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  • advertisement for Ford automobile of 40 years ago. When you fellows wanted some food, what did you do --did you stop and make it or buy it? R: We cooked along the road, cooked up stuff, and then ate it. G: What did you eat? R: I don't remember. That’s been
  • : No. Not in business matters. No. Mc: Your contact with business with Johnson, then, was through KTBC. IV1: KTBC. As an advertiser has been the business contact. live heard, too, that she's a real capable, intelligent, smart woman. lid also heard that she
  • . typists. I did not pay radio advertising. I paid the These girls were my responsibility, to see that they came to work and that they got paid LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • Escapee Program in Nuremberg in the early fifties. I also had considerable experience in advertising and public relations. In early 1960 I decided to leave that world of advertising and public relations and return to Columbia University in New York City
  • [research and development], accepted the realities of life regarding the unions. Then [we] organized national advertisers to do public service, selling zip code. Here you are, with a volume of mail equal the volume of the entire rest of the world, growing
  • , there is a note that Sterling Lord called and said, "I have a contract with Coward-McCann," a small house as he described it--and it was. They were also publishing a book about Bobby Kennedy that was in the works and was being advertised. I was expected to finish
  • for the paper--I was so inexperienced that I didn't know that that's what they were--to advertise the paper and advertise the theatre, that they went together, and they had kid matinees, moving pictures, Mary Pickford and the Keystone Cops and everything like
  • . It was almost It was fantastic. F: They just advertised him, didn't they? . C: Oh, they advertised him so well, everybody wanted to know what this was all about. And as they went into it, this causing them all to study it very sincerely, and that was just
  • begin to turn themselves around, I think it's really significant--like this past week in Washington we have just had the opening of--one of our oldest department stores has built a brand-new building downtown, and they advertised the biggest freestanding
  • . FI 3 BONDS-STOCKS-INVESTMENTS open Boxes 16-21 Material on activities of the Securities Exchange Commission, Treasury Department, and U. S. Industrial Payroll Savings Committee; advertising and promotional activities for U. S. Savings Bonds drives
  • proposed, are the lesser observances, in many cases one time or intermittent in occurrence. As an example, HO/A has references to Advertising Recognition Month (1967), Alcoholism Information Month/Week (1964-1969), various American Days/Weeks in foreign
  • - 1948] SCANNED Stuart, Carl K. [1924; 1927] Famous players [1925 - 1930] Jefferson Standard Life Insurance [1925] South Shares, Inc. [1925; 1928 - 1938] [Texas House Bill 253 - Advertising Rates] [1925] [Oil lease and legal documents - Matador Ranch
  • on Mail Order Sales On copies sold direct to the consumer through the medium of mail order coupon advertising or direct bl mail circularization the royalty shall be 5% of the amount of the Publishers charges for copies of said work, less returns
  • not realise that the ' Saturday Evening Post averages $SO,OOO worth of advertising trom th e Du ?onts and att111ated companies every issue and that one branch ot the Du Pont family 11 heavily supporting Smathers. - STRAIGHl' GOP-DEMO FIGHr - Real tact
  • , Drake University; currently writing series of Shake­ spearean studies WILLIAM D. MAGNES, President of an advertising company bearing his name, Washington, D.C. JOHN MEWHA, United States Army, Retired; currently wri,ting a book .involving Oregon
  • exhibit, "Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect Moment," which contained several homoerotic photographs among its Li() pieces. This proved lo be the "perfect moment" for the opponents of the NEA to launch a direct-mail and advertising onslaught. The purpose
  • tests, or meet the levels needed to be in the army, or what have you, we wouldn't have to draft that many people. And thirdly, the use of the military bases to say that anybody that advertises housing on a military base has to, it's got
  • with employment discrimination. We looked, I believe, at requiring--military installations maybe even had an order issued saying that you couldn't advertise your rooming house or your rooms on the post, on the military installation, unless you agreed to say anyone
  • --and I notice here in one of them, she called the South "a depressed area;" she overstated what we were doing in terms of coverage of workers; she gave too much credit to the minimum wage. I mean, it was an advertising statement, not a political statement
  • , 8/17/67 Remarks by the President: Advertising Council, 5/11/67 Remarks by the President: Statement by the President before 3rd Reserve and Recovery Group Remarks by the President: Meeting with ANPA - Talking Points, 10/6/67 Remarks by the President
  • and the ad-signers. A. M. Secrest 0£ CRS and Randolp~ Blackwell 0£ SCLC will be on hand to observe and participate as members 0£ the meet~ng desire. Ann ou nced purpose 0£ the meeting: To take steps to implement the statements 0£ the advertisement
  • -third. That meeting emphasized advertising and media with Joe Napolitan leading the discussion. That brought us to campaign materials and Geri Joseph gave a detailed report on women's activities. Bob McCandless reported on the regional meetings which
  • City speech on Vietnam; Nixon's continued refusal to debate Humphrey; buying television time for Humphrey; poll results; Humphrey dealing with hecklers; a lack of funding for campaign materials; television advertisements for Edmund Muskie; Humphrey's
  • in it later, left the government actually, went to New York, lived there. G: When was this? In 1952? J: In 1952, before we went on the air. advertising in New York. world. Went off the payroll and sold Thought I was the hottest salesman
  • an advertisement in which he had lifted from the Congressional Record, something that was pretty near an indication that Johnson had endorsed Malone. Well, he thought very kindly toward Malone as I did. Malone was one Republican that was kind of my assignment when
  • Labeling and Advertising Act. I wondered if you remembered anything about that. It interested me because--I didn't find a great amount of material on it, but what seemed to be clear from 1965 through--I think it's a separate-what seemed to be interesting
  • Health care reform; Mary Lasker; White House Health Conference, 1965; Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act; Family Assistance Program.
  • is an Appalachian trait. G:Hould you say that it was a build-cities program? F: Yes, although I don't think it was advertised that way, and I WOUldn't advertise it that way today, because there's a great deal of parochialism among these county governments and among
  • Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] on Doyle Dane Bernbach to do the advertising. charge of that. More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bill Bernbach was in We met occasionally with them, though Bill had a larger
  • come from the advertising world. I was asked to address the American Advertising Association in Boston, and I asked the President if I could be off to make the speech. He said fine; he did not ask to look at my speech, I didn't show it to him
  • wife--up in Westport, Connecticut they live now; he's with Mobil Oil--and she has tried to make as much a collection as she could, and she's advertised in the papers around where secondhand books are sold. of them have disappeared. today. But so
  • : Would you elaborate on this? P: I think the time was when we were having the trouble on the truth in lending issue. Was this the AFA thing? There were three big crises that I had. One was with the advertisers, and I still feel that that goes back
  • Campaign contributions; Bobby Baker; labor leaders; Earle Clements; LBJ's campaign trail; Commission on the Status of Women; Eleanor Roosevelt; three consumer crises: advertisers, boycotts and truth in lending bill; Republican tricks; problems
  • all the paying ones. G: What was Prof Greene's political philosophy? W: Horace Richards put in a little radio station that was an outlaw station--it had no license--in the Ford Motor Company. day and night if he could get any advertisers. with his
  • of Texas history considerably,couldn't, th-::y? W: Yes. Some of the candidates were either serving partly personal motivations or frivolous. self. Gonzalez got in there to advertise him- He had no chance of winning, and he took the Mexicans away from
  • of the domestic business and spent that year in Nigeria. He [Dolan] has established quite a reputation in England. He's an American citizen who, after the war, remained in England and started up a public relations-advertising business. And he had an account