Word: hangared
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...crimes against humanity during the "ethnic cleansing" of Croatia between August 1991 and June 1992. ITALY Milan Runway Crash In thick fog at Milan?s Linate Airport, a Cessna light aircraft strayed into the path of an accelerating Scandinavian Airlines System passenger jet, which crashed into a baggage hangar and burst into flames. The conflagration, which claimed 118 lives, was Italy?s worst civil aviation accident. According to recordings of conversations with the Milan control tower, the Cessna pilot thought he was on a different taxiing runway. GEORGIA Fresh Fighting The smoldering conflict between Georgia and its breakaway province...
...Stephen Wolf was telling everyone from Congress to government regulators to Wall Street analysts that if its merger with United Airlines did not go through, US Airways could not survive on its own and would eventually wither and die. The merger, of course, never even got out of the hangar, and so this week the top brains at US Airways have finally let the rest of the world in on their "Plan B" - by which US Airlines would not only survive on its own, but thrive...
Boeing hopes to continue that trend by instituting a new assembly line for its single-aisle jets. At night at the Renton plant near Seattle, a 737 fuselage arrives by train from Wichita, Kans., and cruises into the fabrication hangar on a huge yellow flatbed nicknamed "the Queen Mary." Almost every day, a completed 737 rolls out the exit. Mechanics are divided into teams such as the Bulldogs and the Jets. "We want to treat mechanics like surgeons in an operating room," says Sandy Angers, a factory spokeswoman. She switches on a mechanical game that gives workers about five minutes...
...away to the scream of rock-guitar music while tourists observe their labors from a metallic catwalk. Across from the plant, on the other side of a runway, a site has been cleared for the colossal building that will house the A380s. The engineers will probably bike in the hangar--an aerospace version of the Tour de France. And like the tour's cyclists, they know better than to discount the American competitor...
...will end up being the same sort weasel the previous critic was (I should mention that the previous music critic for TIME is a pretty cool guy). But inevitably there are moments where you feel the weasel metamorphosis happening. So I'm ushered into this sterile aircraft hangar-like space where the artists are sequestered, like jurors on lengthy murder trials, before their appointed times on stage. The place reminds me of the building where they store the alien ship in "Independence Day" - it's like a Latin Area 54, cut off from the world and public view. Most...