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CIA-RDP67B00446R000400020011-4
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Document Creation Date:
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Document Release Date:
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Sequence Number:
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Publication Date:
February 1, 1966
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February 2, 1966 Approvt gt!MbWQ~5*pM fj.1A4WR6,?4PR0446R000400020011-4 1785
man in the Senate to vote for cloture. I
have had it voted upon me and others in
connection with the Communications
Satellite Corp. fight. We were just be-
ginning to reach the people, and cloture
was voted. I did not: like it. 1. know that
in an overwhelmine; proportion of in-
stances, free debate has been used in the
public interest.
13owever, I am impatient with the
amendment of prayers, and with a fili-
buster even against the consideration of
a. measure. 1 say to the leadership that
I am prepared in this instance to vote for
cloture. Let us have a motion for cloture
ail. bring this issue before the Senate, or
foil. It is intolerable to have this kind
of dilatory practice and procedure pre-
venting the consideration of measures
vital to the interest of the Nation. The
President has said that it is important
to the national interest that these meas-
ures be considered.
I expect to support the motion for
cloture. I believe it will carry. However,
11 it should not carry, I shall join in the
suggestion of the chairman of the Com-
mittee on Foreign Relations to have eve-
ning meetings of his committee. He has
already had certain members of his com-
mittee say that they would help by
pledging that they would be present. I
pledge that I will be present.
Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. President, I be-
lieve all Members of the Senate should
fuel somewhat distressed over the fact
that a request of the chairman of the
i'orcign Relations Committee, to hold
hearings on subjects the administration
considers to be vital and urgent, should
be denied by the Senate itself.
11 any committee should be given spe-
cial permission to meet, it is the Foreign
Relations Committee, because that com-
mittee, above all other committees, in-
cluding the Armed Services Committee
anc, the Appropriations Committee, is
the instrument of the Senate in meeting
the unique constitutional responsibility
wh.ch the Senate has.
The duty of making appropriations is
certainly shared with the House, unless
the House believes it has a particular
priority with respect to a certain matter.
Yet permission is given to the Committee
on Appropriations to meet while the Sen-
ate is in session.
The Armed Services Committee shares
he responsibility with the Armed Serv-
icess Committee of the House of Repre-
sentatives in the subjects that are con-
sidered by it. Both the Senate and House
have responsibility in that field.
I at, under the Constitution and the
traditions of this country, the Senate has
a special and prior responsibility in the
field of foreign relations and foreign pol-
icy. I regret to hear denied by this body
t, ie request of the chairman of the Com-
mittee on Foreign Relations to sit while
the Senate is in session, when other com-
mittees are permitted to sit. I believe
that every Senator should give thought
to the function of the Senate in this
lirld and to the special responsibility
which the Committee on Foreign Rela-
tions carries. Perhaps, in the future, we
should obtain unanimous consent, or
r:henge the rules, in order to allow this
committee to meet. The Committee on
Foreign. Relations should be a primary
committee of the Senate, because it has a
unique responsibility and should. be given
special treatment instead of being denied
the opportunity to meet, as is being given
to other committees of the Senate.
Mr.:HRUSKA. Mr. President---?-
'I'he PRESIDING OFFICER:. The
Senator from Nebraska.
Mr. 1IRUSKA. The question has been
raised repeatedly today as to wkly com-
mittees are prevented from sitting to con-
sider vital measures. Some of these
measures are considered so important
that they merit special recommendations
by the President that they be given ex-
peditious treatment. Included in this
group and the authorization of $13 billion
supplemental for the Department of De-
fense in Vietnam, the foreign aid supple-
mental bill, treaties and various nom-
inations. It is being suggested that the
Senators who insist that the Senate fol-
low its rules bear a high responsibility
in that they are disrupting the orderly
legislative processes. I believe it is im-
perative that we put that situation in
proper focus.
What; is the Senate considering at the
present moment? It is engaged in con-
sidering a motion with respect to it meas-
ure which those in charge of the Sen-
ate's business have determined. to be of
top priority, No. 1. So long as it, is prior-
ity No. 1, the Senate should devote its
exclusive time and talents to this issue.
Any time the Senate grows tired of the
business of assigning first priority to the
issue of compulsory unionism, over such
important matters as the $13 billion in
supplemental appropriations for our
boys in Vietnam and the prosecution of
the war there, or the :foreign aid supple-
mental, or confirmation of various im-
portant; nominations, it should impress
those In charge of the order of business
in the Senate of these feelings. The
majority leadership alone has the power
to reassign priorities. Let those that are
assessing blame for disruption of the
orderly processes lay the Mamie at the
proper doorstep.
That. is what is involved here. It
seems to me that the burden does not
rest on those who say, "Let us give full
intent as to the designation of priority."
It is the business of Senators who are in
charge of the order of the Senate to say
that the issue of compulsory unionism,
of repeal of section 14(b), shall or shall
not have top priority. They bear the
burden. I believe that it is important
that we place the burden where it be-
longs. If other matters such as inter-
national, military, and national prob-
lems are more important, they should
say so. Then the Senate can begin dis-
cussion. and debate on these questions
and forsake the pending issue, which can
not compare in importance to interna-
tional :problems facing our Nation. Un-
fortunately the high priority given re-
peat of 14(b) appears to be based. on the
discharging of a political pledge, whether
made on the platform or otherwise, to
those who are interested in compulsory
unionism.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The
time of the Senator from Nebraska has
expired.
Mr. BASS. Mr. President--
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that I may proceed
for 1 additional minute.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. With-
out objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BASS. Mr. President, I should
like to state that this issue can be settled
in a matter of 2 hours. It would be very
simple. The Senate engaged in 3 or 4
weeks debate on it in the past year. We
have already had 8 to 10 days debate on
it this year. I can promise the Senate,
almost without equivocation, that a
majority of the Senate is ready to vote
on this issue.
I believe that we could almost get
unanimous consent--if the opponents
would not object-to a vote at 2 o'clock
this afternoon and settle this issue, and
it would all be over.
So, now, where does the shoe go? It
goes on the foot that is impeding prog-
ress, because the Senate is ready to vote.
A majority of the Senate is ready to vote
to get this issue out of the way. There-
fore, those who say that the Senate
should not work its will on an issue are
the ones who are holding up and imped-
ing the progress of the Senate in pre-
venting important committees from
meeting and performing their duties.
which are so important in the field of
international affairs.
Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, will the
Senator from Nebraska yield?
Mr. HRUSKA. I yield.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time.
of the Senator from Nebraska has ex-
pired.
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that I may proceed
for 2 additional minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without
objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, we do
not need 2 hours. We need only 30 sec-
onds to withdraw the motion. My good
friend the Senator from Tennessee
should look at the Gallup poll and--
Mr. BASS. If the Senator will yield,
let me say that Dr. Gallup does not vote
in the Senate.
Mr. DIRKSEN. It does not make any
difference. I am talking about the pub-
lic.
Mr. BASS. The public is represented
in this body by a majority of the Senate.
Let them vote.
Mr. LONG of Louisiana. Mr. Presi-
dent
Mr. DIRKSEN. Mr. President, I do
not propose to let any irreparable injury
be done to the citizens of this country in
a city such as Washington where the
political pressures are so well known.
We take our case to the country in this
fashion, and we propose to continue to
do so as long as we have stamina and
vitality enough to do it.
Mr. BASS. Mr. President--
Mr. HRUSKA. Mr. President, I should
like to suggest further to my good friend
the Senator from Tennessee that the
motion for cloture is still an available
tool, if the Senate wishes to take up this
issue. I do not believe that they will get
to it because a two-thirds vote is neces-
sary. But the motion for cloture is
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
spokesmen, himself concluded that the at some point, it seems to me-if they
aims, of the National Liberation Front accept the idea of living at peace within
are classically those of a national front the country-to express their political
preceding a Communist takeover. The views, as do other groups.
North Vietnamese Communist Party co- I suggest also that it is only through
ordinates the whole operation, Chaffard
concludes. As the years pass and the
leaders of the NLF make less and less of
an effort to prove their disguise, it is
more and more openly a clearcut Com-
munist organization.
Mr. President, having suggested that
the National Liberation Front was cre-
ated by Hanoi and controlled by Hanoi, I
should like to make another suggestion.
At most, the National Liberation Front,
even if we allow the very best construc-
tion of what we know about it, is only
one of the smaller of many interest
groups within South Vietnam. Even
considered solely as a group within the
area south of the 17th parallel, it has no
standing that merits its being treated as
anything other than one of the smaller
of the interest groups in the region.
The Front commands a small seg-
ment of military forces and some politi-
cal cadres, but still it is a tiny percent-
age of the total in the areas under dis-
pute.
Thus, if the Front were to be accepted
as an independent negotiating partner,
it would be impossible on grounds of
political reality, as well as on grounds of
moral fairness and rightness, not to ac-
cept in like fashion a host of other and
larger groups. to be represented in such
a political negotiation, whatever it may
be.
Mr. President, I shall mention a few.
The Catholics are at once obvious as a
large group within South Vietnam, and
the Mahayana Buddhists as an even
larger group, particularly in some areas.
There are other segments of Buddhist
groups that have factionalized among
themselves and could make a far better
case for having a voice than the Front.
The northern refugees, nearly a million
strong, have a cause. The Southern
Regionalists may have a case, and the
Hoa Hoa, and the Cao Dai are minority
political groups, larger than the Na-
tional Liberation Front.
The South Vietnamese. Army, the
Vietnamese Civil Service, the labor
unions, the Montagnards, the National-
ist Political Party, and other splinter
political groups would each have as much
validity in claiming the right to be rec-
ognized and to have a voice in a confer-
ence as would the National Liberation
Front.
Whatever else we strive to do in our
own national interest and in the interest
of finding some common denominator
somewhere, somehow that might enable
us to find a less violent solution to the
strife in South Vietnam, it is important
that we not single out one of the more
obscure groups in numbers, one of the
more unrepresentative groups in South
Vietnam, a group that is clearly and pat-
ently identified as an instrumentality
and creature of Hanoi for special con-
sideration in any negotiations, fancied
or real.
At the very most that one could argue
for their case,. the members of the Na-
tional Liberation Front might. be entitled
Hanoi that America can accomplish its
central objective of finding a less violent
end to the aggression from the north
and of obtaining a removal of external
interference from the affairs of South
Vietnam.
We may leave it open to question as to
whether we believe that any member of
the National Liberation Front, or any
member of the Hanoi government, can
survive politically if he dares to nego-
tiate because of the thesis that these
men peddle among their party members
and in the ranks of the faithful. But,
be that as it may, I number myself
among those who say that our own
country should not be inhibited as it con-
tinually probes for any possible break-
through, as the President has striven to
do.
We must make doubly certain that in
the future, as we look backward on this
matter, the judgment of history can
never point a finger of accusation at the
United States and say that we did not
try, that we did not create every con-
ceivable chance.
However, in trying to create that
chance, it is also important that we be
realistic and that we not lose sight of the
reason why we are there, in the dreams
of what we would rather have happen it
we had our way.
Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President,. will
the Senator yield?
Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that the distin-
guished Senator from Wyoming may
yield to the Senator from Ohio for ques-
tions, statements, or observations under
the unanimous-consent agreement under
which I yielded to the Senator from
Wyoming.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. With-
out objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. McGEE. I yield to the Senator
from Ohio.
Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, I com-
mend the Senator for his thorough and
accurate discussion of the background of
the National Liberation Front in South
Vietnam.
I gather from his statement that he
is of the definite conclusion that the
purpose of all the discussions that have
come from Ho Chi Minh and the Com-
munists of the north has been to es-
tablish the National Liberation Front as
the duly constituted government of
South Vietnam. In substance, that is
what I gather. I should like to have the
Senator comment on that.
`Mr. McGEE. The evidence, both from
sources in our Government, and from in-
dependent sources on the National Com-
mission-which does not include Amer-
icans, but is made up of Canadians,
Polish, and an Indian-establishes that
same incontrovertible hard fact, that it
is an instrumentality of Hanoi, aimed at
imposing by force, or any other devious
means, a Communist government in
South Vietnam under the control of
Hanoi.
Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, I am
in thorough accord with what the Sen-
ator has said. I have in my hand a paper
showing 14 points laid.down by the Pres-
ident of the United States as grounds for
the settlement of the controversy in
South Vietnam and North Vietnam.
Point No. 9 states:
We support free elections in South Viet-
nam to give the South Vietnamese a govern-
ment of their own choice.
It seems to me that, with that proposal
made by the President of the United
States, the South Vietnamese should be
given the opportunity to decide for them-
selves what type of government they
want.
It is necessary to look to North Viet-
nam to see what its position is on the
matter of open, free elections, to decide
what type of government shall be had.
In connection with this statement, I
call to the attention of the Senator what
the North Vietnamese have said pertain-
ing to open, free elections.
Mr. McGEE. The North Vietnamese,
under Ho Chi Minh, answered that ques-
tion unequivocally in 1956, when all of
the Geneva agreements broke down,
when the intent of the agreements was
torn to shreds, when we learned, through
Hanoi and Mr. Ho Chi Minh, that by
free elections they meant elections free
of any opposition party except the Com-
munist Party. One party rule: there
was one party, one truth, one set of po-
sitions, one group that should prevail.
That is the heart of his concept of free
elections.
Mr. LAUSCHE. I come down to the
date of April 13, 1965, as further forti-
fication for the statement just made by
the Senator from Wyoming [Mr. Mc-
GEE7. I read:
ToKyo, April 13.-Premier Pham Van Dong
of Communist North Vietnam has laid down
a four-point program for peace that calls
for the exclusion of all foreign interference
in both the North and South.
I shall read point 3 and point 4.
Mr. McGEE. These are statements
from Hanoi?
Mr. LAUSCHE. From Hanoi.
Mr. McGEE. The Premier of North
Vietnam.
Mr. LAUSCHE. And we can assume
that the statements were authorized by
Ho Chi Minh.
These are the statements:
The internal affairs of South Vietnam must
be settled by the South Vietnamese people
themselves-
So far, well enough. I continue-
in accordance with the program of the
South Vietnam National Front for Lib-
eration (Vietcong), without any foreign
interference.
I ask the Senator if that does not
mean that there must be a surrender to
the South Vietnam National Front for
Liberation before there can be what are
supposed to be open free elections.
Mr. McGEE.. Indeed, that is obvious
and conspicous in the statement of the
Premier of North Vietnam. They are
using their own front and party that
they invented, they created, they lead,
and they control, which serves their pur-
pose; and only if the people of South
Vietnam accept the mandate of the Na-
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February 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --- SENATE 1.615
with the hard facts of the power pulls were finally revealed, it became cleax that
that are the realities in southeast Asia. none of these avowed leaders had ever
As Prof. Bernard Fall has very care- occupied any significant position in
fully pointed out-and he has not been South Vietnamese political life either be-
the friendliest historian on this ques- fore 1954 or since 1954.
Lion--the Vietcong operated until Decem- The Purpose of Indicating that, Mr.
ber 196O, he said in his book, as "the ex- President, is merely to suggest that this
tension of the then existing Communist entire enterprise was a concoction for
underground apparatus." psychological warfare purposes, in an at-
In September 1960, the Third National tempt to inject and infuse into the com-
Congress of Lao Doing, the Communist- plexities of the South-complexities still
front group in Hanoi, adopted a simple not grasped by some in our country-that
resolution urging the creation, from its this was a genuine civil war and this was
deliberations of a front group to achieve the evidence for it, the National Libera-
unity,in all of Vietnam.. tion Front. Whatever elements of genu-
Mr. President, that resolution, passed ine civil strife there may be, and there
by the Lao Dong Party in North Vietnam are many, it is important we understand
at that time, goes on to say that "our what they are.
people"-meaning the North Vietnamese I suggest they are not vested in the Na-
in the Communist Party, the Lao Dong- tional Liberation Front. The sooner we
must strive to establish a unified bloc of eliminate that language, that term, from
workers, peasants, and soldiers, and to our attempt to analyze the conflict in
bring into being a broad national unified Vietnam, the sooner it will be possible for
front. These are not revolutions in the us to deal straightforwardly with the
rural areas of Vietnam and not in the hard issue of the core of the problem.
is emote provinces of the 17th parallel. Many names were tossed into the hop-
'l.his is in the resolution adopted by the per when the pressure was on Hanoi and
power in Hanoi in September of 1960. on the South Vietnamese in the rural
From time to time it is asserted that areas to produce leaders for the Nation-
the National Liberation Front was a.ctu- al Liberation Front, but the best that
ally created south of the division line could be done was to pull up names of
that :Yeparated the two Vietnams in 1954. persons who had been for a long time
Many of us have tried to find any sub- open and avowed professional spokes-
stanti.ve basis for this allegation. We men for the Communist Party in the
have tried to find anything that would north. Thus, the name of the first Sec-
support in any way these assertions. So retary General oil the NLF, Mr. Van Hieu,
far nothing can be located. Nothing sub- who had been a Communist Party mem-
stantial has been submitted. These as- ber, a known promoter of the Commu-
;ertations have been contributed only by nist cause, and self-identified in that
the members of the National Liberation role ever since 1945, was selected. Never
Front themselves when they try to pro- had he held a position of political re-
test. sponsibihty in Vietnam before or after
But. none will meet the test of docu- the French.
mentation. Not only is there evidence to Or, similarly, the so-called chairman
the fact that the September and Decem- of the NLF. The chairman was another
ber statements in Hanoi contain no refer- of the avowed, self-styled members of
ence whatsoever to any endemic develop- the Communist Party in the North. The
ments in Vietnam already in existence, National Liberation Front is forced to
but Hanoi goes on to suggest that they put such men forward as'leaders because
better "get with it" from Hanoi and in- of a simple, significant fact; that is, that
ject such a front group in the south in despite the turbulence of South V:ietna-
order to provide the trappings for a rally- mese politics, not a single significant
ing point for their cause, as they de- non-Communist spokesman or group in
scribe it. the South has ever until now embraced
Thus, it can be seen that the National the Vietcong or the National Liberation
Liberation Front was the creature of Front. The only admitted recognition
Hanoi. It was conceived in Hanoi, by and embracing that seems to go on is
Hanoi, and for Hanoi. from foreign capitals far removed from
I am mindful of the many complica- southeast Asia.
tions, the overlapping of issues, and the Starting with Mr. Diem and the fall of
complexities of opinion of the problems his government, whether we take the
in the South. students, or the Buddhists, or the so-
My comments here are aimed at serv- called liberals, or the Catholics, or the
Ing only one purpose, and that is to lay military--any political group one seeks
bare the dimensions of the National to identify in South Vietnam-to this
Liberation Front about which so many in day, critical as they may have been of
our country right now seem to be speak- Mr. Diem, protesting, as they were,, con-
ing so loosely and so inaccurately. ditions in Saigon, not a one of those
The leadership of the National Libera- groups has yet sought to embrace or en-
tion Front is clearly identifiable, as well. dorse the Vietcong. None of them has
Until April of 1962, Professor Fall goes been willing to acknowledge the validity
on to tell us in his book, the National of the National Liberation Front as a
Liberation Front had not disclosed any grassroots, native-born, native-con-
names of its alleged leaders. This was trolled South Vietnamese political group.
nearly 2 years after its inception, after it It is this that makes it imperative that
was cooked up in Hanoi. and still no men- we assign the National Liberation Front
tion of its leaders, to its proper category, at its proper level,
In spite of the fact that its program with its proper motivation: merely a
had been made public from the very be- child of Hanoi, an arm of the policy of
ginning, when the names of some leaders Hanoi, an. instrumentality in the tactics
of power politics that Communists have
pursued since the end of World War II.
The role of the Communist Party in
using, implementing, and engulfing the
National Liberation Front is, it seems to
me, beyond question. It is a role that
has been identified in detail by the In-
ternational Commission that the Geneva
agreements of 1954 established in the
hope that somehow a resolution of the
impasse between the two Vietnams
might be arrived at.
In a circular dated December 8, 1961,
and available through the International
Control Commission, the groups involved
in the National Liberation Front were
instructed to realize that:
The Vietnamese People's Revolutionary
Party has only the appearance of being an
endemic group within, south Vietnam.
When we recognize it for what it is.
The directive goes on:
We need this group in our efforts to take
the south in the interests of the north.
However, during any explanations, you-
'Whoever the members of the party
may be-
must take care to keep this intent strictly
secret, especially in South Vietnam, so that
the enemy does not perceive our purpose.
This is only another way of saying
that the old front group operation was
being translated into an operational and
tactical plan. The National Liberation
Front, incidentally, has never claimed
that it was the government. It has never
asserted that it had status as a govern-
ment. It should be noted that the term
"provisional government" has yet to be
employed by the group in describing its
role.
Thus it is not political in the adminis-
trative sense, and never has been. Yet
there are those who refer to it recklessly
as though it were an existing repository
of power responsibility that ought to be
dignified as a subject of negotiation.
This, further, is a characteristic of the
National Liberation Front that helps us
to strip it bare, it seems to me, of its
outward manifestations and to show it
for what it really is at the heart of the
problem. The front is openly and clearly
a creature of the government in Hanoi.
