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- 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
- . The President: Ho·w long do you expect it to go ·on? Secretary McNamara: All day. Senator Morse said it may go on through tomorrow, but I am going to try to cut it off today. The President: I suppose you have a better case on the fact the attack occurred than
- h e relief o f G erys D es salern os (a lso k n o w n as GerassUnos D essal e m o s ) : to t h e C om m ittee o n t h e Ju d iciary. B y Mr. MORSE: S. 3081. A b ill to a u th o riz e th e e sta b lish m e n t of a p u b lic co m m u n ity co lleg e
- ited S t a t e s and t o p r e v e n t f u r t h e r a g g r e s s io n ." T his r e s o l u t i o n was debated in th e S en ate on August 6 and 7 and was p a s s e d by a v o te o f 88 t o 2 . Only S e n a to rs ■Morse and Gruening spoke and v o te d
- (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
Oral history transcript, James C. Thomson, Jr., interview 1 (I), 7/22/1971, by Paige E. Mulhollan
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- route should be dropped was be~ause you would just get too much Senate-floor flak out of Morse and Gruening, and you would end up with a bigger debate and a more divided Congress--and conceivably country--than not evenhav~ ingthe resolutionwould
- . -- During th e d e b a t e , Senator Morse s t a t e d : "In e f f e c t , t h i s j o i n t r e s o l u t i o n c o n s t i t u t e s an amendment o f A r t i c l e 1, s e c t i o n 8, o f the C o n s t i t u t i o n , in t h a t i t would g i v e th e P