Robert Krulwich brings his Jewish religion into his view of the world as he reports on science. Body Of Knowledge Ace broadcaster brings viewers up to date on latest scientific findings in new PBS series. SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News R obert Krulwich loves to explore and looks for innovative ways to get lots of TV viewers to go along with him. The broadcaster, seen regularly on ABC-TV feature segments that delve into science's latest finds, believes a fast-paced format keeps people tuned in and is using that for a new PBS series, NOVA scienceNOW. The goal is to bring audiences up to speed on cutting-edge discoveries and introduce the scientists whose ideas are moving them ahead of the crowd. The series, with Krulwich as host and sometimes reporter, consists of five magazine-style programs that cover several subjects in each episode. The show debuts at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 25, on WTVS-Channel 56 and includes segments to explain the physiology of empa- thy, sounds made by desert sands and the threat of hur- ricanes in New Orleans. The opening show also profiles James McLurkin, a young technocrat developing groups of small robots coordinated to complete tasks as a mechanical team. "I like taking ordinary experiences and looking a lit- tle more closely at them," says Krulwich, 57, whose recent New Year's Eve commentary on ABC's World News Tonight explained the dusty nature of champagne bubbles. "I also like to look at scientists with a serious eye, questioning and challenging them. "I've worked with NOVA'S senior executive producer Paula Apsell and learned that she was thinking of creat- ing an hour in which there would be more than one story. I invited myself in because I think shorter seg- ments are more accessible." As Krulwich mapped out the topics he wanted to cover, he included one especially important to Michigan viewers. He developed a piece on hydrogen fuels and has interviewed Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick "President Bush has championed alternative fuels, and I am interested to see how realistic the president's strategy is," Krulwich says. "A lot of the auto information comes from Michigan, but our test drive and investigation of the engine takes place in Connecticut." The opening show of "NOVAscienceNOW" profiks James McLurkin, a young technocrat developing groups of small robots coordinated to complete tasks as a mechanical team. Career Moves Krulwich, a Columbia Law School graduate, attributes his ultimate career decision to John Wharton, an attor- ney for whom he worked briefly when he was new to the legal profession. As mentor, Wharton noticed that Krulwich had stronger interests than law and offered time away to pursue those preferences. The law firm had clients that included playwright Arthur Miller and folk-rock singer Art Garfunkel, and Krulwich realized that he was jealous of them. He wanted to be in a field that was more creative and found work with Pacifica Radio. Later moves placed him as a bureau chief with Rolling Stone magazine, business and economics correspondent for National Public Radio, cultural affairs anchor for the PBS series The Edge and a correspondent for several CBS pro- grams. After moving to ABC, Krulwich decided to give his interns positive experiences similar to the one he had with the Wharton law firm. Those upbeat contacts have paid off as his former interns have alerted him to some of the topics he will cover in NOVA scienceNOW. Besides probing the everyday applications of science, Krulwich intends to examine scientific issues that have to do with fears or raise questions of morality. One moral controversy involves stem cell research. "I want to show what a stem cell is so people can see how it works," explains Krulwich, named to TV Guide's "All-Star" reporting team. "I also want to show why there are moral questions about creating them. "It's very easy to appeal to people's religious or moral sense, but I think that should come with information. Before you say 'bad, bad, bad' or 'good, good, good' or `no, no, no' or Yes, yes, yes,' you should know some- thing about what's going on." On The Hom ont "I've always had some intuition that what I see about me is a conscious act," he says. "It feels like one. I've been trained by my parents and my own prejudices to see details that make me see short stories inside the big stories, and in the short stories, I see a certain kind of holiness." Krulwich shares professional interests with his wife, Tamar Lewin, and his sister, Sara Krulwich. Both women are journalists working for the New York Times. His wife is a national reporter he met in law school, and his sister is an arts and entertainment photogra- pher who graduated from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. When Krulwich is not working, he also is interested in exploring, but his focus becomes more geographic than scientific. "I take a neighborhood that I hear about on the radio or in the news, and I just go to it," says the New Yorker and father of two teens invited to accompany him. "I like to wander around an area I've never been. This city is a spectacular place, and it has a rich, deep and varied landscape. Its a city that's very fast moving, so if you're not moving hardly at all, you become a problem." ❑ NOVA scienceNOW debuts 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 25, on WTVS Channel 56. Its compan- ion Web site vvww.pbs.org/nova/sciencenow will review what was covered and offer new information and educational experiences. -