It has operated repeatedly as Hanoi's
political instrument for the purpose of
taking over and imposing upon the south
a Communist government. The front it-
self has no resemblance to genuine na-
tionalist rebel organizations that have
operated in other countries at such times
as this. The fact that there may be
within its membership some genuine
South Vienamese nationalists who are
latecomers, who are looking for a place
to roost, in their sincere sense of protest
against the Diem regime, should not ob-
scure the central fact that the origin,
the leadership, and the purposes of this
front group remain as I have just de-
scribed them-to serve the ends of the
Communist government in Hanoi.
The nature of the National Liberation
Front has-been well summed up by neu-
tral observers, including George Chaf-
fard, of L'Express, who after visiting
National Liberation Front bands, and
roaming around parts of South Vietnam
and conversing with some of their
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Fphruaru 1. 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
1613
many years the boll weevil will be just an
unhappy memory and that we can have
many monuments erected to It in healthy
and prosperous cotton-producing areas so
that future generations may know that there
once existed this very destructive pest. In
many areas production of poultry, livestock,
tobacco, and other crops have substituted,
in whole or in part, for cotton.
When the Agricultural Act of 1964 was
passed, it included a provision authorizing
a.special $10 million cost-cutting research
program for cotton. One of the most urgent
needs of the industry today is to get the cost
of growing cotton clown so that farmers can
compete with synthetic fibers at home and
abroad, and with low cost foreign cotton
production without resort to Government
subsidy.
I delayed the aconclusion of our hearings
ppropriation bill for several
on the 1965 weeks in 1964 with the understanding that
an amendment to the budget' would be sub-
mitted this $10 requesting authorization. riEither
there was a mix-up in communications, or
somebody in the executive branch changed
his mind because when the budget amend-
ment was submitted, it did not include a
request for cotton research funds. I pressed
the Department of Agriculture officials and
called representatives of the Budget Bureau
before my committee in an effort to find out
why no action had been taken to imple-
ment the enabling legislation. We were not
able to find any conclusive answer to this
question.
Our committee finally included, on our
own initiative, additional funds for cotton
t not the $10 mil-
b
u
cost-cutting research,
lion. it is extremely difficult to add new ap- agricultural industries, with supplemental
propriations for items not in the budget, labor from the British West Indies. In that
and not justified by specific testimony, and industry, the Florida sugarcane producers
this was one reason why we did not include are today using over 8,500 canecutters from
the full amount. the offshore islands admitted by the Secre-
Finally $1,925,000 was included that year, tary of Labor because even he has found that
for fiscal 1965, for cost-cutting research. Of American labor is not to be found to cut
as for planning new sugarcane by hand with machetes on the
000
w
this, amount $240,
facilities to cost a total of $3 million, includ- muck lands where it is produced and cannot
ing the planning cost, to house such research. be handled by machines. Some of the mills
in the committee report on the Depart- are understaffed with cutters, but I repeat,
ment of Agriculture appropriations bill for we have been allowed a near adequate supply
that year, we included a strong statement In that field only.
urging the Secretary of Agriculture to do In my nearly 20 years of service in the
what he could to see that the special $10 Senate, I do not recall ever having devoted
million program was included in the budget more of my time and my energies to any one
for the next year, which was fiscal 1966-this subject than I have In connection with en-
current year. Even though funds for many deavoring to obtain an adequate supply of
new programs of great magnitude were re- farm labor including workers from Mexico,
quested in the budget, only a small increase from the British West Indies, and from Can-
was provided for cotton. I still cannot un- ada. Hardly a day passed last year that I
derstand why the expenditure of this rela- was not in conference with administration
tively small sum-almost infinitesimal when officials or was pleading on the Senate floor
considered in terms of the cost of the current in a bipartisan effort, along with many of my
cotton program-is not considered to be a colleagues, and particularly with the able
sound investment. junior Senator from California, the Honor-
In any event, in the conference bill for the able GEORGE MURPHY, for a reasonable ad-
current year we included a substantial sum ministration of our existing laws with re-
($2,685,000) for cost-cutting research as a spect to the importation of supplemental
part of the continuing research program. foreign workers. Some crops were lost be-
We also appropriated $2,760,000 for construe- cause of the shortage of labor and farmers
tion of the new facilities, making a total of and the Nation suffered the consequences.
$5,445,000 for the cotton cost-reduction pro- Some planting was discontinued-some pro-
gram for this year. I hope that we will be duction and processing was moved to Mexico,
able soon to go much farther with this very I do not know what this present year will
important program as we consider the budget bring, but it looks like we must continue this
for the fiscal year 1967 which begins on fight for justice and right particularly for
July 1. our farmers who produce highly perishable
In stressing cost-cutting research, I do not seasonal crops.
intend for a moment to downgrade other At this point in my prepared remarks, I
types of cotton research. I know there is must digress in order to give full credit to
great potential for improving the quality of Mr. Wirtz, the Secretary of Labor, for a de-
cotton fabrics and cotton garments through cision which he made last night : which I
the Department of Agriculture's utilization think is sound and for which I commend
research program conducted primarily at the him. I certainly want to see that Mr. Wirtz
New Orleans Laboratory. We have had very gets cdudue.
taatin the Federal-Sake Frost
important developments stem from this re- g
search, such as the wash-and-wear finishes, Warning Service advised Laof the keland after
serioig threat
I
which have helped hold many of the cotton's yesterday,
markets. I want to commend this organiza- to agriculture oirerett oy mne exi-u --
tion and also the industry for its efforts and wave which we are feeling here today in
financial contributions to the expansion of Jacksonville. Mr. Warren Johnson, who for
this urgently needed research. years has headed up that very fine service
I turn now to another subject which is of at Lakeland, told me that the cold wave was
vital importance to the cotton industry and going to have most serious effects upon the
to the general economy of the United States, citrus crop, the sugarcane crop, the vegetable
That is the pending legislation on labor. Un- crop, and other perishable crops in our State,
fortunately, it appears that this administra- extending all the way from the vicinity of
tion, up to now, has refused to adequately St. Augustine, a few miles below here, to and
take t
actions on He stated the predictions for Sunday night's
quences of its past and proposed serious
the agricultural economy of this country cold in the various areas of the peninsula'
insofar as its labor policy is concerned. I and I could, of course, see for myself that
refer to two matters-the first being the re- the prospect was indeed a serious one. .
fusal of the administration to permit the Shortly after noon yesterday, therefore, I
entry of urgently needed workers in Western called Secretary Wirtz at his home in Wash-
States from our good friend and neighbor, ington and advised him of the situation and
Mexico, and the grossly unwarranted restric- also of my feeling that a crash program
Lions on the Importation of our friends from would have to be set up with all possible
the islands of the British West Indies 'and speed to allow the importation of an added
Canada to do farmwork, primarily in fruits labor force from the British West Indies to
and vegetables, both in the State of Florida harvest frozen citrus fruit and to complete
and generally along the eastern seaboard, the cutting of the cane in such a short time
I realize that cotton farmers across the in each case as to forestall souring and
belt have, to a very large degree, mechanized spoilage. He was cordial, took the matter
their operations to a point where they are under advisement and last night he had one
using relatively few foreign workers. How- of his publicity men advise my administra-
ever, in those areas which continue to use tive assistant in Washington that be (Mr.
them, the abrupt cutoff has had serious Wirtz) would assist our Florida industries in
consequences. Unfortunately, completely the matters mentioned if the freeze damage
mechanized production and harvesting of resulted, in the degree that seemed reason-
most fruits and vegetables is not possible ably certain. In other words, he pledged his
with our present technology. While we are assistance to our Florida producers who would
working on it, we may never learn to com- be so, adversely affected to help them salvage
pletely mechanize the production and har- citrus and cane crops and I take it that the
vesting of citrus fruits, for example. Up same would be true of other crops that might
to this time, the present administration has be salvageable by allowing a crash program
recognized in a near adequate way the needs of importation of the needed labor from the
offshore areas in the British West Indies.
pletelyvascertainable, it is now quite clear,
after knowing the very low temperatures
which existed last night and in many places
fbr many hours, that serious damage has
been sustained and that the loss can only
be alleviated through the immediate build-
up of much larger harvesting forces. I am
grateful indeed to Mr. Wirtz for his respon-
siveness in this matter and I want you_folks
to know that while I have been extremely
critical of him in other matters and may
have to be again in the future that I cer-
tainly want to see that he receives full credit
for his action in this particular matter.
The second matter in which the adminis-
tration's labor policy offers a grave threat to
agriculture is in the field of proposed en-
largements of the minimum wage laws.
Although hearings on minimum wage leg-
islation were held last year, no action was
taken in the Senate. A bill was reported out
of committee on this subject in the House
of Representatives, which would have im-
posed minimum wages on farmworkers. In
addition it would have eliminated most of
the agricultural processing and handling
exemptions. Apparently, the House leader-
ship decided that they did not have the
votes to pass the bill, so action was post-
poned until this session of congress.
It seems that some of our self-styled
friends of the laboring men are unwilling to
recognize. the inflationary impact and the
inevitable unemployment which would re-
sult from the imposition of a minimum wage
of $1.75 per hour in agricultural employment.
It is my earnest hope that a little more rea-
son and a little more commonsense will
prevail in this field of legislation during this
session of Congress.
A third matter having a serious impact on
agriculture, though it affects other employ-
ment even more greatly, is the most funda-
mental issue facing the Nation this year in
the field of labor. It is, of course, the effort
of the administration and of the labor hier-
archy to have Congress repeal section 14(b)
of the Taft-Hartley Act. This section au-
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1.614 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE February 1, 1966
thorizes States to enact so-called right-to- thought to the condition I have described to ments and, ultimately, ruling govern.-
work legislation which permits an employee the end that some cultivation might be
of a business firm having a union contract initiated at the "cotton roots" to see that merits, in most of Eastern Europe.
to decide whether he desires to join or not your voice in the-legislative Bails might again The second. stage of the Soviet tactics
to join the labor union. This so-called right- carry that stentorian ring that it once did then came in the form of bringing pres-
to-work provision is a part of our Florida in years gone by. The old adage "United we sure on contiguous territories not directly
constitution. Our State was the first to stand, divided we fall" is still true and it Occupied by the Russian armies, but next
place it in our constitution. Repeal of sec- applies peculiarly to American agriculture to- door, so that by infiltrating leaders,
Lion 14(b) would inevitably mean that the day where so many divisions now exist. manpower, supplies, and
right-to-work laws now in effect in 19 States propaganda,
of.
would be cast aside. No additional State During the delivery of Mr. ERVIN'5 they could fish ift the troubled ed waters of
could adopt right-to-work statutes or con- speech, postwar devastation. This was notably
:;titutional provisions. Mr. ERVIN. Mr. President, before true in the cases of Greece and Turkey.
Employees of companies having unions passing to the next argument that is We experienced the third phase of
would have to join a union within 30 days used to bolster the argument for com- Communist world policy soon thereafter
or their employer would be forced to fire pulsory unionism, in Berlin, where the great gamble was on
them. Thus workers would be forced to I should like to ask
pay clues to an organization to help, among unanimous consent that I may be per- the rattling of the nuclear sabers, the
other things, finance extensive political ac- mitted to yield to the distinguished Sen- threat of total war, and the intilmida-
tivity which, in some instances, would be ator from Wyoming (Mr. MCGEEI for tions that go with the inhibiting compul-
contrary to the views of the workers. Work- comments or remarks upon any subject sions of so-called free societies in the
crs would he forced to abide by union rules Of his choosing, under the following con- more civilized portions of the globe.
or be fined by union officials. Union officials ditions: That ray rights to the floor will That was met at Berlin.
would not need to be concerned so much as not be impaired by my so yielding to Then there was the flagrant, open com -
they are now with justifying their activities mitment of troops in direct combat in
to their members in order to gain financial the Senator; secondly, that any remarks
support. Members who refused to pay dues -` may make subsequently to the time he Korea.
would lose their jobs. The Senate is re- makes his remarks or comments will not Finally there was the testing of nuclear
cciving vast pates of mail from union mem- be counted as a second speech on my Intentions of :power balances in the en-
hers who do not want to see 14(b) re- part on the motion before the Senate. deavors of the Soviet Union to transfer
pealed. The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there the vestiges of their power to the weights
?rhofe of us in the U.S. Senate who feel abjection? Without objection, it, is so in the scales of power balances in the
that the repeal of section 14(b) would be a Western Hemisphere, further serious impingement on the rights ordered. notably in the case
of individuals and the rights of the several of Cuba.
States, and who feel that compulsory union- Now we find the latest phases in the.
ism. is fundamental) wrong , a VIETNAM
y g compulsory be tactics expressing themselves in south-?
slightly in the minority. Therefore, we have Mr. Mc -Mx_.F-rEident, I thank east Asia in the form of the National
no alternative exc
t to di
ep
scuss the issues fid f Libti
myrenrom North Carolina for hiseraon Front.
involved in this matter at such length az courtesy. While I do not desire to ad- It has been suggested in the debates in
to try to arouse the American people to dress myself to the question of 141b ) at this body and in the discussions in the
the fact that passage this bill will sera-
crusty jeopardize our r liberties. this time, I will have something to say press and in other communications
This course is now commonly referred to about the subject at a later time. I wish media that the United States has been
as an extensive educational program. if to discuss for a few moments one of the neglecting the possible path to peace that
we can get this message across to enough issues that is very prominently being would lead through dealing directly with
people, I feel confident that we will have discussed both on the floor of the Senate the National Liberation Front, and that
the votes to thwart the attempt to remove and around the country at large at this somehow we have to find it possible to
this vital section from the laws of our land.
I may say to you that we have a number of time. These issues stem from the Presi- acknowledge the existence of the front
teachers in the. Senate who have agreed to dent's peace offensive at Christmastime, and to deal with this front directly as a
discuss the issues at some length during the enuciation of some of the wishes of negotiating power in the conflict in Viet-
this educational discussion. They have pre- some Members of this body, by letter Ham.
pared their lessons well and are willing to and in' other forms, and I should like It is in regard to this last of the
stay overtime, if necessary, to get the facts to speak: in particular about one of the tactical shifts of the Communists that I
across to the American people. I have con- issues that seems to be looming ever should like to devote some special time
fidence in our ability to win this fight. larger in the minds of the doubters and in my remarks.
Co. conclusion I want to discuss briefly a those who, for other reasons, or for their The National Liberation Front, will be
problern confronting you and other farmers
for which there probably is no fast cure. own reasons, oppose the President's posi- able to have all of its views represented
There was a time when the voice of the so- Lion on the role of the Vietcong is the at any negotiations to which Hanoi might
called farm bloc was heard loud and clear crisis that faces the world in southeast agree. The U.S. Government has made
in. the State legislatures and in the Halls of Asia
o
Congress. For a. number of reasons, maybe Mr. its intentions Pre cdent this has point. referred t Aga to
the evolution of farming, the exodus of mil-
lions President, the role the Vietcong, and again the of small farmers to other pursuits. the and in particular the National Libera- unconditional discussions or negotiations
:;harp decline of the small family farm, this Lion Front, as the Vietcong are sometimes with any government.
voice has become less compelling of atten.- mistakenly called, has suggested some of Thus, if Hanoi were to accept such
Lion, despite the valiant efforts and excellent the most misleading and untrue profiles a bid it would be with the full under-
s3ervices of your own council, the Farm of the tortuous conflict in Indochina. standing that the National Liberation
Bureau Federation, the Grange, the coopcra- In its
five groups, and other farm organizations. proper context, it seems to me Front would be represented through
')There is a tendency for the general public to that the National Liberation Front needs Hanoi, or with Hanoi at such a confer-
lose sight of the fact that production of food to be viewed in the perspective of the ence table.
.ind. fiber is absolutely vital to the welfare changing tactics of the Communist Party However, thereby hangs a good bit of
of ourselves and all the peoples of the world. in. the many years of the cold war and the misconception that has tended to en-
'or those aotofarmnrient there is little by eex- x- to distinguish between tactics and gulf some portion of our population.
t strategy. That is the connection between the Na-
tion to dedicated service a congressional
Committees on Agriculure. This is a tactical shift rather than a tional Liberation Front and Hanoi.
It is a grueling task that requires many strategic shift, the kind of shift that had The record also shows that the National
hours and days of study and downright hard its beginning when the men in Moscow Liberation Front was in fact created by
work unaccompanied by much press com- sought, first of all, to close in on areas Hanoi. It remains under the control of
,lent or many headlines. But the real prob- closest to the sources of Soviet power; Hanoi.
lem is lack
eras farm of unified of soppd teas among the namely, countries in Eastern Europe, I believe that the sooner we disabuse
sever legislation. where the armies from Russia were al- ourselves of the idea that somehow this
.1 have no pat suggestions for restoring the ready in occupation. is some endemic: development within the
farmer to his former position of great in- This was the device of imposing on borders of South Vietnam, some sort of
fluence in the national legislative picture, their presence the presence of a great peasant rebellion against Saigon, the
but each of you, may want to give serious power in the selection of front govern- sooner we shall be able to come to grips
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
son's policy, the conclusion is inescapable
that the policy is to seek at the conference
table what we have been unable to obtain by
armed force-a South Vietnam controlled by
a Saigon military government which has no
popular base whatever. In a situation of
military stalemate, any political settlement
must be based on compromise reflecting the
military situation, which means that both
Communists and non-Communists must par-
ticipate in the peace and in the interim gov-
ernment responsible for keeping the peace
until free elections could be held. By re-
jecting this crucial principle the President
has in effect surrounded his offer of uncon-
ditional negotiations with an obviously un-
acceptable condition.
The case for renewed expansion of the
war is attributed in part to top secret mes-
sages from military commanders warning
that during the bombing pause Hanoi has
continued infiltration of troops and supplies
to the south. Yet, according to Secretary
McNamara, the Infiltration continued, at a
steadily increasing rate, throughout all the
11 months of air attack. If the bombing did
not stop it, there is no special significance in
the fact that the cessation of bombing did
not stop it. To make this an excuse for
resumed bombing is specious and deceptive.
The United States did not halt its own
buildup during the bombing pause-we
landed 7,000 troops only 10 days ago-and
so has no ground to demand that the North
Vietnamese should have halted theirs.
The President also can site an urgent dis-
patch from Ambassador Lodge alleging that
the bombing was really a great thing after
all-that if it did not halt the infiltration,
still it hurt the Communists' morale, to such
effect that a lot of them are getting beri-
beri. This looks like the same shabby self-
deception that has been pressed upon our
people at every stage of this dismal war.
At every stage, the people have been told
that the military effort which produced such
minimal results in retrospect was about to
score exciting victories in the future; and at
every succeeding stage the people have pain-
fully learned that the new promises did not
fulfill themselves any more than the old ones.
The reason is quite clear. The United
States occupies the position in Vietnam of
a foreign, white, Western, rich intervener
in a domestic revolution, and in such D. sit-
uation all our awesome military power is
simply Ineffective against the desire of the
Vietnamese people to run their own lives.
The illusion that by waging war in Viet-
nam we are saving the world from commu-
nism can best be dispelled by consulting
those we profess to be saving. The clear and
overwhelming counsel of the non-Commu-
nist nations that matter is for curtailment of
the war and a peaceful settlement. If the
United States now expands the war instead,
and so makes a peaceful settlement more
difficult if not impossible, we shall earn not
the world's gratitude, but moral isolation.
From the New York (N.Y.) Times, Feb. 1,
1966]
PEACE AND WAR
In a dramatic move timed immediately
to follow resumption of the bombing of
North Vietnam, President Johnson has asked
the Security Council of the United Nations
to intervene in the Vietnam conflict by call-
ing for an international conference and a
cease-fire. This is an important if long-
delayed gesture by the United States that
holds the possibility of opening the way to
peace and only emphasizes the sincerity of
President Johnson's desire to put an end to
the war in Vietnam.
It is unfortunate that the resumption of
the bombing of North Vietnam, was not de-
ferred at least until there was some evidence
of the success or failure of the American
move in the United Nations. In fact the
good effect of the appeal to the U.N. was in
part vitiated by the prior order to resume
the bombing. Continuation of the bombing
pause would have been a far more effective
complement to the U.N. resolution than the
renewed bombing attacks on North Viet-
namese targets, which will almost certainly
lead to further escalation of the war. More
men, more planes, more ships, more money,
more materiel, more wounded, more dead-
these are the unmentioned but probable se-
quels to the resumption of the bombing of
North Vietnam. The course the war took
during the previous bombing raids proved
that even if the attacks slowed down infiltra-
tion from North Vietnam, they did not pre-
vent it. North Vietnamese solders and ma-
teriel had been going south in quantity long
before the bombing pause.
There is no reason to believe that renewed
bombing can bring a different result. The
United States could bomb Hanoi and Hai-
phong and even destroy all of North Vietnam
.without wiping out the threat posed by
China. In fact, the danger of a ground war
with Communist China, and perhaps a nu-
clear world wart would thereby be brought
considerably closer.
President Johnson argued that "if con-
tinued immunity" were given to North Viet-
nam, "the cost in lives-Vietnamese, Ameri-
can, and allied-will be greatly increased."
But if 100,000 or even 500,000 more American
troops are sent to Vietnam, as is predicted,
many more lives are surely going to be lost.
What was a morass is becoming a bottomless
pit.
