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Usage:

...shift at Smart results from the decision by Terry McDonell, its founding editor, to jump ship from a leaky rowboat to take charge of Esquire, which he likens to "walking onto the flight deck of the aircraft carrier Eisenhower." The change prompted Smart owner Owen Lipstein to merge his shaky start-up with a proposed rival, Men, and pick up its creators, Peter Kaplan and Chris Kimball, as editor and publishing director. In their vision, everything old is new again: Kaplan says his "new" magazine will attempt to recapture the personality of Esquire circa the 1930s, which he describes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: A Muchness of Maleness | 10/15/1990 | See Source »

...lumbering. After gobbling up PSA and Piedmont in 1987 to form the sixth largest U.S. carrier, USAir is losing market share to competitors. Projecting losses of $350 million for the year, USAir last week suspended its stock dividend and postponed for one year the purchase of 16 new Boeing aircraft...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIRLINES: Flying Along at Treetop Level | 10/8/1990 | See Source »

...attacking Israel. U.S. analysts have already detected the movement of missiles toward areas of western Iraq from which they could hit Jerusalem and Tel Aviv in five minutes. Americans fear that Iraq could launch a salvo of 50 to 60 missiles, accompanied by an aircraft attack. Saddam, they say, would try to make it appear that the U.S. and Israel had provoked the attack, possibly by having an Iraqi aircraft drop a bomb on Baghdad...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gulf Saddam's Strategies | 10/1/1990 | See Source »

...plan being called in Pentagon circles "the Half War" goes into effect. Some 700 U.S. aircraft flying from Saudi Arabia and carriers in the Persian Gulf turn a 75-mile-wide area of Iraq north of the Kuwait border into what some Air Force officers call a "parking lot" -- an area that has been completely leveled. F-117A fighter-bombers take out Iraqi antiaircraft missiles. Tomahawk cruise missiles from the battleship Wisconsin hit communications centers, truck junctions, munitions depots. B-52 bombers blast targets with highly accurate missiles. Most important, a variety of weapons * throw a suffocating "electronic blanket" over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gulf: Taking The First Shot | 9/24/1990 | See Source »

...gulf and south of Kuwait, while 30,000 Saudi and Islamic troops are deployed west of U.S. positions and in the far north, a thin line between the Americans and the Iraqi and Kuwaiti borders. U.S., Saudi and British fighter planes are monitored day and night by AWACS radar aircraft, which feed their information to an air-control station at Dhahran. The ground station relays flight instructions to all the fighters, which maneuver in assigned patrol sectors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gulf: Who's In Charge There? | 9/17/1990 | See Source »

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