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1Title:  Hastings, Willinger and Associates Advertising Art     
 Creator:  Gift of Al Willinger 
 Dates:  1970-1990 
 Abstract:  Born Peter Paul Guggenheimer in Berlin in 1922, Peter Hastings was a teenager when his family fled Nazi Germany for Sweden. The family left for the United States in the late 1930s. Hastings became an American citizen, was drafted into the Army, and in the process changed his name from Guggenheimer to Hastings (at least two family members, his mother and brother, kept the name Guggenheimer). After his military service during the war, Hastings joined his parents in Cleveland. He worked with photographer Herb Rebman until he opened his own commercial studio with Al Willinger in 1948. The studio later became the advertising agency. The partnership lasted 35 years. Hastings was hired in 1952 to photograph disc jockey Alan Freed's Moondog Coronation Ball at the Cleveland Arena. The photograph that Hastings took from the balcony before he escaped the turmoil that would prematurely end the concert is world-famous and serves as the visual documentation of the birth of rock and roll. The photograph is now part of the collection of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Hastings served as the unofficial photographer for the Cleveland Orchestra for 23 years. After Hastings semi-retired in the early 1990s, he took up poetry and eventually published a slim volume of his verse A Passion for Life. Hastings died on August 27, 1999, at age 76. Albert J. "Al" Willinger was born on September 13, 1920. He served as a photographer for the Cleveland Jewish News from 1964 to 1982. Willinger immortalized the "birth" of the Cleveland Jewish News with his photograph of the founding board of trustees. He subsequently snapped hundreds of photos over the years, a treasured pictorial history of the Cleveland Jewish News, as well as local Jewish history and visiting celebrities. Willinger died on August 16, 2010, at age 90. The Hastings, Willinger and Associates Advertising Art collection consists of 69 photographs. 
 Call #:  MS 5457 
 Extent:  0.10 linear feet (1 box) 
 Subjects:  Hastings, Willinger and Associates (Cleveland, Ohio) | Commercial art -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Photography -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Advertising agencies -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
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2Title:  Wyse Advertising Collection     
 Creator:  Sheila Wyse 
 Dates:  1935-2013 
 Abstract:  Marc Wyse (born Marc Weiss in Hungary), a noted pioneer in the advertising industry, moved to New York and then Cleveland. He died in 2011 at age eighty eight leaving behind his second wife Sheila, his children, and grandchildren. In 1951, Wyse began his work in the advertising industry when he and his first wife, Lois, opened their own advertising agency in Cleveland. Wyse Advertising became one of Cleveland's best known advertising agencies. Their most notable achievements include the slogan "with a name like Smucker's it has to be good" for the company Smucker's which the company still uses. They are also credited for adding the "beyond" to the company Bed, Bath, and Beyond. Wyse died in 2011 after suffering complications from a stroke. When he died, he left his memoir The Way I Saw It unfinished. The collection consists of articles, artwork, awards, business cards, correspondence, financial notes, newspaper clippings, photographs, and scripts, along with VHS, DVD, and cassette recordings. 
 Call #:  MS 5443 
 Extent:  3.1 linear feet (5 containers, including one oversize folder) 
 Subjects:  Wyse Advertising Agency (Cleveland, Ohio) | Wyse, Marc | Wyse, Lois | Advertising agencies -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Advertising -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- History | Jewish businesspeople -- Ohio -- Cleveland
 
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