Word: sloganized
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...wimp." The local press latched on to the remark as indicative of Stevenson's aloofly intellectual bearing, and a series of "wimp jokes" ensued. ("What does a wimp's read on vacation? Adlai Stevenson's economic plan." What's a wimp's favorite drink? Perrier Light.") Thompson--whose populistic slogan is "Tough times demand a tough leader"--capitalized on "the wimp issue" and has coasted from a narrow deficit to a thumping 19-point lead in the most recent poll, released Sunday. When the results roll in tonight from the Land of Lincoln. Thompson, 45, will almost certainly cruise...
...QUIET" CALIFORNIANS. Democrat Tom Bradley, 64, three-term mayor of Los Angeles and former Los Angeles police officer, uses an all-purpose campaign slogan that touts his two decades of municipal experience: "He doesn't make a lot of noise. He just gets a lot done." His conservative Republican rival, George Deukmejian, 54, could make the same claim, with 16 quiet years served in the state legislature prior to his present post as state attorney general. However, the noise level of the race has risen dramatically as the candidates have spent more and more time and money responding...
...dead-heat classic of American political theater. Weicker was ambushed recently at a campaign stop by Flip-Flop the Clown, a costumed Moffett staffer seeking to symbolize the incumbent's election-year renunciations of his 1981 votes for the President's budget and tax cuts. Weicker, whose slogan has been "Nobody's Man but Yours," has countered by pushing his image as an unbossed maverick, a legitimate characterization. The polls have offered contradictory predictions. And there is also an X factor confusing everyone's calculations: the presence of Conservative Party Candidate Lucien DiFazio, who is positioned...
...fists tightly clenched for the duration of their journey through the Square. Some appear willing to accept on approach, but then, to the dismay of the leafleter, just before of actual handover, reach up and straighten their prop up their eyeglasses. We on Mass, Ave had something of a slogan for these people: "no hands, no business...
...Time spent in the microcosm of a Turkish jail has educated him to the human idiosyncrasies of men under pressure. Each of Yol's characters moves to his own music, discovers his own reasons for being, refuses to be translated into a revolutionary slogan or a reactionary curse. Güney has composed, by remote control, an eloquent portrait of a society in contradiction with itself-a place where the peasants conspire with the government in baroque acts of repression, and where a film like Yol can be made but never shown. -By Richard Corliss