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  • Relations Service has been available at times. helpful. I can't recall the specific instances, but it has been very And of course at the time of the King funeral I was in daily telephone conversation with the Attorney General Clark, and he offered me
  • and former presi dent of the State Bar of Texas, and I guess one of the outstanding people in the legal field in Texas, perhaps the nation--a partner in one of the leading law firms in Houston ; the ex-Ambassador to Australia, Edward Clark ; Mr . Will Wilson
  • endorsement in Missouri. Yes. Although Senator Symington had been one of President Truman's favorites, he and Clark Clifford, both about the same age, very handsome, both tall blondes, had served in President Truman's administration and were ve~J close
  • in the House perhaps except in the days of the caucus, in the Wilson days of Clark and Underwood . And we've only been precise on the number once, and that involved four switches, two each way . That was on that Rules fight in 1961, and that was probably
  • , unfortunately. That still pertains today. F: Did they get past the Attorney General's screenings, or did they ever get that far? A: They got that far, but it gets a little mushy there as to how it just died. F: I was thinking both Katzenbach and Clark
  • of the Johnson family while you were there? T: I believe that the Clark Cliffords carne to call some time during the holiday; and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Porter. out, because the staff ~vas Then also a number of the staff members came always family
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh WICKER -- I -- 17 you put a \'/hole bunch of people like Joe Clark in there, it wouldn't have any weight. F: But Arthur Watkins was almost as unassailable as church. W. Exactly my point. And I believe that the political
  • Ramsey [Clark] and I don't know, but it was the Justice Department. ment of a black judge in the South. It was the appoint- We had a person highly qualified, and they brought up the old saw of IRS investigation, which was just utter nonsense. But it's
  • Komer summarizing the contents and saying, "It's mostly a lot of flowery garbage." What he had done is sent it around to his kitchen cabinet. He sent it to Abe Fortas; he sent it to Clark Clifford; he sent it to Dean Acheson; I forget who the others
  • in November of 1955? H: Well, I can answer that specifically. In 1950 I was with Headquarters Army Field Forces at Fort Monroe, Virginia, as deputy G-3. manding general was General Mark Clark. The com- A most outstanding officer. I went to Korea from
  • : Do you recall who some of his early associates and advisers were during this period? J: Yes. I recall some. I can't tell you how much of this is hearsay or how much this comes from later knowledge, but he had Ed Clark . here who has been