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  1. George W. Bush

    George Walker Bush is the forty-third and current President of the United States of America. Originally inaugurated on January 20, 2001, Bush was elected president in the 2000 presidential election and re-elected in the 2004 presidential election. He previously served as the forty-sixth Governor of Texas from 1995 to 2000, and is the eldest son of former United States president George H. W. Bush.

  2. Ronald Reagan

    Ronald Wilson Reagan (February 6, 1911 - June 5, 2004) was the 40th President of the United States (1981-1989) and the 33rd Governor of California (1967-1975). Reagan was born in Illinois, but moved to Hollywood in the 1930s, where he starred in numerous "B" movies and became President of the Screen Actors Guild. He was a prominent Democrat who supported the New Deal Coalition in the 1940s, and was a leading opponent of Communism in Hollywood.

  3. Theodore Roosevelt

    Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., also known as T.R. and to the public (but never to friends and intimates) as Teddy, was the twenty-sixth President of the United States, and a leader of the Republican Party and of the Progressive Movement, as well as being the youngest President in United States history, at age 42. He served in many roles including Governor of New York, historian, naturalist, explorer, author, and soldier.

  4. Richard Pombo

    Richard William Pombo (born January 8 1961) is a former Republican member of the United States House of Representatives, having represented California's 11th congressional district from 1993 to 2007. After multiple allegations of corruption, misuse of official resources, nepotism, questionable campaign contributions, and concerted opposition from national environmental groups, Pombo lost a reelection bid to to Democratic challenger Jerry McNerney on November 7, 2006.

  5. Lyndon B. Johnson

    Lyndon Baines Johnson, often referred to as LBJ, was the thirty-sixth President of the United States (1963–1969). After serving a long career in the U.S. Congress, Johnson became the thirty-seventh Vice President, and in 1963, he succeeded to the presidency following President John F. Kennedy's assassination. He was a major leader of the Democratic Party and as President was responsible for designing his Great Society, …

  6. Sandra Day O'Connor

    Born in 1930, O'Connor, grew up on an 198,000-acre cattle ranch in Arizona. By the time she was 8, she could mend fences, drive a truck and ride horses with the cowboys on the ranch. In 1952, she graduated from Stanford Law School in California. But law firms would not hire a woman lawyer, so she turned to public service. "In my lifetime, I have seen attitudes about women change dramatically," she told TFK. "Today, almost all occupations are open to women.

  7. Pat Garrett

    Patrick "Pat" Floyd Garrett (June 5, 1850 - February 28, 1908) was an American Old West lawman, bartender, and customs agent who was most known for killing Billy the Kid.

  8. Ben Nighthorse Campbell

    Ben Nighthorse Campbell (born April 13, 1933) is an American politician. He was a U.S. Senator from Colorado from 1993 until 2005 and was for some time the only Native American serving in the U.S. Congress. Campbell was a U.S. Representative from 1987 to 1993, when he was sworn into office as a Senator following his election on November 3, 1992. Campbell also serves as one of forty-four members of the Council of Chiefs of the Northern Cheyenne Nation, …

  9. Warren Chisum

    Warren Darrel Chisum (born July 4, 1938) is a staunchly conservative Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives from the Panhandle city of Pampa, a community of some 20,000 people and the seat of Gray County. He has served in the state House since 1989. A key lieutenant of Speaker Thomas Russell "Tom" Craddick, Sr., of Midland, Chisum is the incoming 2007 chairman of the budget-writing House Appropriations Committee.

  10. Joe Skeen

    Joseph Richard "Joe" Skeen (June 30, 1927-- December 7, 2003) was a conservative Republican congressman from southern New Mexico. He served for eleven terms in the United States House of Representatives between 1980 and 2003. Skeen was born in Roswell, New Mexico. During his teenage years, his family moved to Seattle. During the final year of World War II, Skeen entered the United States Navy. After returning home, he graduated from Texas A&M University in College Station, …

  11. Dale Robertson

    Dale Robertson (born Dayle Lamoine Robertson on July 14, 1923, in Harrah, Oklahoma, in Oklahoma County near Oklahoma City) is an American actor. Robertson started his career in the late 1940s while he was in the U.S. Army. While stationed at San Luis Obispo, California, Robertson went to Amos Carr Studio to have a picture taken for his mother. A copy of the photo displayed in the shop window attracted movie agents.

