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...Queen snubs winter like she disregards most human beings. The standard Ice Queen blows colder than a vicious Noreaster and needs nothing more than a thin pea coat layer for the winter months. She feels no pain. The Ice Queen dispenses with unsightly gloves and muffs. She embraces the cold. She is the cold. FM advice to the Ice Queen: Be nice...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COLD CHARACTERS | 3/4/1999 | See Source »

...Queen snubs winter like she disregards most human beings. The standard Ice Queen blows colder than a vicious Noreaster and needs nothing more than a thin pea coat layer for the winter months. She feels no pain. The Ice Queen dispenses with unsightly gloves and muffs. She embraces the cold; she is the cold. FM advice to The Ice Queen: Be nice...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Groovy Train: Cold Characters | 3/4/1999 | See Source »

...stitched it into a sheep's pulmonary-artery circuit. Blood pulsing against the walls gradually strengthens the muscle cells, just as weight training builds biceps. To make smaller vessels, Laval's Auger bends a sheet of muscle cells around a plastic tube and reinforces it with an outer layer of stiffer cells. Then he removes the tube and seeds the inside with lining cells, which soon grow together. The vessels have worked well in animal tests, and in the lab have withstood blood pressure 20 times normal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Build a Body Part | 3/1/1999 | See Source »

Students woke up yesterday morning to find the campus blanketed in a dusty layer of snow. As the day wore on, however, what began as a light drift took on blizzard-like proportions...

Author: By Alexis B. Offen, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Snow Unlikely to Close Down College | 2/26/1999 | See Source »

...sour note for the $12 billion-a-year music industry, which is belatedly taking a long, painful look at its endangered business model. The industry is losing millions in revenue to the digital pirates, who use a readily available (and free, of course) software program called MP3 (Mpeg1 Layer 3) to receive and send music over the Internet. The pirated tunes have sound quality comparable to that of CDs, and can even be channeled through conventional stereo systems. "The Internet has made music so vulnerable," says Record Industry Association of America (RIAA) general counsel Cary Sherman, "[that] if it were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: You've Got Music! | 2/22/1999 | See Source »

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