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  • Security/meeting at White House Texas Delegation Bobby Sen Fulbright Sen Mansfield Sen Humphrey Sen Chavez Hobart Taylor, Jr. Neil McNeil; re: his inquiry on the time he has spen t with the President since Inauguration Sen Morse Sen McCarthy Shook hands
  • signing it Congressman Harding and Mrs. Pfost re: reclamation project in Idaho Sen Anderson, re: helping on Idaho project Walter Mayor de Lesseps Morrison - re: Fairbanks-Morse project and well in India Govern or McFarland (Phoenix) Booth Mooney, in George
  • hassle over paragraph on mutual reduction of action, Africans didn't want mutual because of our bombing. That is now out. Morse will call for meeting of Assembly but Assembly will do exactly what Security Council did. Presidens Rusk: Let Goldberg find
  • of Amarillo was properly filed fo r US Senator; finding out how much longer Mr. Rogers had in which to pay filin g fee . Senator George Parkhouse and W. O. Reed (Dallas) Gerry, r e: whe n Paul Roger s fee has to be paid. Sen Morse, re: invitation to Sen
  • 15 16 17 18 19 20 4:00p 4:15p 4:20p f 4:35p t 4:45p t 5:15p 5:40p 6:00p 6:40p f 7:00p Date Activity (include March 23, 196 0 visited by)* LD Expenditure Code George Dave McDonal d Atty General Rogers Sen Morse and Sen Lusk Picture in Senate
  • Dick Nelson - asking him to read the yeas and nays on vote last night on cotton - wheat Bill Mac Bundy (nr - fr mansion) Walter Jenkins " " " Senator Morse " " " W. Jenkins " " " W. Jenkins " " " W. Jenkins " " " f Judge Moursund " " " J. Valenti
  • of that. I've thought about this, and so far as I'm concerned, not participating, not debating, is not being a senator. And I'm going to be a senator like Wayne and Paul"--meaning Morse and Douglas--"I'm going to talk whenever I want to, on whatever subject I
  • was going out and Johnson was making up the list, that was a consideration. And certainly Air Force One, nobody got on there just for the heck of it. G: Really? J: There was some reason for it. I remember one time he took [Wayne] Morse somewhere, which
  • selected the other members? J: Well, I'm sure the chairman, Tydings, did. I remember there were some that Lyndon felt he could work with--I mean, he felt he could work with all of them. I believe even [Wayne] Morse was on there, but first and last Lyndon
  • of conduit between Mr. Johnson and his outstanding critics in Congress--men like Morse and Fulbright and Mansfield? M: I tried a little with Fulbright, but it didn't work much. I had known Fulbright, and had been something of a friend of his, but I think
  • on the floor. (Interruption) G: --because that is an interesting point. You were talking about [Wayne] Morse and moving his seat. R: Yes. G: Why did he request it, first of all? R: Morse had gotten at loggerheads with the Republican Party. that point he
  • Wayne Morse and Under Secretary of Labor Collins as special mediators in the middle of this . Did they do anything other than just sort of give a public image that things were going on? Senator Morse was not well thought of . He was able, ingenious
  • to Senator Wayne Morse's. He had a farm somewhere around Washington. I remember going out to Senator Morse's home, and I remember some of the people that Dad used to have over for dinner, and I don't recall whether Senator Johnson was one. We used to have
  • ~ n's are set ad confirmatio for Tuesday, /' //June 2 at 10:30 aom. before _,,/..,.,. E~st ad, Ervin S and IC 7 G~'. LISTER HILL, ALA., PAT MCN.ltMARA, MICH. WAYNE MORSE, OREG. ,...RALPH YARBOROUGH, TEX. JOSEPH 8. CLARK. PA
  • at McGregor Memorial at Wayne State University. Attends reception for Johnsons and Cong. Neil Staebler at Light Guard Armory, later addresses Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner, then returns to Washington. 3/3 Arrives Washington 12:18 a.m., no activity for rest
  • enthusiastic people about investigating was [Wayne] Morse. Republican in those days. I think he was still a He later became a Democrat. mistaken, he was a Republican then. If I'm not There's another Republican that-­ G: Styles Bridges was one. J
  • three, looking like a Texan, and, undoubtedly, loving his state as much as any man they could find. The Democratic Party got a very uncertain blessing at that time. Wayne Morse, 4 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • Wayne Morse and Gruening of Alaska, I guess those were the two who voted against it, they both had the reputation of being mavericks, so nobody paid too much attention. The rest of the Legislative Branch of the government was absolutely solid. They said
