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    1. Hartman Center Travel Grant Previous Recipients | Duke University Libraries

      Annessa Babic ,   American Studies, SUNY Old Westbury "Safety for Our Souls: Food Activism and the Environmental and Women's Movements, (...)

    2. Bringing Tort Law to Life

      The new museum is the brainchild of consumer advocate (and Winsted native) Ralph Nader, whose 1965 book Unsafe at Any Speed revolutionized the (...)

    3. The Goodson Blogson

      The new museum is the brainchild of consumer advocate (and Winsted native) Ralph Nader, whose 1965 book Unsafe at Any Speed revolutionized the (...)

    4. The Goodson Blogson

      The new museum is the brainchild of consumer advocate (and Winsted native) Ralph Nader, whose 1965 book Unsafe at Any Speed revolutionized the (...)

    5. 1900 - 1909 - Emergence of Advertising in America Research Guide - LibGuides at Duke University

      It is the world's largest industrial corporation. 1901 - The Quaker Oats Company is incorporated. 1901 - Oldsmobile creates the first assembly (...)

    6. 1880s - 1890s - Emergence of Advertising in America Research Guide - LibGuides at Duke University

      The company concentrates primarily in the Middle Atlantic states. 1895 - Fred Pabst, president of Pabst Brewing Company, predicts in an essay (...)

    7. 2011 March

      Crash course : the American automobile industry’s road from glory to disaster , by Paul Ingrassia.

    8. Consumer Reports Archives Come to Duke - Duke University Libraries Magazine

      Over the course of its history, the organization has played an influential role in championing pro-consumer protections and rights in the (...)

    9. Timeline - Medicine and Madison Avenue Research Guide - LibGuides at Duke University

      Ralph Nader publishes Unsafe at Any Speed, charging that American automobile industry is neglecting consumer safety (...)

    10. Rental Cars and Buses - Ad*Access Research Guide - LibGuides at Duke University

      An example of early bus design is found in the "Safety Coach" - seven rows seating four people each.

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