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  • Time Period > Presidential (Nov. 22, 1963-Jan. 20, 1969) (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)

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  • to come over when Willie Brandt was there for luncheon . I can still remember-­ I was going through the receiving line, and he said, "Well, Mr . Brandt, I want you to meet my Postmaster General," and he kind of laughed, and I knew he was thinking about his
  • Belen, Frederick C. (Frederick Christopher), 1913-
  • Roosevelt. M: How long have you known president Johnson? R: My family moved to Johnson City in 1912. family came in 1913 or 1914. I believe that Lyndon's In a town which had at that time some four to five hundred people, everybody knew everybody else
  • in the boyhood home of President and Mrs. Johnson. This is the home to which the President's father, Sam Johnson, moved in 1913. They lived in this home until 1936. We have here with us today Otto Lindig, a neighbor and life-long friend of the President
  • in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, June 10, 1913. My father's name was Aaron and my mother Bessie Rubenstein. I have one brother named Darwin. I lived in Milwaukee until I was seventeen years old when I went to the University of Wisconsin. At the University of Wisconsin
  • Cohen, Wilbur J. (Wilbur Joseph), 1913-1987
  • were you born and when. B: I was born in Brooklyn, New York, in December 1913 and I was educated in the public schools in Brooklyn, and I have my undergraduate degree from Brooklyn College and a Master's degree from Columbia University. M: What
  • plant up there to generate the power F: and do the pumping. Did you know Secretary of the Interior (Stewart) Udall before he became Secretary? H: Yes, I had met him out in Arizona. time. I've known the Udall family a long I think in 1913 I bought
  • , and we moved back to Waco in 1913, I believe, and I've lived here ever since. I graduated from Baylor Law School in 1924 and like a lot of other would-be lawyers, I was running for office before I graduated, and was nominated in July, 1924
  • . Rasmussen, tell us a little bit first about yourself--where you're from and how you came to be the head of the Bureau [of Land Management]. R: I was born in southern Idaho in 1913. My father was a railroad engineer, and we moved from Glenns Ferry, Idaho
  • . Well, that began in 1913, which meant that Kearns as 2 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org
  • on the part of the business community . I personally felt it could be a very good idea ; in fact, when it started this way, we had a Department of Commerce and Labor beginning in 1903, and they did separate in 1913 . And I can well appreciate the advantages
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh (TAPE #1) December 12, 1968 M: To start off, Mr. Camp, I would like to know where you were born and when. C: Mr. McComb, I'm proud to tell you that I am a native Texan. I was born in Greenville, Texas, November 25, 1913