Word: jointedly
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Whatever their other differences, U.S. and Peruvian officials are united in the war against drugs. Joint U.S.-Peruvian antinarcotics teams have recently taken out of service 28 airfields used to fly coca leaves to Colombia for processing. Government estimates indicate that eradication of coca plants last year nearly doubled. "We are a long way from getting a handle on the problem," says a U.S. official. "But the program is not doing too badly...
...Kurile islands, a subject that Moscow has long chosen to ignore. The Japanese made it clear that any final communiqué that failed to include the topic would be unacceptable. At the end of last week the Soviets appeared ready to make an oblique reference to the dispute in a joint statement. The new Soviet approach to Japan appears to be largely due to Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who is believed to be anxious to improve his country's image in Asia generally. Relations with China have improved, Soviet influence has increased over North Korea, and Moscow has tried to mend...
...growing number of legislators seem to recognize that, just as the crisis has no single cause, it cannot have any single solution. They are proposing various combinations of tighter insurance regulation and tort reform. A bill on the verge of enactment by the Minnesota legislature would set up "joint underwriting associations" to issue liability policies, written by the state, to customers who could not get commercial insurance; any losses would be picked up jointly by the state's insurers. But to limit those losses, the bill also would restrict punitive damages, among other tort reforms...
...sudden wind shifts, Challenger's crew had an especially rocky launch right from lift-off. Just 72 seconds into the flight--a second and a half before the explosion--the orbiter yawed suddenly to the right. As the righthand rocket booster broke loose, spewing superhot gases from a faulty joint, the shuttle's engines tried to compensate for the loss of pressure, and the crew must have felt swift side-to-side lurches...
...started innocuously enough when Air Force General Frank Vargas Pazos, 51, chief of Ecuador's joint armed forces command, complained that he had not been informed of a practice alert at the Defense Ministry in Quito. The impetuous Vargas, who is nicknamed "Loco," quickly found himself in a quarrel with the Defense Minister, General Luis Piñeiros Rivera, and the army chief, General Manuel Maria Albuja. Shots were heard inside the ministry. Piñeiros promptly fired Vargas, who in turn charged Piñeiros with accepting a kickback in the purchase of a plane for the national airline. Vargas also alleged...