Gathering of individuals for the Business and Professional Women's organization with Lyndon B. Johnson, fourth from left. It is unclear if this was during Johnson's Vice Presidency or after he became President. The women in the photo are unknown, and the remaining individuals identified in the photo from left to right are: 1. Unknown 2. Unknown 3. Senator Carl Hayden, from Arizona, 4. Lyndon B. Johnson, 5. Unknown 6. Senator Alan Bible.
Help Us Write History article from UNLV Special Collections, posted in the Las Vegas Review Journal on April 1, 1984 on behalf of the Dorothy Dorothy Collection. The purpose of this article was to identify the unknown people in the image after the collection was donated.
Help Us Write History responses to article from UNLV Special Collections, posted in the Las Vegas Review Journal on April 1, 1984 on behalf of the Dorothy Dorothy Collection. As stated, 13 callers identified the man in the middle of the photo as Senator Carl Hayden of Arizona. The women remained unidentified. The callers' names and numbers are listed in order of call, as well as information they know about the people in the photograph.
Help Us Write History responses to article from UNLV Special Collections, posted in the Las Vegas Review Journal on April 1, 1984 on behalf of the Dorothy Dorothy Collection. As stated, 13 callers identified the man in the middle of the photo as Senator Carl Hayden of Arizona. The women remained unidentified. The callers' names and numbers are listed in order of call, as well as information they know about the people in the photograph.
Group portrait of individuals with Lyndon Johnson in front of a plane. Identified from left to right, rear: 1. Vail Pittman, 2. Grant Sawyer, 3. Howard Cannon, 4. Lyndon Johnson, 5. Alan Bible, 6. Walter Baring, 7. Unknown, 8. Gertrude Gottchalk. Children in front are unidentified. [Identified by Dorothy Dorothy 11-1-84]
Various photographs of an article featuring the nightclub "Copa City" in Miami Beach and the Arden-Fletcher Dancers who performed there. An illegible signature can be found handwritten on the back of the images, possibly belonging to Jean Gelihurst.