lewis ross was one of the finest clothing areas in all the 19th century. the first thing he did is he came here to d.c. and he looked at johnson the way he was dressed and he said, you look like a schlub. i know this guy out in beverly hills. let's get you a nice suit and my grandfather became the tailor to the president of the united states of america. the story could end there and it would be nice. but then he was personally opposed to the vietnam war. and he was very active in progressive politics and as a businessman, he had a union shop. he was aclu man of the area. and it wore on him more and more and he had a crossroads where he said i can speak out and say something about this but lose my most important famous client or remain silent and keep him. and it wasn't a difficult choice for him. he took out full page ads with my grandmother telling president johnson not to run for re-election and offering to pay him in his retirement a little money and it made national news his entire magazine, etcetera. and i grew up with that story. my grandfather died