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  • 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
  • nowhere. and mine. It got two votes: Wayne Morsels Dick Russell attacked it violently and said it was practically . . Of course, you know, in retrospect the whole LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • Resolution; Wayne Morse and Alan Cranston
  • candidates? G: That is correct. a candidate. Wayne Morse, to begin with, said he would not be We had a law at that time that you had to sign an affidavit that you were not a candidate. Otherwise your name automatically appeared in what we have
  • Biographical information; teaching career; candidacy for Congress; support of JFK; Wayne Morse; impression of LBJ as a Senator; education legislation; federal aid to education; opinion of Sam Rayburn; parochial school question; Adam Clayton Powell
  • in that capacity, which has existed in this country ever since, I guess, the Civil War. Really about the only black friend he had was Hobart Taylor, who at that time was assistant prosecutor of Wayne County in charge of the Civil Division--who is a Texan
  • that only Wayne Morse can make. I've heard them over the years, heard him stand up there and accuse the President of the United States of treason. These kinds of things begin to bother you after awhile. But he took this on as a personal fight against
  • Power of state Economic Opportunity director of governors; veto power and overrides; creation of the National Advisory Council; Perrin’s duties as deputy director of OEO; Senator Morse; involvement of BOB funding; political red tape; GAO
  • . At any rate as far as my relations with him were concerned, I was on the real ''black list" all through the winter of '64- '65. classify me with Wayne Morse. He used to LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • were calling for I didn't have any insight on it and I voted for the resolution and I thought [Wayne] Morse and [Ernest] Gruening were just being sort of prima donnas, in a wa~ in voting against it. G: When did your own concern about Vietnam begin
  • for censure, but I know that he was opposed to it. He later talked to me about censuring Wayne Morse for something that he said, and I remember Lyndon urged that people not consider it. He believed in the tradition of the Senate. He was pretty much a senator's
  • , increasingly, and I think understandably, Lyndon became personally indignant against the doves of his own party. He felt, I can understand, a Republican who might do it for political reasons, but why should he get stabbed in the back by the [Wayne] Morses
  • . isolationist sentiment. behind the program. There got to be a quasi- It was hard even to get internationalists, They came along but--for example, Hayne Morse, who sponsored it in the Senate put me--as he had every right to do and did a good j ob-- t.:hrough
  • ; John Rooney and the Appropriations Committee create problems for State Department programs; characterizes Wayne Hays, John Brademas, John Tunney, Donald Fraser, Peter Frelinghuysen, Benjamin Rosenthal, Albert Quie; Patsy Mink, Wayne Morse, George
  • 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
  • , 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
  • 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
  • Walter Ridder, Ridder Newspapers James Cary, Copley Newspapers Bernard Gwertzman, Washington star Richard stoiUey, I!fe Wayne Kelly, Atlanta Journal Cauley asked the President to discuss his philosophical approach to his office at this time in his service
  • they were a little afraid of talking to the chairman of the FCC about broadcasting things, you know. I think they thought, "Well, it's a Kennedy guy, and we can't trust him." F: Wayne Morse and Ralph Yarborough, as well as others, had conducted
  • [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 9 State Department has submitted such legislation to Congress several times, and I believe it was largely blocked by Senator Morse--at least that was my
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh - 15 [Wayne] Morse, regarding Vietnam. I remember his saying that he just couldn't understand how, if he had the same advisors and the same State Department as John Kennedy did, it was that he was so
  • [Wayne] Morse and [Ernest] Gruening, and-R: We certainly were. They even provided us with congressional testimony by the antiwar advocates, of some of the people that you've just [named], Gruening especially, from Alaska, McGovern and some
  • of repression of fa c ts from th e public. M i c h a e l B. R u b i n , T erry S t e in h a r t . P h i l a d e l p h i a , P a ., A u g u st 7, 1964. S en ato r Wayne M orse , U.S. Senate, W ashington, D.C.: C o n tin u e p ro te stin g o u r In d o c h
  • 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
  • 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
  • and advocate peace. Because I certify that the Fulbrights and the Morses will be under the table and the hard liners will take over -- unless we take initiatives. I can see lot of things developing in the future to distress us. keep peace emphasis on. END AT 1
  • obligation to report to SC (S.;: •.:,.i.rtty Co~n.cil) • If we offer a resolution and it i.3 vetoed~ Morse will say th~ UN has rejected us and we -ought to get out of South Vietnam .. RG.sk: Two difficult points: 1. Pressure to take cease-fire without
  • Bill and the fact that the Committee has been delayed by Senator Morse, who as Chairman of the Committee has been involved in other matters. He said that Senator Morse 1 s activities on the rail strike has prevented the Senator from working as much
  • didn't go to the Hill; I got into a very nasty fight with Senator Morse about this, but I distinguished very strongly between my idea of delegating Head Start to an office in HEW, and spinning it off to the Office of Education, which is what Dominick
  • ; Senator Morse; Job Corps; Nixon’s views on OEO/poverty program; Mr. Agnew’s statement; Green Amendment; TWO Project; effects of Vietnam War on war on poverty; OEO handling of budgetary requests; LBJ’s support of OEO; liaison between from OEO and White
  • have been queried, only 8 or 9 have problems economically. What most interests him is Viet Nam; 80 feel we ought to follow current course, 10 % want out, 10% want to go on. Rivers wants us to go on with bombing. Morse wants us to g e t out
  • to the White House. Congressman Heckler: Congressman Brad Morse said this week that the people of this country are frustrated about the war. He put forward a plan that he said would result in an honorable conclusion. The President: Most of the proposals which I
  • on the question. I believe, though, had I been there anti had I heard all the deha.te, including the reasons set forth by Secretary Dulles and through sending it to the Foreign Relations Committee, anti Senator Man:sfield, anMorse and Fulbright and others who
  • their questions from Vietnam, to elections to a question from Mrs. Heckler about Brad Morse's proposal. He said they applauded the President twice. He said tonight that they are all out telling what he said. The President relayed that he told the Republican
  • that some U.S . Senators such as Morse would misinterpret this as a repudiation by the world body of the United States policy in Vietnam. The President said John Knight wrote a pretty good article. Rusk replied that he sat at the table with Knight when
  • on the Hill. I don 1t think we should seek agreement from Conte, Fulbright, Morse, Church and the others most interested in this topic, but you may want to be able to say that you notified them beforehand. (The law requires you to make formal notification
  • if it did any good. We delivered a letter to the North Vietnamese, and they threw it back the first day. But the pause lasted five days. "On pause number 2, Morse came in and told me the Soviet Ambassador said that such and such would happen if we would stop
  • situation was bett.,r, the eountl'y ln sounder hands, but the economic and social problems remain. He emphasized that we dld not englnee-r the overthrow (statlng t•even CIA did not''}. Rusk was questioned by Senato\'& Morse and Dirksen concernlng outstanding