Word: steels
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Steel Wheels is the name of the record; Nothing Ventured would have suited too. It boasts five reprobates cranking themselves up for yet another crack at the distance, showing their years -- flaunting the things, in point of plain fact -- while they swan around some of the nation's largest concert stages, soaking up the applause and the revenues, blowing off their greatest hits, taking the new material out for an audience airing...
...contrast to most American dramatists, who have excelled at depicting the struggles of home and hearth but not the larger world, Hwang thinks more shrewdly about mankind than about individual men and women. He has the steel- trap analytic grasp of the champion scholastic debater he once was, the lawyer he thought of becoming. The main weakness of his writing is that its purpose often seems more political than literary, more attuned to social issues than to the private struggles of the human heart. The final scene of M. Butterfly, when the agony of one soul finally takes precedence over...
...much protection do U.S. steel mills need from foreign competition? In answering that question last week, President Bush added to his reputation as the Great Compromiser. Instead of extending the soon-to-expire voluntary trade quotas another five years, as Big Steel wanted, or abolishing the restraints altogether, as the industry's customers desired, Bush split the difference. For the next 2 1/2 years, the U.S. will hold foreign imports to 18.4% of the domestic steel market. After 1992 the barrier will be dropped. In the meantime, Bush directed U.S. Trade Representative Carla Hills to try to negotiate...
...Steel argued for protection because it believed foreign plants were unfairly benefiting from subsidies. But the industry's customers complained that the restraints produce shortages and higher prices...
...English movies of the '80s had a team like Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, David Lodge's funny, adroit Nice Work would make an ideal vehicle for them. The novel's protagonist, Vic Wilcox, is a gruff but keen-witted exec struggling to turn around a laggard steel-parts factory in Rummidge -- "an imaginary city," the author informs us, "which occupies, for the purposes of fiction, the space where Birmingham is to be found on maps of the so-called real world." Vic's antagonist (and here the term is literal) is Robyn Penrose, an attractive, rigorously feminist lecturer...