  12. Dolph Briscoe

    Dolph S. Briscoe (born April 23, 1923 in Uvalde, Texas) is a wealthy Uvalde rancher and businessman who was the Democratic Governor of Texas between 1973 and 1979. He was the last governor to serve a two-year term and the first to serve a four-year term, when the state doubled the length of gubernatorial terms, effective in 1975.

  13. Malcolm Wallop

    Malcolm Wallop (born February 27, 1933) is a Republican politician and former three-term United States Senator from Wyoming. Wallop is noted as the first non-lawyer to serve as a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

  14. Clayton Williams

    Clayton Wheat Williams, Jr. (b. 1931), a businessman from Midland, Texas, is best known for running for the governorship of the state of Texas against Democratic State Treasurer Ann Richards in 1990 on the Republican ticket.

  15. Winthrop Rockefeller

    Winthrop A. Rockefeller (May 1, 1912 - February 22, 1973), was a politician and philanthropist who served as the first Republican Governor of Arkansas since Reconstruction. He was a third-generation member of the renowned Rockefeller family.

  16. Samuel Maverick

    Samuel Augustus Maverick was a Texas lawyer, politician, and land baron. Born near Pendleton, South Carolina, he was the son of Samuel and Elizabeth (Anderson) Maverick. He received his B.A. from Yale College in 1825 then studied law in Winchester, Virginia. In 1829, having returned to South Carolina, he was admitted to the bar.

  17. Albert B. Fall

    Albert Bacon Fall (November 26, 1861 - November 30, 1944) was a United States Senator from New Mexico and the Secretary of the Interior under President Warren G. Harding, notorious for his involvement in the Teapot Dome scandal.

  18. Bob Price

    Robert Dale “Bob” Price was a Republican congressman from the Texas Panhandle from 1967-1975 and a member of the Texas State Senate from 1978-1980. Price was considered to have been among the most conservative members of his party. He was the first Republican since Reconstruction to hold the Panhandle congressional seat. Price was born to Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin F. Price, Sr., in rural Reading, Kansas.

  19. Anne Armstrong

    Anne L. Armstrong (b. December 27, 1927) is a United States diplomat, politician, and the first female Counselor to the President; she served in that capacity under both the Ford and Nixon administrations. She was also the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, and graduated from Vassar College in 1949. In 1950, she married Tobin Armstrong and moved to Kennedy County, Texas.

  20. Clifford Hansen

    Clifford Peter Hansen (born October 16, 1912) is a retired Republican politician from the American state of Wyoming. He served as both governor (1963-1967) and U.S. senator (1967-1978). Earlier, he was the president of the board of trustees of his "alma mater", the University of Wyoming at Laramie (Albany County), the state's only four-year institution of higher learning. He was also a county commissioner in Jackson, the seat of Teton County.

  21. Suzanna Hupp

    Suzanna Gratia Hupp (born 1959) is a former Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives, who represented traditionally Democratic District 54 (Bell, Burnet, and Lampasas counties) for ten years from 1997-2007. Hupp is recognized worldwide as a leading advocate for the Second Amendment and an individual's right to carry a concealed weapon. She was elected to her first term in 1996 but did not seek a sixth two-year term in 2006.

  22. Richard M. Kleberg

    Richard Mifflin Kleberg, Sr. (1887-1955) was a seven-term member of the United States House of Representatives from Texas's 14th congressional district over the period 1931-1945 and an heir to the King Ranch in South Texas. He was elected unopposed in 1940 and 1942. Lyndon B. Johnson served as a congressional secretary under Kleberg in 1931.

  23. Winthrop Paul Rockefeller

    Winthrop Paul Rockefeller was Republican lieutenant governor of the U.S. state of Arkansas from 1996 until his death.

  24. Temple Dickson

    Robert Temple Dickson, III, was a prominent trial lawyer, rancher, and a former Democratic state legislator, having served in both the Texas House of Representatives, from 1965 to 1971, and the Texas Senate, from 1989 to 1993.

