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  • BRIOHT, J .W., NSFIELD, Mike MORSE,Wayne HICKENLOOPER,Bourke B. CASE, Clifford P. COOPER,John Sherman CARLSON,Frank AIKEN, George n. HARPHAM,Dale, Washington, n.c. KING, James B., Jr. LOBODA,Samuel R., Oakton, Va. April Jl. 1'61 Dear CoaaH•en,ae
  • for the nselves. It was a I remain, Your friend, I Frank B. G" iotti, D. D. Past Na:ti al Commander Regular et erans Association of the U. s. ~oing around that the that he might rename :-ganization in this l that we stop alloWing •.• t Gaul.le shows a good
  • , during the mid-1950s he had a very narrow majority, one or two votes. C: Had the Wayne Morse situation and so on. G: Frank C: Lausche. Yes. But I'm not sure--then again, I'm going backwards. I'm not so sure anybody really wanted a working majority
  • facilities. Democrats Harry Byrd and Frank Lausche joined Republicans on the vote. Eisenhower sends special message to Congress proposing legislation to establish civilian controlled National Aeronautics and Space Agency to direct all government activities
  • the people when I ran that I'd vote with the Democrats to organize the Senate, so that was well settled. My word is my bond. Now when Senator [Frank] Lausche came in, it may have been a little different because he had everybody in suspense as to which
  • know. [Inaudible]. G: The Senate was almost split fifty-fifty Democrats and Republicans that year. In 1957, LBJ was elected majority leader because of one very conservative Democrat, Senator [Frank] Lausche, voted for him for majority leader. Did he
  • with Stanley Marcus, Ed Connally, Mr. Choate (Boston Herald-Traveler), Mr. & Mrs. Hobart Taylor, Jr., Jim Pipkin and Augustus Long of Texaco, and Frank Mayborn. Talks with Woodrow Seals and with Secy. Freeman. 1/20 Lunch at White House for [Democratic
  • : Do you recall what he did that was so impressive? R: No, it wasn't what he did, it was his manner. relaxed. He was easy. He seemed to be very frank and very candid. He was Since there was so little he could possibly say I didn't pay any
  • , is in no mood for additional legislative programs. ICC - no ~oblem. Safety - concern over additional expenditures even from the Trust Fund. Said he will discuss with Wilbur Mills, George Fallon and possibly Harley Staggers. Rep. °Frank Thompson - Okay
  • of Agriculture & Mrs. Freeman MANSFIELD, Mike, U.S. Senate CASE, Clifford, U.S. Senate LAUSCHE, Frank J ., U.S. Senate GRUENING, Ernest, U.S. Senate CHAFEE, John H., Gov. of R.I. ELLINGTON, Buford, Gov. of Tenn. CONNALLY, John B., Gov. of Texas WlDNALL, William B
  • Lausche votes with the Democrats to organize the Senate. Senator Mansfield is elected Democratic whip. Senator Anderson offers a motion to consider the adoption of new Senate rules in hopes of changing Rule 22, the filibuster rule. LBJ immediately moves
  • by member ICO agencies, with attachment of Jo Ko Treadwell, Chairman, Ships Panel of ICO, letter dated January 24, 1967, to Dro Frosch regarding utilization of ANTON BRUUN M Letter to Mro Frank Meyer, Administrative Assistant to Representative Gerald Ford
  • , Edward V. McCLELLAN , John 1 • SCOTT, Hugh TYDINGS, Joseph D. BARTLETT, E. L. BREHJSTER, Daniel B. CASE, Clifford P. CLARK) Joseph S. DOUGLAS, Paul H. GRUENING, Ernest HARTKE, Vance INOUYE, Daniel KENNEDY, Robert F. KUCHEL, Thomas H. LAUSCHE, Frank J
  • and strategic delivery systems, and to apply necessary safeguards to peaceful activities which have possible weapon implications. The Assistant Director is Dr. Herbert Scoville, Jr. He was appointed to this position in December, 1963, succeeding Dr. Frank Long
  • , Harrison A. BREWSTER,Daniel B. KENNEDY,Edward M. BASS, Ross CANNON, Howard W. COTTON,Norris DOMINICK,Peter HARTKE,Vance LAUSCHE,Frank J. McGEE, Gale W. MCRTON,Thruston B. NEUBERGER, Maurine B. PEARSON,James B. u. s. Congress GJ:AIMO,Robert N. HARRIS, Oren
