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  • of being for labor or management, with Connor sort of indicating well, if they're pressed, you're going to have to let them raise their prices and what have you, that we would have to bring somebody else in. It was not, I'm sure--I didn't know Wayne Morse
  • , accompanied by Senator Wayne Morse, Gardner Ackley, Secretary Wirtz, Asst Secy of Labor James Reynolds, David Ginsburg to meet with him concerning t strike negotiations -- the President had not yet retired and was on the massage table. At this session
  • , 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
  • a minority to filibuster legislation or a nomination supported by the majority and LBJ's interpretation of the rule; military bases in the South; Cronin's view of Wayne Morse; Claire Booth Luce's and Lewis Strauss' nominations; working with Margaret Chase
  • the way tor acceptance of the treaties. DOS The President today sent to the Congress his report on the Commodity Credit Corporation To Oval ofc w/ Robert Anderson Joe Califano and Senator Wayne Morse Hon Cyrus Vance ^7 Nicholas Katzenbach
  • Joelson Sen Wayne Morse Cong Robt Duncan Cong Jed Johnson Sen Karl Mundt THE WH!TE HOUSE Date PHEStDEWT LYMOOM B. JOHNSON Feb 24 DA'LYDtA^Y White The President began his day at (Place) Day p fort ^j . -r;^ Teiephone In Out 7^ 10:50a Lo /# Expend
  • of this, that he was going to be attacked just daily. And indeed, within the Senate there was [Wayne] Morse and later [William] Proxmire and people like that who began to attack him for being too much of an authoritarian ruler. That was enough, I guess, at some
  • Lucas Senator Alan Bible Senator Gale McGee Senator Edmund Muskie Senator Joseph Tydings Senator Eugene McCarthy Senator Ralph Yarborough Senator Daniel Inouye Senator and Mrs. Phil Hart Senator John Pastore Senator Jennings Randolph Senator Wayne Morse
  • : I have no recollection. G: Anything on the Hells Canyon legislation? K: Only that Wayne Morse, who was a brilliant person, highly volatile and a real loner, took over the opposition to the construction of the dam on Hells Canyon. Lyndon treated
  • election; Wayne Morse; the Lewis Strauss nomination; the McCarthy censure and the Watkins committee; LBJ’s relationship with Richard Nixon; relationship between Republicans and Democrats in Senate; civil rights legislation; statehood for Hawaii and Alaska
  • -(no individual pictures taken) Senator Howard Cannon Cong Raymond Clevenger Senator Lee Metcalf Cong John Dent Senator Alan Bible Cong James Fulton Sen Joseph Montoya Cong Elmer Holland Sam Gibbons Sen Wayne Morse Cong Sen Paul Fanning Cong Jed Johnson Sen Frank
  • '/ Attorney General Ramsey Clark J Senato r Mike Mansfield / Senator Russell Long . ' / Senator Richard Russell / Senator Robert Byrd / Senator Wayne Morse / f _ Senator Ralph Yarborough ' A // Senator Everett Dirksen CXC^ Speaker John McCormack Cong. Gerald
  • strike I just frankly was not involved with. G: Wayne Morse I think was the senator. C: Wayne Morse who was on our committee was the main guy who was involved in that. And I think Senator Hill had turned that over pretty much to Wayne Morse
  • of HR 4177 to convey certain lands pics taken McGeo Joseph Karth Authorizing Minn St Paul out Minn Bundy Senator W G of Wayne Morse of Oregon Jenkins Reedy To press office and read ticker read Return to Oval Office Liz Carpenter Dr Burkley
  • Secretary of Montana Wool Growers; Senator Gale McGhee, Senator Henry Jackson, Senator Wayne Morse, Senato r Mike Mansfield. J A Crowder Counsel Operator asking In outer office W Jenkins His for 10-12 cups of coffee in Cabinet Room reading first editions
  • will be different after The key disarmament people in the S nate have lost some strength -­ Joe Clark, Wayne Morse, Senator Carlson. Ambassador Wiggins: Ratification of the NPT is an embarrassment. All ask if we are going to ratify it. The non-nuclear group wonders
