Word: austine
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...biggest selling job on Lyndon Johnson, who displayed his ambivalence about the SST in his handling of the announcement of the design winners. Washington had been awash with rumors that the announcement was imminent and that Boeing had won, but Acting Press Secretary Robert Fleming, with the President in Austin, declared that he was "confident" that no announcement was about to be made...
...blonde is Pamela Austin, a 25year-old Omaha-born actress and model who lives in Hollywood with her husband and two-year-old son. All her harebrained derring-do is done in the name of souping up sales of Dodge automobiles. Though it is impossible to say precisely how much auto sales are affected by promotion as opposed to styling, the fact remains that Dodge has done wonderfully well since it first went riding with Calamity Pam. In 1966, while most auto sales slumped, Dodge's went...
...Austin, her job with Dodge has never taken her to Detroit, she knows few of the Chrysler Corp.'s top brass, and until she was spotted for the Dodge Rebellion by Don Schwab, Hollywood producer for Manhattan-based advertising agency Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborn, she was virtually unknown. Pam was under contract to Warner Bros, and MGM, made a few pilot films for TV, and did a stint as a dancer in Tony Martin's nightclub act, but her career was going nowhere. The Dodge Rebellion revolutionized all that. Last year she earned $34,000 plus residuals...
From his temporary White House in Austin, the President declared that he has never authorized bombing anything "except military targets." Dwight Eisenhower backed him up. "I know U.S. operations are aimed exclusively at military targets," said Ike, "but unfortunately, there are some civilians around those targets." Added he: "Is there any place in the world where there are not civilians...
...Parke, Davis & Co., whose annual drug sales have more than doubled (to $240 million) over the past 15 years, hardly needs any drastic changes, but it now seems certain to get a transfusion of sorts. Last week the company named a Canadian-born physician, Dr. Austin Smith, 54, as chairman and chief executive officer, succeeding Supersalesman Harry J. Loynd, 68. No black-bag-carrying doctor, Smith received his postgraduate degree in medicine in 1940, went straight to the staff of the American Medical Association. In 1959 he became president of the American Pharmaceutical Association, in which capacity he vigorously defended...