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...maintaining its reputation for producing well-made cars. According to a study by World Markets Research in London, VW's factories turn out only 46 cars per employee, while Renault averages 71-73 per worker and Nissan gets 101 at its British assembly plant. Volkswagen has a been a pioneer in using so-called platforms - mainly common engines and drive trains - on a wide number of models, thus saving money on research and development. But many analysts have warned that the company may be taking the process too far, so that the cars are starting to look alike. "With...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Slipping into Overdrive | 2/18/2002 | See Source »

Hinckley, Mormons believe, is in direct contact with God and so presumably is party to the whole plot. Thus the faithful paid close attention last July when the head of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints stood up to make his annual speech for Pioneer Day. But instead of a soothing homage to Mormon virtues and achievements in the 154 years since the pioneers settled Utah, Hinckley, 91, gave the world's 11 million Mormons a lecture on being good neighbors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Drive For A New Utah | 2/11/2002 | See Source »

...state's best-known writers. Utah is hardly Brigham Young's Promised Land of milk and honey. It is mostly infertile desert, rock and a lake that is too salty to support even fish. Out of this apocalyptic landscape of blood-red rock and sulphur-colored plains, the pioneers hacked a difficult livelihood, struggling with biblical droughts, a plague of grasshoppers and overpowering summer heat. In other Western states such hardships bred a cantankerous individualism. In Utah the LDS church fostered a tightly knit communitarian approach. This lingers today in the "clannishness" that Hinckley criticized in his Pioneer Day speech...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Drive For A New Utah | 2/11/2002 | See Source »

...ceiling's chipped I beams. The plaster walls of the main exhibition space are randomly gashed and pockmarked. The café's price list is scrawled onto sheets of brown paper and stuck to untreated concrete pillars with gaffer tape. Using public money and private contributions from sponsors like Pioneer and Bloomberg, Bourriaud and Sans recreated the atmosphere of a seedy Berlin squat in the heart of Paris' opulent 16th arrondissement. But what does all this nouveau squalor have to do with contemporary art? The curators don't explain. Nor do they say why they didn't simply move into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: But Is It Art? | 2/4/2002 | See Source »

...state's best-known writers. Utah is hardly Brigham Young's Promised Land of milk and honey. It is mostly infertile desert, rock and a lake that is too salty to support even fish. Out of this apocalyptic landscape of blood-red rock and sulphur-colored plains, the pioneers hacked a difficult livelihood, struggling with biblical droughts, a plague of grasshoppers and overpowering summer heat. In other Western states such hardships bred a cantankerous individualism. In Utah the LDS church fostered a tightly knit communitarian approach. This lingers today in the "clannishness" that Hinckley criticized in his Pioneer Day speech...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Utah | 2/3/2002 | See Source »

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