  • Wayne Morse (b.1) LUNCH w/ Mrs . Johnson , Mr . J . C . Kellam , Mr.^oftMM ^ Clyd d Weatherby , Mr. Donal d Thomas , Mr . an d Mrs. W . P . (Bill ) Steven , Liz Carpenter , Lyn n Machado, J Jacobse n MRs ^Mamien*Jts Allison -i4 */- Meeting o n
  • Biographical information; Senator Wayne Morse; Clayton Powell; Chair of Education and Labor; loss of power in 1966; Edith Green; liberal on education; lasting impact; offered amendments under JFK and LBJ; critical of Office of Economic Opportunity
  • legislation passed more easily; the passage of the Medicare bill; Wilbur Mills' involvement in 1963 legislation; Wayne Morse; extension of the temporary feed grain program; John Gronouski replacing Edward Day as U.S. postmaster general; how Henry Cabot Lodge
  • e Jacobse n , the Cabinet Room for BIPARTISAN CONGRESSIONAL LEADERSHIP OFF r / Senator Mike Mansfield . I Senato r Russel l Long | Senato r Robert Byrd | Senato r Margare t Chas e Smith ! Senator Wayne Morse | Senator John Sparkman ' I Senator
  • , but keep me out of it." I'm with you all the Just sort of that view, and of course some senators, like Wayne Morse, had been critical of the [Leader]. He was critical of everybody, and he was critical of the Leader from time to time. And there were
  • Rights Bill; impressions of Wayne Morse; LBJ's sources of power; counting votes; LBJ and Eisenhower; Alaska-Hawaii statehood; Harris-Fulbright natural gas bill; views on support of education; issue of regulation of electronic media; unemployment
  • importance, the staff did it. G: How long would the meetings generally last? J: A couple of hours, from, say, ten till twelve. G: I think you were going to talk about Wayne Morse and your recollections of him leaving the Republican Party. J: Oh yes, I
  • More detailed recollections of the majority leadership; the Policy Committee; Wayne Morse; Robert Taft; nature of bipartisanship under Eisenhower Administration; William Knowland and Hawaii and Alaska statehood
  • of the judiciary committee to get the judicial interpretation that helped us avoid traps that were laid for us. In the Senate I worked closely with Wayne Morse, who was the subcommittee chairman for education. I worked in addition with John Brademas, with Hugh Cary
  • -state issue, segregation, and the poverty impact formula; working with Adam Clayton Powell, Carl Perkins, Phil Landrum, Emanuel Celler, Wayne Morse, John Brademas, Hugh Cary, Edith Green, Joe Clark, Jack Forsyth and Charles Lee; lobbying the Congress
  • ^ Senator Wayne Morse- Member in Fish Room REMARKS: 5:40tn ^^04! Mr. Fred Kappel - Member Mr. Theodore Kheel - Member _^ Mr. George Meany - Member I Mr. nHHHJHHHy John N (Jack) Gentry - Deputy Asst Secy of Labor _ )I Mr. HIMHM^^ Robert "Bob" Harris - Counsel
  • on, were clearly on the rocks. Abel was asking for way more than 3.2 per cent; the industry was nowhere near 3.2 per cent. We decided, for a couple of reasons, that Wayne Morse and LeRoy Collins, who was then the undersecretary of commerce, should be sent
  • : Oh, sure. Oh, sure. G: Now [Wayne] Morse of course was left out in the cold because he was a member of neither party at this point I suppose. R: Well, Morse was left out in the cold, but he wasn't completely left out in the cold
  • . U Alexis Johnson Hon. Robert E Kintner Cong. William S Maillard H. E. Dr. Jose A Mora, Secy General, Council of OAS Senator Wayne Morse H. E. Ilmar Penna-Marinho, President, Council of OAS Hon Walt Rostow H. E. Dr. Carlos Sanz-de-Santamaria, Chairman
  • ! Con g Joseph Minish Conb Burt L. Talcott Cong J. Irving Whalley Sen Claiborne Pell ! Cone Charles Weltner Cong J Wm Stanton Cong F Bradford Morse Sen Clif ord CaseJ Cong Bernard Grabowski Cong Thomas Rees Cong Vernon W. Thomson Sen Johi S. Cooper