President Johnson said that "the end of
the pause does not mean the end of our
pursuit for peace." In this he Is, of course,
completely sincere.' The great conflict over
Vietnam that has arisen in the United States
is precisely over the meaning of "the pursuit
for peace." A number of respected and in-
formed Senators and Representatives; mili-
tary men like Generals Gavin and Ridgway;
academic specialists, teachers, and clerics;
and a great many friendly foreign statesmen
and commentators, all believed and said that
the bombing of North Vietnam ought not be
resumed. They all felt that peace had not
been given a full and fair chance. They all
fear the consequences of the United States
getting more and more deeply involved in
Vietnam.
So far as the bombing of North Vietnam
is concerned, the decision has now been
made. American troops in the field must
be supported; but so must American efforts-
inside the United Nations and outside it-
to reach an honorable settlement in order
to restore peace and self-determination in
Vietnam.
TRUTH IN LENDING
Mr. DOUGLAS. Mr. President, I was
encouraged to receive recently from the
Chicago District Council of the Brother-
hood of Railway & Steamship Clerks a
resolution expressing its strong support
for my truth-in-lending bill.
I ask unanimous consent that this reso-
lution signed by Mr. William G. Denison,
president, and Mr. Kenneth A. Stone,
secretary-treasurer, of the Brotherhood
be printed in the RSCORD.
There being no objection, the resolu-
tion was ordered to be printed in the
RECORD, as follows:
RESOLUTION ON TRUTH IN LENDING BILL
BROTHERHOOD OF RAILWAY &
STEAMSHIP CLERKS,
THE CHICAGO DISTRICT COUNCIL,
January 19, 19G6.
Hon. PAUL H. DOUGLAS,
U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C.
Whereas the consumer is many times
gouged by carefully camouflaged sky-high
interest rates and hidden finance charges on
so-called easy credit dealings with merchants
and lending Institutions; and
Whereas consumers need and deserve more
Federal protection in order to receive full
value for every dollar that they spend to feed,
clothe, and house themselves and their
families; and
Whereas consumers today are particularly
subject to lack of information on the terms
of costs of credit and are too often unaware
of the full cost of a credit transaction, and
therefore unable to compare financing costs
because of nonstandard ways of reporting
interest charges; and
Whereas disclosures of all finance charges
in borrowing or credit-buying arrangements
is ecsential to help consumers protect them-
selves against abnormally high interest rates
and excessive credit charges. Such protection
would be required by truth-in-lending legis-
lation before Congress. It would simply re-
quire the lenders to disclose the total amount
of the loan cost and finance charges expressed
in dollars and cents and as simple annual in-
terest rate on the unpaid balance: Therefore,
be it
.Resolved, That the Chicago District Council
wholeheartedly supports the truth-in-lend-
ing measure now pending in Congress.
This resolution was unanimously adopted
by the Chicago District Council at its regular
meeting held on Friday, December 17, 1965.
Copies to be sent to Senators DOUGLAS and
DIRKSEN, Representatives in Congress and
Grand President C. L. Dennis.
KENNErI-I A. STONE,
Secretary- Treasurer.
WILLIAM G. DENISON,
President.
THE IMPORTANCE OF HELPING DE-
VELOPING NATIONS TO IMPROVE
THEIR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS
Mr. TYDINGS. Mr. President, Presi-
dent Johnson sent to Congress today his
annual request for foreign aid authoriza-
tion. The President has emphasized the
importance of helping developing na-
tions to improve their educational
systems.
It is not surprising that education is,
almost without exception, the first major
goal of developing nations.
To millions of people in the less-
developed parts of the world, progress is
a schoolhouse.
For that reason, many countries are
asking for-afid getting-more help with
education than any other field of tech-
nical assistance. In fiscal 1965, one out
of every five AID-financed experts over-
seas was working in some aspect of edu-
cation.
Most of these technicians-four out of
every five-are staff members of Amer-
ican colleges and universities at work in
specialized training programs-training
doctors, nurses, public health officers,
farm experts, engineers, and public ad-
ministrators.
Coming the other way, to study in our
universities and colleges, are thousands
of foreign technicians and professionals
who return to their countries to take over
the supervision of public education in
multiple fields. Since point 4 began in
1949, the United States has financed the
training of 94,000 foreign specialists in
U.S. institutions, and 19,000 more in the
educational institutions of other coun-
tries.
In addition, the United States has
helped to finance national construction
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I,?ebr'uary 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
r?, by getting on with doing the job.
.,: annual cliff-hanging authorization
:i?r:r,e is, furthermore. a deterrent to
n Ii -'s recruiting the top quality people
ill badly needs. I am sure, that Mem-
of Congress could well use time freed
inn an authorizat,ion wrangle to the
_,n-fit of other pressing matters-in-
ciucti.n?; the ways in which AID actually
r,:}crates.
Americans pride ourselves, as we
;;vs d, on the realism and the efficiency
i;lr which we conduct large business
liarprises. if we accept, as we must,
.. .? long-range planning is equally an
i1,9perative for large public enterprise, we
?i'1 nut hesitate to confer a measure of
i:, c,li something so vital as foreign aid.
i ~~ o ,hould support President John-
,Z; r request for long-range planning in
i,i::- held of foreign aid.
33I G BROTHER
Vie. LONG of Missouri. Mr. President,
the Subcommittee on Administrative
Practice and Procedure held hearings
lain year on IRS tactics in the Boston
[a tl~ , district. At that time Mr. Alvin M.
Rel.ley was district director.
We found that IRS had used lock
peirs to break and enter, had used ille-
; :tl wiretaps and bw? s, and had even re-
.s.:lrted to the use of Army sniperscopes.
Although Mr. Kelley disclaimed both
knowledge of and responsibility for such
activity, he seemed far from repentant.
:lis lack of repentance is apparently
Lill with him. He was recently pro-
moted to regional commissioner in Chi-
cr? ;n. In his acceptance speech he gave
every indication of continued use of
ea esdropping devices "when necessary."
Will the IRS never be reformed?
ask unanimous consent to have
pl?i n-ted in the RECORD at this point a
clipping from the Chicago Daily News of
January 21, 1966, on this subject.
There being no objection, the article
was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as :'oilows:
ins CATER HERE Vow:, USE OF "BUG"
Alvin M. Kelley, rew regional commis-
;.i ~ncr of the Internal Revenue Service, has
c'l'n od it war against organized crime with
Inc use of electronic eavesdropping devices
:when necessary.
"[ would not like to give comfort to those
who think we will not continue our use of
i, b'rt:ive surveillance techniques," Kelley
s;dcl.
Kelley said the Intelligence Division of the
which works on criminal violations, has
lea-to progress against crime syndicate
li =rues.
LLr 1965, while he was district director of
Piston, Kelley appeared before a. Senate sub-
,;ommittee probing the use of electronic
listening devices by Government agents.
Kelley, 50, was sworn in Thursday by U.S.
Dis.riet Court Chief Judge William J. Camp-
bell at ceremonies attended by about 80
,'cderal employees.
J
THE RESUMPTION OF BOMBING
IN VIETNAM
Mr. JAVITS. Mr. President, yester-
day's decision by President Johnson to
resume the bombing of military targets
and supply lines in North Vietnam to the
same extent as before the pause-based
as it is on urgent military considera-
tions-deserves the support of the Amer-
ican people.
At the same time, I approve of the
President's determination to continue the
peace offensive on a high-priority basis,
by his new initiative in the United Na-
tions, based on Pope Paul's suggestions.
By the President's action, he is giving
the people of the United States and the
world every reason for confidence in the
determination of the United States to
act as a servant of freedom and justice.
I also believe that it is now more ur-
gent than ever that, Congress launch a
full-scale debate on Vietnam in order
to bring congressional and Presidential
policy into complete accord.
fNfI]RNATIONAL MONETARY
U F ?aRRI
L`.'ir. MUSKIE. Mr. President, for sev-
eral years, experts on international eco-
nonne problems have stressed the need
for monetary :reform.. Many of them de-
vised plans for such reform. But the
discussion stayed in the wings, a theo-
retical problem debated by specialists.
Last fall, monetary reform moved to
the center of the stage, as a result of the
bold initiatives undertaken by the Presi-
dent. Secretary of the Treasury Fowler
carried to all the European capitals the
President's plea to get things moving. As
a result, intensive work has begun to de-
velop agreement among the major in-
dustrial countries on international
monetary pclicy.
Later this year, we expect these nego-
tiations to move into a second stage
where other nations of the free world
will also be represented. Before long, the
world should be able to free its monetary
system from domination by th pace of
gold mining in South Africa, and the
willingness of the Russians to part with
their gold. As the President says, we can
look forward to "an agreement that will
make creation of new reserve assets a de-
liberate decision of the community of
nations to serve the economic welfare of
all."
Progress on this front is urgent. The
Council of Economic Advisers' report
shows how far world monetary reserves
are lagging behind world trade, and it
explains the threat to the growth of
trade that can arise unless funds for in-
ternational payments begin to grow more
rapidly.
The Council's report also describes a
promising road to new reserve creation
in a. two-pronged approach that creates
a brandnew reserve unit and simultane-
ously expands the important automatic
lines of credit at the International Mone-
tary Fund. Such a program will give
new life and new vigor to world trade
hand the world's economy. This is a com-
plicated technical area-many countries
and many views have to be heard. But
it is an issue that is. central to the eco-
nomic welfare of the whole world.
The administration deserves congratu-
lations for fulfilling so clearly America's
role of world leadership on this impor-
tant issue.
THE BOMBING:: BEFORE AND
AFTER
Mr. CHURCH. Mr. President, last
week I joined with 14 other Senators-
all Democrats-in a letter to the Presi-
dent, in which we expressed our collec-
tive judgment against the resumption of
the bombing of North Vietnam.
The President has now made his de-
cision to resume the bombing. He has
given his reasons, and the issue is set-
tled.
However, two editorials have come to
my attention that I think should be
made a part of this RECORD. The first,
appearing in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
on January 27, summed up the case
against a renewal of the bombings at
this time. It was written prior to the
announcement of the President's de-
cision. The second editorial appeared in
this morning's edition of the New York
Times. It is an appraisal after-the-Fact
which deserves thoughtful reflection.
I ask that both editorials may be pub-
:tished at this point in the RECORD.
There being no objection, the editorials
were ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
as follows:
[From the St. Louis (Mo.) Post-Dispatch,
Jan. 27, 1966]
CLOSER TO A TRAGIC MISTAKE
By every sign, the psychological buildup
is underway for a resumption of the bombing
of North Vietnam and for another escalation
of the American military commitment. We
believe President Johnson will make a tragic
mistake if he adopts this course.
He will be doing what the responsible lead-
ers of Britain, France, Japan, and the United
Nations, among others, have explicitly urged
him not to do. He will be rejecting the
counsel of many of the wisest Senators in, his
own party, and defying the opinion of large
:numbers of his countrymen. Having pro-
jected himself before the world as a cham-
pion of peace in Vietnam, he will be creating
a situation that not only makes peace im-
probable, but greatly increases the risks of
Chinese intervention.
The President is said to believe that his
peace offensive has fully convinced all well-
disposed people around the world that only
Hanoi stands in the way of negotiations for
an honorable settlement. He should beware
of becoming the captive of his own propa-
ganda. Even those who accept the sincerity
of his desire for negotiations would not nec-
essarily agree that the way to obtain them is
to escalate the war once more. And it is im-
possible for the most favorably disposed
friends to ignore the :inconsistency between
his generally admirable 14 points and his re-
fusal, at the critical point, to make the one
concession most obviously necessary to bring
about negotiations.
The critical point is the role of the V ict-
cong, which controls two-thirds of South
Vietnam's territory, in both the peace talks
and the political future of South Vietnam.
So far as his own words go, Mr. Johnson has
adopted the ambiguous stance that the Viet-
cong might be represented in negotiations by
Hanoi, and that their views would be con-
sidered. But at the level of Secretary Husk
there is no ambiguity. Mr. Rusk repeatedly
states that any peace talks must exclude par-
ticipation by those who have been doing most
of the actual fighting, and that there is no
place for them in the olitical future of the
country.
Since Mr. Rusk would not hold the position
he does if he were not carrying out Mr. John-
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE February 1, 1966
concerned to request from the Congress
such appropriations as may be n ecessary
to comply with these standards. The act
requires future Federal construction,
building, or installation to be provided
with waste disposal facilities.
On January 25 of this year, the Sen-
ate Subcommittee on Air and Water Pol-
lution, under the able direction of the
Senator from Maine [Mr. MUSx1E], as
a result of hearings held in major cities
throughout the country, issued a report
calling for a national expenditure of $20
billion, including a $6 billion Federal
contribution over the next 6 years, to
control water pollution.
In his budget message, the President
proposed a program and funds to imple-
ment this important legislation enacted
by the Congress last session, in the fol-
lowing terms:
Increased urbanization and industrializa-
tion have resulted in a rapid buildup of pol-
lutants in the environment. Expenditures
to deal with these problems will increase by
$92 million to $331 million in 1967.
This increase will allow acceleration of
research on pollution and training of more
manpower to deal with pollution problems.
The attack on air and water pollution and
the solid waste problem will be intensified
under recently enacted legislation which also
established a Water Pollution Control Ad-
ministration.
A new program will be started in selected
river basins to demonstrate methods for a
broad attack on the water pollution prob-
lems of an entire basin. Water pollution
from existing Federal installations will be
reduced in accordance with the recent Ex-
ecutive Order No. 11258, and a similar
directive governing air pollution is planned.
Legislation will be proposed to (1) strength-
en water pollution enforcement authority,
including the registration of those responsi-
ble for discharging effluents into interstate
and navigable streams, and (2) expand re-
search, training, and control programs and
demonstrate new techniques for waste treat-
ment.
The trend in legislation seems to look
solely to the Federal Government to
solve this problem through increased
financial contributions. This will be
necessary, but we must remember that
the increase in pollution is caused by
more advanced agricultural and indus-
trial uses and if we are to come to grips
with this problem we must have the sup-
port of private industry. One way of
increasing the participation of private
industry is to give industry a financial
incentive to purchase and install facili-
ties for the abatement of water and air
pollution. It is only proper that where
industries purchase expensive equipment
and facilities to reduce pollution-which
facilities bring no financial return on
their investment but are devoted to the
greater public purpose and benefit-that
a portion of that cost should be borne
by the public.
In the January issue of the monthly
letter published by the Morgan Guaranty
Trust Co., of New York, there is an
interesting article on this subject en-
titled, "Progress and Pollution-Can The
Link Be Broken." In the body of that
article the question of private industry
purchasing equipment to control air and
water pollution receives the following
comment:
If businesses and communities are to be ex-
pected to install control equipment on. a mas-
sive scale to abate air and water pollution,
more thought will have to be given to meth-
ods of inducing them to make the necessary
investment. It needs to be frankly recog-
nized that there is little motive in most cases
for the individual business unit to assume
unusual costs in order to reduce or prevent
pollution, particularly if competitors aren't
doing so. Control equipment is nonproduc-
tive so far as yielding any marketable prod-
uct is concerned. In a competitive industry,
it may represent the marginal item of cost
that prices a company out of some market.
Recognizing this, a community eager to at-
tract new plants may be tempted to relax in
enforcing pollution regulations.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous con-
sent to have this article printed in the
RECORD at the conclusion of my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without
objection, it is so ordered.
(See exhibit 1.)
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, despite
the fact that installation does not pro-
duce profits many segments of industry
with a sense of public. obligation are in-
vesting large sums of their own operat-
ing funds.
There is wide interest everywhere in
water conservation and water pollution
controls. The National Junior Chamber
of Commerce has made this subject a
major objective and it is important to
the whole Nation.
The bill we introduce today on behalf
of myself and the distinguished Senator
from West Virginia [Mr. RANDOLPH]
would amend the Internal Revenue Code
by increasing from 7 to 14 percent the
investment credit to those companies
that purchase equipment and facilities
abating, controlling, or eliminating air
and water pollution.
I should like to speak of the work of
the distinguished junior Senator from
Connecticut [Mr. RIDICOPPI who has
been in the forefront in proposing eco-
nomic incentives to private industry as
a method for the control and elimination
of pollution. The bill which we now
introduce was offered by him on the floor
of the Senate as an amendment to the
Revenue Act of 1964 and was cospon-
sored by some 25 Senators. The Senate
voted to accept the amendment. I re-
gret, however, that the amendment was
dropped in the ensuing conference with
the House. On April 1 of last year, Sen-
ator RIBICOFF introduced a bill, S. 1670,
which would encourage the abatement
of water and air pollution by permitting
companies to amortize for income tax
purposes the cost of this equipment over
a period of 36 months. As a start, I do
not believe it matters greatly which ap-
proach the Congress takes; that is,
whether the Congress increases the in-
vestment credit or provides for a faster
writeoff of equipment and facilities or
a combination of both.
I hope that these bills will be con-
sidered by the Finance Committee of the
Senate as well as the Ways and Means
Committee of the House, and that in
their studies and research they will com-
pare the merits of the two bills. I feel
strongly that Congress should give pri-
vate industry an incentive to carry out
this difficult, expensive, but altogether
necessary task of clearing up our streams
and :air. In the last analysis, many of
the problems are caused by the great
technological advances in our industrial
development. Unless we enlist the sup-
port of Industry in this battle, I do not
feel that the problem can be adequately
dealt with by Federal and State govern-
ments-and, indeed, municipal govern-
ments.
In conclusion, I should like to point
out with respect to the bill we introduce
today, that the Treasury has estimated
in 1964-at the time the amendment was
offered-that the loss of revenue for the
first year would be $25 million; the sec-
ond year $30 million, and over the long
run approximately $50 million annually.
This, of course, might be subject to some
change today, but I do not believe by
any substantial amount.
When we think of the huge amount of
funds the Federal Government is con-
tributing and the even greater amount of
funds it is urged to contribute, our bill
represents a modest start in aiding pri-
vate industry in this most important
field.
Mr. RANDOLPH. Mr. President, I
associate myself with the well-reasoned
remarks of the senior Senator from Ken-
tucky [Mr. COOPER] in support of the
legislation which he has introduced to
accelerate industrial investment in facil-
ities to control and abate environmental
pollution.
As ranking majority member of the
Senate Subcommittee on Air and Water
Pollution I have been actively involved
in recent legislative efforts to combat air
and water pollution. The 88th Congress
enacted the Clean Air Act, of which the
able junior Senator from Connecticut
[Mr. RIBICOFF] was the primary sponsor.
And last year, under the vigorous leader-
ship of the junior Senator from Maine
[Mr. MUSKIEI, the 89th Congress en-
acted the Federal Water Pollution Con-
trol Amendments of 1965.
It was my privilege to cosponsor both
these measures and to participate in the
hearings, the executive sessions, and the
drafting of the final legislation.
Throughout this process, it has been my
conviction, shared by other members of
the Senate Committee on Public Works
as well as many Members of this body,
that the protean tasks of combating and
eliminating environmental pollution
will not be accomplished without the
cooperation of private industry.
Many segments of business, especially
in recent months and years,- have evi-
denced a highly cooperative attitude in
this field and have given every indica-
tion of a desire to control air and water
pollution. However, the Federal Gov-
ernment has not yet applied all the in-
struments at our disposal to enlist in-
dustrial cooperation to the fullest ex-
tent. I speak with specific reference to
tax incentive legislation to promote
greater investments in pollution abate-
ment facilities.
The cost of abatement of industrial
pollution, Mr. President, is truly a stag-
gering one. Though we do not have re-
fined figures on the problem for all seg-
ments of Industry, informed persons tell
me that it will- be much greater than the
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y''cG r?uarij .1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE 1619
next person in aspirations, their hopes
to survive in dignity, their dreams to
grow in affluence.
it; is this on which our decision rides.
It is this on which the course of the de-
bates in this body hinge. That is the
season why I have taken these few min-
utes today to make a part of the RECORD
what I think is an unassailable, factual
:teceunt of the origin of the National
liberation Front, of the role it occupies
with and for Hanoi, and plead with my
cufie3gues in this body, in all the differ-
ences we may have, at least to strip away
the falsehood, strip away the hoax that
engulfs the NLF.
Once we do that, it seems to me that
we have a better chance more realisti-
cally to deal with the hard-gut issues of
Vietnam.
As I terminate these comments, thank
roy colleague from North Carolina I. Mr.
f,in.vrv I for his courtesy in yielding to me
at this time that I might develop for the
RECORD the story of the beginnings of the
ational Liberation Front. how it was
conceived, and for what purpose it was
conceived. That is what really counts.
The point; of the National Liberation
Font remains what is described in the
simple word "front." It is a front. It is
a facade, and nothing more. Let us not
be deceived any more than we were de-
ceived anywhere else around the world
by new psychological tactics of the Com-
tnutwists in Moscow in one interval, and
by the psychological tactics of the Com-
munists in Peiping at another interval,
and now the Communist group operating
currently out of Hanoi.
If my friend from North Carolina is
of such mind, I would like to return the
[lour to him, and thank him for his cour-
tesy.
