Word: evens
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...aisle and into a seat. For Josephine Baumann, 71, a retired cook with the face of Edith Bunker, the trip to Bally's Park Place on a recent Wednesday is a welcome -- and cheap -- respite from arthritis, television and the addicts and prostitutes on her midtown Manhattan block. "I even forget my name," she says. The trip actually costs nothing: in exchange for her $18 Gray Line ticket, the casino refunds $15 in coins plus a $5 coupon off on the next trip...
Some mechanical problems are hard to spot in even the most thorough of inspections. Case in point: experts suspect that microscopic cracks on a 300- lb. revolving disk caused the tail engine on a United Airlines DC-10 to blow apart last July. The mishap crippled the jet's hydraulic steering system, killing 112 people when the plane crash-landed in Sioux City, Iowa. (McDonnell Douglas said last week that it would modify its DC-10s to ensure safe landings even if all hydraulic systems failed...
Airlines are scrambling to buy new aircraft, but the huge growth in air travel has forced them to keep many of their older planes in the air even as the modern ones arrive. According to the Future Aviation Professionals of America, an Atlanta-based group, U.S. carriers will need 50,000 new mechanics by 1997 as the airlines take delivery of 3,000 new jets with a value of more than $40 billion...
Those lofty words, however, are hardly likely to clear the smog of despondency that has enveloped East Germany. Even before thousands of its most talented young people streamed to the West last week, the part of divided Germany that is still a dictatorship was clouded over with feelings of dejection and frustration -- the result of being held captive by a Stalinist government that refuses to change when the world all around it is changing...
...well informed about events in the Soviet Union, Poland and Hungary. Their frustration has mounted as they watch those countries experimenting with glasnost and perestroika. But party chief Erich Honecker, 77, made it clear that such social and economic reforms will not be forthcoming. The authorities in East Berlin even took the unfraternal step of banning Soviet publications that carried "distorted portrayals of history...