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  • widow, Brigitte Seebacher-Brandt INTERVIEWEE: WILLY BRANDT INTERVIEWER: Joe B. Frantz PLACE: Willy Brandt's office, at the Social Democratic Party offices Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 F: This is an interview with former chancellor Willy Brandt in his
  • See all online interviews with Willy Brandt
  • Vice President Johnson's 1961 visit to Berlin; meeting LBJ in the 1950's in the United States; LBJ's affinity for Germany and German people; Brandt's visits to the U.S. in the mid-1960's; Vietnam police; LBJ's opinions of European relations; Robert
  • Brandt, Willy, 1913-1992
  • Oral history transcript, Willy Brandt, interview 1 (I), undated, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Willy Brandt
  • 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-
  • , and had a gallbladder attack. This was when he was President of course. He had an attack, and I was called with Dr. Burkley who was at the White House at the time, and I think maybe Willis Hurst had seen him also, called me and asked me to come see him. I
  • Cain, James C. (James Clarence), 1913-1992
  • exactly when. Willie Day Taylor had for years clipped the tickers and marked the tickers for President Johnson, and we just continued this and had the two different wire services--a clipboard for each. She just continued it as she always had. And even
  • Roberts, Juanita, 1913-1983
  • be in it. Your name is Boisfeuillet Jones. You were born in 1913 in Macon, Georgia, and educated at Emory--a bachelor's and a law degree in the late thirties. From 1935 to 1943 you were with the National Youth Administration, on the Georgia staff, then Georgia
  • Biographical information; meeting LBJ through the National Youth Administration (NYA) and Dr. J. Willis Hurst; Jones' work to develop Emory University's health services, including its medical school; Jones' work on the National Advisory Health
  • Jones, Boisfeuillet, 1913-2001
  • looking ahead like he was going to be there forever. I'm told, and the way he used to tell it, when he first came back in February, 1912--[Sam] Rayburn came in March of 1913. Remind me to tell you a story about 4 LBJ Presidential Library http
  • been picked up Gi b Crockett suggested that I ca 11 Willi e Day Taylor and get a copy of it. 50 I called her and went in to tell Senator Russell about the fact that I'd gone to this trouble to try to get him a copy for his collection. He said
  • this same old bunch, Marietta Brooks and Julia Bryson down running the .office; we had Charlie Herring, later our state· ·senator, and Don Thomas, he1ping on this helicopter; Sam Plyler and Dorothy Plyler, Willie Day Taylor, Mack DeGeurin were all involved
  • Pickle, J. J. (James Jarrell), 1913-
  • in the second Graham primary when Willis Smith defeated to the brass knucks. him~ oh, brother~ that got down And we were beaten in that, and beaten pretty badly. They said, "They threw the communiDts at him in the first primary and it didn I t work
  • http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Reedy -- XVI -- 3 that all of the senators in the 1913-1914
  • education? C: I'm a native of Tennessee. My father died when I was I was born in Lawrence County, Tennessee. quite young, six. I came to Texas with my mother and my brother and sister, older brother, younger sister, in 1913. Oh, I didn't tell you I
  • would assume that he lived there in 1912-1913. The first memory I have would be in 1914. M: What memory is that? R: In 1914, Tom Ball ran against Jim Ferguson for governor of Texas. Ferguson was an anti-prohibitionist and Ball was a prohibitionist
  • in Hamilton, Texas, which is in the southwest part of the state. I remained there until I was about six months old or so, and then I was moved to Dallas; that was 1913. a native Dallasite. and high schools. So I consider myself I attended schools here
  • Freeman, Orville L. (Orville Lothrop), 1913-2003
  • , Texas, on August 11, 1913. I graduated from the public schools in Eden in 1929. I entered Howard Payne College in Brownwood, Texas, in the fall of 1929. With some absences occasioned by the Depression, I graduated with a bachelor's degree from Howard
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Hopkins -- III -- 23 when I was just a young boy in prep school in Austin in 1913-14. Mr. Perry's only son, Edgar, and I were classmates at this little school called Austin Academy located at the corner
  • 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
  • where that is--he started that college paper in 1913. of it. Several illustrious people were editors I think Robert Montgomery was and. . . . But Mr. Adams, he not only started it but went downtown and sold ads to the merchants. G: Was the paper
  • 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
  • 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
  • lived in Camp County, the county seat of which is Pittsburg, Texas, I've been in this county all of my life . I was born in 1913, and I'm fifty-eight years of age now . M: Then you spent most of your lifetime right here in this area . BL
  • Freeman, Orville L. (Orville Lothrop), 1913-2003
  • 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
  • Talmadge, Herman E. (Herman Eugene), 1913-2002