M:r. ERVIN. Let me assure my good
frier.d from Wyoming that I was asked
to yield the floor to him in order for him
to make a very clear statement about
the status of the Vietcong. I think it
was a most worthwhile statement be-
cause of the need to have that status
clarified. We have had much loose talk
about negotiating with the Vietcong. To
me the Senatorfrom Wyoming has made
it clear that it would be about as sound
a basis for negotiation as if some country
would demand that when it entered into
negotiations with the United States, in
addition to the officials representing the
United States, there should also be ne-
totiations with members of the Masonic
1.,od6,e, members of the Knights of Co-
lumbus, members of the Ku Klux Klan,
he :Protestant churches and the Catho-
lic churches
;'JIr. McGEE. And the B'nai B'rith.
Nfr. ERVIN. Yes: the B'nai B'rith, the
Anti-Defamation League of the B'nai
Il'rith; and the various unions, the mem-
bers thereof, and different social organi-
zations as well, because they have been
sustained within the borders of the
United States on the same basis, except
that they have been less turbulent
and their activities have been more
,ratifying.
Mr. McGEE. The Senator's comment
is gt;ite appropriate. The point of paral-
lelism is drawn excellently. I would as-
sume that the Senator would want these
comments to be included in the context
of my remarks rather than as a part of
his remarks.
Mr. ERVIN. Yes, because they are
relevant to the speech that the Senator
made, and not to my speech.
During the delivery of Mr. ERVIN's
speech,
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, I thank
the Senator from North Carolina very
much for yielding to me. I note that,
with his usual legal ability, he has
covered every eventuality which might
occur within the next few minutes.
Mr. :ERVIN. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that my previous
unanimous-consent request be broadened
to permit the Senator from Kentucky to
introduce bills, and to engage in colloquy
with other Senators for such questions,
answers, observations, and statements as
he or they may care to make in connec-
tion with such bills, under the same
conditions.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without
objection, it is so ordered.
INVESTMENT CREDIT FOR PRIVATE
INDUSTRY COM13ATING WATER
AND AIR POLLUTION
Mr. COOPER. I thank the Senator
from North Carolina for his courtesy in
yielding to me. I know it is very difficult
for him to give up his time to me, but I
appreciate it very much.
Mr. ERVIN. I will say to the Senator
from Kentucky that it is always wonder-
ful to have an opportunity to be cour-
teous to such a courteous gentleman. I
yielded to him notwithstanding the fact
that I had a long speech to deliver, and I
do not know whether I shall have suffi-
cient time to complete the speech today.
For that reason, I intend to ask unani-
mous consent that I be permitted to
continue. my speech at a subsequent day
without having- my speech of today
counted. as a speech on the. pending
eubj ect.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without
objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, in be-
half of the distinguished Senator from
West Virginia [Mr. RANDOLPH] and my-
self, I send to the desk a bill to increase
the investment credit allowable with
respect to facilities to control water and
air pollution. I ask that the bill be
printed in the body of the RECORD follow-
ing my remarks, and that it lie on the
desk until a week from tomorrow,
through next Wednesday, for additional
cosponsors.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without
objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. COOPER. Mr. President, this bill
would increase the present investment
credit of 7 to 14 percent for those indus-
tries purchasing and installing facilities
and equipment controls that would abate
or eliminate air and water polluation.
The Public Works Committee, of which
I am a 'member, during the last several
sessions of Congress has held extensive
hearings on the subject of water and air
pollution. As a result of this study by
the committee, several bills were passed
by the Senate and enacted into law.
The Water Quality Act, which became
Public Law 89-234, provides for a Federal
Water Pollution Control Administration,
increases from $100 million annually to
$150 million annually the grants for
waste treatment facilities over the next
2 years, and increases individual project
grants from $600,000 to $1.2 million, and
multiproject grants from $2.4 to
$4.8 million. It sets up a 4-year, $80 mil-
lion program for demonstration grants
involving new or improved methods of
controlling pollution from storm sewers.
Finally, it authorizes the Secretary of
Health, Education, and Welfare to estab-
lish water quality standards in interstate
waters in those situations where the
States have failed to take action.
The Senator from Maine [Mr. MusKos I
deserves great credit for his leadership in
this field. He introduced the bill and
conducted the hearings. The Senator
from Delaware i Mr. BOGGS] also, as the
ranking member of the subcommittee,
deserves great credit, as does my cospon-
sor. I opposed the bill first introduced
and passed, for, as I stated in my indi-
vidual views and in debate on the floor of
the Senate, I thought the first bill gave
too large a grant of authority to the
Secretary of Health, Education, and Wel-
fare in fixing water quality standards.
f pointed out also that private industry
in the State and local communities
would be required to bear the chief bur-
den of installing antipollution facilities,
and that the bill as originally passed by
the Senate did not provide adequate pro-
visions for their participation in the
establishment of these standards.
However, these provisions of the Sen-
ate bill were remedied in great measure
by the House bill, and I supported the
bill finally agreed upon in the House and
Senate conference.
In April of last year, the committee
held hearings on amendments to the
Clean Air Act. The purpose of that act
is to provide for the establishment of
standards for automotive vehicle emis-
sions, the establishment of a new Fed-
eral Air Pollution Control Laboratory to
conduct a national research and develop-
ment program, and for international
control of air pollution where a foreign
country is adversely affected by air pol-
lution from sources within the United
States.
This law also contains a title 2 desig-
nated as the "Solid Waste Disposal Act,"
which authorizes a total of $92.5 million
for 4 years to be used by the Department
of Health, Education, and Welfare and
Interior for research, demonstrations
.and training in connection with disposal
of garbage, refuse, and other discarded
solid materials.
The committee reported favorably and
the Senate passed S. 560, the Federal
Installations, Facilities and Equipment
Pollution Control Act, which is designed
to provide for improved cooperation by
Federal agencies to control water and
air pollution of Federal installations and
facilities and to control automotive ve-
hicle air pollution. The bill authorized
necessary funds for the installation and
maintenance of waste disposal systems
in Federal buildings to meet the stand-
ards established by the Secretary and
makes it mandatory upon the agency
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
Mr. LAUSCHE. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent to have printed in
the RECORD an article published in the
Washington Post for April 14, 1965, en-
titled "North Vietnamese Peace Program
Calls for End of All Interference"; and
a statement on U.S. official position on
Vietnam.
There being no objection, the article
and statement were ordered to be printed
in the RECORD, as follows:
NORTH VIETNAMESE PEACE PROGRAM CALLS FOR
END or ALL INTERFERENCE
Toxro, April 13-Premier Pham Van Dong
of Communist North Vietnam has laid down
a four-point program for peace that calls for
the exclusion of all foreign Interference in
both the North and South.
The Now China news agency, quoting a
North Vietnamese broadcast, said the points
were made by Dong Monday in a report to
the national assembly in Hanoi.
The four points made by Dong, the agency
said were:
"1. Recognition of the basic national
rights of the Vietnam people: Peace, inde-
pendence, sovereignty, unity and territorial
integrity.
"2. Pending peaceful reunification of Viet-
nam, while Vietnam is- still temporarily di-
vided Into two zones, the military provisions
of the 1954 Geneva agreements on Vietnam
must be -strictly respected; the two zones
must refrain from joining any military alli-
ance with foreign countries, there must be
no foreign military bases, troops and mili-
tary personnel in their respective territory.
"3. The internal affairs of South Vietnam
must be settled by the South Vietnamese
people themselves, in accordance with the
program of the South Vietnam National
Front for Liberation (Vietcong), without any
foreign interference.
"4. The peaceful reunification of Vietnam
Is to be settled by the Vietnamese people
In both zones, without any foreign interfer-
ence."
The "stand expounded above * * Is the
basis for the soundest political settlement
of the Vietnam problem," Dong said. "If
this basis is recognized, favorable conditions
will be created for the peaceful settlement
of the Vietnam problem and it will be possi-
ble to- consider the reconvening of an Inter-
national conference along the pattern of
the 1954 Geneva Conference on Vietnam."
The New China news agency said that on
the first point "according to the Geneva
agreements, the U.S. Government must with-
draw from South Vietnam U.S. troops, mili-
tary personnel and weapons of all kinds, dis-
mantle all U.S. military bases there, cancel
its 'military alliance' with South Vietnam.
It must end its policy of intervention and
aggression in South Vietnam * * * The
U.S. Government must stop its acts of war
against North Vietnam."
Dong said U.N. intervention in Vietnam
would be "inappropriate" because the United
Nations Is 'hhasically at variance with the
1954 agreement." The 1954 agreement halted
the war between the French and the forces
of Ho Chi Minh, new president of North
Vietnam, and left the country divided.
U.S. OFFICIAL POSITION ON VIETNAM
The following statements are on the pub-
lic record about elements which the United
States believes can go into peace in south-
east Asia:
1. The Geneva Agreements of 1954 and
1962 are an adequate basis for peace in
southeast Asia.
2. We would welcome a conference on
southeast Asia or on any part thereof.
3. We would welcome "negotiations with-
out preconditions" as the 17 nations put It.
4. We would welcome unconditional dis-
cussions as President Johnson put it.
5. -A cessation of hostilities could be the
first order of business at a conference or
could be the subject of preliminary dis-
cussions.
6. Hanoi's four points could be discussed
along with other points which others might
wish to propose.
7. We want no U.S. bases in southeast
Asia.
8. We do not desire to retain U.S. troops in
South Vietnam after peace is assured.
We support free elections in South
Vietnam to give the South Vietnamese a
government of their own choice.
10. The question of reunification of Viet-
nam should be determined by the Vietna-
mese through their own free decision.
11. The countries of southeast Asia can
be nonalined or neutral if that be their
option.
12. We would much prefer to use our
resources for the economic reconstruction of
southeast Asia than in war. If there is
peace, North Vietnam could participate in
a regional effort to which we would be pre-
pared to contribute at least $1 billion.
13. The President has said "The Vietcong
would not have difficulty being represented
and having their views represented if for a
moment Hanoi decided she wanted to cease
aggression. I don't think that would be an
insurmountable problem."
14. We have said publicly and privately
that we could stop the bombing of North
Vietnam as a step toward peace although
there has not been the slightest hint or sug-
gestion from the other side as to what they
would do if the bombing stopped.
Mr. McGEE. Mr. President, I hasten
to add that at the beginning of this prob-
lem, in 1954, 1955, and 1956, we did not
divide Vietnam. Vietnam was ultimately
divided by the forces and the power blocs
which were operating in that area at that
time. We did not divide Korea. That
was an expedient aimed at trying to
achieve the transition from total war to
some kind of peace. -
We did not divide Berlin. We did not
divide Germany, but, we are confronted
by the hard facts of a divided world,
nonetheless.
As Adlai Stevenson put it on one occa-
sion so much more eloquently than I:
Our real choice is not that of a divided
world or one world, but a divided world or
no world.
We have long since learned of the ne-
cessity to accommodate ourselves to a
reasonable division of the areas of power.
It is what some in the old fashioned days
used to call, "restoring the balance of
power," Those are dirty words. The
mete mention of balance of power in-
flames some of our friends in this body.
It also inflames many of my former co-
horts in the academic world who regard
balance of power as a dirty phrase. In-
deed, it is. It is wrong. It is immoral.
But, it is a fact of life. For, in all of the
great progress which we have made in
technological know-how, in scientific en-
deavor, in medical solutions to hitherto
defiant health problems, in all of this
great progress which we have made, we
have made virtually no progress in the
science of orderly existence on earth.
If Napoleon Bonaparte were to cone
back to earth today, he would recognize
the same vestments of nationalism and
national power in the world, they have
changed little in 250 years,
It is a sorry commentary that the only
substitute that civilized man, so-called,
has been willing to accept for war, is the
balance of power. Therefore, it be-
hooves us, upon whose shoulders has
been thrust by history the responsibility
to reestablish that balance in the world,
to start with the hard facts of interna-
tional life; namely, the balance of power.
Of course, that is not the end that we
seek. That is not the goal. But, that
is our starting point, not our stopping
point.
Unless we can reestablish the balance
of power in the world, we cannot mean-
ingfully plan or even hope for a more
stable society of man in the years ahead.
That is what rests upon our conscience
as well as upon our shoulders in this role
of leadership which we assume. We did
not choose it. We did not seek it. But,
as the emerging power of great strength
in the wake of the disasters of World
War II, we inherited it. We inherited
it from the British, from the French, and
from the Dutch.
Unless we can re-establish the balance
of power, we will simply forfeit to a world
in chaos and international anarchy.
This opportunity gives us our begin-
ning. Once we achieve it, Mr. President,
we will have then won the opportunity
for which the war was waged-that is,
the opportunity to do it a little better, the
opportunity to improve upon the trap-
pings of the world order, if we can.
But, we have got to -win the oppor-
tunity first. That opportunity remains
ever elusive if we do not restore the
balance of power. We have come a long
way along the road of balancing the
world in the wake of World War II-a
long way. We were tested in Greece and
Turkey, Iran, Berlin, Korea, and Cuba.
Now it is Vietnam.
Each crisis, in its own terms, by its own
forces, was the measure of our willing-
ness to assume the responsibility of
power in drawing the line of balance
around the globe. Such a line has al-
most been drawn. We can begin in the
northern area of our earthly domain In
Finland, and with a piece of chalk
sketch a line on the globe down across
eastern Europe, above Greece and Tur-
key, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan and India, al-
most to the China Sea.
That represents a firm line that has
been drawn, not by a geographer, not by
a theoretician, not by by a philosopher,
but by the sheer balancing force of the
counter power. One source of that power
was vested in Moscow, and the other in
the United States of America. But the
line has been drawn, and it has produced
a greater semblance of order in the
world-in that part of the world; that
is-than at any time since World War
II. But only in the East has it remained
in a vacuum, in a total state of fluility.
We have come so close to rebalancing
the globe that it would be a forfeiture of
deep responsibility finally to stop now,
finally to be so near and yet stop when
it is still so far.
That is the reason why it makes a dif-
ference what we do now, and that is why
we are in Vietnam. That is why we have
no rational, no meaningful, no moral al-
ternative but to stay there for the pres-
ent, to draw that line there, and to epito-
mize in our own vestments of power the
hopes of those nations and lesser people
in numbers, though no lesser than the
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Pe(rruary 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 1617
tional Liberation Front, directed from
ITa.noi, will they be permitted to make
"their own self-determining way" for the
futu::e.
Ar. LAUSCHE. I hope the Senator
from Wyoming will suffer my repeating
the statement, because it is very signifi-
cant, and it has not been emphasized
anywhere, so far as I know:
'I be internal affairs of South Vietnam must
be settled by the South Vietnamese people
6herrselves, in accordance with the program
of the South Vietnam National Front for
Liberation, without any foreign interference.
1A es that not mean that all the other
people whom the Senator has mentioned
will have nothing to say, except that the
election shall be conducted by the South
Vietnam Liberation Front?
Mr. McGEE. Not only conducted by
i t but counted by it.
Mr. LAUSCHE. Now I ask the ques-
Lion : If the election is carried on in that
way, will it or will it not be a duplica-
tion of the one-party elections which
have been held in all other countries
where the Communists have said, "We
will have open, free elections"?
Mr. McGEE. Indeed it would be. We
should learn that fact from history.
[Tistory can teach us some important
lessons in that respect. I hope it taught
its that lesson in Greece, where exactly
the same demands were made in 1945
and 1.946, and we were compelled to hold
the line, even in support of a king and
royalty and some black-market groups,
in o:der to win the votes for a genuine
,elf-determining development in Greece.
It meant that for a time we had to aban-
don the good guys in the rural areas of
Greece who were involved in that civil
war situation.
In Germany the same thing was time.
This was exactly what the Communists
had in mind when they wanted free elec-
Lions in Germany, provided that mem-
bers of the Communist Party conduct
those elections.
The Communists cannot stand free
elections in Berlin. They cannot stand
free elections in Eastern Germany, be-
cau:se they would be swept out immedi-
ately by the German people. This is an
old hoax, and the fact that some of our
people here in America are taken in
by that hoax, after the lessons we should
have learned from the cold war, is an
exceedingly distressing factor of our
time, and makes the chances of an op-
portunity for winning peace in Viet-
narn all the more difficult, even now.
MM :r. LAUSCHE. It seems to be a
travesty and an insult to the intelligence
of ,he people, when the North Viet-
narr_ese state that: "We want the issue
settled by the South Vietnamese people
themselves, but in accordance with the
program of the South Vietnam National
Front for Liberation."
Our Government has said that it is
com:ent to permit the people of South
Vietnam to determine what type of gov-
ernment they want. In twisted words,
Nor:h Vietnam, through its Premier, has
said chat it wants the people of South
Vietnam to determine what type of gov-
ernment they want.
Yesterday the President of the United
States asked that Ambassador Goldberg
take up the matter in the United Nations.
I suggest at this time that an exploration
of the legitimacy of the proposals by
North Vietnam and by our Government
should be made by the United Nations,
with a view of bringing about open, free
elections, supervised by the United Na-
tions or by a new international agency
created to observe the elections. I should
be happy to hear the Senator comment
on that suggestion.
Mr. :McGEE. I say to my friend
from Ohio that this IS indeed an inter-
esting and provocative suggestion. I feel
compelled to say, on my own behalf, that
it will probably be a great deal more
complicated than that. It is not like
aiming toward elections in Greece, where
they have had a far more sophisticated
experience with. some of the trappings of
self-government or responsible local gov,
ernment, at least, for many years, or in
Germany, where such capabilities exist-
ed wherever free elections could be had.
In South Vietnam, we have the tragic
,circumstance that there has been almost
no experience in self-responsibility in
government. We would only be delud-
ing one another if we agreed that in try-
ing to stage now what we might call free
elections, we would achieve elections
such as we think of in the American
vernacular or in the experience of other
countries in the so-called free world. I
do not believe that can happen very soon.
But I believe that we should try to win
them by drawing a line. We must try to
draw a line in Vietnam for the Viet-
namese to grow into that kind of respon-
sibility, allowing time and opportunity
for them to rise to this capacity, which
all peoples can do if they are not sup-
pressed from the outside by forces that
are deliberately geared to prevent their
self -expression.
If we include the timing in our con-
cept, and realize that perhaps in our time
we shall not see any genuine free elec-
tions so-called,, because the people yet
have to grow up with that kind of ex-
perience, then we could say, "Yes, in-
deed; take any means for a chance for
whatever determination they choose to
make, but free from any imposition on
what they do from Hanoi or any of the
other areas to the north."
Mr. LAUSCHE. There is soundness in
what the Senator has declared. The
point, however, which I am trying to
make is the approach to the problem
from the standpoint of the immediate
time that our Government is prepared to
have open and free elections, to the ex-
tent they can be obtained with the pres-
ent untrained experience of the South
Vietnamese, while the North Vietnamese
have made, in the words of their
Premier, false and beguiling statements
that they wish the people of South Viet-
nam to determine what shall be done
but, quote, "in accordance with the pro-
gram of the liberation front." This
absolutely means the old Communist type
of election.
Mr. McGEE. The Senator is correct.
Let me suggest that even if there may be
some dispute over the degree to which
the people of South Vietnam-or similar
areas which were too long under colonial
domination-might be capable of rising
to self-governrrient, the fact remains that
we know the surest way they will never
obtain it would be to turn them over to
the Communists. Whatever else our
feelings may be, at least we have a moral
goal in the matter of what we believe,
and political righteousness in terms of
freedom for all people to make their own
determination of what they wish to live
with, and what conditions they will ac-
cept, and so forth. We also know how
they cannot get that by surrendering to
forces from the outside that would move
in by sheer power, and cram its doctrine,
its methodology, and its leadership down
the throats of its neighbors.
It is the prevention of such a situation
that we stand for in this country.
I hope we are not trying to make little
democrats out of everyone-and with all
due respect to my friends on the other
side of the aisle, I mean little democrats
with a small "d." I hope we are not try-
ing to make little Americans out of
everyone.
To me, American foreign policy is sim-
ple, and that is to uphold the right of
every nation, of every people, anywhere,
to determine its own future, its own
destiny within its own confines, so long
as it does not impose its attitudes upon
its neighbors by force, or have to suc-
cumb to imposition from its neighbors by
force.
That is as simple and as plainly as it
can be put. Let the nations work out the
variations of the future they want.
Mr. LAUSCHE. It is my position, and
I am quite certain that it is the position
also of the Senator from Wyoming, that
when we made the statement that we
support free elections in South Vietnam,
to give the South Vietnamese a govern-
ment of their own choice-which we did
in a brief statement, and simply put-
we declared what the Senator has just
stated a moment ago to be his concept
of the philosophy of our Government.
If the Liberation Front really wishes
peace, it would seem to me that it would
go to the negotiating table and there dis-
cuss ways and means to insure free and
open elections. But, that they will not
do.
Mr. McGEE. The Senator does not
blame them, does he?
Mr. LAUSCHE. I blame them be-
cause--
Mr. McGEE. Because that would de-
stroy them.
Mr. LAUSCHE. They wish South
Vietnam to be surrendered to them-
Mr. McGEE. Of course. They cannot
afford to negotiate. They cannot afford
to compromise. They cannot afford to
settle. Their only hope is to settle by the
imposition of force-their force-on only
one kind of peace; namely, their peace.
They cannot afford anything else.
Mr. LAUSCHE. Another condition
laid down by the Premier is that all for-
eign troops be pulled out, and then that
elections be held in accordance with the
concept of the Communists in holding an
election.
I thank the Senator from Wyoming
very much for his comments.
Mr. McGEE. I also wish to thank the
Senator from Ohio for his valuable con-
tribution in this dialog that we have been
able to spell out on. the floor of the
Senate.
