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...February, Lorillard introduced Satin, a cigarette with a satin-paper filter tip. Market research indicated that women wanted a product that symbolized luxurious relaxation. Ted van de Kamp, a director with MCA Advertising, says studies showed women in the 1980s are looking for a cigarette that will let them "indulge themselves." Philip Morris put Virginia Slims on the market in 1968 with an image of the striving, independent woman and the slogan "You've come a long way, baby." Its share...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Puffing Hard Just to Keep Up | 7/18/1983 | See Source »

Howard added that through this "intellectual perspective on educational studies and practice." of the results will filter back into courses taught at the Ed School. "Hopefully it will be a conduit between research and teaching...

Author: By Rebecca J. Joseph, | Title: Research Center Planned at Ed School | 3/5/1983 | See Source »

...remainder of the film, excepting the epilogue, takes place some years later while Dini is in high school, and is shot through some kind of blue fog filter. This technique sometimes gives the sensation of dreaminess, and sometimes gives the sensation of a blue fog filter...

Author: By M. Daniels, | Title: Blue Fog Is Blue Fog | 2/10/1983 | See Source »

...much more effective than previous armor, but it is so expensive that it's only being put on the front. The M-1's gas turbine engine makes it lightning fast. But such engines require a lot of air, which the M-1 takes in through a defective filter that tends to get clogged with sand. And they also need a lot of fuel (much more than the M-60), so the M-1 has to be followed into battle with a fuel truck Each of these miracle fighting machines costs a meager $2.7 million...

Author: By David V. Thottungal, | Title: Military Playground | 12/4/1982 | See Source »

JUST AS THESE conclusions will be too grand to filter down into concrete good, so Bok's approach to the issues that confront him as an educator is too broad. He should be commended for concerning himself with such a pressing topic as financial aid, and it is difficult to find fault with much of the logic that characterizes his annual report. But, in the long run. Bok's words will serve only to clarify that the president of Harvard likes the idea of federal aid to students--in general. Aside from a few loose suggestions for the feds...

Author: By Nancy F. Bauer, | Title: Looking Within | 5/6/1982 | See Source »

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