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Crafts, Edward C. (Edward Clayton), 1910-
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9 results
- up my wife and children
and drive them cross-country to bring them back to Washington.
When we were
going through the city of Rapid City, South Dakota, Thursday, the 24th of
August, and we stopped at a signal on St. Joseph Street.
M:
You must have
- series of new things.
I hope I have a copy of that here.
A friend of mi ne, Florence Mahoney, and
I were great friends with Clark Clifford, who was also a great friend of
Senator Johnson's, as you well know.
Clark Clifford said that he would
. get us
- with outdoor advertising, we wanted to try to get our
views before him.
We had no direct line to the President.
I was from
Texas, and Ed Clark was a good friend of mine, and I knew that he had
the President's ear at times and Mrs. Johnson's ear, because his
- and technical aspects.
They've got to have
money, and they've got to have staff.
Mc
You mentioned in the last tape the rather intriguing meeting between Udall
and President Lyndon Johnson over Alaskan land, and you mentioned that Clark
Clifford
- of the Lewis and Clark Trail Commission.
But unfortunately the President's Council didn't work out too well.
Udall was the first chairman for two years, and then Freeman was.
During
LBJ Presidential Library
http://www.lbjlibrary.org
ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
- .
But there was the feeling that you were
sitting with a dynamo more than the touching.
He was at concert
pitch all the time.
One time during the war, we went to an Army-Navy game.
Jim was off in the Pacific and Bird was in Texas.
Tom Clarks.
We drove over to Baltimore
- a small dinner at the White House
for the Cabinet, and then lunch out at Clark Clifford's on the 20th, and
I haven't seen him or corresponded with him since then .
M:
That exhausts the questions I had for you .
B:
Let me go back and say one thing .
I
- this.
Mrs. Kennedy had also asked John Walker, the Director
of the National Gallery of Art, to address himself to this problem,
and I worked very closely with John on it, as I did with Mr. West,
and ultimately with Mr. Clark Clifford, who was an advisor