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February 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE
What we are now witnessing is the Ameri-
can economic miracle and, since the Nation
is now into the sixth year without recession,
it is time to recognize that this miracle is
not accidental.
At a time when communism is still claim-
ing it is the wave of the future-though
neither in Red China nor in the Soviet Union
can Communist agriculture feed its own
people-maybe competitive private enter-
prise has something to be said for it.
We must be doing something right.
When President Eisenhower submitted
a 1958-59 budget of $72 billion, Secretary of
the Treasury George Humphrey screamed at
the White House that such a spending binge
would "bring on a recession that would curl
your hair." It didn't.
The $112.8 billion budget Mr. Johnson
presented to Congress this week is a big bud-
get but, because of the vigor and growth of
the economy, it does not dangerously strain
the resources of the Nation.
Eisenhower's $72 billion was often cited as
the biggest peacetime budget ever. But it
wasn't. Not that it wasn't the biggest to
that moment, but it wasn't a peacetime
budget. It was a peace-plus-cold-War
budget.
And Mr. Johnson's $112.8 billion is not a
peacetime budget. It is a peace-plus-cold-
war-plus-hot-war budget and the President
put his finger on its economic soundness
when he pointed out in his economic mes-
sage that, while our defense needs are great,
our economic growth is far greater.
There is no doubt that there are large
uncertainties in the budget. The uncer-
tainties are the war-cost estimates and the
revenue estimates. They could both be
wrong. They usually are.
If they prove to be, the President will have
to propose higher taxes and cutting back
some homefront spending to hold inflation
in check.
NEED FOR BAIL REFORM
(Mr. SCHWEIKER asked and was
given permission to address the House
for 1 minute.)
Mr. SCHWEIKER. Mr. Speaker, I
introduce today a bill which will estab-
lish for the first time a formal statutory
removal procedure to be followed by bail
bondsmen and supervised by U.S. judicial
officers in the State to which an alleged
bail jumper has moved. It is a simpli-
fied form of the current extradition
process and requires that bondsmen pro-
cure an arrest warrant from a U.S. com-
missioner or U.S. judge and then bring
the bailee before that official for a hear-
Ing. The Federal officer would issue a
removal warrant to the bondsman only
after he had satisfied himself that the
accused was the person sought, that he
had been admitted to bail in another
State and had violated the provisions of
that bail, and that the bondsman is a
valid representative of the bonding com-
pany. If the removal warrant was
issued, the accused would have to be re-
turned promptly to the State from which
he had fled. Bondsmen who fail to com-
ply with these provisions of my bill would
be subject to a fine of not more than
$5,000, or imprisonment for not more
than 2 years, or both.
The dangers of the present system
have been made clear by the actions of
bondsmen in a recent episode involving
one of my constituents. Presently, con-
victed criminals that escape have more
rights than alleged bail jumpers who
have not been convicted of any crime.
At present, the law does not prescribe
procedures in this field. In fact, bonds-
men today base their actions on a Su-
preme Court decision handed down in
1872. I believe that the due process of
the law can only be assured by enactment
of this bill. It will merely require bonds-
men to follow the same procedures now
used by policemen under similar circum-
stances. Presently, bondsmen enjoy
special powers not given even to the
police. I feel that is is imperative that
the operations of bail bondsmen engaged
in recovering fugitives in another State
must be subject to the careful super-
vision of the courts to protect the basic
rights of all concerned.
I am pleased to be joined in this effort
by my colleague, Senator TYDINGS, who
is introducing this bill today in the
Senate.
(Mr. SCHWEIKER asked and was
given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
BENEFITS FOR VETERANS OF CUR-
RENT MILITARY SERVICE
(Mr. ADAIR asked and was given per-
mission to address the House for 1 min-
ute and to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. ADAIR. Mr. Speaker, much con-
cern has been expressed in recent months
over the benefits that were available to
veterans of current military service.
These men are, of course, entitled to
many of the benefits that our grateful
Nation has bestowed upon its war vet-
erans. Two notable exceptions, however,
are educational benefits and hospitaliza-
tion for the treatment of non-service
connected disabilities.
I have introduced a bill to authorize
educational benefits for veterans of serv-
ice after January 31, 1955, and I antici-
pate that my colleagues in the House of
Representatives will soon have an oppor-
tunity to vote on a bill on this subject.
I am today introducing a bill making
veterans with service after January 31,
1955, also eligible for hospitalization for
non-service-connected disabilities on the
same basis as veterans of a period of
war. We have all seen instances, Mr.
Speaker, of men who were separated for
disabilities which the Veterans' Admin-
istration holds are not service connected.
These men, in many instances, are un-
able to establish the fact that their dis-
abilities originated in service. When
they require treatment for such condi-
tions, the existing law prohibits it.
It is my understanding that the Vet-
erans' Administration will accept a vet-
eran applicant for treatment in one of
its hospitals until such time as service
connection is either established or ruled
out. The bill I am introducing today will
provide statutory entitlement to this
hospitalization with the same limitations
regarding the veteran's ability to pay
and the availability of a bed as is con-
tained in existing law for war veterans.
I urge my colleagues to join in support
of this measure.
(Mr. BRAY asked and was given per-
mission to address the House for 1 min-
ute and to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. BRAY. Mr. Speaker, the Presi-
dent has stated some of the compelling
reasons that the United States is again
using air power against the Vietcong and
their North Vietnamese supporters.
He could have told in more detail how
much the bombing pause has allowed the
Vietcong to increase their supplies and
strengthen their resources. There is no
question but that the Vietcong have
benefited from a buildup in supplies dur-
ing the bombing pause. How much this
may lengthen the war and how much it
will cost in lives no one can say.
This was a decision of the President,
and only time will tell whether the pause
contributed to finding a peaceful solu-
tion to the Vietnamese problem.
What has been most disturbing is
the public appeals of several prominent
Senators to continue the bombing pause.
I do not question the right of these repre-
sentatives to voice their dissent to the
policies of the President, even though
they are of his party, but to publicly ask
for an extension of the pause after he
had already told congressional leaders of
the compelling arguments for resump-
tion of the bombing could serve little
purpose here and was misinterpreted
abroad.
Everytime a prominent American sug-
gests a softening of our policy in Viet-
nam unfortunate consequences follow in
Asia. Our friends, the South Viet-
namese, are constantly concerned that
that United States will pull out of Viet-
nam and leave them to the retaliation
of the Vietcong.
The North Vietnamese and the Chinese
take each such statement as further
proof that our strength is ebbing and
our determination is weak.
The most important factor in bringing
the Communists to negotiations is to con-
vince them that we are absolutely deter-
mined to see the problem through to a
reasonable solution. If they think we
are about to withdraw or give up, such
misconceptions will only prolong the
fighting, causing more American service-
men to be killed, and hamper efforts to
find a peaceful solution.
Consequently for several Senators to
publicly pressure the President on this
subject, even after the decision to resume
had been made, was a move unwise in
conception and harmful in execution.
If further debate is to be had on this
subject, let us try to keep it within the
realm of matters which can still be
changed, and let us try to phrase our
questions in such a way as to leave no
doubt of our firm resolution.
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTING
(Mr. MATHIAS asked and was given
permission to address the House for 1
minute and to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. MATHIAS. Mr. Speaker, I would
like to call the attention of the House to
some statistics which I placed in the
RECORD on Thursday last, January 27,
1966, which appear on -page 1307 of the
RECORD. These figures are startling
when the proximity of the 1966 congres-
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE 1+ ebmtary 1, 1966
:ional primary and general elections is
considered.
In my remarks I have pointed out that
more than 25 percent of the Members of
this House will be affected if a congres-
sional districting bill, already passed
here and amended and now pending in
the other body, is enacted into law to
bring congressional districts to within
10 percent of each other in population.
One-fourth of flee districts represented
in this House would have to be altered to
conform to that legislation, and although
its effective date may be postponed, its
tarovisions could be influential with leg-
islatures now discussing congressional
redistricting.
Mr. Speaker, in my compilation of sta-
tistics on that subject I have used the
li;;ures which existed in North Carolina
prior to the veo recent redistricting in
that State.
I would like further permission, Mr.
Speaker, to note that the figures used in
my previous remarks must be adjusted
,a.,, necessary to reelect the changes in
North Carolina districts.
The SPEAKER. Without objection, it
is so ordered.
There was no objection.
COMMITTEE ON VETERANS'
1l FAIRS
Mr. BOGGS. Mr. Speaker, I ask unan-
imous consent that the Committee on
Veterans' Affairs may have until mid-
night tonight to file certain reports.
':1'he SPEAKER. Without objection, it
is so ordered.
There was no objection.
THE FOREIGN AID PROGRAM
(Mr. HAYS asked and was given per-
mission to address the House for 1 min-
ute and to revise and extends his re-
marks.)
Mr. HAYS. Mr. Speaker, I have sup-
ported the foreign aid program for 17
years, sometimes somewhat reluctantly,
but at the samr. time I have felt free
to criticize the foreign aid administra-
tion when I thought they were wrong.
They do not like criticism, and con-
sequently I was not one of those who got
an advance notice of what they are pro-
posing in a new foreign aid program, nor
was I one of those invited down for a
briefing yesterday. But if what I hear
around the floor is correct, it has taken
them 6 or 7 years to approach what I
have been suggesting that they do for a
lung time, and that is quit trying to in-
dustrialize emerging nations, nations
which have no basis for industrialization,
no technical know-how, and no skilled
personnel.
We should try to concentrate upon the
basic things, namely, teaching them
how to feed themselves and how to pro-
duce enough food so that they will not
be on a starvation diet, and how to start
with very basic and elementary educa-
tion. If the AID agency is sincere in try-
ing to carry forward a program like this,
1. might find it possible to support for-
eign aid for the 18th time. But having
watched them in action, I will be very
careful to scrutinize their requests and
ask questions, even if it is at the risk of
being left out of the briefings. I think
I will be able to survive and get the in-
formation anyway.
THE FOREIGN GIVEAWAY
(Mr. GROSS asked a- .gas given per-
mission to address the , _ _Kse for 1 min-
ute and to revise and extend his re-
marks.)
Mr. GROSS. Mr. Speaker, I wondered
where one of the previous speakers got
so much information about the Presi-
de:st's foreign aid program in view of
the fact that the White House message
has not been read. The gentleman from
Ohio, my friend Mr. HAYS, throws some
light on the subject. Apparently it was
at a closed-door meeting at the White
House yesterday.
.1 would hope that the President, if he
is :doing to ask for a 5-year foreign give-
away program, would let a few more of
us in on the takeoff as well as the land-
ings.
,Nir. HAYS. Mr. Speaker, will the E'.en-
tlernan yield?
:Hr. GROSS. I am happy to yield to
the gentleman from Ohio,
Mr. HAYS. I was not concerned about
not being invited to the briefing. I Just
hope that they do not take me off the list
when they have food down there. That
is what I like to know about .
Mr. GROSS. I was not personally
concerned about it either, but I do think
that perhaps others ought to be in on
the takeoffs as they are staged.
Tl i.IE; FOREIGN AID PROGRAM--
MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT
OF THE UNITED STATES (H. DOC.
NO. 374)
The SPEAKER laid before the House
the following message from the Presi-
dent of the United States, which was
read, and together with the accompany-
ing papers, referred to the Committee on
Foreign Affairs and ordered to be
printed:
To the Congress of the United State:,:
I recommend a foreign aid program to
help those nations who are determined
to help themselves.
I recommend a program to help give
the people of the less developed world
the food, the health, the skills and edu-
cation-arid the strength-lead their
nations to self-sufficient lives of plenty
and freedom.
:[ propose to carry forward the best of
what we are now doing in the less devel-
oped world, and cut out the worst. I
also propose to make the basic changes
the times demand.
My recommendations are grounded in
the deep conviction that we must use
foreign assistance to attack the root
causes of poverty. We must concentrate
on countries not hostile to us that ?,,ive
solid evidence that they are determined
to help themselves.
'1 his is the lesson of the past. It is
the hope for the future. It is the guiding
principle for a nation ready and will.-
Ing to cooperate with the industrious,
but unwilling to subsidize those who do
not assume responsibility for their own
fate.
During the past year I have given cur
foreign assistance program the most so-
ber and searching review. I have ques-
tioned the merit of each program. Spe-
cial groups have concentrated on the
particular areas of food, education, and
health. A Cabinet committee has ex-
amined the details of our general eco-
nomic and military assistance.
Thus, the steps I recommend. today
have been developed in the light of ad-
vice from senior officials in the execu-
tive branch, congressional leaders, and
experienced advisers from outside Gov-
ernment. They also have been developed
with full recognition of our balance-of-
payments situation.
They emerge from a rigorous examina-
tion of our past experience.
They are informed by compassion and
shaped by the history of two decades.
They are the proof of our devotion to
the works of peace.
They reflect our vision of a world free
from fear and ripe with opportunity.
They will shape the legacy we leave
our children.
I
The quest for :peace is as old as man-
kind.
For countless centuries man struggled
to secure first his home, then his village,
then his city. It is the unique heritage
of our century that men must strive for
a secure world.
Peace, plenty, freedom-our fathers
aspired to these as we do now. But the
fateful truth of our age is that all our
personal and national hopes hang in a
balance affected by events and attitudes
half a world away.
We have paid a fearful price to learn
the folly of isolation. We have learned
that the human misery which infects
whole nations with a thirst for violent
change does not give way to mere slogans.
We have learned that the works of peace
require courage and foresight. The need
knows neither national boundary nor
narrow ideology.
We have demonstrated this under-
standing in many ways over the past two
decades. Our military strength has pro-
tected many countries threatened by in-
vasion from without or subversion from
within. Our economic assistance pro-
grams have rebuilt Europe. We have
helped untold millions to gain confidence
in peaceful progress, where there has
been neither peace nor progress for cen-
turies.
We will never know how many cri:;es
have been averted, how much violence
avoided, or how many minds have been
won to the cause of freedom In these
years. But I believe we have many such
achievements to our credit.
Yet today the citizens of many develop-
ing nations walk in the shadow of mis-
ery: half the adults have never been to
school; over half the people are hungry
or malnourished; food production per
person is falling; at present rates of
growth, population will double before the
year 2000.
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House of Representatives
The House met at 12 o'clock noon.
George R. Davis, minister, National
City Christian Church, Washington,
D.C., offered the following prayer:
Let us pray.
Eternal Spirit of- Truth, whose ways
are higher than our ways, and whose
thoughts are higher than our thoughts,
we feel Thy call to us. We cannot rest
until we have more nearly approached
Thy goodness, Thy love, Thy holiness.
We pray in all of our human agencies a
deepening of the desire to find and fol-
low Thy laws for men. Just now espe-
cially we long for this in governments.
And we pray especially In these hours
for our own Government. We thank
Thee for her greatness, her ideals, her
achievements. In these very critical
days let Thy blessing rest upon this
House of Representatives, the President
of the United States, our courts, and all
the governing bodies of our Nation.
Help us to be strong and unwavering as
we carry the burdens of world leader-
ship. Keep us humble. Keep us per-
sistent in the quest for world peace, by
every legitimate means, even as we stand
faithfully against aggression and tyr-
anny. 0 God, our Father, hear our
earnest prayer, for all men and nations,
and be to us all not only the God of the
nations, but the Father of each of us,
In the name of Him who Is the Wonder-
ful Counselor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace.
Amen.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1966
United States cannot induce progress in
other nations from the outside.
On the other hand, the people of Asia,
Africa, and Latin America now know
that a far better life Is possible. They
know that ignorance, poverty, and de-
spair are not inevitable facts of life. In
the face of this new awareness and the
new aspirations to which it gives rise,
the rich nations of the world can no
longer afford just to help their under-
developed neighbors sustain themselves
on the brink of survival. Such a course
would eventually lead to worldwide
disaster. There is no doubt that we
must assist in this struggle for a better
life. In doing so, however, we should
continue to insist upon adequate stand-
ards of performance from those who seek
our aid. Our most vital contribution
should be assisting the drive toward self-
reliance. For us, this is the only prac-
ticable course; for new nations with a
strong sense of national pride and pur-
pose, it is the only acceptable course.
As the President has emphasized, self-
help means more than cost-sharing on
individual projects. It means firm com-
mitments about how the finished proj-
ects will be used and maintained. In the
President's concept, self-help must in-
clude such things.as the restructuring of
a tax system to make it more effective
and more equitable; the enactment of
stringent fiscal measures to insure that
temporary gains are not swept away in
a tide of inflation; the institution of
agricultural and land reform so that the
farmers may realize a better return for
their labor.
What we are trying to do in Asia,
Africa, and Latin America is to get the
less-developed countries started on an
upward spiral of rising production, rising
income, and rising standards of living so
that they eventually will be able to con-
tinue on their way unaided.
President Johnson has made clear his
determination that U.S. foreign aid
shall not be used as a worldwide relief
program with the needy nations lined up
for handouts from the rich. He is de-
termined, rather, that our aid will be
used to help developing nations achieve
economic independence as well as politi-
cal independence. I know that he will
receive the enthusiastic support of the
Congress in his efforts.
Communist aggressor. The President
extended the olive branch of peace. He
even gave the aggressor time to recon-
sider his infamous actions and offered
to negotiate. The President's gesture of
peace was rejected by additional ruth-
less aggression. The President had no
alternative but to attack the source of
aggression.
The enemy took advantage of the
truce to strengthen his base of aggres-
sion. The enemy used this time to pre-
pare for further aggressive action
against the peaceful Vietnamese people
and against American soldiers stationed
in Vietnam for peace and to prevent the
spread of war.
Having returned from Vietnam only
last week, Mr. Speaker, I can assure you
this is welcome news to the American
men at the fighting front and to free-
dom fighters of all nationalities. We
cannot permit sanctuaries free of at-
tack when aggression is spawned and
nurtured against freemen from those
sanctuaries. We must destroy those
bases of aggressions and International
crime. We are in war and every means
at our disposal should be used to insure
final victory over the forces of tyranny
and evil oppression. We must protect
our men with every means at our com-
mand. We should barricade the coast of
North Vietnam and prevent their instru-
mentalities of death from reaching our
boys at the fighting front. We should
destroy the airfields, generating plants,
and industrial complexes of North Viet-
nam. The President's action will en-
courage the Koreans, the Thais, the
Philippine people, the Republic of China,
and the forces of freedom all over the
world.
Mr. Speaker, our men in South Viet-
nam from General Westmoreland to the
private in the foxhole, the Vietnamese
military, news correspondents, and civi-
lians in every walk of life are virtually
united in their desire to see victory in
the cause of freedom in southeast Asia.
Upon my return from South Vietnam,
I, along with others, made this recom-
mendation to the President. President
Johnson has my support In his heroic ef-
fort to halt Communist aggression and
restore peace to the world.
THE JOURNAL
The Journal of the proceedings of yes-
terday was read and approved.
MESSAGES FROM THE PRESIDENT
Sundry messages In writing from the
President of the United States were com-
municated to the House by Mr. Geisler,
one of his secretaries.
SELF-HELP AND U.S. FOREIGN AID
(Mr. ZABLOCKI asked and was given
permission to address the House for 1
minute, to revise and extend his re-
marks, and to include extraneous mat-
ter.)
Mr. ZABLOCKI. Mr. Speaker, I was
most pleased by the stress President
Johnson placed on the need for more
self-help by countries seeking economic
aid from the United States. This em-
phasis on more self-reliance reflects a
growing recognition that our economic
assistance programs must be genuine
partnerships if they are to succeed. The
burden must be shared, but the major
portion of the burden should be carried
by the developing nations themselves.
Economic development is an inside job.
With all its wealth and technology, the
1624
y /},r~~ YOUTH WANTS TO KNOW
V PRESIDENT MADE RIGHT (Mr. TENZER asked and was given
(Mr. DORN asked and was given per- and to include extraneous matter.)
mission to addre
th
H
ss
e
ouse for 1 min- Mr. TENZER. Mr. Speaker, this past
ute; to revise and extend his remarks Saturday, January 29, I had the pleasure
and to include extraneous matter.) of viewing Edwin L. Weisl, Jr.'s appear-
Mr. DORN. Mr. Speaker, President ance on Theodore Granik's award-win-
Johnson made a forthright, courageous, ning "Youth Wants To Know." In these
and wise decision. He is right in resum- crucial times when the need for a better
Ing the bombing of North Vietnam-the understanding of the critical issues of
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February 1, 1966
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 1623
verse business behavior but the "inevitable
roiLCOmitant," as the President's Science Ad-
visory Committee has noted, of technological
tic UN icy.
Ili_isinessmen, while they direct much of
this activity, can neither be credited with all
its benefits nor held uniquely accountable
for all its unwanted byproducts. The
dividends and debits alike are society's to
;;hare.
I r substantial pollution-control costs are
to to built into the business process, it is
society at large that is ultimately going to
pay the price of those costs just as it now
pays, for other social objectives-such as
factory safety, abolition of child labor, and
ounhrnum wages-that have become accepted
cost of doing business. Clean water and
clear air simply aren't free goods. Recogni-
tion of this is the vital prerequisite to the
development of sensible abatement programs.
