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Eating Out is Fun?

Red always thought that the Texas Restaurant Association had the best slogan/motto ever created.  Well, because eating out is in fact usually fun.  Or at least it was when eating out was not something that you did every day and was something of a special treat.  The slogan was apparently first used by the National Restaurant Association in 1947 and later used by the TRA from 1956 onwards.  It does seem to have faded from use.

Well Austin has taken the TRA mantra to heart.  When Red was recently in Austin, there appeared to be a restaurant every 75 feet.  Red has been unable to get a fix on exactly how many restaurants there are in Austin, but the number seems to be extraordinary.  Driving down lower South Lamar alone, Red counted over 50 restaurants in what used to be essentially a dry gulch.  In order to sustain the number of dining establishments observed, everyone in Austin must eat out at least 7 times a week. Is eating out still fun?

Today in Texas History – June 4

From the Annals of Commencement Addresses –   In 1897, Booker T. Washington gave the first commencement address to the graduating class at Prairie View A&M University. At the time the school was known as Prairie View Normal Institute.  Washington, president of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, was the leading advocate of black advancement through self-help, hard work and solidarity programs. His trips to Texas included an appearance at the State Fair and visits with prominent black families such as the Covingtons of Houston and the Watsons of Dallas.

Today in Texas History – May 27

From the Annals of the GOP –  In 1961, John Tower was elected as the first Republican senator from Texas since the days of Reconstruction.  It was Tower’s first elective office. Tower a professor at Midwestern University had run unsuccessfully for state representative in 1954 and worked to build the GOP in Texas.  By 1960, he was sufficiently well known to be nominated at the state Republican convention to run against Lyndon B. Johnson for senator – who was also on the national ticket as the Democratic candidate for Vice-President.  Tower’s campaign slogan was “double your pleasure, double your fun, vote against Johnson two times, not one.”  Johnson easily won the election but resigned his seat when he was also elected vice president. Tower entered a very crowded field of more than 60 candidates for the special election to replace Johnson. His main opposition was William Blakely of Dallas whom Price Daniel, Sr. had appointed to fill the vacancy left by Johnson’s resignation.  He led the first election with 31% of the vote and then won the runoff.   Tower was a mostly reliable conservative during his tenure.  His shameful votes against the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act were likely popular in Texas.  But Tower did stray from the ranks of the hard-right when he supported Gerald Ford over Ronald Reagan in 1976.  Tower resigned in 1985.  After his 24 year career in the Senate, President Ronald Reagan appointed him chief United States negotiator at the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks in Geneva. In 1986, Reagan appointed him to chair a commission to investigate the Iran-Contra affair. In 1989, President George Bush nominated him to become secretary of defense.  In an unusual move, the Senate rejected one of its on largely because of concerns over Tower’s alleged excessive drinking and womanizing.