  • as I recall. E: Yes sir, there was. Wayne Morse and Senator (Herbert) Lehman from New York opposed me, and I had Lyndon's support all the way. F: Now you had seniority, as far as seniority was concerned you were definitely in line. But you have
  • lined up. It was in those years, I recall, that Wayne Morse left the Republican Party and went over first as an Independent and then as a Democrat. M: Did Mr. Johnson, in cases where the Democratic Party would break--did he have to depend
  • from doing anything even if there was anything we could do -- which we cannot at this time." - - "All the United Nations can do is to debate and deplore the situation... " Senator Wayne Morse demonstrated again that a totalitarian state fears
  • your problems were? D: A lot of people. Bill Fulbright was very understanding in this area. Wayne Morse was helpful in the area. Over on the House side, particularly Congressman Mayard of California, and Armistead from Alabama--although he got
  • , in the country_ And I haven't attended conventions. conventions and one Republican. I attended only two Democratic That's the time when Wayne Morse--I asked him how in the world does he belong to the Republican party. And you remember a few years later
  • decided that the people that he admired in the Senate were Paul Douglas and Wayne Morse, and both were loners. Senator [Herbert] Lehman from New York was not psychologi- cally a loner but his issues made him a loner, too. But I think Prox consciously
  • done the same thing? M: No. He didn't. I didn't pursue it, because he said, "He's a Kleberg," and I knew that Johnson had worked with him. G: How about the Clare Boothe Luce incident with Wayne Morse? M: I don't remember much about it. I don't
  • Wayne Morse and Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois, who were all very active. My belief is that it was a composite job for which they all deserve great credit. Lyndon deserved credit because, of course, he was a Southerner, but in addition to that he had
  • . This was Senator Wayne Morse as the chairman and LeRoy Collins. The third one slips my mind. ~1: That IS verifi ab 1e, too, without too much trouble. C: Yes. M: They came here to Pittsburgh? And then did they deal for him for Well, he was sending this trio
  • Party "one of many faces." When you took a look at it you didn't know whether you were looking at the Republican Party of President Eisenhower, or the Republican Party of Senator Taft, or the Republican Party of Senator [Wayne] Morse, or the Republican
  • : And also, if you were the president and you're in a steel negotiation or you're in a big airline or railroad problem, you talk to the Wirtzes and Connors and maybe the Goldbergs and the Wayne Morses of the world. I think the only way a guy like Simkin
  • , that there was a chance that what had happened to the French could happen to us. But at that meeting and for some time thereafter, Mansfield was the only skeptic. I mean Wayne Morse and Senator Ernest Gruening from Alaska, I guess they even voted against the LBJ
  • . Wayne Fredericks and Glenn Fields shamefacedly agree. Glenn recalls that the Minutes were to show this as up for review l"'February. So I've confirmed this ad referendum to you. Bye the bye, these project statements are atrocious. They go on for pages
  • by wC111en or cripples. G: Wayne Morse called for an investigation of Lackland Air Force Base, said it was poor training conditions, et cetera, et cetera. Eugene Zuckert and John Connally and Horace Busby and others went down there and spent SCITle time
  • MONDALE, Walter F • MONRONEY, A. S. Mike MORSE, Wayne MORTON, Thruston B. MOOS, Frank E. MUNDT, Karl E. MURPHY, George MUSKIE, Edmund s. NELSON, Gaylord NEUBERGER, Maurine PASTORE, John O. PEARSON, James Bo PELL, Claiborne
  • , February, of 1967? G: Yes. O: Was it Wayne Morse, Clark? And there was a third senator. G: I think Gaylord Nelson. O: Yes, it was Nelson, who became involved in trying to establish a sense of the Senate on escalation. In that early stage
  • JULY 16, 1967 - 2:15 p.m. ---SI BIPARTISAN CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS AND RANKING MINORITY MEMBERS OF COMMITTEES Sec. McNamara Sec. Wirtz Sec. Boyd Attar. Gen. Clark Senator Mansfield Senator Long Senator Russell Senator Byrd ~. Sen. Morse Sen
  • by presidential veto." It depends on how you approach it, but Douglas never did really get much legislation passed because he and Wayne Morse just wouldn't compromise. They worked hard but they didn't know how to compromise and work. The rest of the senators were