The bill (S. 2857) to increase the in-
ves: ment credit allowable with respect
to facilities to control water and air pol-
lution, introduced by Mr. COOPER (for
himself and Mr. RANDOLPH), was re-
ceived, read twice by its title, referred to
the Committee on Finance, and ordered
to be printed in the RECORD, as follows:
S. 2857
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That (a) sec-
tion 46(c) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1954 (relating to definition of qualified in-
vestment for purposes of determining the
credit for investment in certain depreciable
property) is amended by adding after para-
graph (4) thereof the following new par-
agraph:
" (5) FACILITIES To CONTROL WATER AND
AIR POLLUTION?
"(A) In the case of section 38 property
which consists of facilities or equipment to
control water or air pollution, the amount of
the qualified investment shall be twice the
amount determined under paragraph (1).
"(B) For purposes of subparagraph (A),
the term 'facilities or equipment to control
water pollution' means a facility or equip-
ment used to control water pollution by re-
moving', altering, or disposing of wastes from
any type of manufacturing or mining process,
including the necessary intercepting sewers,
outfall sewers, pumping, power, and other
equipment, and their appurtenances.
"(C) For purposes of subparagraph (A),
the term 'facilities or equipment to control
air pollution' means a facility or equipment
used to control atmospheric pollution or
contamination by removing, altering, or dis-
posing of atmospheric pollutants and con-
taminants from any type of manufacturing
or mining process"
(b) The amendment made by subsection
(a) shall apply to taxable years beginning
after December 31, 1965.
RECESS UNTIL 11) O'CLOCK A.M.
TOMORROW
Mr. MUSKIE. Mr. President, I move,
in accordance with the previous order,
that the Senate stand in recess until 10
o'clock a.m. tomorrow.
The motion was agreed to; and (at
5 o'clock and 15 minutes p.m.) the Sen-
ate took a recess, under the order
previously entered, until tomorrow.
Wednesday, February 2, 1966, at 10
o'clock a.m.
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - HOUSE February 1, 1966
As an investment banker, Eugene Meyer have different imperatives. Medicine is in-
proved an immediate success. In short time creasiRgly and necessarily dependent on a
he had a seat on the stock exchange and delicate and complex technology. Now shall
was serving as director of a large number this be reconciled with a sick person's need
of corporations. When World War I began, for personal warmth-and our growing un-
he was called to Washington to serve as a derstanding of the effect this has on the
member of the War Industries Board. In course of his illness? We are beginning to
1918 he was appointed a special assistant to approach abstruse and thrilling questions
the Secretary of War in connection with about the chemical nature of life and its
aircraft production, and reorganization of processes. Can we dedicate the necessary
the Department of Production. President energy and time to this inquiry and still act
Wilson.named him hirector of the War Fi- on our recent awareness of a hospital's broad
nance Corporation of the United States. A human responsibility to the community it
few months later he became Managing Direc- serves?
tor and remained such throughout the life These and similar questions resolve into
of the Corporation. Retiring from that posi- a single, central question: In the light of
tion at the close of the war, he was rehired rapidly changing social, economic, and sci-
in 1921 to fight the effects of postwar infla- entific conditions, how can the most produc-
tion, pumping credit into American agri- tive relationship between physician, patient
culture. and hospital be achieved? The answers
Under President Coolidge, Eugene Meyer carry implications for personnel, adminis-
reorganized and held office as Commissioner tration, construction, research, education-
of the Federal Farm Loan Board. Under the full gamut of medicine and medical
President Hoover he became Governor of the practice.
Federal Reserve Board. In 1931, in the midst It is particularly important that univer-
of the depression, he drew up the bill creat- sity hospitals approach the question imagi-
ing the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, natively and vigorously-for they mold the
the most useful Federal agency conceived physicians of the next generation and set the
under President Hoover. Indeed, it is his- example for thousands of other hospitals.
tory that virtually every financial emergency Washington is fortunate in having George
law proposed by President Herbert Hoover Washington University Hospital. You are
was suggested, in whole or in part, by Mr. growing, inquiring, learning-expanding
Meyer. your concerns as well as you bed capacity,
In 1933, Mr. Meyer resigned his public office allying yourself with the future. You have
and bought control of the Washington Post, much to be proud of and much to look for-
which under his guidance was to become one ward to.
of the outstanding newspapers of the United In the effort ahead of you, the Government
States. will support, encourage, aid. Between us we
As a newspaper publisher, Mr. Meyer did can build a most productive partnership.
not, however, retire altogether from the polit- This plaque is witness to the possibility. But
ical world or forsake the other needs of the the bulk of the effort-as it has always
community. As publisher, he was not above been-must be yours. Yours is the knowl-
serving as reporter on occasion, and as an edge, talent and skill. Fulfillment of some
editorial commentator. Meanwhile, he con- of the deepest of men's hopes rests with you,
tinued to serve as a philanthropist to his and in this sense, you are doing God's work.
city and his country, which tradition he in- I am honored to be associated with your
troduced as far back as 1904. In that year, effort.
at the age of 29, he donated a considerable In closing, may I say that I deeply appre-
amount to Yale University, his alma mater. ciate and I am very grateful to all those
The same spirit prevailed when, in World associated with George Washington Univer-
War I, as a personal cost of a large sum of sity in presenting the very fine plaque to me
money, he brought to Washington men who and to Senator BIBLE, which honor Mrs.
were vital to the war effort. Still later, in McCormack and I shall treasure for many
and Agnes F. Meyer Foundation for the sup-
port of public services including university
peaceful negotiation has clearly indi-
cated that there is no possibility for
peace at this time.
It must be said by any unbiased ob-
server that the efforts of the President
have been overwhelming in the pursuit of
a peaceful solution. He has gone far
more than the second mile. He has re-
peatedly committed the administration
to the principle of unconditional discus-
sions leading to the negotiation of the
cessation of hostilities and a peace set-
tlement. He has expressed readiness to
utilize mediation efforts by United Na-
tions members, and especially by United
Nations Secretary-General U Thant. He
has also proposed a billion dollar devel-
opment fund for southeast Asia.
All of this indicates a deep sense of re-
sponsibility on the part of the President
to explore every means possible to find
a solution to problems in Vietnam.
With his announcement of today, the
President has again forcefully asserted
his sincerity of purpose by instructing
Ambassador Goldberg to immediately
take this problem to the Security Coun-
cil of the United Nations.
If the request by the President for the
intervention by the United Nations
achieves success, we will all rejoice. I
join with my colleagues in upholding the
hand of the President in this matter and
giving him my prayerful support.
(Mr. ROSENTHAL (at the request of
Mr. Moss) was granted permission to
extend his remarks at this point in the
RECORD and to include extraneous mat-
ter.)
[Mr. ROSENTHAL'S remarks will ap-
pear hereafter in the Appendix.]
REMARKS OF VICE PRESIDENT
HUMPHREY, CYO CONVENTION,
CHICAGO, ILL.
(Mr. ROSTENKOWSKI (at the re-
quest of Mr. Moss) was granted permis-
sion to extend his remarks at this point
in the RECORD and to include extraneous
matter.)
Mr. ROSTENKOWSKI. Mr. Speaker,
on November 13, 1965, the Catholic
Youth Organization of Chicago pre-
sented their award "For God and
Youth," to Vice President HUBERT H.
HUMPHREY for his outstanding work in
support of the welfare of our Nation's
young. In accepting the award the
Vice President addressed the CYO Con-
vention with a most stirring speech.
With permission, I would like this speech
printed into the RECORD at this point:
REMARKS BY VICE PRESIDENT HUBERT HUM-
PHREY, CYO CONVENTION, CHICAGO, ILL.,
NOVEMBER 13, 1965
Your excellency, monsignor, reverend
clergy, and my friends of the CYO, I am
deeply honored to receive this award, "For
God and Youth." I favor both.
You young people of CYO exemplify what
is right with the youth of America. You are
our builders of the future. You will uphold
our Nations best traditions and practice
good citizeliship and civic responsibility.
You are working, in the words of Pope Paul,
to "create a world that is more humane by
promoting the common good for all."
We are a young country. And we are
getting younger all the time. The average
the sons and daughters or puonc servanw? (Mr. HANSEN-IIS-fwa (at the request
The spirit of philanthropy was ever-present of Mr. Moss) was granted permission to
in him. Eugene Meyer was a gerat American.
He had an intense love of his fellow human extend his remarks at this point in the
beings. He was truly "one of God's noble- RECORD and to include extraneous mat-
men." ter.)
Many times over the years I have begun Mr. HANSEN of Iowa. Mr. Speaker,
speeches by saying I was proud and happy without the least hesitation I want to
to be wherever I was-and truly so. It seems associate myself with the fine remarks
too easy a formula for this occasion-though made by the majority whip, the Honor-
rately, am, indeed, proud and happy. More accu-
rately, I am honored and quite humbled by able HALE BOGGS, yesterday. Addition-
your generosity. ally, I wish to commend him for the ex-
The current revolution in medicine and cellent contribution he made as one of
the organization of medical care has become the panelists on the CBS special news
almost a commonplace in nonmedical liter- program of Sunday, January 30, when
ature in this last few months. Enactment the question facing this Nation in Viet-
of the medicare program, of course, is the nom was discussed for 90 minutes.
cause of much of this interest. But midis In my judgment, President Johnson
care has s grown out of needs and possibilities
which, while more keenly felt and clearly had no alternative but to order the re-
enunicated recently than in the past, have sumptiQn of aerial strikes against North
been apparent for some years. It is well that Vietnam. All of us appreciate the sad-
the issue is now being dramatized for the ness the President felt when he an-
American people-for the progress is real nounced this action. He and his admin-
and imminent and will touch all of us. istration patiently awaited some sign of
Most immediately it touched you-doe- willingness on the part of the North
tors, nurses, all who staff the Nation's hos- Vietnamese to negotiate. Through 37
oft For it is you who have urged much days of forebearance, not one flicker of
tchange e in n the kind of expert care now
of the h
available and who will bring it to reality. interest was displayed. Instead rather
The challenges ahead are impressive. To a blunt rebuffs were made to all overtures.
large extent they demand reconciling goals The fact that the Vietcong and North
which-while not precisely conflicting-do Vietnam have rejected every effort for
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If'cbruary 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD-HOUSE
elation with Mr. Yancey, countless young tend his remarks at this point in the
me, have gained a moral foothold upon life, RECORD and to include extraneous mat-
and a considerable number have gone on to
college and professional studies. ter.)
.Joseph J. Yancey, loyal friend of youth Mr. HOWARD. Mr. of Mr. Speaker, affairs
and Jpioneer worker for high Christian ideals lieu of the current state of world affairs
in a unified community, the Catholic Inter- and the sacrifices our servicemen are be-
racial Council of New York is happy to pre- ing called upon to make, I believe it is
sent you as the recipient for 1952 of the important for the Federal Government
Jaynes J. Roey Award for Interracial Justice. to provide a plan under which veterans
HAL(JI.D A. STERNS, who have served in the Armed Forces
President, ..,;n --'----
Chairman, Board of Directors. ance, d'.eath and disability compensation,
JOHN LA FARCE, S.J., farm, home, and business loa.ns..
Chaplain. We need only cite the GI bills cover-
1 PEPARTAMENT OF STATE, BUREAU OF
l )IICATION AND CULTURAL AF-
I?ArRS,
Mr. .IOSRPH YANCEY,
Nr7v York. N.Y.
lh:AR. Ma. YAEcEY: 11, was a pleasure hav-
ing you in the office last week to tell us about
your extended trip to Latin America. I am
writing at this time to thank you again for
the fine work you did for the American
specialists program.
We now consider you something of a vet-
eran, for you have been abroad under our
program a number of times. In view of
your splendid accomplishments in the past
we had no doubt that this latest trip would
he successful also. Nevertheless, we were still
delighted at the laudatory reports of your
work that have come in from our Embassies.
The reports repeatedly speak of your high
professional competence and your friendly,
pleasant personality. We are advised that
you were very popular with coaches and
athletes alike, and that in addition to re-
rreshing track and field knowledge, you also
imparted a good deal of new Information to
the people with whom you worked. The gen-
eral feeling of the posts may be summed up
by the comment from the Embassy in San
;alvaclor which stated- "We would be glad
to have him back any time, and heartily
recommend him to other posts."
It was indeed generous of you to take such
a lor.g leave of absence from the Internal
Revenue Service in order to make the Latin
American trip. We are most appreciative of
your time and effort in so successfully pro-
moting good will toward our country, and
we hope you have the feeling of satisfaction
that comes with the knowledge of a job well
done.
.>incerely yours,
PAXTO K 13, JOHNSON,
Program officer, Division for Americans,
Abroad.
(Mr. GIAIMO (at the request of Mr.
Moss) was granted permission to ex-
tend his remarks at this point in the
RECORD and to include extraneous
matter.)
I Mr. GAIMO'S remarks will appear
hereafter in the Appendix.]
(!'JIr. BRADEMAS (at the request of
Mr- itfoss) was granted permission to
'xtend his remarks at. this point in the
itgr;otp and to include extraneous
"natter. )
IMr. BRADEMAS' remarks will appear
Hereafter in the Appendix.]
GI BILL FOR GOOD
t Mr. HOWARD (at the request of Mr.
Moss I was granted permission to ex-
No. 16--14
trig World War lI and Korean war
veterans to see that they actually saved
the United States money. Veterans who
availed themselves of these p:rograms-
includirig myself-have raised their in-
ome and educational levels. As a re-
sult, our society as a whole has improved.
The old GI Bill of Rights cost the Gov-
ernment $14.5 billion. However, the
persons who took advantage of this bill
are now better educated and are :return-
ing higher taxes to the U.S. coffers at a
rate expected to pay back the amount
twice a:nd possibly three times over in the
course of a lifetime.
Our draft law is necessary but it does
require these young men to serve on ac-
tive duty in the Armed Forces for a re-
quired period of time. These young men
have been called upon to make the per-
sonal sacrifices associated with military
service; yet they have been denied the
readjustment aids to vitally needed to
help them catch up with those of their
contemporaries who were not in service.
Some Members of Congress favor a
very limited so-called "hot war" bill but
I think this falls short of our need.;. The
bill I alrm about to introduce will provide
a plan which is coherent and equitable,
and applicable to all servicemen without
regard to where they .may be directed to
serve in response to the exigencies of the
cold war or crisis situations.
A leading New Jersey newspaper, the
Red Bank Daily Register, recently car-
ried an editorial which I hope every
member of this House will read. At this
point I would like to insert into the
RECORD the editorial which recently ap-
peared.
In terms of dollars alone, the return In
taxes from the men and women who used the
educational provisions of the first GI bill is
expected to total 21/2 times the $14.5 billion
governmental outlay. But more important
are the services supplied by the doctors,
dentists, teachers, lawyers, clergymen, busi-
nessmen, tradesmen, and thousands of others
who got their schooling with the aid of the
law.
It was the most extensive Federal aid to
education program in the country's history,
which makes continued carping about the
"threat" of such Federal aid the more difficult
to understand. Still, that is no harder to
understand than arguing against a new bill
on the ground that it would cost too much.
By the same token, there is no need to
justify support for the legislation as a Viet-
namese war GI bill of rights. Regardless of
whether the servicemen fighting in the
jungles there merit a reward, the return on
investment is so promising that the Nation
can scarcely afford to pass it up for its own
sake alone.
Instead of passing a Vietnamese war GI
bill-as there were GI bills after World War
II and the Korean war-Congress ought to
pass a permanent GI bill..
EUGENE MEYER PAVILION
(Mr. McCORMACK: (at the request of
Mr. Moss) was granted permission to
extend his remarks in this point in the
RECORD and to include extraneous mat-
ter.)
Mr. McCORMACK. Mr. Speaker, on
Friday, January 21, 1966, the Eugene
Meyer Pavilion was dedicated at the
George Washington University Hospital.
The late Eugene Meyer was a great sup-
porter of George Washington University,
and as everyone knows, he was very ac-
tive in the field of business, philanthropy
any civil works. The pavilion is a won-
derful tribute to his memory and repre-
sents the latest of medical equipment,
which truly emphasizes the greatness of
the late Eugene Meyer. The pavilion,
with its excellent medical facilities, will
be of great assistance to the hospital it-
self, and patients will derive much bene-
fit from the medical improvements.
The George Washington University
honored Senator BIBLE and me by pre-
senting to us two very fine plaques,
which have been installed in the lobby
of the Eugene Meyer Pavilion. On that
occasion I had the honor to address the
group that was assembled to dedicate the
pavilion. In my extension of remarks, I
include the speech that I made on that
occasion:
Dr. Elliott, president of George Washing-
ton University, Mrs. Eugene Meyer, board of
trustees, Senator BIBLE, distinguished guests
and friends, born of pioneer stock, in the
literal sense, Eugene Meyer was to become, in
time, a poineer in his own right, blazing
paths of glory in several areas of endeavor,
and establishing a record unsurpassed in
the field of business, philanthropy and civil
works.
Eugene Meyer's father immigrated from
France to California via the Isthmus of Pana-
ma, settling In Los Angeles, in the 1870's.
There he became successful as a commercial
banker in the French firm of Lazard Freres.
Young Eugene Meyer was educated in the
public schools of San Francisco and spent
it year at the University of California, con-
cluding his studies at Yale, from which he
graduated in 1895. Six years later he opened
his own investment banking house in New
York City.
GI BILL FOR Goon
Long-stymied efforts to enact a new GI bill
oi rights are expected to succeed early in this
year's session of Congress, The administra-
tion and its spokesmen in the Ilouse re-
portedly have relaxed their opposition to a
measure already passed by the Senate to
grant education and home loan benefits to
men who have served in the Armed Forces
since the Korean war GI bill expired in 1955.
The administration blocked the legislation
in the past because of its cost, which is not
a sound reason for opposing a program which
would be as much in the Nation's interest as
that of its individual beneficiaries. The
change in attitude apparently arises from the
political climate generated by the increasing
hazard to U.S. servicemen in Vietnam, which
is not the best reason for adopting the
program.
There is no better argument for a new GI
bill than the experience with the original
one for the veterans of World War II. While
it was conceived primarily as a way to reward
the millions whose lives were interrupted and
permanently changed by that great struggle,
the Nation. as a society got a great deal more
out of the program than it put in.
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February 1, 1.966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX
not a comfortable position for the heavy-
handed Texan who is used to having his
own way in most everything except per-
haps, his daughter's marriage.
The state of the Union message was dis-
turbing In that it carried the message of a
man who labors for a consensus on the one
hand with a program of massive welfare
now being extended into a worldwide appli-
cation in apparent hopes that the impover-
ished across the land will join the legions
of L.B.J. boosters among the welfare recip-
ients here at home. On the other hand the
tone came through of a man who realizes
that two centuries of progress, bringing us
to the point of being the greatest and most
generous civilization the world has ever
known, still find leaders of rival world forces
bent on our destruction. The obligations
of protecting that civilization at the expense
of losing points in the "world opinion poll"
are not as easy to face as are suggestions
for spending money among the poor.
LYNDON; WHAT HE DIDN'T SAY
Midst all of the suggestions for advancing
the spending for welfare, the new Depart-
ment of Transportation, and the 4-year terms
for Congressmen (well calculated to gain
congressional favor) there were a number
of pertinent points that were totally ignored.
We hope that responsible Members of the
Congress will raise these points on the floor
for debate and demand that they be included
in any program of action that we may em-
bark upon.
We heard nothing of the demands of labor
for wage increases of 30 percent and more
in the railroad operating unions and in the
transit unions of New York. lie did admit
in a press conference, the following day, that
the settlement of the transit strike in New
York had far exceeded the guidelines of non-
inflationary price and wage adjustments. He
didn't do anything about it though, to no
one's surprise.
Floridians noted a lack of emphasis on the
space program. With all other aspects of
Government spending given a good leg up on
the Great Society train. it seemed significant
that this vital program was totally ignored
in the picture Lyndon painted. A sharp cut-
back in spending, for space could have a
quick reaction on the economy of Florida.
The rights of people in Vietnam to deter-
mine their own destiny was made clear. The
rights of the millions of people who have
been gathered unwillingly into the commu-
nity of captive nations to those same rights
of determining their destiny was ignored.
In fact it was strongly suggested that we step
up our trade with those who had done the
captivating of these people.
Mounting evidence of Communist terror-
ism in South and Central America was ig-
nored. Numerous countries are feeling the
increase in this reprehensible tactic of the
Vietcong in this hemisphere from the Domin-
ican Republic to Brazil. Plans for assistance
to these nations were not mentioned.
There was no mention of the plan recently
announced to settle the problem with Pana-
ma by a treaty amounting to almost total
surrender to forces of the radical left. When
sovereign U.S. territory is given away by
treaty, or at least is in the position where
it is about to be offered to the Senate for
ratification, it would seem to be worth men-
tioning in the state of the Union message.
Rising threats of inflation were skimmed
over without a backward glance. Cost-of-liv-
ing figures are rising at a rate that should
create some interest among people other
than those getting hurt. No one thing can
defeat the aims of the war on poverty
faster than inflation. If there is to be any
victory in that war there must be curbs on
inflation. An example on your own table
is the reduction of the weight of a standard
loaf of bread from 11/2 to 11/ pounds while
retaining the same size. Perhaps you haven't
read the wrapper; it might be interesting.
