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Lisa Loeb was born to a Jewish [9] family in Bethesda, Maryland, [10] and was raised in Dallas, Texas, [11] where her parents still reside. Her mother, Gail, was the president of the Dallas County Medical Society Alliance and Foundation, and her father, Peter Loeb, was a gastroenterologist. [12]
Matchett Herring Coe (1907–1999) was an American sculptor active in Texas. Coe was born in Loeb (now Lumberton ), Texas and lived in the Beaumont area most of his life. He graduated from Lamar College , attended Cranbrook Educational Community and served with the Seabees on Guadalcanal during World War II, but was active as a sculptor before ...
Irving Loeb Goldberg (June 29, 1906 – February 11, 1995) ... Texas from 1932 to 1934, returning to private practice in Dallas from 1934 to 1942.
Lobo is located in the Trans-Pecos region of West Texas, between the Van Horn Mountains and Wylie Mountains in southern Culberson County. It is situated along U.S. Highway 90 , approximately 12 miles (19 km) south of Van Horn and 24 miles (39 km) west of Valentine .
Patrick was born Dannie Scott Goeb in Baltimore on April 4, 1950. [4] [5] He was raised in a blue-collar neighborhood in East Baltimore. [2]He is the only child of the former Vilma Jean Marshall (1926–2016) and Charles Anthony Goeb (1926–2002), who worked at The Baltimore Sun for thirty-one years as a newspaper vendor, [6] before he retired in 1984.
Kuhn, Loeb & Co. was an American multinational investment bank founded in 1867 by Abraham Kuhn and his brother-in-law Solomon Loeb. [1] Headed from 1885 onwards by Jacob H. Schiff, Loeb's son-in-law, it grew to be one of the most influential investment banks in the late-19th and early-20th centuries, financing America's expanding railways and growth companies, including Western Union and ...
Bryan Burrough (born August 13, 1961, in Memphis, TN) is an American journalist and author of eight books, including four New York Times best-sellers, the Wall Street classic Barbarians at the Gate (with John Helyar); Public Enemies: America’s Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI, 1933-34; The Big Rich: The Rise and Fall of the Greatest Texas Oil Families; and Forget the Alamo: The ...
James Calhoun Tanner (February 27, 1926 – December 5, 2019) was an American journalist who covered the oil and gas industry for The Wall Street Journal for many years. He was part of the team that won the 1961 Gerald Loeb Award for Newspapers.