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Word: archipelagos (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...investigation has underscored the concern of many Bahamians about what the flourishing drug trade has done to their 700-island archipelago. For years the Bahamas have been a haven for arms and liquor smuggling. Then in the 1970s the transshipment of marijuana and cocaine from Colombia and other South American countries to the U.S. became a thriving business. Some Bahamians amassed fortunes by providing landing strips, storage depots and distribution channels to drug traffickers. Inevitably, violence followed, and by the early 1980s drug abuse among local residents had become a serious problem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Bahamas: Pot Shots | 2/13/1984 | See Source »

...failure immediately confronted NASA with the question of whether it should go ahead with the launch of Westar's twin, Indonesia's Palapa B2, scheduled for the next day. Palapa is to be used as a telecommunications link between the 13,677 islands of the sprawling Indonesian archipelago. At week's end, NASA decided to postpone the launch at least for a day while ground controllers probed the Westar accident. If Indonesia requested a deferral until a later mission, the shuttle would have to bring the satellite back to earth. The added weight would speed the shuttle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space: Flying the Seatless Chair | 2/13/1984 | See Source »

Modern Soviet labor camps (or "gulags") first arose under Joseph Stalin's regime. His secret police rounded up the inmates--mostly Stalin's political opponents--and imprisoned them in a series of camps known as the "Gulag Archipelago." At their peak in the late 1940's, slave labor camps held as many as 15 million Russians. The exact numbers remain unknown--thousands may have died of starvation, cold, or disease. Interviews of recently released gulag inmates have revealed that conditions today are in violation of nearly every recognized standard of health and safety...

Author: By Paul L. Choi, | Title: The Bitter Fruits of Slave Labor | 10/15/1983 | See Source »

...plane taxied to its gate and three uniformed policemen stomped aboard, passengers heading for the exit were ordered back to their seats by the crew. One of the passengers was TIME Hong Kong Bureau Chief Sandra Burton, who had just finished reporting a story in the Indonesian archipelago and then, by prearrangement, had detoured to Taipei to accompany Aquino on the final leg of his homecoming flight. As Burton recounted it in a file to TIME this Sunday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Philippines: Bloody Welcome | 8/29/1983 | See Source »

...would be difficult to imagine a more unlikely partnership than the U.S.Japanese alliance. One nation is ancient and culturally homogeneous, crowded onto an archipelago at the edge of Asia. The other is an ethnic melting pot, with European roots, that spreads across a continent. Both are troubled by memories of a global war that inaugurated the nuclear age, terribly and personally for each. Still, over the past three decades the U.S. and Japan have managed to forge what U.S. Ambassador to Tokyo Mike Mansfield calls "the most important single bilateral relationship, bar none." An American with long experience in Japan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Japan: Talking Past Each Other | 8/1/1983 | See Source »

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