  25. Zales Ecton

    Zales Nelson Ecton (April 1 1898 - March 3 1961) was a rare Republican United States senator from Montana, having served from 1947-1953. Ecton was born in Weldon, Decatur County, Iowa. He moved with his family to Gallatin County, Montana, when he was nine years old. He attended the Gallatin County public schools, the then Montana State College (later Montana State University) at Bozeman and the University of Chicago law school.

  26. Harold Montgomery

    A. Harold Montgomery, Sr. (April 19, 1911 -- December 17, 1995) was an agricultural businessman and a Louisiana state senator, who is remembered as an outspoken conservative within his state's dominant Democratic Party. He represented District 36 -- Bossier and Webster parishes and, later, part of Bienville Parish -- in three nonconsecutive terms in the Senate, 1960-1968 and 1972-1976.

  27. Albert Bel Fay

    Albert Bel Fay, Sr. (February 26, 1913 - February 29, 1992), was a wealthy Texas and Louisiana businessman, United States ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago, and a Republican Party activist whose political involvement began with the presidential campaign of Dwight D. Eisenhower.

  28. Uncle Ned Kennedy

    Uncle Ned Kennedy was a U.S. cowboy from the northwest who ran the Horse and a Half Ranch near Tacoma, Washington. In 1948 he completed a 3500 mile transcontinental horseback trip and met President Truman, the son of a prosperous horse-trader himself.

  29. Willis And The Jolly Ranchers
  30. Da Jolly Ranchers
  31. I Jolly Ranchers
  32. Dolly Dolly Ranchers
  33. Chris Cloud

    Chris Cloud was appointed chairman of the Missouri Farm Bureau Young Farmers and Ranchers (YF&R) Committee during the organization's 91st annual meeting in December 2005. The appointment was made by Charles Kruse, Missouri Farm Bureau president. As YF&R chairman, Cloud also serves as an advisory member on the Missouri Farm Bureau Board of Directors. Cloud and his wife, Michelle, run a 90-head commercial cow/calf herd on 320 acres.

  34. Todd Hays

    Todd Hays was elected for a two-year term to the board of directors at the organization's 90th annual meeting December 2004. Hays represents District 2, encompassing the north central area of the state. Hays also served as an advisory member on the Missouri Farm Bureau Board of Directors during 2003 when he was chairman of the Missouri Farm Bureau Young Farmers and Ranchers (YF&R) Committee.

  35. Suzanna Gratia Hupp

    Suzanna Gratia Hupp , Texas State Representative

  36. Lewis Campbell

    Lewis (Lew) Campbell (1831-1910) was a pioneer rancher in the Kamloops, area of western Canada. He and James Todd were the first settlers in what is now Barnhartvale, British Columbia. Campbell went to British Columbia from the United States during the Cariboo Gold Rush in 1858, but like many others he discovered more profit in transporting supplies and food for the miners than in actually prospecting for gold. In 1864 he drove a herd of cattle from Oregon to the Cariboo, …

  37. James Todd

    In 1865, James Todd (1832-1925) and his family established a ranch south-east of Kamloops, British Columbia. He and Lewis (Lew) Campbell could be considered the first settlers of Barnhartvale, British Columbia. James Todd was originally from England. In 1849 he went to California for the gold rush. He does not appear to have struck it rich in California, but he made his living as a packer transporting supplies for the miners.

  38. Jackie

    tennaya layout.

  39. Mirella Carillo

    My name is Mirella, Im brown and im fucken proud. If u want 2 know stuff about me ask ME! "Pregunta me, pero pregunta me!".

  40. Yasser

    I AM TYPE PERSON WHO LIKES GO OUT AND HAVE FUN WITH FRIENDS AND ALSO LOVE GOING CLUBING AND PARTYS. I AM A COOL GUY TO BE AROUND BECAUSE I"M FUNNY,PLAYFUL,CARING LOVING PERSON WHO LOVE TO BE AROUND PEOPLE.ALSO I ENJOY MEETING NEW PEOPLE ALL THE TIME.THERES ONE THING I ALWAYS SAY AND THAT IS LIFE IS TOO SHORT SO LIVE IT TO THE FULLEST. Get this layout or more Yankees hi5 Layouts .

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