58,379 research outputs found
Cassie Martin, Clara Bates Wingfield, and Tommy Zachery, ca. 1940s
(L-r) Cassie Martin, Clara Bates Wingfield, and Tommy Zachery, ca. 1940sCassie Martin, Clara Bates Wingfield, and Tommy Zachery, ca. 1940
Sanford Bates Correspondence to R. L. Wilton
A letter addressed to R. L. Wilton of the MacMillan Company in thanks for transferring the copyright of "Prisons and Beyond"
[Sample Rolaids Advertisement for the U.S. Tobacco Journal, 1976]
Sample of what a Rolaids advertisement would have looked like in the 1976 U.S. Tobacco Journal. It is part of the "How Do You Spell Relief?" advertisements, created by the Ted Bates Agency for the American Chicle Company. The famed slogan was created by Jack Kendrick, a copywriter for the Ted Bates Agency throughout the late 1960s and 1970s. The full slogan is as follows; "How Do You Spell Relief? R-O-L-A-I-D-S." Rolaids is an American brand of calcium and magnesium-based antacid produced by Procter & Gamble. Invented in the 1920s, the antacid is best known and remembered for the slogan created by Kendrick in the 1970s
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[Sample Rolaids Advertisement for the U.S. Tobacco Journal, 1976]
Sample of what a Rolaids advertisement would have looked like in the 1976 U.S. Tobacco Journal. It is part of the "How Do You Spell Relief?" advertisements, created by the Ted Bates Agency for the American Chicle Company. The famed slogan was created by Jack Kendrick, a copywriter for the Ted Bates Agency throughout the late 1960s and 1970s. The full slogan is as follows; "How Do You Spell Relief? R-O-L-A-I-D-S." Rolaids is an American brand of calcium and magnesium-based antacid produced by Procter & Gamble. Invented in the 1920s, the antacid is best known and remembered for the slogan created by Kendrick in the 1970s
Sanford Bates Correspondence from the MacMillan Company
Several pieces of correspondence and copyright certifications regarding "Prisons and Beyond". The correspondence is addressed to Sanford Bates from H. S. Latham and R. L. De Wilton of the MacMillan Company
Sanford Bates Correspondence from the MacMillan Company Letter 2
A letter from R. L. De Wilton addressed to Sanford Bates
F. R. Bates '73, approximately 1870-1873
Carte-de-visite portrait of Frank Richard Bates (Norwich University Class of 1873), possibly as a cadet, from a disassembled Alpha Sigma Pi photograph album
William Bates receives the Arthur L. Swim award
University of Idaho student William Bates receives the Arthur L. Swim Award from President Donald R. Theophilus
John Bates Clark: The first American marginalist as a social economist
We analyze the content of four articles by John Bates Clark published between 1878 and 1887, during his Christian Socialist period in order to show that next to the marginalist Clark and beyond the neoclassical principles outlined in The Distribution of Wealth, the whole Clark's work is a strongly coherent body, deeply rooted in positions less extreme than the ones held by more reformer-minded economists like Richard T. Ely or John R. Commons containing an array of different contributions to political economy displaying a certain originality and coherence, and enrolling in a thematic environment that today would be broadly defined as social economy. In particular, the main ideas emerging from this selection of papers are his organismic idea of society, the role of moral forces in shaping economic activity, and his promotion of profit sharing and cooperation as better regimes for production and distribution with respect to competition
Schooling and education.
Schooling and education by Giles R. Wright with Howard L. Green and Lee R. Parks. Number 4 in the New Jersey Ethnic Life Series. Published by New Jersey Historical Commission
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