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  • a lon g w ay from th ose days to C arn egie H all. He talked about a str ik e i •MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE W ed n esd a y , M ay 10, 1967 ; WASBINOTON Page - of 1912 or 1913, and I cou ld s e e old heads bobbing through the a u d ien ce in m e m
  • that, which undoubtedly were very modern in 1913 when the department was established, but it looks kind of funny nowadays . So we had, oh, I guess, about 400 designs submitted to the judges, and they came up with a design which is, as you know, called
  • relate the amount of currency that we had outstanding in the United States to the gold that we possessed. Originally, when the Federal Reserve Act was enacted back in 1913, they put currency and bank deposits-you had to keep a certain gold reserve
  • it to be. The man from the street, I didn't think would come to see this, even though it was an historic occasion, that maybe here was the making of a brand new state, the first since 1913. So I LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • background briefly, leaving out a number of things, I'm afraid. You were born in 1913 in Sacramento; bachelor's degree from Cal Tech in 1938. t,,: No, University of California. B: And a Ph.D.in '42. M: Yes, also Berkeley. B: And you taught
  • : My father, Hugo Pinto Reiss, was a Brazilian diplomat. He went to China in 1913, where he met my mother, whose maiden name was Mary Murphy. She came from Carmel, California, and she was taken to China when she graduated from the convent