There was no mention of accepting the
help of the well-trained and equipped army
of Nationalist China to aid our cause in
South Vietnam. There was also no mention
of extreme 'vulnerability of our forces to a
sudden and massive air attack from China
with nuclear weapons or conventional
bombs. There was no mention of the tre-
mendous stock of supplies being shipped
regularly to our enemies by our so-called
friends.
There was no mention of the weapons of
war being supplied by Russia and her Eastern
European stooges to the Hanoi war effort.
The idea of increasing trade with these coun-
tries must seem strange to a man looking
down the barrel of a Polish-made rifle, built
with steel from a plant supplied by the
United States and delivered with trucks
along a road we cannot bomb; trucks built
with the capacity of plants assisted by U.S.
dollars.
The state of the Union is not quite as
suggested by last Wednesday's message.
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
of
HON. J. WILLIAM STANTON
OF OHIO
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, January 27, 1966
Mr. STANTON. Mr. Speaker, this
coming Friday evening, February 21,
1966, there is scheduled in my hometown
of Painesville, Ohio, a surprise dinner in
honor of one of Lake County, Ohio's out-
standing citizens. The dinner is in
honor of Mr. Louis Vinocur, county
administrator, Lake County, Ohio.
Mr. Speaker, for the benefit of those
who will be present, and for the count-
less thousands of taxpayers of Lake
County who have benefited by Mr. Vino-
cur's services, I would like to outline a
few facts about this very likeable gentle-
man.
Louis Vinocur started to work for the
Lake County Commissioners on Decem-
ber 1, 1960. At that time it was my
pleasure to be serving on the board of
county commissioners. He was recom-
mended to me by my fellow commis-
sioner, John D. Hadden. Mr. Vinocur
brought with him over 15 years of ex-
perience in the State auditor's office and
a thorough knowledge of county finances
and procedure. As the years went by,
Lake County became the fastest growing
county in the.State.and Mr. Vinocur's
experience proved to be of tremendous
value. His insistence on the investment
of idle county funds has saved the tax-
payers hundreds of thousands of dollars.
A great personal tribute to Mr. Vinocur
is the fact that, while he himself is a
stanch and loyal member of the Grand
Old Party, he has served in the capacity
of administrator under the administra-
tion of both political parties. In his job
he has always put the good of the public
before personal political consideration.
Louis Vinocur is a strong family man.
He now resides with his wife, Mercedes,
at 7 North Park Place In Painesville. A
daughter, Mrs. Roberta Friedkin of Mas-
A443
sachusetts, and a son, Sander, have made
him the proud grandfather of five lovely
children.
Mr. Speaker, I am very proud to call
Louis Vinocur a personal friend. He is a
close confidant of mine whose advice I
have often sought and will continue to do
so. I hope to be in Lake County -on Fri-
day night to say along with his hundreds
of friends, "Thanks Louie."
Mr. Speaker, at this point in the CON-
GRESSIONAL RECORD I wish to insert a
statement by County Commissioner
John Hadden concerning Louis Vinocur.
This excellent statement most ade-
quately reflects the thoughts of thou-
sands of Mr. Vinocur's friends:
As an example to the youth of today who
may feel an inadequacy in the future of
America or in the benefits of education, we
of Lake County, Ohio, point with pride to
our appointed county administrator as an
ideal to strive toward.
This gentleman, Mr. Louis Vinocur, as a
peasant lad in southern Russia-with his
family at the turn of the century-walked
across Russia to the North Sea to seek a bet-
ter life in America. Going first to Montreal
and then to Cleveland, he progressed through
education and application, working his way
through school and earning his degree from
Ohio Northern University.
He has served the public of Lake County
and the State of Ohio faithfully and well and
has now reached the pinnacle of his years.
A successful man-with a fine family-a
faithful public servant with integrity, hon-
esty, candor, and fearlessness, combined with
friendliness and a warm human nature. His
legacy will be a good life and a dedication to
duty that the student of today would do well
to emulate.
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
OF
HON. BENJAMIN S. ROSENTHAL
OF NEW YORK
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Tuesday, February 1, 1966
Mr. ROSENTHAL. Mr. Speaker, un-
der leave to extend my remarks in
the Appendix of the RECORD, I take
the liberty of including herein two
editorials which appeared in the New
York Times-one in the January 31 edi-
tion entitled "Congress and Vietnam,"
and the other in this morning's edition
entitled "Peace and War."
I believe these articles merit the con-
sideration of all Members of the Con-
gress, and I therefore commend them to
the attention of my colleagues:
[From the Now York Times, Jan. 31, 19661
CONGRESS AND VIETNAM
With 200,000 American troops in Vietnam
and growing concern that many more may
have to join them there, pressure is increas-
ing in Washington for a formal, full-dress
congressional, debate on U.S. policy in this
area.
We believe that a comprehensive discus-
sion of this issue in the Senate-or in both
the House and the Senate-is extremely de-
sirable. A matter of this great importance
deserves more adequate and more organized
attention than is provided by the occasional
statements individual legislators have made
in recent months. Moreover, the situation in
Vietnam and the scale of American Involve-
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - APPENDIX February 1, 1966
fnent there have changed drastically since
the Tonkin Gulf incidents of the summer of
1364 that produced the blank check congres-
sional joint resolution President Johnson has
recently cited as legal authority for his pres-
ent use of American forces in Vietnam.
There is certainly no lack of opportunity
for the needed great debate on Vietnam
policy. Both chambers of Congress have be-
fore them the President's request for an
additional appropriation of $12.7-billion to
finance military and economic activities in
that area. Senator GRUENING has introduced
a resolution to deprive the President of au-
thority to send draftees to southeast Asia,
while Senator MonsE has sponsored a bill to
repeal the 1964 joint resolution on which the
President relies. A major discussion of Viet-
ruun would be appropriate to consideration
of any or all of these matters.
The argument can be made that such an
open clash of opinion would strengthen the
conviction in Hanoi and Peiping that the
United States is tiring of the Vietnam war
and will abandon Saigon sooner or later.
But this argument is not very persuasive
since the North Vietnamese and Chinese
Communists are already well aware that a
significant number of Congressmen and
other Americans have publicly indicated
their lack of enthusiasm for escalating that
conflict.
Congress must engage in a full and syste-
matic debate on Vietnam policy if it is to
meet its constitutional duties as well as its
members' moral obligation to the voters they
represent. Such a debate could help educate
the people of this Nation--many of whom
are undoubtedly hazy about why American
boys are fighting and dying so far from
borne-on the issues involved, and the na-
ture of the choices before the country. Life
might be simpler for the administration if
Congress merely continued to rubberstamp
its Vietnam policy, but President Johnson's
political position both at home and through-
out the world would be much stronger if his
actions won formal and explicit congressional
endorsement after full airing of all points of
view. Those who oppose a congressional de-
aate encourage belief, in Hanoi and else-
where, that the present White House policy
in Vietnam has less domestic support than
the President claims it has..
1From the New York Times, Feb. 1, 1966]
1'a,,CE AND WAR
In a dramatic move timed immediately to
follow resumption of the bombing of North
Vietnam, President Johnson has asked the
Socurity Council of the United Nations to
intervene in the Vietnam conflict by calling
for an international conference and a cease-
lire. This is an. important if long-delayed
gesture by the United States that holds the
possibility of opening the way to peace and
Only emphasizes the sincerity of President
Johnson's desire to put an end to the war
in Vietnam.
It is unfortunate that the resumption of
the bombing of North Vietnam was not de-
ferred at least until there was some evidence
of the success or failure of the American
move in the United Nations. In fact the
good effect of the appeal to the U.N. was in
part vitiated by the prior order to resume the
bombing. Continuation of the bombing
pause would have been a far more effective
complement to the U.N. resolution than the
renewed bombing attacks on North Vietna-
mese targets, which will almost certainly
lead to further escalation of the war. More
nien, more planes, more ships, more money,
more materiel, more wounded, more dead-
these are the unmentioned but probable se-
quals to the resumption of the bombing of
North Vietnam. The course the war took
during the previous bombing raids proved
that even if the attacks slowed down infiltra-
tion from North Vietnam, they did not pre-
vent it. North Vietnamese soldiers and ma-
teriel had been going south in quantity long
before the bombing pause.
There is no reason to believe that renewed
T
bombing can bring a different result. The
United States could bomb Hanoi and Hai-
phong and even destroy all of North Vietnam
without wiping out the threat posed by
China. In fact, the danger of it ground war
with Communist China, and p;rhaps a nu-
clear world war, would thereb', be brought
considerably closer.
President Johnson argued that "if nen-
tinued immunity" were given to North Vlet-
naai, "the cost in lives-Vietnamese, Ameri-
can and allied- will be greatly increased."
But if 100,000 or even 500,000 more American
troops are sent to Vietnam, as is predicted,
many more lives are surely going to be tort.
What was a, morass is becoming a bottomless
pit..
President Johnson said that "the end of the
pause does not mean the end of our pursuit
for peace." In this he is, of course, com-
pletely sincere. The great conflict over Viet-
nam that has arisen in the United States is
precisely over the meaning of "the pursuit
for peace." A number of respected and in-
formed Senators and Representatives; mili-
tarv men like General Gavin and Ridgway;
academic specialists, teachers and clerics; and
a great many friendly foreign statesmen and
commentators, all believed and said that the
bombing of North Vietnam ought no' be
resumed. They all felt that "peace" had not
given a full and fair chance. They all fear
the consequences of the United States getting
more and more deeply involved in Vietnam.
So far as the bombing of N )rth Vietnam
is concerned, the decision has now been made.
American troops in the field must be sup-
ported; but. so must American efforts-inside
the United Nations and ouside it-to reach
an honorable settlement in order to restore
peace and self-determination in Vietnam.
SPEECH
OF
HON. JOHN J. ROONEY
OF NEW YORK?;
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Thursday, January 27, 1966
Mr. ROONEY of Nev York. Mr.
Speaker, :25 years ago the people of the
Fourth District of Arkansas sent to this
body a bright, young and aggressive at-
torney from El Dorado, Ark. Ever since
then the people of Arkansas and the
United States have greatly benefited
from the service here of the Honorable
Or-:EN HARRIS. Unfortunately, OREN is
now leaving this body to assume a seat
on the bench of the Federal District
Court in Arkansas. The House of Rep-
resentatives will sorely miss him.
For the past 8 years as chairman of
the House Interstate and Foreign Com-
Irlerce Committee OREN HARRIS has orig-
inated, fought for, and succeeded in en-
actment of legislation which touches
deeply upon the life of every person in
this country. His investigative and
legislative skills have led to progressive
laws in fields ranging from the make be-
lieve world of radio and television to
the very real worlds of public health,
commerce, and transportation. Under
his chairmanship the House Interstate
and Foreign Commerce Committee-a
very difficult one because of the sensi-
tive and complex nature of its jurisdic-
tion-has gained a stature seldom known
in the history of this body.
I think I speak for all my colleagues
here when I say that I am happy to see
the Federal judiciary gain a member
Of OREN HARRIS' stature. And I think
I also speak for them when I say I am
sad to see OREN HARris leave the House
of Representatives. We wish him god-
speed and good fortune.
Associated Industries of Alabama State
Position on Packaging and Labeling
Bills
EXTENSION OF REMARKS
OF
HON. JAMES D. MARTIN
OF ALABAMA
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Monday, January 17, 1966
Mr. MARTIN of Alabama. Mr.
Speaker, I would like to call the atten-
tion of all the Members to an important
report made to the members of the Ala-
bama delegation at the annual Washing-
ton meeting of the Associated Indus-
tries of Alabama. The report deals with
the labeling and packaging bills and was
presented to the conference by Mr. Whit-
field King, Jr., assistant to the vice presi-
dent of the Chemstrand Co. at Decatur,
Ala.:
PACKAGING AND LABELING
(Statement in the public affairs field pre-
sented before the Alabama congressional
delegation, January 24, 1966, by Whitfield
King, Jr., assistant to vice president, Chem-
strand Co., Decatur, Ala.)
S. 985, HART; H.R. 643, MuLTER; H.R. '770,
GILBERT; H.R. 993, FARBSTEIN, H.R. 1576,
Roosevelt, and H.R. 1664, CF-LLER-AIA has
been on record as opposing this type legisla-
tion since its introduction several sessions
ago.
This legislation would empower the Fed-
eral Trade Commission and the Food and
Drug Administration to adopt and enforce
rigid regulations over the packaging and
labeling of consumer nondurable goods, in-
eluding:
Control of the weights and volumes in
which goods may be packaged and sold, re-
gardless of whether existing practices are
deceptive.
Control of the sizes, shapes, and. dimen-
sions of packages.
Absolute prohibition of "cents-off" promo-
tions and the use of such label terms as
"economy size."
Control of pictorial illustrations on labels.
Specification of label terms that may be
used to describe package sizes, such as
"small," "medium.," and "large."
Requirement that sufficient Information
as to ingredients be stated on labels.
Specification of type-size and location of
net contents on labels.
In addition to foods, drugs, and cosmetics,
the law would cover hundreds of consumer
package goods, and. affect many heavy indus-
tries engaged in producing or fabricating
packaging materials.
Our association cannot support this legis-
lation for the following reasons:
1. In many respects this legislation merely
duplicates provisions in the existing law.
The Chairmen of both the Federal Trade
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Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, will the
Senator yield?
Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts. I
yield to the Senator from Oregon.
Mr. MORSE. I join the Senator from
North Carolina in his commendation of
the Senator from Massachusetts.
Mr. KENNEDY of Massachusetts. I
appreciate the statements of the Senator
from North Carolina and the Senator
from Oregon.
iv
AIR ATTACKS ON NORTH VIETNAM
Mr. SYMINGTON. Mr. President,
now that the President, as a matter of
national policy, has made the decision to
renew air attacks on North Vietnam, I
would hope they would be undertaken
against more meaningful military tar-
gets. The result to us of such a change
in military policy would be a major in-
crease in the effectiveness of our conduct
of this war.
In my report to Chairmen RussELL and
PULBRIGI-IT about my recent visit to
South Vietnam, I said:
Air operations against North Vietnam have
been relatively ineffective, to the point where
these operations should not be resumed un-
less there is more target license; license to
hit such military targets as powerplants, oil
stores, docks, etc.
My conclusions in this regard were
partly the result of rereading the con-
clusions of the strategic bombing surveys
of 1945 and 1946.
It would seem that we are attacking
the least important targets most, the
more important targets less, and the
most important military targets not at
all.
I agree with some leading military au-
thorities that a real air effort to knock
out important military targets, instead
of periodic attacks on targets of far less
importance such as bridges, barracks,
and buses, might eliminate the necessity
of sending hundreds of thousands of ad-
ditional ground troops to South Vietnam.
In this way we would be using the
qualitative advantage characteristic of
our sea and air power, instead of strug-
gling with the enemy on a quantitative
basis where they are strongest, on the
ground, in Asia.
So far our attacks on North Vietnam
have been a nuisance but they have not
done any real damage to the enemy's
growing military potential.
Attacking more important North Viet-
nam military targets could be done with
the same planes and pilots that are now
being used; and would result in less cost
and less casualties in South Vietnam.
STITUTIONAL WAR IN VIETNAM
Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, I ask
unanimous consent that certain tele-
grams and communications which I have
received in support of my opposition to
the unconstitutional and illegal war in
South Vietnam be printed in the
RECORD.
I have received over 450 wires since
Sunday. Except for four of them they
all support my opposition to the illegal
Executive war in Vietnam. I am insert-
ing the four critical wires also with my
answer to them.
There being no objection, the com-
munications were ordered to be printed
in the RECORD, as follows:
PORTLAND, OREG.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank God for your courageous stand on
Vietnam. Lot's trust U.N.
Mrs. JAMES THOMPSON.
KLAMATII PALLS, OR-,G.,
January 31, 19G6.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
You are not alone on your Vietnam posi-
tion. We cannot police the world.
Mr. and Mrs. TRUMAN JOHNSON.
MILWAUKeE, OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Concerning CBS television appearancc
thanks again for standing firm on Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. DELORD.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Press for peace.
PORTLAND, ORE G.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations, let's give the country
back to the people. We don't need a Texas
dictator.
GEORGE H. WEBER.
LAKE OswrGO, OREG.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MoRsE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
When Secretary husk speaks of our com-
mitment in Vietnam tomorrow I hope some-
one will ask him how about President John-
son's commitment to the American people
when he gained our trust by campaigning on
a reasonable attitude in Vietnam and has
subsequently betrayed us by pursuing im-
moral and illegal aggression there.
JANE ERICKSON.
EUGENE, OREG.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MonsE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I'm gratified by your courageous stand
on southeast Asia policy.
THOMAS DUNCAN.
EUGENE, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
More power in eftorts to restore respon-
sibility to elected representatives regarding
Vietnam.
SALEM, OREG.,
January 30, 1966..
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We favor your courageous stand against
the Vietnam policy of the President and his
experts. We fear the cost of our sons In the
defense of the corrupt power groups in
Vietnam and elsewhere. We fear the con-
sequence of American bombing anywhere.
Mr. and Mrs. JAMES E. NELSON.
February 1, 1966
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations to you and Senator CLARK.
Your reference to that dictator was perfect.
Senator I3occs should try, for a change, to
operate this country as a private enterprise.
I am fed up with all this waste and graft.
Why should we support all these countries,
nobody pays my bills.
THERESA STEIN.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your opinion concerning the
U.S. Involvement in Vietnam. Thank you.
NICK SAMMONS,
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
The following telegram was sent to Presi-
dent Johnson with 58 signatures:
"We the undersigned Unitarian-Univcrsal-
ists believe that the moratorium on the
bombing of North Vietnam should be con-
tinued. We welcome your peace campaign
efforts and recommend you make unequivocal
your willingness to negotiate with the na-
tional liberation front as an independent
force."
VANCOUVER, WASH.
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We appreciate your stand on the Vietnam
policy.
SALEM, OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Grateful for your resolutions on Vietnam.
Our illegal immoral offensive unilateral ac-
tion there must end.
MARVi and VIOLET METTLETON.
PORTLAND OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank God for a Senator who speaks the
hopes of those who don't want war.
Rev. BRUCE KLINE.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We are in complete agreement with you
on Vietnam. Insist on United Nations
participation.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 31, 19G6.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I was proud of my Senator on CBS-TV.
Please convey arrival to Senator CLARK.
PAT DUREN.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Saw you on TV. Didn't vote for you but
back you 100 percent.
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February 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
ASTORIA, OREG.
Agreed with your plea on CBS program.
Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM C. REUTER.
PORTLAND, OREG., '
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your elevision stand on Vietnam greatly
admired. Continue your fight to end this
war.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. STONE.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
DEAR SENATOR: I am on your side. Keep
going.
PATRICIA BRAXTON.
CORVALLIS, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Re Vietnam, thank you.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Re headlines Sunday Oregonian dear Sen-
ator bravo.
Mrs. ALFRED POWERS.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on continued strength of
your stand on Vietnam. We support you
completely.
PORTLAND, 'OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Admired your position in Sunday debate.
Likewise all your efforts regarding Vietnam.
SIDNEY BERLAND.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Hon. Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Endorse wholeheartedly position regarding
Vietnam. Approve views expressed by CLARK,
MUNDT, and yourself.
Dr. and Mrs. LAWRENCE ROSENTHAL Jr.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
EUGENE, OREG.,
January 30, 1966.
Behind you 100 percent.
NOEL and DOROTHY DANN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
SALEM, OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
American eagle becoming vulture. Civil-
ization jeojardized. Congressional respon-
sibility demands continued denunciation of
Pentigon's heinous solution.
MARTHA FULLENWIDER.
PORTLAND, OREG.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I would heartily endorse your continuing
efforts to place the issue of the Vietnam war
or peace efforts before the legislative branch
for debate rather than in the executive
branch of the Government exhibit the de-
ciding influences on policies in Vietnam.
Sincerely yours,
Dr. JAMES L. SCHNELLER.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We are in complete agreement with you on
Vietnam. Insist on United Nations partici-
pation.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We agree on your Vietnam stand, your
search for truth, respect your unpopular
stand.
Mr. and Mrs. IVAN ICKES.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Continue opposing President's Vietnam
policies. Surely reason will prevail.
Dr. and Mrs. V. MAZZARELLA.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your courageous challenge to the unhu-
man and illegal activities of the Government
in Vietnam deserves full support.
ERWIN FEHER.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Of course Johnson is exceeding his con-
stitutional rights. The situation is desperate.
God prosper you.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Heartily commend you and associates for
opposing our Stupidity southeast Asia. Our
military must leave.
Mr. and Mrs. FRANK G. CLARK.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate, Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support your efforts for Vietnam
de-escalation; please continue.
JUDITH LUSTIG.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
By all means rescind the 1964 Presiden-
tial mandate. Good luck.
PATRICIA E. ROWE.
1549
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Against resumption of bombing. Favor
full congressional debate on alternatives to
present unsatisfactory Vietnam policies.
MIKE JOELL.
STATE COLLEGE, PA.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
You have my fullest support on trying to
halt escalation in Vietnam. Am absolutely
opposed to President Johnson's chauvinism.
HELEN STRIEDIECK.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building;
Washington, D.C.:
ST. Louis, Mo.,
January 29, 1966.
