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Word: gateways (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...months since People Express started up, its home base-a former freight terminal-has become the busiest gateway at Newark International Airport, some 13 miles southwest of New York City. Flying passengers between cities from Boston to Palm Beach and as far west as Columbus, the pint-size airline earned a profit of $27 million in the first nine months of 1982, while the likes of Pan Am, Eastern and TWA were all showing losses. People's progress is mainly due to the lowest operating costs in the business, an average of 5.3? per seat per mile flown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How People Does It | 2/21/1983 | See Source »

...Harvard is to have any success against this St. Louis team, it will need the kind of the defensive effort that back Jeanne Piersiak Kelly Gately and sweeper Debbie Field in last Friday night's upset of Brown That effort sent the Crimson to the Gateway city today. In particular Harvard will have to contain St. Louis strikers Karen Lombard and Jean Gettemeyer, who combined account for 23 of the squad's tallies...

Author: By Becky Hartman, | Title: Women Booters to Face UMSL Today, Match-Up Pits Old Guard Against New | 11/13/1982 | See Source »

...booters earned the chance to travel to the Gateway City to meet second-ranked Missouri-St Louis next weekend by playing their finest soccer of the year and providing that they can win in the big games...

Author: By Becky Hartman, SPECIAL IS THE CRIMSON | Title: Booters Wallop Brown, 3-1 | 11/6/1982 | See Source »

...goes well, the station will reopen in several years. But no matter how faithful the restoration, the "grand gateway to the capital" will never recapture its past glories. "It was really something," says James ("Doc") Carter, who started as a redcap in 1942. "There were kings and queens and Presidents. When they put that Pit in the ground it was terrible, just like someone running you out of your home." -By Maureen Dowd

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Washington, D.C.: Last Stop for Union Station | 10/25/1982 | See Source »

Some 1 million keyed-up rock fans poach under the midday sun at the Gateway Arch in St. Louis. There are 600 police officers at your disposal, but you still face the classic problem of transporting the feature star to center stage without getting him mobbed. If you are Lieut. Colonel James Hackett, 50, of the St. Louis police force, you enlist that myopic master of outrageous disguise from Middlesex, England, Reginald Kenneth Dwight. In standard police clothing and cruiser, Hackett and Dwight then casually drive the 15 blocks to the Gateway Arch. Once backstage, Dwight looks around, then begins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jul. 19, 1982 | 7/19/1982 | See Source »

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