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Word: bumpers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Some people are media addicts. Every magazine, every newsletter, every advertisement that gets slipped under their doors--they read them like the back of the Cheerios box at breakfast. If they happen to be Harvard students, they are lucky. This year, the College's regular bumper crop of student publications--from century old stand-bys to newly founded newsletters--kept readers busy...

Author: By Merin G. Wexler, | Title: Using Some Poetic Licence | 6/9/1983 | See Source »

...exporting revolution, the island is having enough problems trying to import it. English may still be the first language of the island, but it often comes off second best when it comes to translating socialist slogans. The revolution communicates by billboard in the way that Californians do by bumper sticker, posting its noble but often mind-numbing reminders at almost every road turning and intersection: THE LAND IS OUR WEALTH, EDUCATION IS OUR LIBERATION, WORK HARDER, GROW MORE FOOD, BUILD THE REVOLUTION. With equal alacrity, the Grenadians have adeptly copied the dress code of the revolution, and the streets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Grenada: Revolution in the Shade | 5/2/1983 | See Source »

Maybe so. But at the moment OPEC is clinging to the rear bumper, and market forces are dragging the group down the road. Because of slumping demand for oil, OPEC'S production has plummeted from 30.6 million bbl. per day in 1979 to a current rate of 14 million. Unless demand snaps back sharply, the target ceiling of 17.5 million bbl. per day will be irrelevant. Even after last week's reduction in the bench-mark price, many oil buyers still balked. Said Barry Good, senior oil industry analyst with the Morgan Stanley investment firm: "I have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OPEC Knuckles Under | 3/28/1983 | See Source »

...white-and-blue bumper stickers have even sprouted declaring IACOCCA FOR PRESIDENT. Preposterous? Yes, preposterous. lacocca greatly enjoys the sound of his own voice and often pontificates on political and economic matters, especially as they affect Chrysler. But friends say he does not have the patience for politics, and he concurs. "I'm not interested," he says, and then, as if to explain how the stories start: "If you only talk cars, people say you're a provincial son of a bitch. If you're outspoken, then they say you are running for office." Quips Publisher Keith Crane of Automotive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iacocca's Tightrope Act | 3/21/1983 | See Source »

While he has been restructuring the corporation, lacocca has never stopped scrutinizing new model designs. A little while ago, he took one look at a mock-up of a 1986 subcompact, then curtly told the stylists that the front grille and bumper made them look like "Dodg'em cars." The lights burned late in the styling studios for weeks thereafter. lacocca is unrepentant. Says he: "The guys who have it tough in this company are the product guy and the marketing guy because I grew up in those areas and think that I know more than they'll ever know...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iacocca's Tightrope Act | 3/21/1983 | See Source »

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