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  • for the FBI? S: Oh, I went in about the time of the beginning of World War II and stayed in till the end of the war. I returned to Dallas then to practice law. [vi: Did you join this firm that you're now in at that point? '. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • President Johnson. go in and Mr. Wilkins said: So they "Mr. Vice President, we want to talk to you about civil rights legislation. II This was another one of many occasions where President Johnson's knowledge of government, his keen personal understanding
  • Oral history transcript, Luther Holcomb, interview 2 (II), 7/8/1969, by T.H. Baker
  • here, and weI re about to allow it to be taken away from us. II That was particularly evident from the labor people and the more liberal element in the party. They seemed to have a distrust for this switchover, and so in order to make it official
  • Mayborn -- I -- 10 Ninth Air Force PIO [public information officer], that worked for me when I was acting chief and assistant chief of SHAEF [Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force] public relations in World War II. This boy was the Ninth Air
  • is made sub ~ect:'G L:1"'~,:;1..-,-cwing term~ a~d conditio~s: 1. ':::'i ::le to the 'S.13.·c_":ialc:ra'i"csferred :lere p:.:'J?2rty rights, will pas~ to the Gnited Stat~s as ~~ delivery of this material ii:1.to the ?hysical cus tody c
  • in the newspaper business, magazine business, World War II service in the Air Corps, and, after the war, your own public relations firm. When in this process did you first meet Mr. Johnson? M: I saw him when he was running for the Senate in 1948. I did
  • background and how I got started in Texas politics, I was born in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and came to Texas during World War II. As a relatively young man and with very little interest in politics, I met my wife in Austin, Texas and went to law school