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...made by a Paris-based multinational consortium called Airbus Industrie, went into commercial service on Air France between Paris and London. This week the ambitious MRCA (multirole combat aircraft), a joint project of Britain, West Germany and Italy, is scheduled to make its maiden flight in the skies above Munich. Both promise to offer stiff competition for American planemakers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIRCRAFT: Two New Birds from Europe | 6/3/1974 | See Source »

...need of organizational streamlining. Airbus Industrie, for example, is a consortium of companies in Britain, West Germany, The Netherlands, Spain and France. Each company builds components that are shipped to the Aérospatiale center in Toulouse, where they are finally assembled. The MRCA is built by Panavia of Munich, jointly owned by the British, West Germans and Italians. But the work is divided according to each country's share. Thus Britain builds 42.5% of the airframe, West Germany builds 42.5% and Italy builds 15%-the wings. Work on the propulsion system is broken up in the same proportions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIRCRAFT: Two New Birds from Europe | 6/3/1974 | See Source »

Visions of Eight. Eight directors from around the world look at the Munich Olympics. Kon Ichikawa, Arthur Penn, Milos Forman, Claude Lelouch, Mai Zetterling, Juri Ozerov, Michael Pfleghar, and John Schlesinger. At Cinema 733, Sunday and Monday...

Author: By Richard R. Briney, | Title: THE SCREEN | 5/31/1974 | See Source »

This level of competition is not new to Harvard cyclists. B-School student Allis rode for the United States in Munich, Mexico City, and Tokyo. He is far and away the most experienced cyclist in the area, and has taken a lead in the effort to develop cycling in Boston...

Author: By David J. States, | Title: Harvard Cyclists Gear for U.S. Team | 5/7/1974 | See Source »

...flow of rich personal melodrama. Early on, the reader meets the "idling student, promenading in Linz with his cane and kid gloves," and the proud, self-pitying, angry young would-be artist in Vienna, suing his dealer over an imagined embezzlement. After the abortive beer-hall putsch in Munich in 1923, Hitler scurries to safety-and to despairing Hamletesque thoughts of suicide. After he had won the Reich chancellorship a decade later, he posed as the "lonely wanderer out of nothingness" who had come to power. Finally there was the "imitation Wagnerian end" in a bunker in burning Berlin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Stages of Savagery | 5/6/1974 | See Source »

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