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  • • C91ffel"Atlea wlth Clark Cllfford. Clark Nlleft• taat tile Vlce PAa ■ ldeat la by.... to reacll olll a. far ..... CAD to tile wltbnt act..n, ~ OD aaytblaa ,.. nld ,.a,llclJ. ClWord Nllan■ we ■bOlll• bep om of till■ a■ m11ell a ■ poa ■ ll,le Ulll &Told
  • . . '· ~· , ., ·-· .. . . .... ' The general served "'1.th the· President as a rr,ember . . . ,. -· ··or· the Brazilian Expeditionary Force {BEL?) . which fought under .Gen . ·Ma-rk Clark during World War II~ · He is . intensely proud of his role in the ·BEF and. reputedly believes
  • . ... 4. Goldberg ms been searching for a way to leave his post with appropriate dignity: he inquires as to the successo~ to Mr. Justice Clark. He asks whether Phil Jessup' s post on the International Court of Justice at The Hague may soon be vacant. 5
  • that might be used by U. S. spokesmen in the wake of a Presidential announcement. 7. We have discussed these papers at length today with Clark Clifford, and he sides with Raborn, Wheeler and the Joint Chiefs against a pause. The rest of us are for _it
  • this matter. CEJohnson -aECRET Attachment October 17, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR DR. E. C. WELSH Subject: Soviet One-Orbit Space Operations The October 16, 1967, TIMES article by Evert Clark, concerning the possible significance of the recent flurry of Soviet
  • hout the area, EOlice never came under sni er f j.re ~ no flashes w e r e ~ seen, and no bullets or expended shells were the Lt. William Clark, who, as/Bergen County Police De art---~---civil disorders expert, was on the scene, reporte.d
  • to get rid of all these Tex ans who had been ruining every­ thing in Washington all this time. of all. And, of course, he was ~e l ea d Texan And then it sor t of we nt down the lis t of the Tex a n s like Ramsey Clark a nd the o t h ers , and Lyndon
  • ; lunch in China Room; new Tiffany wildflower china for Johnson administration; tea for American Federation of the Arts; viewing film, "Paintings of the White House;" party at Sulgrave Club for Lynda Johnson & Charles Robb; Charles Robb & Tom Clark toast
  • : be ~etter Ball: If you wind up bom':lin.g during New Year, wouJ.dn' t 1 t to do it during their ~ew Year? Wouldn't it be better to ao it before Congress comes back? Pres1ient: Incidentally, do ·we want a personal State of the Union nessage? ·Clark, I
  • of the different people. He described He said that he'd had Justice Fortas and Clark Clifford there as two men who were completely independent and detached from the whole thing and had no particular involvement, who could just sit in the corner and watch
  • to bring that about in Philadelphia, and Senator Bennett Clark from Missouri handled it, and John O'Connor, who was Congressman from New York, he handled it, too. And we abrogated the rule then. But I don't think he wanted to see those votes recorded
  • (she later became his wife and was a delightful person whose days were all too short lived), sometimes Ed and !mne Clark or Everett and Mary Looney. None of us had a lot of money but we were young and ambitious. The track ahead of us was clear and we
  • 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
  • in it in color, et cetera. How to do it? Clark Clifford was there. They decided to form this Society, the White House Historical Society. a non-profit organization which would publish the White House guide. i.t~-the editing. not a cent. We said that we
  • wanted to ask you about that because, as I recall, there was a Washington Post and New York Times article about the role of Clark Clifford when he became secretary of defense. Was it Bobby's