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- "Your Car and Clean Air," 1970 - By 1970, the date of this Ford Motor Company booklet, automobile companies were reassuring their customers that they were engaging in intensive research programs to eliminate "offending" emissions, by then widely recognized as a significant source of air pollution.

- 1970
- Collections - Artifact
"Your Car and Clean Air," 1970
By 1970, the date of this Ford Motor Company booklet, automobile companies were reassuring their customers that they were engaging in intensive research programs to eliminate "offending" emissions, by then widely recognized as a significant source of air pollution.
- Press Kit for the Forty-Third National Automobile Show, Detroit, 1960 - Detroit's annual auto show has taken place nearly every year since 1907. It was hosted by various venues until it found a home in 1960 at the newly opened Cobo Hall (now Huntington Place). Detroit's show initially focused on domestic manufacturers, but it broadened its scope to include international automakers. It was renamed the North American International Auto Show in 1989.

- 15 October 1960-23 October 1960
- Collections - Artifact
Press Kit for the Forty-Third National Automobile Show, Detroit, 1960
Detroit's annual auto show has taken place nearly every year since 1907. It was hosted by various venues until it found a home in 1960 at the newly opened Cobo Hall (now Huntington Place). Detroit's show initially focused on domestic manufacturers, but it broadened its scope to include international automakers. It was renamed the North American International Auto Show in 1989.
- National Automobile Show Official Program, 1956 - Auto shows in America date all the way back to 1900. Printed programs for these shows reflected the hopes and dreams of manufacturers, dealers and prospective buyers. Advertisements for new products filled many pages of the programs, including those featuring the "Forward Look," an innovative new look created by Chrysler director of styling Virgil Exner.

- 1956
- Collections - Artifact
National Automobile Show Official Program, 1956
Auto shows in America date all the way back to 1900. Printed programs for these shows reflected the hopes and dreams of manufacturers, dealers and prospective buyers. Advertisements for new products filled many pages of the programs, including those featuring the "Forward Look," an innovative new look created by Chrysler director of styling Virgil Exner.
- National Automobile Show Program, "Motordom on Parade," New York, New York, November 1935 - Auto shows allowed automakers to share their latest models with the press and the public, and they gave visitors a chance to review and research. They were part trade show and part show business -- and they're nearly as old as the automobile itself. The 1900 New York Auto Show is considered the first major all-automobile show in the United States.

- 02 November 1935-09 November 1935
- Collections - Artifact
National Automobile Show Program, "Motordom on Parade," New York, New York, November 1935
Auto shows allowed automakers to share their latest models with the press and the public, and they gave visitors a chance to review and research. They were part trade show and part show business -- and they're nearly as old as the automobile itself. The 1900 New York Auto Show is considered the first major all-automobile show in the United States.
- Forty-Third National Automobile Show Program, Cobo Hall, Detroit, 1960 - Detroit's annual auto show has taken place nearly every year since 1907. It was hosted by various venues until it found a home in 1960 at the newly opened Cobo Hall (now Huntington Place). Detroit's show initially focused on domestic manufacturers, but it broadened its scope to include international automakers. It was renamed the North American International Auto Show in 1989.

- 15 October 1960-23 October 1960
- Collections - Artifact
Forty-Third National Automobile Show Program, Cobo Hall, Detroit, 1960
Detroit's annual auto show has taken place nearly every year since 1907. It was hosted by various venues until it found a home in 1960 at the newly opened Cobo Hall (now Huntington Place). Detroit's show initially focused on domestic manufacturers, but it broadened its scope to include international automakers. It was renamed the North American International Auto Show in 1989.