Drive Alone A Saurus

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Text on Button DON'T BE A DRIVE-ALONE-A-SAURUS!
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Circle slash over an image of a yellow dinosaur wearing a black hat and driving a pink car with a license plate that reads "ROADHOG" in the center with black text over a yellow boarder.

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This button encourages the idea of ride-sharing or car pooling and not driving alone.  Carpooling is seen as a more environmentally friendly and sustainable way to travel, reducing carbon emissions, traffic, and parking needs.

Catalog ID CA0025

Oxidizer

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Text on Button OXIDIZER 5.1
Image Description

Black text and an illustration on a yellow background

Curl Text NES (800) 637-2384
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NES is a company that works with businesses and government agencies to make sure that employees and the environment are protected. The company provides education in the form of environmental and industrial hygiene consulting through workshops, training, and other personalized services. Some of the issues that NES discusses are indoor air quality, mold, water damage and exposure to hazardous materials. Not only does NES work to insure that work environments are safe, they also want to make sure that companies are following health, safety and environmental rules and regulations. NES has worked with companies such as; Pacific Gas and Electric and The Sacramento Bee. The company is based in California but helps companies throughout the country.

An oxidizer is an agent used to support combustion. Hydrogen peroxide would be an example of an oxidizer. The symbol shown is the hazard symbol for oxidizer.  

Catalog ID AD0103

Better Days Are Coming

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Text on Button BETTER DAYS ARE COMING They're called Saturday and Sunday
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Capitalized text on top, lower case on bottom with top background in orange and yellow.

Curl Text © SWIB. LISLE. IL 60532
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This is a popular sentiment celebrating the weekend. The labor movement fought to have 8 hour workdays for 5 days a week. This was largely realized by the Fair Labor Standards Act in the U.S. in 1937, giving Americans a couple of days to relax and/or party down.

Catalog ID HU0056

Everybody Needs A Wang

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Text on Button Everybody Needs A WANG
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White button with Blue text. 

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The now defunct Wang Laboratories Corporation was part of the so-called Massachusetts Miracle of the 1980s.  It, along with Apollo Computer, Data General, and Digital Equipment Corporation, help the Commonwealth's rebound from two generations of de-industrialization and unemployment, especially in the cities along the Merrimack River.  Wang was found by Dr. An Wang in Cambridge, Massachusetts during 1951.  The headquarters moved north to Tewksbury in the 1960s and finally to Lowell in the 1970s, where it remained until 1997.  

The products Wang made varied from decade to decade.  In the 1950s, they may typesetters.  In the 1960s, they made calculators.  In the 1970s, they were creating word processors and experimenting with "minicomputers," basically a mainframe.  By 1977, Wang had released the Wang VS, a minicomputer aimed at business users and data processors.  However, by the 1980s, personal computers, rather than word processors and minicomputers, were taking over the market.  Wang fell on hard times and declared bankruptcy in 1992.  After bankruptcy, the company, now named Wang Global, focused on what it called network services.  In 1999, Wang Global was sold to a Netherlands-based company.  The current owner of the VS line of minicomputers serviced the pre-bankruptcy Wang VSes until the end of 2014.  

Catalog ID AD0398

Tropical Bird

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Text on Button Larry Smith
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An illustration of a red, yellow, blue, and green bird perched on a tree branch next to two red flowers. More trees and branches are behind and below the bird. There is a blue body of water, white mountains, and clear blue sky in the background. 

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The image on this button was created by artist Larry Smith. Smith received a Master of Applied Art and Design from Montana State University in 1969. In 1980, he founded Designer Graphics Chula Vista.  It produced greeting cards, posters, stationary gifts, and educational toys and craft items. Among the company’s clients was the San Diego Zoo. As the company was sold in 1992, this button was likely produced between the years 1980 and 1992.  

Catalog ID AR0064

Licensed To Bitch

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Text on Button LICENSED TO BITCH!
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Black text on a yellow background.

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A badge worn by chronic naggers and complainers to explain that they are allowed to bitch.

Catalog ID IB0048

Shit Face

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Text on Button SHIT
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Yellow smiley face with a frown and tongue sticking out of it's mouth and black text underneath.

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This is a variation of the classic yellow smiley face that is comprised of a yellow circle, two black dots for eyes and a black arc ending in serifs for a mouth. It  was designed in 1963 by by commercial artist, Harvey Ross Ball. Ball was commissioned by The State Mutual Life Insurance Company to create a happy face to raise the morale of their employees. His version was created in 10 minutes. The design was printed onto more than 50 million buttons. Neither Ball nor the company copyrighted this smiley, so it was continually used by other businesses in their promotions. 

The design and concept is quite simple and was definitely used before Ball’s 1963 version. However his has become the most iconic. Variations have been used for advertising campaigns and in popular culture ever since.

Catalog ID SM0012

If It Were Up To Me

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Text on Button If it were up to me... I wouldn't leave it up to me.
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White text on a pinkish purple background.  

Back Paper / Back Info

70 ¢ 

Curl Text © 1986 CALIFORNIA DREAMERS, INC. B29
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Some people just shouldn't be in charge.

Catalog ID IB0133

Country's Hot

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Text on Button COUNTRY'S HOT ARMADILLO'S NOT
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Pink wrap around text on a black background. In the middle, is a green, and presumably dead, armadillo laying on its back with tail and feet pointed straight up in the air. The armadillo is placed on a pink background with a black slash running across its body.

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Have info on this button? Contact us here.

Catalog ID IB0295