  • : Of course, old Senator [Wayne] Morse, the one hair shirt of the Senate that he shouldn't get crossways with--and I believe he was told ahead of time, if I remember rightly, that Morse would oppose the closing of that center. Of course, Bert was of a nature
  • William Ayres Cong Cong Cong Cong Charles Goodell Alphonzo Bell Ogden Reid Gerald Ford Senator Wayne Morse Cong Senator Ralph Yarborough Cong Senator Jennings Randolph Cong Senator Harrison Williams Cong Senator Winston Prouty Cong Cong Adam C Powell
  • / same as above Senator Wayne Morse - (ret. his call of earlier ) David Ginsburg - attorney April 21, 1966 White House THURSDAY Henry Wilson Senator Mansfield MW (pl) Bob Fleming (pl) (ret. his call) MW (pl) To the State Dining Room
  • __ a means for Congressional CommiteeSenator Wayne Morse Hon. Wilbur Cohen Chairman and Sub-Committee Chair Senator Russell Long Hon. Ralph Huitt men to rreet Secietary Girdne^r Senator Clinton Anderson Hon. Wm. Gorham _j and the nLembers of his organiza
  • ~ ..Y-1net' ~~ A/cJ • ~J~~LjC. "'9s-e,c, ~.4C-?LL~~ d4d ~. ~ --uJd:::7.,4,A.,, ,f ,[)__ C!. ...... .J. W. P'ULIIRIGHT, ARK., CHAIRMAN JOHN SPARKMAN. ALA. HUl!IERT H. HUMPHREY• MINN. MIKE MANSFIELD, MONT. WAYNE MORSE. OREG. RUSSELL 8. LONG/LA
  • . This time there was a knife-edge Republican majority in the Senate of 48 to 47, and one Independent, Wayne Morse. In some ways it was the best time of Lyndon's life. It's much easier to ride herd on a group of men who are that closely matched. You have more
  • ; Allan Shivers' visit to Washington, D.C.; LBJ's relationship with Sam Houston Johnson, Josefa Johnson, and Rebekah Johnson; Oveta Culp Hobby; visits to Washington, D.C. by Madame Chiang Kai-shek and Anthony Eden; Wayne Morse changing parties
  • Democrats, and 1 Independent (Senator Wayne Morse). LBJ and CTJ (Lady Bird Johnson) are guests of Sarah McClendon at the Women’s Press Club dinner that night. 1/6 LBJ and CTJ attend a cocktail party given by the Dale Millers in honor of Speaker Rayburn
  • help in all those fights. I think this had something to do with his effect on Wayne Morse too because Wayne Morse was strong for Hell 1 s Canyon. And Lyndon Johnson was very active in our efforts to push that legislation through, despite
  • . Then he cooled off. And Wayne Morse who was chairman of the subcommittee at the same time was a small "d" democrat and everybody has to have their say and we should go through the processes and all that. I clearly believe that. I found that to be true
  • extent Wayne Morse, people like-G: Kefauver? 0: Well, Kefauver, but he was in a different category . What was the senator from Pennsylvania? Clark . He was a loner . Liberal senator? Oh, Joe These senators--Pat McNamara--were not in the Johnson
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Glen and Marie Wilson -- II -- 4 He had some other gimmicks he used to use. Senator [Wayne] Morse was known around the Senate
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh McGovern -- I -- 18 Up until then, the ball on descent was carried by Morse [Senator Wayne Morse] and [Ernest Henry] Gruening because they did think that we were going to get in deeper. I don't know why
  • for the Vietnam War effort; why McGovern spoke out against the war in Vietnam as early as 1963; McGovern's expectation that LBJ would get U.S. troops out of Vietnam after the 1964 presidential election; Wayne Morse, Ernest Henry Gruening, and other senators who
  • to Morocco and actually saw the thing firsthand from our committee was Wayne Morse. Wayne sent for me. He said he was going over there to take a look at it, and he got me to give him a whole series of suggestions as to what we were looking into and so forth
  • was in session, he made it Most senators, they hate being there to listen to people like Wayne Morse and people making those long-winded speeches. But Johnson would always be there. He would have lunch with people like Senator [Walter] George or Senator