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- Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "You Can be Sure to Play an Important Part in the Exploration of Space," March 1962 - President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.

- March 01, 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "You Can be Sure to Play an Important Part in the Exploration of Space," March 1962
President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.
- Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "Moon Bug," November 1962 - President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.

- November 01, 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "Moon Bug," November 1962
President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.
- Scientific American, Volume 227, July 1972-December 1972 -

- July 1972-December 1972
- Collections - Artifact
Scientific American, Volume 227, July 1972-December 1972
- Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "Destination Moon!," July 1962 - President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.

- July 01, 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "Destination Moon!," July 1962
President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.
- Trade Card, "Man Made Wonders: Television," 1936 - In the last third of the nineteenth century, American consumers could choose from an unprecedented variety of goods and services. Seeking to distinguish certain products and businesses from the competition, advertisers began to print and distribute trade cards. Though the popularity of these cards diminished after 1900, some companies employed the informative, often vibrant little advertisements well into the twentieth century.

- 1936
- Collections - Artifact
Trade Card, "Man Made Wonders: Television," 1936
In the last third of the nineteenth century, American consumers could choose from an unprecedented variety of goods and services. Seeking to distinguish certain products and businesses from the competition, advertisers began to print and distribute trade cards. Though the popularity of these cards diminished after 1900, some companies employed the informative, often vibrant little advertisements well into the twentieth century.
- "Townsend's Horizontal Pipes," 1847 - Sparks and embers were a constant hazard from wood-burning locomotives. Passengers complained about singed clothing, shippers about damaged goods, and trackside property owners about scorched buildings. Spark arrestors, fitted to locomotive smokestacks, helped control the problem. But not until coal -- which produced fewer sparks -- became the dominant locomotive fuel after the Civil War was the issue effectively solved.

- April 24, 1847
- Collections - Artifact
"Townsend's Horizontal Pipes," 1847
Sparks and embers were a constant hazard from wood-burning locomotives. Passengers complained about singed clothing, shippers about damaged goods, and trackside property owners about scorched buildings. Spark arrestors, fitted to locomotive smokestacks, helped control the problem. But not until coal -- which produced fewer sparks -- became the dominant locomotive fuel after the Civil War was the issue effectively solved.
- Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "You'll Work on the Projects of 1970, Today," June 1962 - President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.

- June 01, 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "You'll Work on the Projects of 1970, Today," June 1962
President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.
- Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "This is NASA's Project Apollo," May 1962 - President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.

- May 01, 1962
- Collections - Artifact
Recruiting Advertisement for NASA, "This is NASA's Project Apollo," May 1962
President John F. Kennedy's vision to explore the "new frontier" of space ignited the public's imagination. It was also an overt Cold War strategy against the Soviet Union which launched the first man in space April 12, 1961. NASA published this ad series in 1962 to convince aerospace engineers and scientists to join them for the U.S. effort to conquer space.