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...Exactly 581 posters bearing inscriptions were returned to us, and duly examined by expert judges. Winning exhibits are now on display in New York's Grand Central Station. Naturally, many have an advertising slant: "The White Knight cheats at polo," "Pall Mall can't spall," "Avis is Hertz's Newsweek" "Xerox never comes up with anything original," and "I dreamed I could wear a Maidenform bra-Twiggy."." There is also the one about the two effeminate Braniff pilots, one of whom says to the other: "Look, Tony, you promised I could take the pink one up today...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: may 19, 1967 | 5/19/1967 | See Source »

...Reading Dynamics operation, which has justly been called the greatest advertising campaign since the comeback of Hertz, was not always based on the pure money ethic. In fact, Evelyn Wood is a deeply religious person and she considered her first attempts at commercialization in 1960 more in terms of a religious crusade: "Why have I dared to believe that reading down the page, at speeds held by many experts to be impossible, can be done? Perhaps it is because my deep religious convictions teach me that 'a man is saved no faster than he gains knowledge;' that...

Author: By Jeffrey C. Alexander, | Title: Evelyn Wood: Most Just Waste The Money | 5/3/1967 | See Source »

Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. Chairman Gilbert W. Fitzhugh last week felt a little like a Hertz executive who had been told that Avis had finally overtaken him. The mighty Met, long the second biggest U.S. company after A.T. & T. in terms of assets, and No. 1 in the insurance field for nearly half a century, lost honors to rival Prudential Insurance Co. of America. By the margin of $83,020,000, the Pru outdid its competitor, ended the year with assets of $23,594,698,000 v. $23,511,678,000 for the Met. Part of the gain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Insurance: Change in Standings | 3/10/1967 | See Source »

Eyeball to Eyeball. Ally's returning ads partly spoof those for Avis by Doyle Dane, partly press Hertz prowess. One television commercial, for instance, shows a "We try harder" balloon deflating slowly while a voice ticks off Hertz's advantages in available cars, widespread locations and electronic reservation service. Another agrees that Avis' "only No. 2" claim is "hard to argue with." Ally, a teaching fellow in English at the University of Michigan before he turned to ad writing, proudly produced another that asks: "No. 2 says he tries harder. Than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Advertising: When the Big Guy Hits Back | 12/23/1966 | See Source »

...With the Hertz campaign only seven weeks old, cash-register results so far are inconclusive, but Ally is pleased that mail is running 9-1 in favor of the ads. Like Doyle Dane, he admits that what he calls "an eyeball-to-eyeball, nose-to-nose" confrontation will be good publicity for the entire $500-million-a-year car-rental industry. It should also be rewarding for the agencies. Avis' annual ad budget has risen from $1,200,000 to $4,500,000 since the No. 2 campaign began, and Hertz's outlay is certain to increase...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Advertising: When the Big Guy Hits Back | 12/23/1966 | See Source »

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