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Word: compacter (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...building for months. High interest rates, an initial shortage of low-cost models and the unwillingness of customers to buy cars from a company that seemed about to go out of business have cut in half projected sales of the stylish, economical K-car. Even the once popular sub-compact Dodge Omnis and Plymouth Horizons are selling poorly, and dealers now have more than a 120-day supply, twice the desired amount. As the auto industry last week prepared for its annual holiday shutdown, only three of Chrysler's six assembly plants were operating. The company, which had once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Chrysler Goes Back to the Well | 12/29/1980 | See Source »

...fact, Chrysler's sales in November rose by 6.9% over the same period last year. But behind that figure stalks a lot of bad news. Chrysler is staking its survival on the success of its new compact K-cars, the Dodge Aries and Plymouth Reliant. Despite the company's constant references to its "record-breaking" introduction, however, the two models are not doing well. Only 16,000 K-cars were sold in November, as compared with the company's target of 40,833. Gone with the poor sales figures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Detroit's Road Is Still Rocky | 12/15/1980 | See Source »

...Lower Middle Class to a Cambridge/Loeb Drama Center audience risks a failure of communication: the gulf between Brecht's selfish characters clawing away at each other on the stage and the dainty gourmet shops sitting outside on Brattle St. seems wide enough to swallow Seven Deadly Sins' compact message. The great virtue of Alvin Epstein's American Repertory Theatre production is its dextrous explication of Brecht's easily garbled multiple ironies. Epstein uses his performers, music, dance, mime and even neon signs to illuminate Brecht's critique of the half-life of the bourgeoisie; he gives it such sober clarity...

Author: By Scott A. Rosenberg, | Title: Brecht in Boldface | 12/9/1980 | See Source »

Last week, while earthlings nearly a billion miles away marveled as they monitored its progress, an all-seeing but unmanned spacecraft no larger than a compact car completed the final and most spectacular phase of an epochal journey. Beating Buck Rogers and the faithful Wilma, sci-fi heroes of the pre-Star Trek generation, by five centuries, Voyager 1 brushed past the ringed planet Saturn, second largest member of the sun's family, and provided the best images yet of that strange and wondrous world, a far-off realm in the solar system never before glimpsed with such glittering...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Visit to a Large Planet | 11/24/1980 | See Source »

...Stanley Elkin characters might say, why not? Even those who happen to own all the 18 volumes that Roth and Elkin have written over the past 20 years are likely to find these two collections of golden oldies a sound investment, a way of consolidating large past pleasures into compact present ones. New readers have a different and equally worthwhile treat in store: the happy discovery of two serious comic writers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Two Serious Comic Writers | 11/10/1980 | See Source »

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