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  • Clark Clifford and Abe Fortas to kill the damned story. You can't hide a bull fiddle in a Volkswagen. F: It would have been worse if leaked. W: Yes. It's just too bad that you sometimes do things with your eye on the irmnediate short-range
  • , Justice Black is not a chief justice; he's one of the associate justices. It's just as fascinating. I've been rather interested in the recent controversy on Justice [Abe] Fortas' appointment. So few people have realized that an associate justice has
  • in that job would have had the kind of access that somebody on the White House staff had or a cabinet officer had would have been if he were a good friend of the President's, if he were a Bill Deason, or an Abe Fortas, or a Clark Clifford or somebody like
  • was in the Pentagon then. Among the things I do remember is getting Abe Fortas and McGeorge Bundy and Vance I guess down to the Dominican Republic to get [Joaquin] Balaguer put in power. But I think, you know, Johnson always thought that Fulbright didn't like
  • ? And I think he always regarded the ABA as kind of a stuffy organization. I am dimly beginning to remember actually a meeting with the ABA Judicial Selection Committee or the ABA president, somebody which may have come during the [Abe] Fortas-- G: He
  • . . . . And then in the afternoon at three o'clock he's got [Abe] Fortas and [Clark] Clifford in the office with him. They're going over the State of the Union. He wouldn't let anybody in. Then he starts this whole series of calls to me and Valenti. G: Making further changes? C
  • if he called himself. It may not be logged in. C: God. [Abe] Fortas is really all over this. Okay. In any case, let's get on with this. G: You think this is about April 4, 1966? C: I think this happened on April 4. Well, I just, maybe I'm wrong
  • . And the idea was not to pinpoint this one box, but to break the entire election down and just see who won it and who lost it. And they were unwilling to do that." And he said, "At four in the afternoon, Abe ----------,------------LBJ Presidential Library
  • and got an apartment in a hotel, and went-to work at Arnold, Fortas, and Porter with the understanding that I could campaign. Of course, Abe Fortas supported Lyndon Johnson, but the fi rm had a ra.ther wide acceptance of political views, and really
  • app are nt. The newspapers in o ther countries make g reat to-do ab out the Presid e n t's security . I've got a picture tak en in Aust ral ia pr inted in a newspaper there. I had a radi o in my hand , and I bent over to tell the President
  • Experiences with Presidential foreign travel; importance of availability of communication; Presidential speeches; LBJ’s foreign relations; White House staff press briefings; Marvin Watson; 75% free hand with the press; Fortas/Thornberry nomination
  • that Abe Fortas and Tom Corcoran and Ed Weisl are going to try to get us some contributions, and a lot of absolutely delightful, sarcastic, substantive letters from Jim Rowe especially. G: LBJ seems to have had more support from labor nationally that year
  • at our house in those days was likely to have a mixture of, oh, say Stu Symington and Abe Fortas and Don Cook and Senator [Alvin] Wirtz from Texas when he was up, Bill Douglas, the Tom Clarks, the Speaker any time we could get him, Fred Vinson, who
  • , I think, we ought to develop. Because, you see, Lyndon Johnson had been in government some thirty-odd years. And he knew from his long contacts with Abe Fortas and with the man Wirtz who was Under Secretary of Interior-M: Alvin Wirtz? C: Alvin
  • recommended on particular programs--take into account the budget that he had put before the Congress, and then to fit everything into that. Had I known in advance, had Abe Fortas said at the beginning, or Joe Califano at some stage had told me that "We want
  • , through Tommy Corcoran and Abe Fortas and a 11 the people tha t had to do with PWA public works. He and Tom Corcoran became friends very early. To that extent he was in and around the periphery of the White House even as a youngster, even before he
  • and then it came up during recess of the Supreme Court. In a very, very rare occasion for a newspaperman, a justice invited about three of us reporters for Texas papers back into his private chambers for a hearing. was Justice Hugo Black. It Abe Fortas, who
  • and Clark Clifford and Abe Fortas to accept Walter Jenkins' resignation immediately; I felt that that was not the right tactic--that it would be a little bit too much--it would smack too much of abandoning a man who certainly had been a long, faithful
  • relationships with Eppie [Ephraim] Evron, who was the Israeli minister, number two in the Israeli embassy. I'm sure it came to President Johnson through Abe Fortas, Arthur and Mathilde Krim, and a number of his personal friends who were leaders in the American
  • this tragedy occurred in Dallas, the President came back here as President--Mr. Johnson. My wife and I and Abe Fortas and his wife were at the Elms where he was then living just after he came back, and I saw the enormous and unique burden he was carrying
  • , incidentally, that both [Clark] Clifford and [Abe] Fortas were at that meeting. In any case, I never heard anything more about going to work for the White House until the day that Bill Moyers was announced as press secretary. And I was just reading that over
  • that I ought to do this. So in the end I gave in and said I would. Then that was the day of his news conference when he announced me and Abe Fortas. Now, I'm not absolutely certain that Justice Fortas ever did say "Yes," but I had said yes. 13 LBJ
  • much more visually. And I think there was a tremendous amount of respect for Clark Clifford. MG: What about Abe Fortas? G: He was probably a tragedy because I think Johnson and Fortas were so close personally. MG: Did you have a chance to see