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Part 2. Other PR activities are carried out by lobbyists, consumer affairs bureaus, community relations experts, media consultants, and more. In addition to the many organizations that specialize in consumerism, corporations also usually have departments of consumer affairs to handle complaints and deal with other matters such as product defects. (See also Consumerism; Lobbying.) History. The use of publicity and press agents in the 19th century might never have merged into public relations had it not been for American corporations. Far from being interested in gaining the public's goodwill, most business leaders expressed either indifference or contempt for the public. Heads of corporations believed it was their right to maintain secrecy about their lives and business operations. These attitudes were dangerous during an era when the public was becoming hostile to big business. During the first years of the 20th century, investigative reporters— called muckrakers by President Theodore Roosevelt—began to write devastating exposés of corruption in business and government. Many of these works were carefully documented and first appeared in magazines in 1902–4. The best-known exposés, later published in book form, were Ida M. Tarbell's ‘History of the Standard Oil Company', Thomas W. Lawson's ‘Frenzied Finance', and Lincoln Steffens' ‘The Shame of the Cities'. Upton Sinclair's attack on the meat-packing industry, ‘The Jungle', came out in 1906 and was soon followed by the enactment of a Federal Food and Drugs Act. In 1906 David Graham Phillips issued his ‘Treason of the Senate', which documented how the United States Senate and business leaders worked together against the interests of the public. These and other revelations, combined with the denunciations from Roosevelt, put both business and government on the defensive. It was in this social climate that corporations decided to promote themselves in a positive way. Among the first enterprises that soughtfavorable publicity were the railroads. Fearful of impending regulation, they hired The Publicity Bureau, a Boston organization founded in 1900. During the next few years several more organizations were founded simply to create good publicity for corporations. Many were started by newspapermen, who had spent their careers in generating publicity. One of the leaders in the development of public relations as a profession was Ivy L. Lee, a business reporter for the New York World. In 1903 Lee quit his reporting job to manage the campaign of Seth Low for mayor of New York City. The next year he was hired as a press agent for the Democratic National Committee. In the next few years, after organizing a PR firm, he worked as publicity director for the Pennsylvania Railroad and for mine owners in Pennsylvania whose employees were on strike. Instead of trying to suppress the news, Lee was open with reporters. He realized that, if the corporate image he was trying to create was not matched by corporate performance, his task would be hopeless. As government threatened regulation and public hostility crystallized, corporations turned increasingly to publicists like Lee. Other institutions also saw the value of public relations. Harvard University hired The Publicity Bureau in 1900, and the University of Pennsylvania set up its own publicity office in 1904. In 1909 an Episcopal church in New York City hired a public relations expert. The United States Marine Corps established a publicity bureau in 1907. World War I forced government into the PR business. In 1917 President Woodrow Wilson authorized creation of the Committee on Public Information, headed by George Creel. At a time when there was no radio or television, the committee conducted a national campaign to mobilize public support for the war, to encourage enlistment in the armed forces, and to promote the sale of Liberty Bonds. The committee conducted public rallies in major cities, using such film celebrities as Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford to inspire patriotism. In the period after the war there was rapid growth of public relations as an industry along with the related fields of advertising and market research. The journalist Walter Lippmann published his book ‘Public Opinion' in 1922. A year later Edward L. Bernays published ‘Crystallizing Public Opinion', the first book on public relations as a profession. Many of today's large public relations firms were founded in the years immediately after World War I. World War II again brought the federal government into the public relations business. The Office of War Information (OWI), with radio news commentator Elmer Davis at its head, was founded in 1942. After the war the OWI was transformed into the United States Information Agency. One of the agency's responsibilities is the Voice of America radio broadcasts, sending news and features about the United States to the rest of the world. After World War II the public relations industry grew and prospered. By the late 1980s there were more than 2,000 PR firms in the United States and many more in other countries. Professionalization was encouraged by the founding of the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA) in 1948 through the merger of the National Association of Public Relations Counsel (founded 1936) and the American Council on Public Relations (1939). The American Public Relations Association (1944) became part of the PRSA in 1961. Other organizations include the International Public Relations Association (1955), the International Association of Business Communicators (1970), and various regional and state organizations. Early schooling for PR was mostly in the journalism departments of universities. Edward Bernays taught a PR course at New York University in 1923, three years after the subject was included in the curriculum at the University of Illinois. The first school of public relations was established by Boston University in 1947.
4. Answer the following questions:
1) Why did most business leaders express either indifference or contempt for the public in the 19th century?
2) When did corporations decide to promote themselves in a positive way?
3) What enterprises were the first that sought favorable publicity?
4) People of what profession were the first to generate publicity?
5) When was the Committee on Public Information authorized?
6) What did the Committee do to mobilize public support for the war, to encourage enlistment in the armed forces, and to promote the sale of Liberty Bonds at the time when there was no radio or TV?
7) When were many of today's large public relations firms founded?
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Title each part. Give their main ideas. | | | Nature of Propaganda |