  • and there. I think [Frank] Lausche of Ohio was in the Senate at that particular point and Lausche was way to the right of Bob Taft. You get sorne of the New England group such as Johnny Pastore, who was a liberal but certainly was not part of the liberal
  • . Woolf crJ•it brUlianUt. It .can't. e~~r, b• that tough. a1aia~ Jlt' • 1ot to 1•t ea1ier. Y~ bow you baye a yo\Uli, 111.a• working for you iame of ·Peter stabell wit.~ married Su ■an. Loe• ■•r, Frank Loe ■■ er' t dauahter. i q.udl~ her oa my knee
  • position is inimical to our best interests in .-Latin America. Senator Lausche -- Ray Firestone, Chairman of Firestone, _ has been talking to Senator Lausche and is planning to do so again. He seems to be sanguine about having Lausche support the Resolution
  • , quite strong in that way. interest was foreign policy. But the key that triggered my The incumbent Senator, Senator Frank Barrett who had been in public life without a defeat all the way from the state legislature to governor to Congress to the Senate
  • a in st t h e v a st m ajo rity s e n ti ­ m e n t in th is co u n try , b o th w h ite an d Negro, w h ich n o w w a n ts to see th in g s d on e. Instead o f Just lis te n to m ore b ig talk . SOUTHEAST ASIA PROBLEM M r. LAUSCHE. Mr. P resident, I de
  • Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh SUNDQUIST -- I -- 6 S: On the motion of Senator Lausche. G: But that did come from the Agriculture Department in 1963? S: Oh, yes
  • -=--.~ CODE _ _ _ ~ J96-3500 _ __ . (Walter Edwards) 1.700 K. St., N# Res: 4941 Glenbrook Rd : ~: 363-4133 AREA COO[ - CHURCH_, Sen~ Frank .(405 OSOB) 6704 Pembert~.!:!L-.8.~tb_~sdaL_ Md_.- - -·- OL 6-lm JlqFA CODE 342-8107 109 Idaho St., Boise
  • know that Johnson went over frequently--until the last year when Mr. Rayburn was progressively ill--to the Board of Education meetings and met there with the collection of Texans and others, Dick Bolling [D.-Mo.] and Frank Thompson [D.-N.J.] and John
  • (Cong. Record, p . 1 7 8 3 4 ); Lausche (Cong. Record, p . 178 35 ); Randolph (Cong. Record, p . 173 3 6); Sparkman (Cong. Record, p . 17838) B a r t l e t t (Cong. Record, p . 178 39 ); Byrd (West V ir g in ia ) (Cong. Record, p . 17839) and Clark (Cong
  • assurances of friendship and support. He too seemed quite pleased to have had a frank and open SECRET ~!GDia _s.EGRET NODIS -2discussion with your representative. Following the luncheon, I met again with the Chancellor, this time accompanied by Vice
  • . Johnson, members of the United States Government, and the peoples of the United States for the spontaneous and warm welcome accorded us during our short stay in your country. We are fully confident that the frank and friendly dis­ cussions which we have
  • as-­ I'm not now talking about southern Democrats and the civil rights issue, but you had a few Democrats like [Frank] Lausche of Ohio and two or three others that on fiscal matters were really much more Republican than they were Democratic. G: [Harry
  • (chairman) presiding. Present: Senators Fulbright, Sparkman, Mansfield, Morse, Gore, Lausche, Church, Symington, Dodd, Clark, Pell, McCarthy, Hickenlooper, Aiken, Carli>n, Williams, Mundt, Case, and Cooper. Also present: Senators Gruening, Morton, and Percy
  • . JONES December 16, 1966 EXECUTIVE /L. ..$1"/ Bill Bonnell returned to Washington from his Virgin Islands vacation yesterday, and said that his informant in Alabama was Frank"caron, an insurance man there who is close to the cabinet members
  • apparent criticism of our policies, and he said that noses seem to be out of joint over the fact that everybody but the Congress has now been consulted. He said he got this kind of feeling from Fulbright and Lausche and Mundt, and even from Stuart Symington