Word: ad
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Ireland. And across the grey border of Berlin was TIME'S Moscow Correspondent Israel Shenker, who found himself unexpectedly invited by the East German government to watch Nikita Khrushchev appear on his own side of the Berlin Wall. Shenkers trip from Moscow to East Berlin was no ad for either German or Communist efficiency-the Communist airline officials lost his typewriter; the East German propagandists were not expecting him, and Shenker could only wander about, without credentials, through groups of people being drilled on how to cheer as Khrushchev passed...
Even the titles are different. The modern manual eschews Slope's love and Van de Velde's ideal and bears down hard on guilt. WHO is TO BLAME FOR SEXUAL UNHAPPINESS IN MARRIAGE? probes the headline of a full-page ad for a book called The Sexually Happy Wife. Duty rather than pleasure keynotes a volume by Writer Maxine Davis: Sexual Responsibility in Marriage...
Barry Goldwater is the type of man one might expect to find in a Marlboro ad. And speakin' for myself, I'm a Marlboro...
...contrast, the Times Magazine racked up $13 million in advertising last year, despite its costly, strike-born blackout, and accounted for more than 10% of the newspaper's total ad revenues. When the 15-week newspaper strike ended in April, the magazine returned with a robust, 200-page issue, fattest in its history. Department-store buyers, fabric makers and dress manufacturers all over the country read it avidly for the ads that tip them off to what's hot in the fashion capital of the U.S. Largely because of this clientele, the Times's Sunday circulation outside...
Even while arguing with itself, the industry association has begun a $7,500,000 ad campaign to pitch the nutritional value of dairy products, to make milk drinking seem grown up and to convince weight watchers and cholesterol worriers that they have nothing to worry about. (Margarine makers spend some $22 million a year to convince them subtly that they do, and both sides quote the American Medical Association to make their points.) Every U.S. taxpayer has a stake in the dairy industry's success. Despite a drop in the U.'S. cow population from 20.6 million...