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Word: deserting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

Colonel Muammar Gaddafi could not have appeared more at ease last week as he sipped orange soda in an official guest house during a one-hour interview with TIME Diplomatic Correspondent Strobe Talbott in the central Libyan desert city of Sebha. Indeed, the mercurial strongman's imperturbability seemed to be in almost studied contrast to the erratic policies that have increasingly made Libya a focal point of international controversy and contention. Only hours after the interview, Israel charged that Libyan-operated SA9 missiles had been fired at Israeli reconnaissance planes from Palestinian positions in southern Lebanon (see preceding story...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libya: Thriving on Trouble | 6/8/1981 | See Source »

...cartel's hard-liners argued equally insistently that the Saudis had to help tighten the market by cutting production and raising prices. For the past eight months Saudi output has crested at 10.3 million bbl. daily, or about 2 million bbl. more than the desert kingdom produced three years ago. This is a key reason why worldwide petroleum inventories are now bursting with some 2 million bbl. daily in excess crude oil output...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Energy: OPEC Deadlocks in Geneva | 6/8/1981 | See Source »

...Force wants to hide 200 missiles in the bleak Great Basin desert of Utah and Nevada. Installations spreading across an area about the size of the state of New Jersey would require building 4,600 shelters and 9,000 miles of roads. Along the roadways, flatbed vehicles, forever rolling, would carry missiles tipped with ten warheads each. That is the $56 billion scheme for safeguarding the proposed MX system, a brobdingnagian shell game meant to foil a Soviet attack on the missiles. The plan has been derided as an ineffective, ecology-destroying boondoggle, and the MX now has a powerful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nix to MX | 5/18/1981 | See Source »

...largest and most powerful of its Arab neighbors. It had achieved a fair measure of prosperity and a high living standard for its 3.9 million citizens. Yet beneath the surface gaiety Israel's mood was troubled. The once exuberant young democracy, the land of gardens in the desert and triumphs on the battlefield, showed signs of age, uneasiness and uncertainty. In many ways it seemed a nation at odds with itself, with its past, with its values. The vision of the future once so boldly defined by its leaders seemed somehow out of focus. Faced with a world more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Israel: Troubled Land of Zion | 5/18/1981 | See Source »

Herbert, a former West Coast newspaperman, set the science-fiction world on its antenna in 1965 with the publication of Dune, an involved and resonant adventure saga of how human civilization was reborn in a desert. Set on the waterless planet of Arrakis, or Dune, the book introduced a hero whose ancestry went back to the legendary Greek House of Atreus. Paul Atreides had something for everyone. He was part Odysseus, part Jesus and part Muhammad. His followers were a desert people forced by circumstances into a mystical and practical awareness of their ecosystem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A New Turn of the Worm | 5/11/1981 | See Source »

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