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Auto Headlines |
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AutoWeek - Latest News Feed
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Breaking news from the industry's leading weekly consumer magazine
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HUZZAH! Here’s something to cheer about: Nissan rolls out the 370Z:
His eyes locked on us, their gaze cutting across two lanes of rush-hour traffic crawling up Woodward Avenue, his hand hovering, frozen, over the handle of a parked Daytona-blue 350Z.
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L.A. auto show: The deep, dark secrets of Kentia Hall:
Deep beneath the Los Angeles Convention Center, far underground below the corporate-carpeted South Hall of the L.A.
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Lamborghini reveals open-top Gallardo at L.A. auto show:
The gaudy Gallardo lineup is growing--and getting an open-air experience that’s uniquely Lamborghini.
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2009 Boxster S first drive--PDK is pretty darn kwik:
We have driven the 2009 Boxster S around a very good race track and can assure you it's everything you'd want a new Boxster S to be.
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Honda unveils new fuel cell concept:
Honda has rolled out a new fuel cell-powered “design study” that shows what a fuel cell sports car could look like in the future.
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2010 Mazda3 first drive--An evolution, not a revolution:
Mazda's best-selling vehicle worldwide, the Mazda3, gets a major makeover for 2010--a new engine and transmissions, reshaped sheetmetal and a revised interior, and a few surprises.
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Nissan 370Z unveiled at L.A. auto show: Z-licious:
The power, the looks--the lust. Few icons can be condensed into a single letter. But for Nissan, sports cars start with the last letter of the alphabet: Z.
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Hyundai goes green with ‘Blue Drive’:
In keeping with the all-things-green theme that seems pervade the modern car industry, Hyundai announced more details of its alternative-fuel strategy at the Los Angeles auto show.
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Carlos Ghosn electrifies L.A. auto show:
As every keynote speaker at the Los Angeles auto show has done before him, Carlos Ghosn talked environment when he addressed the Motor Press Guild on the first of the auto show's two press days.
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Bob Gritzinger--They shoot horses (or car companies), don’t they?:
Los Angeles, the home of car culture past, present and the increasingly tenuous future, looks a little green around the gills this year.
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