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Matthew M. Hoffman '91 Night Editors: Jonathan S. Cohn '91 Melissa R. Hart '91 Gregory B. Kasowski '93 Tara A. Nayak '92 Joseph R. Palmore '91 Eric S. Solowey '91 Arts Editor: Kelly A.E. Mason '92 Feature Editor Colin F. Boyle '90 Sports Editor: Julio R. Varela '90 Photo Editors: Leor S. Bachar '91 Nicole D. Grier '91 Business Editor: Raymond M. Nomizu '91 Copy Editor: Mary Louise Kelly...
News Editors for This Issue: Ross G. Forman '90 Melissa R. Hart '91 Night Editors: Colin F. Boyle '90 Brian R. Hecht '92 Emily Mieras '90 Suzanne Petren Moritz '93 Tara A. Nayak '92 Joseph R. Palmore '91 Editorial Editor: Andrew J. Bates '90 Feature Editor Ross G. Forman '90 Sports Editor: Michael D. Stankiewicz '91 Photo Editor: Daniel H. Schumann '93 Jennifer L. Barro '92 Business Editor: Timothy B. Paydos '92 Copy Editor: David G. Zermeno...
...months. Some 13,000 U.S. troops were already in place at well-stocked bases. They provided intelligence on opposing forces and protection for the arriving invaders. Most significant, Panama was mainly an Army show, though small units of Navy SEALs and Marines were involved. Joint Chiefs Chairman General Colin Powell squelched interservice rivalries and gave the two top on-site Army generals, Maxwell Thurman, head of the U.S. Southern Command, and Carl Stiner, the Task Force Commander, clear authority to direct the attacks. Says retired Vice Admiral Joseph Metcalf III, who commanded the Grenada task force: "In Panama they...
News Editor for This Issue: Spencer S. Hsu '90 Night Editors: Andrew J. Bates '90 Colin F. Boyle '90 Susan B. Glasser '90 Melissa R. Hart '91 Spencer S. Hsu '90 Tara A. Nayak '92 Editorial Editor: Colin F. Boyle '90 Feature Editor Spencer S. Hsu '91 Sports Editor: Julio R. Varela '90 Photo Editor: William H. Bachman '91 Business Editor: Michael S. Harwayne...
Operation Just Cause was less than eight hours old, but General Colin Powell was all but declaring victory. As Defense Secretary Dick Cheney looked on approvingly, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff boasted that a 24,000- man U.S. force had "decapitated" Manuel Antonio Noriega's army and seized control of strategic facilities along the Panama Canal. Though the crafty dictator was still on the loose, Powell said that it was only a matter of time before U.S. soldiers tracked him down. The only bad news in Powell's rosy report was the uncertain fate of a dozen...