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In "Taking Heat," he records his reaction.
This attitude that reporters are more a special-interest group than guardians of the public interest has informed the Bush administration's dealings with the national press, and it's reflected in "Taking Heat," the tedious and tendentious new book by Ari Fleischer, the former White House press secretary.
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The UK, in fact, is fairly unique in not taking heat seriously, as anyone who has shivered their way through winter in a draughty British home can testify.
Its new "redox flow" system pumps an electrolyte "blood" through a computer, carrying power in and taking heat out.
As usual, most theorists are somewhere in the middle — taking heat from both sides that their view is untenable.
St. Mary's Cathedral in Australia is taking heat for implementing a "tap and go" collection plate.
But the Fed has come under intense criticism in recent months, taking heat from politicians, financial professionals and commentators ranging from Paul Krugman to Sarah Palin.
Grace Andrews, 49, a corporate consultant in Melrose, Mass., is the one taking heat in her family.
JPMorgan is hardly the only Wall Street firm taking heat in Washington.
No sooner did Mrs. Clinton cast her vote than she started taking heat in Iowa.
He said that he was used to "taking heat" in his role as Human Rights Watch investigator.
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