Word: againâ
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...landing went badly. Djibouti control at first accepted the plane as a flight in distress, then waved it off when an Air France pilot identified it as Cyprus 007. "Air France blew the gaffe on us," complained Melling, who landed anyway. There they refueled and took off once again???this time to their starting point at Larnaca. En route they were informed that they could divert to Damascus; Syrian President Hafez Assad himself had assured the killers refuge. Mohammed's reaction: "Not Syria! You don't know Syria! We're not going there...
...terrorists to set traps for them) and are accompanied everywhere by bodyguards. (That did not help Schleyer. His three bodyguards were killed when he was captured.) Even those who are not likely to be targets of terror are affected. Observed a Dortmund barber: "They're going to hit again???somewhere. It's so terrible not to know where and when...
...even to try to walk again. From then on, his life, which had seemed on the upturn, took a tragic downward plunge. He was taken to the Xanadu Princess Hotel in Freeport, where the Bahamians this time were happy to welcome him. Then, after two years, he was moved again???this time to the pyramidal Princess Hotel in Acapulco...
...equal. She and Jimmy campaign apart and take turns going home to Plains each week for two or three days of rest and recuperation and family renewal. "What I liked about the Navy," says Rosalynn, "is what I like about politics. You see your old friends again and again???those with whom you have shared experiences...
...buying enough goods and services to prop demand and prices up for a long time. Frightened by the rise in the jobless rate, governments then throw the policy into reverse and pump out enough money to initiate expansion again???at a higher base rate of price increases than prevailed at the start. These stop-go policies interrupt growth, and to make up the production losses incurred in the slow phase, governments run ever larger inflationary deficits and accelerate increases in money supply. In the U.S., the avowedly conservative Nixon presidency has piled up cumulative deficits of about $120 billion...