Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

482 results

  • Advertising SVC Assoc Intl Edward M. Kriz Mr. James H. Rademacher, VP, Natl Assoc of Letter Carriers Ira Kappenstein Mr. E. C. Hallbeck, Pres., United Federation of Postal Clerks Lawrence Lewin ! Mr. Patrick J. Nilan, Legis. Dir. , United Fed of Postal Clerks
  • , 1983 INTERVIEWEE: HARFIELD WEEDIN INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: The Chateau Marmont Hotel, Hollywood, California Tape 1 of 1 G: You were discussing your ad agency. W: No, it was an advertising agency. Was it PR or advertising? My
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Prokop -- I -- 22 influence there. G: Was this primarily the advertising profession? P: Absolutely. They were very strong, particularly during the period of the Truth in Packaging. They had, quite
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Jenkins -­ XV -­ 8 controlling advertising along the federally-funded highways. Do you recall LBJ's position here in 1955? J: I don't. I know what Mrs. Johnson's position would have been, but I don't think she was active
  • Albert Armitage, assistant national editor, Hearst Newspapers Sam Bornstein, managing editor, Boston Sunday Advertiser Ed J Dooley, editor, San Francisco Examiner Thomas Eastham, executive editor, San Francisco Examiner Robert Fichenberg, editor
  • City Theodore S. Repplier, International Round Tables, The Advertising Council, Inc Bernard Rosenberg, President, Cameo Curtains, Inc. , New Rochelle, NY Mrs. Rt Sargent Shriver, Exec VP, Joseph Kennedy Foundation, Wash., DC George Tarjan, M. D. , Univ
  • . To the White House Theatre - for film taping of Independence Day Message on purchase of Savings Bonds. The message is sponsored by the Advertising Council, and is filmed in color and to be available for national distribution over the weekend of July fourth
  • representing the Aqua Festival. Bruce BulsNorth Austin BankFleetwood Richards Kathy Lott (Queen) Steve Price Advertising Man Cong JaKe PicKle Jacque Buske Mickey Bentley Ann Ilse Lester public relations man Terry Sasser Mayor Palmerof Austin real estate
  • Construction on KTBC studios, electric rates for KTBC, accounts receivable, KTBC advertising for Columbia/CBS, possible individual for job in LBJ office, personal expenses, reusing Senate campaign envelopes for KTBC
  • . Did that establish a business relationship? B: Yes. Yes, it did. G: Let me ask you to describe that. B: Well, of course, naturally we wanted to help, so we told our advertising department to look into it and anything we could do to help out
  • advertisers. M: You went into a national market then? A: Yes, I went into the national market myself. Of course, the station had national reps. Still they couldn't do a whole lot for you; they're more or less order takers. So this is 12 LBJ Presidential
  • was in professional services and I couldn't, being a small a- gency, take that time off without any income to the agency. No, we made a deal, as I recall, and I think I made it through Woody, and the deal was that we would handle the advertisement, placing ads
  • Meeting LBJ; Albert Thomas; seeing his wife for the first time; events before and during the 1960 convention; LBJ accepting the vice-presidential nomination; LBJ as Senate Majority Leader; Valenti’s role in the 1960 convention; advertising
  • to talk to the news media. Again, one of our on going programs that got a lot of emphasis during President Johnson's regime, and still is, is the advertise­ ment. During his tenure we spent about eighty or ninety thousand dollars for advertising
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Peterson -- I -- 15 really reflected far more than others in the White House staff what the President was thinking. For example, an advertising pub­ lication, Printers Ink, printed a nasty editorial
  • that so many business leaders from all industries were willing to lend their names to the membership of that committee, even in public advertisements, as well as donating the one thousand-dollar maximum amount that could at that time be contributed legally
  • dollars a year in that original form! But too few advertisers graced its pages. At one of the difficult stages, [Gardner] Mike Cowles admitted: "You are doing your best" to lift the pages of Look to a higher level"--the two of us ran Look
  • of California at Santa Barbara. In 1951 you joined the Travelers Insurance Company and were there until 1964. K: '65. G: '65. Is that correct? From 1964 until 1965 you were the vice president of Travelers in charge of public information and advertising
  • : No . M: but at that time he was an officer of an advertising firm in New York . He was a private citizen, then, acting as the President's friend, your informal representative in this case . Lemoyne Billings at that time, I'm not sure what he's doing
