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  • . And nobody else could pick up on that line. G: Really. Were there any lines to anyone other than, say, White House staffers? B: Not that I know of. G: Was there one for Dean Rusk, say, or Robert McNamara or Clark Clifford? B: No, the PLs in the office
  • directly. This business of using a third and fourth and fifth party that you get into in politics is seldom a very sound way of communicating unless you do your dealing with very deft and skillful people. I got my fingers burned a little bit the way Clark
  • LBJ meets with Clark Clifford & Abe Fortas about 1968 election; arrival ceremony for Prime Minister & Mrs. Egal of Somalia; Lady Bird works on Women Doers' Luncheon on child health; LBJ gives speech & awards to Federal Career Women group; Lady Bird
  • ; Lady Bird names guests at Women Doers' Luncheon; Lady Bird gives speech; speakers are Dr. Esther Clark, Mrs. Charles Welch & Muriel Humphrey; brief statement by Luci Nugent; Lady Bird to Mar-a-Lago, Florida, as guest of Marjorie Merriweather Post
  • class; Lady Bird gives speech for Williams College's Center for Environmental Studies; Lady Bird & Professor James McGregor Burns go to Mt. Hope Farm; books about LBJ; to Clark Art Institute; dinner at President Sawyer's home
  • Lady Bird to hairdresser; meeting of Preservation of White House Committee; new drapes and rugs for White House; briefing on finances of White House Historical Association by Clark Clifford; lunch; reception for Fine Arts Committee; Lady Bird's
  • on the petition. He had just gotten this information over long distance from Ed Clark. Ed.said that ··John Gracy and one other man turned. him down. Col. Blaylodk: told me on the phone yesterday that he had gotten Lyle and Looney an~ appointment with Major Parten
  • MISSOURI My dear Mr. President: SAMUEL G. K ELLY E XECUTIVE DI REC TOR ADYI SO"'Y GlllOU P MR. WM. 9 . 9ELK"AP 911t1G. GENERAL CLJFF0"9:D BLUEMEL , U.S. ARMY ~ .. ET.> 1111"5. A"LEIGH BURKE COLONEL MILDRED I, CLARK CHll.F, AAlllY CORPS "u"'u: GENERAL
  • States . res . ernanatec1 . from ,eo~essiona1 repre·s entatives·, espec.i ally ·senators Clark and Pell and Rep.• Donald .F ra.s er. · , Att'itude.Towa.rds .King . ~unta Attitudes toward the lG.lJg do ·not appear to: follow along tne s~· lines
  • /show/loh/oh HURD -- I -- 30 country rather than to accept the six thousand dollars that I was offered. So that brings up one other matter, too, that perhaps would be interesting. Mr. Clark Clifford was the lawyer member of the White House Association
  • a wonderful mind, but I don't think he handled himself well with the Congress, and I think that some of his actions as Secretary of Defense were great mistakes. B: And the Attorneys General? T: I think Ramsey Clark's the poorest one we've had in the history
  • in the election of Wilso~--one week; and the next week in Baltimore which nominated Wilson over Champ Clark after 47-48 ballots, a deadlock. I came here from that convention, got a job on the Washington Post on the 4th of July and went to work here on the 4th
  • 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
  • came back to Austin after clerking for Justice Clark. I didn't have much to do with him when he was working for the governor, although I used to do things like write civil rights speeches for the governor, but that was another-B
  • it the New Clark--the only thing new about it was the door. Anyway, we were standing out on the sidewalk in front of this hotel with our wives--neither of us had the tickets to get our wives into the gallery--discussing it; LBJ Presidential Library http
  • of Washington protocol, if a federal agency is going to be operating in a state, it is customary at least to inform the senators. H: It usually is. B: Did you ever think of talking to Attorney General Kennedy--or Katzenbach or Clark? H: No. I talked
  • was known as a liberal. Most of them just But when I was in the (Virginia) State Senate I supported all the liberal things and was an active supporter of Woodrow Wilson and all of his programs when Champ Clark and a lot of others said he was going
  • contribution the United States should make to world order is the example of a model society at home. M: That's the William Borah isolationist ideal, of course. But a lot of these people, Joe Clark of Pennsylvania and others--Aiken--in the past have supported
  • that quest for votes. I remember Tom Clark and his wife were along, and one other couple. They also invited Lyndon and Lady Bird. It was on Sunday, and we were on one of the Treasury boats on the Potomac. And Lyndon was just as mad as he could be because
  • or not NATO should have a special ministerial meeting right away on Czechoslovakia. Cabinet Room. We had a session over in the Clifford, who was the Secretary of Defense, Clark Clifford, said he thought even if the ministerial meeting didn't accomplish
  • through this period, we did. As a matter of fact, both White House staff and Bureau of the Budget people like Jim Clark. You know, you argue with them and discuss things with them, but there was strong support. And of course the guys on the White House
  • mayor may not become a member of the Supreme Court at the present reading, and Ed Clark who did become an ambassador to Australia a little bit later. At any rate, we opened this new radio station in 1946, and I was employed as a part-time news editor
  • there was no opposing candidate, General [Mark] Clark called me out of the infantry, asked me a number of questions, and told me that he was somewhat afraid that I might get hurt; so was I, for that matter, as I told him. He wanted me to apply for relief to go home
  • represen- tation on the bench. We clearly had a claim on that appointment and we had a excellent candidate. I know that Ramsey Clark was for him and recommended him but it was stopped at the White House, and I think it was because of my position
  • , and visited with Clark Clifford and Stu in their rooms and saying, "Good fight, but just didn't have enough horse power" and all of that, "Don't give up. Next time, or another time around," so on, you see. Me Who did you think was going to be the Vice
  • Fortas and Clark Clifford came to see me in my office at the White House one day. From time to time you would hear reference to what happened to the missal, which I always referred to as a bible because I never did open the cover of it, the missal that I
  • district line up? P: Well, the Congressional District used to go all the way down to Clark Street. The ward lines, of course, don't go anywhere near that far. But Lyndon was deeply--you know, nothing, nothing, nothing took more of his time. Wherever he