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...short, Halevi was less an extremist than one of the early media militants who learned to exploit the press for publicity. His literary ambitions and his eventual decision to become a journalist suggest a more moderate man's need to examine experience in a cooler light. But his sharp skills as a journalist do not always serve him well as a memoirist. The emotional temperature drops steadily as Halevi writes about his disaffection with the JDL, his marriage to a woman with a Mayflower pedigree who converts to Judaism, the birth of his children, the death of his father...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: THE MAKING OF A ZEALOT | 11/27/1995 | See Source »

...cooler to say that you're conservative than it was 10 years ago," Krishnamurthy says...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Minority Conservatives | 11/4/1995 | See Source »

Artsmart's Irving said she can understand why students may not be attracted to the Shops. "It needs to be cooler," she said. "I'm young and I spent a lot of time Harvard Square when I was in high school and college, and maybe they need some fresh perspective on design and presentation. The Shops are going through a bit of an identity crisis...

Author: By Geoffrey C. Upton, | Title: Stores Review Mission | 10/6/1995 | See Source »

While boom-and-bust hurricane cycles lasting decades have been well documented, the reasons for them remain obscure. That's not the case for individual storms, though. Atlantic hurricanes inevitably get their start in Africa, where hot, dry air overlying the Sahara desert collides with cooler, moister air over the sub-Saharan region known as the Sahel. Under normal conditions, the collision produces eddies of low-pressure air that drift out over the ocean, where storm clouds begin to form. Most of the time, the clouds simply dump their load of rain and dissipate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HURRICANE ONSLAUGHT | 9/11/1995 | See Source »

...barraging their rubidium atoms with lasers, slowing them to a crawl (heat is really just the motion of atoms and molecules; slowing therefore equals cooling). Then they put the atoms in a magnetic "bottle" that allowed the faster-moving, more energetic atoms to escape; those left behind were cooler. Finally, in a leap of ingenuity that enabled this scientific team to outflank its rivals, the Boulder scientists rotated the magnetic field so that the few cold atoms that were leaking through a weak point in the bottle couldn't find this one escape route...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: EINSTEIN STRIKES AGAIN | 7/24/1995 | See Source »

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