Word: redesigns
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...businessmen of Fort Worth-like those in many another U.S. city-watched in dismay as traffic congestion clogged downtown streets and customers fled to the suburbs. At their behest the city hired Architect-Planner Victor Gruen to redesign the downtown area, but Gruen's elaborate plan proved to cost more than the city fathers were prepared to pay. Then a downtown mall was tried, but planners failed to provide enough convenient parking space; in the Texas long hot summer, the few potted trees they installed did little to shade the wide concrete expanse, and business declined. But Marvin...
...which began shrinking last year, have given way almost completely to uncluttered, lightly chromed lines that Detroit likes to call "clean." Chrysler has not hesitated to borrow styling from its rivals and end up looking quite a bit like them. While lead times did not permit Townsend to completely redesign the PLYMOUTH and DODGE, they do look different from the '625, and the main change is a flat roof on each that closely resembles the top deck of Ford's racy Thunderbird. The compact VALIANT is chunkier than in '62 (and looks more like Rambler...
...scientific, and technological fields, Fuller remarked that "science paces technology, technology paces industry, industry paces economics, and economics paces politics. Quite clearly, then, political leaders are at the tall end of affairs. And for man to ask change of political leaders is like asking the cow's tall to redesign...
...Vanderbilt caused her husband to complain: "I'm only a Vanderbilt, not a Rockefeller!" By 1943 the fun had gone out of store design, and Lapidus branched into architecture on his own. For several years he worked mainly as a hotel doctor, adding his bright touches to the redesign of resort hotels. In 1954 he got his first major Miami Beach commission, designed the $15 million Fontainebleau...
...Douglas' problems is its new DC-8 jetliner. Though Douglas has orders for 156 DC-8s, development expenses were so much more than anticipated that the firm is not yet near breaking even. Douglas also had to redesign parts of the DC-8 after the plane failed to meet its initial guarantees (Douglas' explanation: the DC-8 will go as fast as claimed-550 m.p.h.-but has to burn too much fuel to do so). Losses on the DC-8 contributed heavily to a net loss of nearly $34 million reported by the company for the year ending...