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Word: sloganeer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...lose," Mrs. Sullivan declares optimistically. "How can they talk about bicycles and medicine cabinets and pins being dangerous, and not bullets?" She has some strong support. Free of charge, the J. Walter Thompson advertising agency is preparing a public relations blitz. Television spots, bumper stickers and posters feature the slogan YOU NEED A BULLET

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Ban the Bullet | 3/3/1975 | See Source »

...your report entitled "The Hartford Heresies" [Feb. 10] tells the whole story, then current theology has apparently fallen back to its last line of defense, whose slogan might be: "For God's sake, at least be orthodox...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forum, Feb. 24, 1975 | 2/24/1975 | See Source »

...part because of this sympathy voters have confidence in Muskie. After Richard Nixon, people want a President they can trust and the long lanks. Lincolnesque Muskie ("Trust Muskie" was his slogan in '72) does his best to remind voters of "Honest Abe." Surely, Democrats predict, if the public has a choice in 1976 between a new Lincoln and a used Ford, voters will select the newer model; clearly. Democrats reason, a car that hugs the middle of the road will be more popular than the used Ford brought to us by the man whom no one would trust to sell...

Author: By Mark A. Feldstein, | Title: Muskie for President? | 2/21/1975 | See Source »

...later; he proved so able that even after his marriage broke up, his ex-father-in-law made him vice chairman and chief executive officer. Scott wants to improve A. & P.'s "slipping image" among shoppers, partly by building many new stores. He will probably ditch the WEO slogan, which he does not like, but still keep markups low. Yet he also hopes to lift A. &P.'s profit margin, which now hovers at less than half its traditional level of 1? on every dollar. Scott reckons that earnings should start to improve within a year. Just...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Bye,Bye,WEO | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

...others all black, at the Betty Parsons Gallery in Manhattan. This ironic burst of premature minimalism was only the first in a series of gestures that, throughout the '50s, persistently harassed and delighted art's public in New York. They were all conducted under Rauschenberg's slogan, derived from futurism and Dada, about "working in the gap between art and life." Out of street rubbish, dead birds and old newspapers and gaudy lathers of pigment, he put together the "combine paintings" that, so much later, remain his best-known works. How outrageous, how iniquitous that tire-girdled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Enfant Terrible at 50 | 1/27/1975 | See Source »

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