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...Play along with us, and we can make good things happen for you. Oppose us, and . . . well, watch out. Delivering the first part of the message, Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen on March 12 welcomed into his airy office executives of seven major oil companies: Amoco, Ashland, Chevron, Conoco, Phillips, Shell and Unocal. "We're willing to adjust our fuel tax in ways that will help you," said Bentsen. He noted that his department had already promised to revise the way it proposed to collect a new energy tax to favor U.S. oil refiners over foreign competitors. He vowed to consider...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill Clinton: Breaking Through | 3/29/1993 | See Source »

...water for weeks; they lie on their blankets all day long. At 105, Fatima Malokos has suffered through all of Yugoslavia's 20th century wars. "In World War I they only fought, in the second they only burned some houses," she says. "In this one they just shell civilians. This one is the worst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: On The Road of White Death | 3/15/1993 | See Source »

...however, just as clearly as Band Professor of Science P.O. Wilson does in his recent Diversity of Life. Beginning with some real-life trouble in Tahiti, this message carries explicitly through Gould's first three essays, ending with a reflection on the loss of the limpets, a snail whose shell "looks like a Chinese hat of the old caricatures." Through Gould's superb interweaving of history and biology, the limpet becomes a poor pitiable and yet complex organism, with symbolic meaning for other endangered species...

Author: By Anthony J. Laracuente., | Title: Eight Little Piggies Rail Against Social Darwinism | 3/11/1993 | See Source »

Biological wizardry of a different sort is responsible for the ruggedness of abalone shells, which under high-powered microscopes resemble elaborately constructed stone walls. In this case, crystals of calcium carbonate, siphoned from seawater, serve as the stones, while a slurry of protein and complex sugars acts as the mortar between them. "The ingredients themselves are not at all impressive," marvels Princeton University materials scientist Ilhan Aksay. "Yet the shell is as strong as the most advanced man-made ceramics." And if a simple stone-and-mortar design can turn an intrinsically chalky substance into a tough coat of armor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Copying What Comes Naturally | 3/8/1993 | See Source »

Brown said that only $6 million was being spent on the buildings so that the additional $3 million Hillel hopes to raise will be allotted for maintenance and endowing a permanent staff so the building "will not be an empty shell...

Author: By Margaret C. Boyer, | Title: Hillel Construction Begins | 3/2/1993 | See Source »

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