Word: lunches
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...weighs 206 Ibs., and should shed at least ten. At his Texas ranch some weeks ago, his wife ordered chicken for dinner one evening-knowing that it is not one of the President's favorite dishes and that Lyndon probably would not eat too much. At lunch one day last week, Lyndon noticed that his guests got banana pudding for dessert while his plate was left empty. "I don't know what Mrs. Johnson is doing here," said he. "I want some of that dessert." He picked up the service bell, and the tinkle soon brought him some...
Wearing black tie and tux, Goldwater told some 1,500 members of the blue-chip Economic Club of New York that Johnson's State of the Union address indicated that the new Democratic Ad ministration plans to be a "Santa Claus of the free lunch, the Government handout, the something-for-nothing and something-for-everyone." As evidence, Goldwater cited Johnson's declared war on poverty. Said Goldwater: "America, for most of its years, has waged a war on poverty. And wherever it has waged that war, in factories, in laboratories, in shops, over counters and under...
...Pennsylvania's Governor William Scranton traveled only from Harrisburg to Philadelphia to a lunch hosted by Scott Paper Board Chairman Tom McCabe and billed as an attempt to promote Pennsylvania industry. But with increasing talk that such influential Eastern Republicans as Leonard Hall and Meade Alcorn Jr. are urging Scranton to get more national exposure, the guest list was politically impressive. It included National G.O.P. Chairman William Miller, former Chairmen Hall and Alcorn, Massachusetts National Committeeman Richard Treadway, Maine's National Committeeman Bradford Hutchins, Maryland's National Committeeman Edward Miller, former Defense Secretary Neil McElroy, Eisenhower...
...fireplace in its own enclosed area, a dining room large enough for twelve, a skylighted kitchen, a master bedroom with two baths, a sitting room, and a penthouse study for the doctor. From here, he can wigwag through the skylight into the kitchen when he is ready for lunch. There is also a separate guest house that can accommodate six when the occasion arises...
...next. Then the U.S., and then the world. After that, perhaps, come the interests of the Scripps-Howard chain to which the paper belongs. No cause is too large for the Press-or too small. It hid a camera in a bawdyhouse and snapped pictures of city cops taking lunch there. When the Press disagreed with the Cleveland Bar Association's candidate for the municipal bench, it asked its readers to write in the name of an unknown young lawyer whom the paper preferred. The young lawyer won. If the Press likes a politician, it can boost him into...