Economic Growth - Nixon, Richard Milhouse, [Republican], 1960
Item — BurtonHall Cold Storage: 1, PCC - Film Reel - 16mm: 248
Identifier: P-8-128
Scope and Contents Nixon praises the economic growth in America. He points out that American's earnings, savings, investments and high rate of employment help stimulate economic growth that must be maintained to keep the peace. Agency or Creating Entity: Other
Dates
- 1960
Conditions Governing Use
While the University owns the materials in its collection, it does not own copyright to any of the materials. It is the responsibility of the user to acquire any necessary copyright authorizations for use of the materials such as may be required.
Extent
From the Series: 14,137 Items (14,137 items (This series includes United States Office of President Campaign Ads from 1912-2016): Each item within this collection falls under the following categories: 16mm film reels, VHS videotape, 3/4" U-Matic videotape, 1" and 2" tap, Beta SP, Betamax, Mini DV, DVD, and born-digital video formats.)
Biographical / Historical
The Political Communication Collection, located in the Carl Albert Center Congressional Research and Studies Center Archives, contains political television and radio commercials from the beginning of the 20th century through the present day.
Transcript - Full
Mr. Nixon, what is the truth? Is America lagging behind in economic growth? Certainly not. The fact is that Americans are earning more, investing more, saving more, living better than ever before. More Americans than ever before are bringing home the weekly paycheck. Sixty-eight million people are employed today. Now this is growth, the kind that ensures our strength at home, and it exceeds the economic growth in Russia today. Ours is a growth based on paying our bills, too, not a system of reckless borrowing that will burden our children tomorrow. This is the kind of economic growth we must continue to have in order to continue to help us keep the peace. Vote for Nixon and Lodge November 8. They understand what peace demands. For more information, visit www.fema.gov
- TypeCollection
Repository Details
Part of the Carl Albert Center Congressional and Political Collections Repository