Word: makeing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1990
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...1960s and 1970s effectively reworked Henry Ford's theories, replacing his intensely hierarchical assembly-line system with a more flexible team-based arrangement. Japan's efforts have been fruitful. In the past decade the Japanese have built 11 plants in the U.S. and Canada with the capacity to make 2.6 million cars a year...
...small-town sentiment. That may be a + canny marketing move. "The Saturn is the beginning of something we have been warning our Japanese friends about," wrote Jean Lindamood, executive editor of Automobile magazine. "Americans are harboring strong anti-Japanese sentiment just below the surface, and when Detroit can make a car that is the equivalent of a Japanese car, Americans will buy it. I believe it will sell like crazy. I also believe that if Saturn has quality problems, Saturn is finished...
...Saturn's biggest challenges will be to turn a profit, even in the long run. "Nobody makes money on small cars," says Maryann Keller, an analyst for the investment firm Furman Selz Mager Dietz & Birney. "Saturn's no different from anybody else. The Japanese certainly don't make money on small cars." In most cases, those models serve as loss leaders for the larger, more option-loaded vehicles and to boost the average fuel-efficiency of an automaker's total fleet in order to meet U.S. government standards. But GM president Lloyd Reuss contends that Saturn will make a profit...
JOHN JARVIS: PURE CONTOURS (MCA). Ten cuts to make the local fern bar tolerable. This Nashville keyboardist is so uncannily adept and writes such stay-put melodic riffs, he's likely to give New Age music a good name. He can certainly make it swing and even -- stand back -- rock a little...
...educating people "to go home, not necessarily where they came from, but to some place where they can dig in and support meaningful things, not just upward mobility." Jackson got no firm answer, nor did he expect one. He carries the question with him wherever he travels to make people think again about what they may have lost and what they really treasure. He seeks a new generation that can find and grasp the "great and priceless privilege" that Dwight Eisenhower, perhaps the most beloved and respected American of this century, found in Abilene...