By Joe Pratt
8-F and Many More: Business and Civic Leadership in Houston
8F Club, 8F crowd, African Americans, Alice Pratt Brown, anti-Semitism, Baker Botts, Baker family, bankers, Bob Smith, Brown brothers, Bush Intercontinental Airport, business, business leaders, businessmen, Captain James A. Baker, civic leaders, civic leadership, corporate citizens, cotton industry, cultural institutions, Desegregation, economic development, economy, educational institutions, Enron, Felix Tijerina, George R. Brown, Greater Houston Partnership, Gus Wortham, Herman Brown, Hobby Airport, Houston Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Ship Channel, Humble Oil & Refining Company, Jesse Jones, Jewish Americans, Jews, Jim Abercrombie, Jim Crow, John Henry Kirby, Johnson Space Center, JSC, Judge Elkins, Judge James A. Baker, Ken Lay, Lamar Hotel, lawyers, Louie Welch, Louis Cutrer, Lyndon B. Johnson, M.D. Anderson, Maurice Hirsch, Mexican Americans, Mr. Houston, NASA, Naurice Cummings, oil boom, Oil Industry, oil price bubble, oilmen, Oscar Holcombe, Oveta Culp Hobby, petroleum industry, philanthropy, politics, postwar boom, racism, Rice Stadium, Rice University, Robert E. Smith, Roy Hofheinz, Roy Hugh Cullen, Segregation, Texas Medical Center, University of Houston, urban sprawl, Will Clayton, Will Hobby, William Marsh Rice