Word: attachable
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Even so, the Israelis were concerned last week that the U.S. would feel that their attack on West Beirut was a punishment that did not fit whatever crime the P.L.O. may have committed. Major General Menachem Meron, Israel's senior military attaché in Washington, called in reporters to try to claim that the Wednesday assault on West Beirut was aimed only at rooting out P.L.O. gunners who were firing on Israeli troops. But Meron had told the same reporters two months earlier that Israeli forces would go no deeper than 25 miles into Lebanon. When bluntly asked...
Kurz came up with the notion of using a new bonding technique to attach a brace to the back of the tooth. The braces were tightened by a wire anchored to the patient's molars. After trying a prototype on his receptionist, Kurz filed for a patent in 1976 and sold it two years later to Ormco, a dental-appliance manufacturing company. At present 3,000 of the nation's estimated 7,400 orthodontists have signed up for Ormco-sponsored seminars in Kurz's technique...
...more and more companies are jockeying for a slice of Osborne's success. Last week, at the mammoth National Computer Conference in Houston, at least a dozen U.S. and foreign manufacturers were hawking portable computers that fit on the decks of pleasure boats, under airline seats, into attaché cases-even in the palm of the hand. Four of the new machines were Osborne imitations featuring built-in video, detachable typewriterlike keyboards and luggage-type carrying handles. While several models improved on the Osborne's eye-straining 5-in. screen, only one-manufactured by Non-Linear Systems...
...envoys. On April 3, an Israeli embassy official in Paris named Ya'acov Barsimantov, who was said to be particularly well informed about P.L.O. activities in Europe, was fatally shot outside of his apartment by an unidentified woman. Only three days earlier, the offices of the Israeli military attaché in Paris had been sprayed with machine-gun fire...
Without air superiority, says one foreign military attaché in Buenos Aires, "the British might be able to land troops, but they would take very heavy losses because they could not keep an umbrella over them for a long enough period. When the Harriers are supporting their troops, they are a match for the Argentine planes, but they can't be there all the time. They simply don't have enough." Adds a Western European military observer: "Once the troops were ashore, the entire Argentine air force would go into battle. The British could not cover the troops...