Clarence Faulk

W. Page Faulk Clarence Eugene Faulk, Jr. (January 9, 1909 – March 5, 2010), was an American journalist who published from 1931 to 1962 the Ruston Daily Leader, the daily newspaper in Ruston in north Louisiana.

He was also engaged in real estate and a pioneer of self-storage warehousing, a business that he did not launch until after he was seventy years of age.

After two years at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, Faulk transferred to the School of Journalism at the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri, where he met Louise Benson Page, herself a journalism student.

Faulk was publisher of the Ruston Daily Leader for thirty-one years until he sold the newspaper in 1962.

He was a member of the federal wartime Office of Price Administration, often called the "rationing board".