A flying saucer to call your own

From: Jerusalem Post | Date: January 7, 2001| Author: JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH | Copyright information


Jerusalem Post

01-07-2001

Headline: A flying saucer to call your own
Byline: JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH
Edition; Daily
Section: Features
Page: 16

Sunday, January 7, 2001 -- In some future battlefield, instead of looking at enemy positions through binoculars, soldiers may pull a tiny "flying saucer" out of their backpack and send it off to carry out reconnaissance missions.

This is the prediction of scientists at the Technion in Haifa, who a...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

See a flying saucer up close
Dayton Daily News ; Caption text only.
PRACTICAL JOKER GETS COME-UPPANCE AS FLYING SAUCER GOES ON SAFARI.(News)
Daily Post (Liverpool, England) ; A GIANT flying saucer turned up yesterday among the baboons at Knowsley Safari Park park after disappearing from the home of a village prankster nearly two months ago. The full-sized steel saucer vanished from the bottom of Bill Gibbons' garden as he celebrated his 45th birthday. Pals of the arch
Flying Saucer's used CDs prove music demand is still `out there'.(Business Times)(The Entrepreneurs)
The Washington Times ; There's no 10-foot Tower Record sign, no Blockbuster awning to signify that the converted basement apartment in Adams Morgan is, in fact, a music store. Just a solitary orange neon sign that says CD next to a blue-and-green neon saucer. In simple black and white, the words Flying Saucer Discs give
When a Team Member Winds Down: Have you planned for the possibility - and likelihood- that a team member will leave the practice?
On Wall Street ; T eam transition is the last phase of the team life cycle. As a result, it may be overlooked when individual advisors - eager to start a team - are concerned primarily with compensation and responsibility issues. But team transition is important and should be dealt with from Day One. It is the
Flying saucer launching pad.(Fast Facts)(Brief Article)
Journal of Property Management ; * Built in 1967, the world's only flying saucer launching pad is in St. Paul, Alberta, Canada.