Word: escorted
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Heath said that because of security concerns, Tufts has recently installed extra emergency telephones on the campus for a total of 15 such phones. Tufts also has a new van for its evening escort service, Heath said...
...cars, the redesigned successors to its strong-selling Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme and other intermediates. The auto industry, though, is impatiently waiting for GM's next model: the J-car, which will be unveiled in May or June. The J-car will be larger than a Ford Escort but smaller than the Dodge Aries. It is expected to get 28 m.p.g. in city driving. The new models will carry Chevrolet and Pontiac name plates and probably later Cadillac. They will come in a range of styles that will include a notchback and a five-door station wagon...
...impressive. Its older big cars, such as the Chrysler Cordoba and Dodge Mirada, look like forgotten orphans on the market. The small fuel-efficient Dodge Omni and Plymouth Horizon are now three years old; they face stiff competition from both Japanese imports and new American cars like the Ford Escort...
Ford's new offering this year, in addition to the Escort and Lynx, is a redesigned Ford Granada. The car, which will be marketed also as a Mercury Cougar, is 500 lbs. lighter than the old Granada and Mercury Monarch. But, like other standard Ford products, it has a "big car" look, which could hurt in a market that is demanding small autos...
...North American market, and smaller ones like the Opel Rekord abroad for the foreign market. By the mid-'80s, however, there will be one world auto market. The same car is likely to be seen on the streets of Frankfurt, West Germany, and Fargo, N. Dak. The Lynx, Escort and J-cars are all such "world cars." Models will be assembled in places like Japan and South America, in addition to Detroit, from parts that are manufactured in several countries. The result will be stiffer competition among the remaining auto giants. According to a congressional subcommittee study, for example...