Word: warmers
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...letters. Freud, of course, is not the only corrosive element at work on her optimism. There was after all the war, whose effects are very much present in both sides of the correspondence. And there is the matter of aging. In this respect, the later letters offer a warmer, more gentle, and sometimes whimsical picture of the aging giant and his aging devotee, extending their sympathies from each other's sick beds by courier post. By this time, moreover, Salome is slightly more hesitant in offering her intellectual opinions, or at least more apologetic about what she repeatedly calls...
...legal question involves only receipt and possession of the stolen documents. The maximum penalty is ten years in prison and a $10,000 fine. When asked if his arrest might have a "chilling effect" on First Amendment rights, Whitten quipped: "I was personally chilled." Anderson's response was warmer. He charged that the FBI has been following and harassing his staff. "All of us are ready to join Les Whitten in jail if we must," he said, "before we stop digging out and reporting the news...
Moynihan introduced himself to Senator J. William Fulbright (D-Ark.), chairman of the Committee, as "one of the original Fulbright fellows," and told the Committee that U.S.-Indian relations are "much warmer, much better than they have been," the Boston Globe reported Tuesday...
...Titan, the largest of Saturn's ten moons, by a team of Cornell University scientists under Astronomer-Exobiologist Carl Sagan. From infra-red and other telescopic measurements of the satellite, a body as large as the planet Mercury, Sagan and his colleagues conclude that Titan is relatively much warmer (about-100° F.) than previously estimated. It also has a thicker atmosphere than had been suspected and is leaking small quantities of hydrogen gas into space. Pondering these surprising conditions on Titan, the Cornell group has evolved a picture of a strange and turbulent world...
...Inside the museum, this conversation of silvery tones resumes as the sun spills through a long slit in the roof where the halves of the vaults meet, and is diffused by a perforated deflector slung on yokes. The light washes the plain concrete surface of the cycloids, gently blending warmer reflections from a white oak floor. Curve answers to curve, vault to channel. There is no glare on the pictures. Yet as the sun moves, the light, and by implication the space, changes subtly, like reflections in a pond...