  • or is it in--? In May of 1966--I said the spring of 1967, I meant the Spring of 1966. But in May of 1966 Fowler, Connor, Schultze, and [Arthur] Okun were supposed to appear on a panel before the Advertising Council on May 17, and they were going to discuss economic
  • that was related to that seems to have been the control of advertising rights along these highways and whether the federal government could or should get involved with regulating bill boards and things like that. B: It was a very emotional issue
  • The Advertising Council is undertaking a two­ year campaign to promote the concept of equal em­ ployment opportunity and to encourage minority citizens to prepare for rapidly expanding job oppor­ tunities. The proposal for the campaign was submitted by the Plans
  • 'by­ noni-doera and non-makers, nopru,wa• sons, ~randaons, banks a.ro now can­ trolli~ the newap&pera onoe built 1n great freedom and tor service to the people, The publicity view point through advertising re~enue aa n l l as rioh man O\m$rshi p haa
  • , Coordinating conceivable·that 15. probably by • on July 27, 1967. who participated and protests of the Student membership of the group exerts.much militant Advertising It is· financed received Society the.·· ... - Nonviolent Coimni.ttee. Due
  • Typewriter situation, speaking with contacts re hiring of salesman and insurance for station, advertising, ASCAP contract, INS contract, CBS affiliation, personnel matters (engineers and salesmen), mention of TJ Taylor and Alabama estate
  • Balance of personal and business accounts, KTBC book-keeping and advertising accounts, Lady Bird finding errors in KTBC book-keeping
  • , Barkley, Berle. September Walter Jenkins offered commission in Navy as ensign, decides to be private. 9/4 Greer destroyer incident. 9/7 FDR’s mother, Sara Delano Roosevelt, dies. 9/8 LBJ promotes Navy advertising in small Texas newspapers. 9/11
  • York City (Former Deputy Secretary of Defense) Fairfax Cone (63 yrs.) - Chairman, Executive Committee of Foote, Cone, and Building Advertising Firm, Chicago, Illinois (Trustee for the· Committee for Economic Development) Joseph C. Wilson (57 yrs
  • very kind about Malone on the floor after he had been with us on a close vote. Of course, he used that in an advertisement when he ran against Howard Cannon. That's what caused Johnson to stop there on Sunday after he had made the trips in 1958 and have
  • B. JOHNSON Date IARY esident began, his day at (Place ) . Tirhe Telephone .1 : . In Out Lo f or t .LD White Activity January 6, 1967 House ^ggmXJ Day (include visited by) Robert P. Keim, Pres. , The Advertising Council, NYC Robert D
  • notice on that particular time. He just had a couple hours notice on that and had to set up the security on that for him. But it wasn't an advertised visit,so we were able to set up our securi ty pretty qui ckly. r1: I suppose that would be easier
  • interest in the station at that time? W: Well, Mrs. Johnson purchased the radio station, and it was having quite a difficult time to survive; in other words, he had to get companies to advertise on his station. And to do that, he had to get acquainted
  • . We are for getting our ship We may give the North Koreans the psychological advantage of pulling the U. S. 's beard. We will send units quietly. There will be no advertisement of this. But it will get out to the North Koreans, and they will know we
  • . \Vld.mq SAoemabr Aaelatant to-th'fl Pr-u tdat Ml'. c. F. C;r omptoa 20 Bbchhl&I·.Drive Wldpgaa7, R•' JUMf 0798& JR: le -I FEderal 8-9 15 3 v THE ADVERTISING COUNCIL ~" * INC. GENERA.I: NEW YORK• WASHINGTON• CHICAGO• LOS ANGELES• SAN FRANCISCO
  • there should have been, as to whether this was something the city itself had any area of responsibility for or whether, as many people said, it could have happened anywhere. Well, it could have happened anywhere, but there was an advertise- ment
  • ; 7th Avenue wholesalers; Dallas Morning News’ notorious advertisement; Bruce Alger; re-establishing Dallas as a good place to live and work; Bronze Abstract Wall commissioned by Dallas Public Library; problem with having an official designer; Adele
  • of that year, Congress had passed legislation that put a health warning on cigarette packages. I proposed to the President that we recommend legislation that would ban cigarette advertising from television. We'd go through the legislative program--we won't get
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Johnson -- XVII -- 23 we had sort of set the date for June 1 for a new start. Lyndon said we ought to advertise that. No matter how
  • . Schulman - Chicago - restauranteur presented on behalf of he U. S. Mary G. (Mrs. Charles) Sethness - Chicago - Trustee. Lincoln Academy of Illinois to Mexico in 1966 -- which was a Edward H. Weiss - Chicago - President, Edward H. Weiss & Co. , Advertising
  • literature and media in behalf of Humphrey-Muskie. (^^~ National ' advertising At the head table were: Mrs. Johnson, Luci, Lyn Hon. Joseph Alioto, Mayor of San Francisco (Chairman of the Nationalities Divsion, DNC Mr. Mario Procaccino, City Council