Our Nation owes you gratitude for your
position on Vietnam. Urge you continue
courageously.
SANTA ROSA, CALIF.;
January 29, 1966.
Washington, D.C.:
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Please support the Fulbright , position
on Vietnam and try awhile longer for dip-
lomatic settlement.
Mr. and Mrs. HARRY B. FORTMAN.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We applaud and are grateful for your
steadfast sanity and courageous fight to get
us out of this most unwanted war. Keep up
the fight.
SARAM AMERLING and
Dr. MARTIN SHE'PARD,
Representing 14 residents of 50 West
96 Street, New York City.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Bravo. Stage talkathon for rescinding.
Arrange maximum publicity. Hit Senate and
public with facts.
ALICE FRANKLYN BRY'ANT.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I support your stand
gratulations, we need
thinkers like you.
on Vietnam. Con-
more Independent
Senator WAYNE MoRsE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
If the President resumes bombing without
allowing time for action by Congress to re-
vise previous actions, I request that you ini-
tiate impeachment proceedings without
delay. There will be only one rubicon.
Please reply to this message collect.
GEORGE C. THOMSON.
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE D. MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
The stand you are taking against this im-
moral, undeclared war has my fullest sup-
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE 1_1. MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your fight against illegal war is one voice
worthy of the name human being.
DAVID H. MANN.
,ts.IIAMBRA, CALIF.
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senator Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Gratitude to you for your courage and
efforts. World survival depends upon men
like you.
IRENE WALKER.
OEBASTOPOL, CALIF.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We ask your continued support of Senator
FULBRIGHT on his latest stand on Vietnam,
thank you.
JAMES E. HENNINGSON.
IIAMPDEN, MASS.,
January 29, 1966.
: ena.tor WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Our full support to you and associates for
Vietnam stand.
JULIA WINETROUT,
KENNETH WINETROUT.
EVANSTON, ILL.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I admire your courageous efforts for ra-
tional politics for constitutional legality and
democratic process. Fully support your fight
against presidential dictatorship. Agree
Rusk, McNamara should be ousted. Thank
you for speaking the American conscience.
God bless you.
HANS NOLL,
Professor of Biology, Northwestern Uni-
versity, Evanston, IS.
COLUMBUS, 01110,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
As American citizen, taxpayer, and regis-
tered voter, I humbly request that you order
withdraw of the memorandum giving Presi-
dent Johnson authority to conduct the con-
flict in Vietnam ns he sees fit. If state of war
exists, let's declare it or get out.
I6O13ERT S. SHAW.
PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.,
January 30, 19G6.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Keep up the fight to rescind your resolu-
tion of the 1964 approval. We Americans are
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations.
JERSEY CITY, N.J.,
January 29, 19..6.
STOCKTON, CALIF.,
January 29, 19';6.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I strongly concur with your proposal for
Vietnam.
JACKSON HEIGHTS, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
DEAR SENATOR: Please continue your e:forts
for peace in Vietnam. All community sup-
ports you in your efforts for peace.
GEORGE STOGEL,
TERRY STOGEL,
ANNA YATES,
ABRAHAM YATES,
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 29, 11+66..
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
You were one of Americas great in-
dependent leaders. You have become a
moral coward. Please support President.
ROBERT CHARLES.
ARDSLFIY, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Urge full disclosure foreign policy. Got out
of Vietnam.
TIIE LRENS ARDSLF:Y'S
BOULDER, COLO.,
January 29, 1:166.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Fully support doubts and questioning of
our present Vietnam policy. Urge continua-
tion of debate.
GARDENA, CALIF.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We offer our support and encouragement.
Flow can we help you?
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 29, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
You have our unqualified support of your
courageous and :forthright stand on the
Vietnam war.
Mrs. ELIZABETH E. JONES,
Mars. FREDERICK ELLIS,
Dr. FREDERICK E. ELLIS.
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF'.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNEMORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Revere your efforts to return sanity to
ARLINGTON, VA.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
It is high time for people who back your
position on Vietnam to let you know that
they do. I count my wife and me among
them.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We commend and support you for your
courageous peace efforts. We urge you to
continue.
Mr. and Mrs. I. SHARROW.
WIFITING, IND.,
January 29, 1966.
WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Endorse completely Vietnam stand. More
war is not the answer. Don't give up.
Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT W. SIEVERS.
FRESNO, CALIF.,
January 29, 1966.
SENATOR MORSE,
Senate office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Demand executive orders be rescinded and
stupid war in Vietnam brought to a close.
ROBERT R. HART.
Los ANGELES, CALIF..
January 29, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C..:
We support your stand for nonresump-
tion of bombing implementing Geneva
Agreement.
Air. and Mrs. A. LONER.
MONTE VISTA, CALIF.,
January 29, 196,6.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Commend your stand to rescind southeast
Asia resolution will urge our Senators sup-
port you.
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31
1966.
SEBASTOPOL, CALIF.,
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
January 29, 1966.
January 29, 1966.
Senate Office Building,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senator WAYNE .MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Senate Office Building,
Senate Office Building,
In complete accord with your views on
Washington, D.C.:
Washington, D.C.:
please continue efforts to prevent
Vietnam
I support your Vietnam, position and re-
We support your effort toward peace in
,
holocaust.
pudiate Rusk's.
Vietnam. Please continue your efforts.
Mr. and Mrs. SPENCER W. FRANC.
JERRY and BEVERLY DANIEL.
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February 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
COLUMBIA, MO.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support appeal to prolong North
Vietnam bombing lull. Urge continue your
efforts.
DAVID WURFEL,
PAUL WALLACE,
RICHARD DORM,
ARTHUR KALLEBERG,
DAVID LEVTHOLD,
Political Science Department, Missouri
University.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNEMORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We applaud and support your courageous
efforts to resist the President's disastrous
military solution to Vietnam's political and
social problems. We feel present policy
doesn't reflect a true consensus and will
serve to provoke war with China.
VETERANS AND RESERVISTS To END THE
WAR IN VIETNAM.
NEW HAVEN, CONN.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
can people. Accomplish this Christian did
KEw GARDENS, N.Y.,
of religion historich and political hope.
January 29, 1966.
God will give you also historich and politi-
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
cal reward. Hold on. Peace may not be
so far.
Apocalitch did.
Senate Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulation with your position on Viet-
nam.
WILLIAM OLTMANS,
Senator WAYNE MORSE
Dutch Journalist.
,
Senate, Washington, D.C.:
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
We commend you on the stand you have
taken on Vietnam.
JEAN AND GEORGE USATCH.
Senator MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
January 29, 1966.
GLENDALE, CALIF.,
January 29, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.
DEAR SENATOR: Thank you. Beg you to
stand firm to help all from destruction.
Respectfully,
WESTPORT, CONN.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington D.C.:
(Please see that copies are made for Sen-
ator G. AIKEN, Senator J. W. FULBRIGHT, Sen-
ator A. GORE, Senator M. MANSFIELD, Senator
W. MORSE, Senator THOMAS Donn, Senator
ABRAHAM RIBICOFF, Senator JACOB JAVITS, and
Senator ROBERT KENNEDY.)
I commend your opposition to bombing
Vietnam and urge continued efforts toward
negotiating.
ELIZABETH HELFRICK.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I strongly protest the resumption of bomb-
ing in Vietnam especially with napalm.
GEORGE WM. MARTIN.
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
You have my support and blessings in at-
tacking this heinous war in Vietnam, God
speed.
Earnestly support intended Monday ac-
Support your and other Senators' efforts to
tion to limit executive authority for war
continue pause in bombing North Vietnam
without congressional consent.
with aim to obtain ceasefire in Vietnam.
BOSTON, MASS.,
I. H. POLLACK.
Lillian Berkowitz, Jean Berman, Emma
January 29, 1966.
Lou Bi Tham,.Helen Bonime, Clarence
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
WHEATLAND, CALIF.,
Broadnax, Beulah W. Burhoe, B. D.
Washington, D.C.: _
January 30, 1966.
Burhoe, Phyllis Cady, Georgia Cassi-
Millions know Pentagon prevaricated Au-
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
matis, Clarabelle Chankaya, Ida David-
gust 2, 1964, Tonkin. See Time magazine
U.S. Senate,
off, Anna Lee Dayton, Maurisette Dem-
following United States attack PT's.
Washington, D.C.:
bitzer, Frieda Easton, Murray Fox,
Mrs. RITA FRELICH.
We endorse your effort to rescind the con-
Anne Gladstone, Dorothy Golof, Sus-
gressional resolution approved on August
anne Gordon, Gordon Hall, Doris Hal-
ELKINS PARK
PA.,
10, 1964, Public Law 88-408. We are counting
lowitz, Cynthia Harrison, Mary Hen-
,
January 30
1966.
on you to limit the powers of the President
nessey, Dorothy Hermann, Helen Hub-
,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
in regard to the Vietnam war.
bell, Dorothy Isenman, Molly Jacob-
Senate Office Building, .
IRENE CREPS,
son, Rose Jarmak, Edward Jarvis,
Washington, D.C.:
Mrs. ENA DELCO CREPS,
Helen Jennings, Katherine Jones, Joan
Support you 100 percent in your coura-
THERESE PORCELLA.
Kahn, Anne Marie Kearney, Clara Mi-
geous stand on Severeid program and in Con-
chael, Lillian Moore, Rhoda Moss,
gress. You are truly a sane voice crying in a
NORTH HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.,
Esther Nothnagle, Jan Park, Helen Var-
wilderness of irrationality.
January 30, 1966.
sons, Lottie Perutz, Katherine Phelps,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Ann Rappaport, Angela Reitzer, Mar-
Senate Office Building,
garet Reynolds, Sherwin Rosenstein,
CASPER
WYO.,
Washington, D.C.:
Frank Sales, Shirley Sarkin, Marriet
,
January 30
1966.
I support your opposition Vietnam involve-
Schneider, Gertrude Schuchard, Eliza-
,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
ment. Please continue your efforts in behalf
beth Sharnik, Ruby Shaw, Eleanor
Senate Office Building,
of peace.
Sheldon, Phyllis Singerman, John
Washington, D.C.:
Sommer, Clarence Taylor, Beatrice
Applaud and endorse your proposed resolu-
Vogler, Helen Welch, Social Workers in
tion urging Vietnam debate.
Fairfield County.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Senator WAYNE MORSE
We support your efforts for peace and agree
,
Washington, D.C.:
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington
D.C.:
that the legality of our undeclared war
Please continue your efforts against es-
,
Watched the program. You were marvel-
against North Vietnam should be questioned.
calation. Regain the rights of Congress.
ous. I'm a Missouri Republican
but I vote
MORRIS and VERA SCHUPACK.
Mr. and Mrs. S. IT. MANN.
,
for your ideas. Keep up your thoughts re-
garding Vietnam.
SEBASTOPOL, CALIF.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
DEAR SENATOR MORSE: I strongly support
your statement today relegating the power
of declaring war to the people of the United
States. Please hold fast.
70 PD. INTL., CD FIRENZE,
January 29, 1966.
Senator.MoRsE,
U.S. Senator, Washington, D.C.:
I sent President Johnson this message.
Don't let shelling start again. It is terrible
almost apocalitch mistake. His misfortune
that would fault like cyclone also on Ameri.
January 29, 1966.'
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Please support Senator FULBRIGHT'S posi-
tion favoring immediate negotiations in
Vietnam.
Rev. and Mrs. LEWIS WHITEHEAD.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Suddenly a ray of hope has come with Sen-
ator FULBRIGHT's statement on Vietnam.
Please support.
SEATTLE, WASH.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Your courageous stand on Vietnam as
enunciated on Severeid's program admirable.
Situation alarms us.
Mr. and MIS. FRED BERGMAN.
MARTINEZ, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I applaud your advocacy of debate of our
Vietnam involvement.
VIRGIL BOGARTH.
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
DENVER, COLO.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Bravo Senator MORSE. I support your
Vietnam views w:holcheartedly as does the
conscience of the American people. Curtail
L.B.J. Fire Rusk and McNamara and end
this mess by direct negotiations with the
National Liberation Front.
WILLIAM HANNAH.
1,0; ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
ienator WAYNE MortSE,
Senate Office Building:
Am with you 100 percent on views ex-
grossed today on CBS. Feel free to advise
senators KUCHEL and MURPHY I have said
this.
I31UOOKLYN, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your position on Vietnam.
Please continue in your determination to
have the American people presented with
the true facts. God speed you.
Mr. anti. Mrs. LEONARD PERLMAN.
ANN ARI'OR, MICH.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
Washington, D.C.:
We saw you on. CBS. We support your
stand.
Mx, and Mrs. JAMES L. Copp.
1.1.0: KAWAY BEACH, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MOaSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We applaud your stand in reference to
Vietnam. Your views on TV program were
superb; as parents we appreciate.
The SUrTINS.
CHICAGO, ILL.
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington D.C.:
With all our heart and mind endorse your
tosition and are grateful for your efforts in
t}ehalf of all that is decent and humane.
Dr. a.,id Mrs. AARON LEARNER.
MEMPHIS, TENN.,
January 30, 1966.
;Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Build inn,
Washington D.C.:
Thanks.
, IOITII BEND, IND.
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington D.C.:
DEAR SENATOR: I heartily agree with your
reasoning concerning Vietnam. Keep urging
U.N. settlement.
PITTSBURGH, PA.
January 30, 1966.
PrrrsBURGII. PA.,
January 30, 196'.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Building,
Washington,D.C.:
Agree with you on solution of Vietnam.
Keel) up good work.
Mr. and Mrs. EOGsNE SPONAGLE.
LONG BEACH, CALIF.,
January 30,1961;.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We approve of your courageous stand on
Vietnam TV' today.
The L. W. DENEVAN i.
KALAMAZOO, MICH.,
January 30, 1960.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations for courageously speaking
up.
DEAN COPPIN':..
WEBSTER GROVE;, MO.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank God for your views, keep plugging
for our American boys.
Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM A. THA.:r.
EVANSVILLE, IND.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Continue good fight for Vietnam peace
negotiations.
ROBERT FENNEMAN.
KNOXVILLE, TENN.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We agree 100 percent with your position on
the Vietnam situation.
SK ATHERINE AND DoN VAN VLEFT.
.MOORESTOWN, N.J.,
January 30, 1966
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
,Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your position on Vietnam. I am
your distant cousin. Heart surgeon in rhil-
adelphia.
HAVF:R.FoRD, PA.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Entirely behind your views, please keep
try log.
GERTR.ImE L. ROBGINS,
Mrs. Edward Robgins.
PHOENIX, ARIZ.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support Vietnam stand. Public
must have full-scale debate, learn facts now
being withheld.
Mr. and Mrs. M. R. HAGERI Y.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
I endorse your comments on CB3 panel
this date. May you continue saying them.
or. SAMUEL HAZO,
Associate Dean, College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences, Duquesne University,
Pittsburgh, Pa.
FERNDALE, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your stand on Vietnam.
ANDRE PENNELL,
Clerk of Detroit Friends Meeting.
BALTIMORE, MD.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I urged you in 1964 to run for nomination
for Presidency. Again I say please, plea e,
please, announce now your candidacy for
Democratic nomination for President at next
election, start campaigning all over country
to give people facts, not lying generalities
and banalities concerning Vietnam war.
M. C. PINCOF'FS, Jr.
BOSTON, MASS.,
January 30. 1966
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Republican mothers draft-age son sends
unlimited congratulations. Demand return
congressional rights. See STENNIS telegram.
Mrs. KATHRYN R. GRANT.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your courageous Viet-
ram stand especially letting the people have
the truth. Suggest you Introduce bill re-
quiring all taxpayers to send in 10 percent
more tax April 15 to pay current cost of
Vietnam war. This would slow inflation and
might even halt the war.
HARRY A. BARTII.
LA MESA, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
We have agreed with you on Vietnam.
From the first we :heard you on radio today.
We were proud of you. We are Democrats.
Worked hard in Johnson's campaign. If the
Senate allows this war to be escalated, we
will deserve what we get.
Mr. and Mrs. GILBERT CARLSON.
NEW YoRK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
We are in fullest agreement with your
policies regarding Vietnam and hope you can
induce the administration to clarify all the
issues pertaining thereto.
ROBERT AND RITA ROBILLARD.
STAMFORD, CONN.,
January 30, 1966'.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Please accept our wholehearted support of
your positions re Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT STEmBE5.
WEYMOUTH, MASS.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Agree wholeheartedly with your position
as stated on "Today" program, keep talking.
ROBERT T. MCKENZIE.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations, Senator MORSE, on Viet-
nam stand. We're not In favor of the un-
declared and illegal war. Hope your cen-
sorship of President will be successful.
We're not in favor of war or draft in any
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sense. Your actions and deeds in our
thoughts and prayers. Keep it up.
GAIL and BILL NEWHALL.
NASHVILLE, TENN.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank God for leaders like you. If you
keep speaking we may be saved yet.
Mrs. THOMAS FRIST.
SOUTHFIELD, MICH.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MoRSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Heard and watched Vietnam perspective.
Congratulations. Continue our support.
NEL and VILoET TUCKER.
SHELBURNE, VT.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We commend your support of halt in Viet-
nam bombing and negotiations with all
parties concerned.
PIERSON and ALICE OSTROW.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Bless you, thank you, imaginative, sus-
tained efforts peace Vietnam.
LESLIE and ALICE BALASSA.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
On behalf of the-National Board, YWCA,
I urge your support for a policy of con-
tinued patience and conciliation in the Viet-
nam situation. We have the deepest sym-
pathy with the President in his heavy
burden of crucial decision and are pro-
foundly anxious that he should be fortified
and encouraged to the utmost by realizing
the great public support behind his efforts
to avoid escalation and keep the spirit of
negotiation even when these efforts appear
to elicit no response as yet.
Mrs. LLOYD MARTI,
President, National Board, YWCA.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Following is copy of telegram sent to Presi-
dent Lyndon B. Johnson, White House,
Washington, D.C.: "Bombing resumption of
North Vietnam will inevitably shatter
chances of peace. War with China will draw
in Soviet Russia on the side of China. We
urge that you accept the counseling of Sen-
ators FULBRIGHT, CLARK, MANSFIELD, and
others who are dedicated to the preserva.
tion of world peace."
JOHN WEILBURG,
JOHN F. RYAN,
LINDA F. BASCOMBE,
PATRICK FLANAGAN,
IRVING BEREZIN,
DOROTHY BEREZIN,
DOROTHY STULL WEILBURO.
DEEasIELD, ILL.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Appreciate your opposition to war as an
accepted instrument of national policy.
JACK CROOK.
ALBANY, N.Y.,
January 28, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Please press for continuation of bombing
ROCKVILLE CENTRE, N.Y.,
January 28, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
For God's sake and the world's do not re-
sume the bombing. Deescalate. Recognize
the NLF. Stand up for humanity and
against Senator STENNIS and the Pentagon.
M. CLYDE,
MISS LORA,
Mrs. F. FRIEDMAN.
Senator MoasE,
Washington, D.C.:
CUMMINGTON, MASS.,
January 28, 1966.
Urgent refer Vietnam peace issue to United
Nations. Continue demand clarification ad-
ministration policy. Bless you.
Rev. DAVID ROSE.
GAINESVILLE, FLA.,
January 28, 1906.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support your protest against U.S.
policy in Vietnam. The glaringly faulty offi-
cial estimates of the situation since 1964 de-
mand a revision of our whole Asia policy.
Mr. and Mrs. GEORGE G. Fox.
LAFAYETTE, IND.,
January 28, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Assure you our support urging continued
bombing suspension North Vietnam. Your
leadership appreciated.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 28, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thanks for questioning Rusk. Sincerely
hope you can halt the snowball.
MAR AND ELIZABETH WHITCOMBE.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Prevent world war III. Continue to chal-
lenge basic assumptions of our foreign policy.
Indispensable that bombing not resumed
and N.L.F. be considered main party in nego-
tiations.
NEW YORK, N.Y., January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
You have our utmost admiration in respect
for your courageous stand on our undeclared
war in Vietnam. We could only wish that
you were our Senator. We think in the end,
history will be grateful for men like you.
We sincerely hope that you can keep reason
alive and most desperately hope that your
views prevail. We must negotiate with those
whom we fight, the NLF. You have our sup-
port, what little it is, in your efforts. We do
not belong In Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. ALLEN KOENIGSBERG.
PASADENA, CALIF., January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Please reply collect would it be effective if
we the people all loyal law abiding Americans
organized a doorbell-ringing census, block by
block, polling voters regarding Vietnam and
sending results to Washington. We do not
believe that past polls represent present
thinking of American voters.
JUNE MARSH,
PEGGY BLACK AND COMMITTEE.
SEATTLE, WASH., January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,,,
Washington, D.C.:
You are courageous. We admire, and sup-
port you in your attempt to force a test vote
on the President's authority to wage illegal
war.
Mr. and Mrs. H. K. LARSON.
NEW YORK, N.Y., January 30, 1966.
Honorable WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Chambers,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your honest, wise, courageous
stand against administration's dangerous
course in Vietnam. Urge you to oppose fur-
ther American involvement in southeast Asia
and to work for withdrawal of our forces as
first step toward peace.
Dr. ALBERT PARETS.
NEW YORK, N.Y., January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
DEAR SENATOR: I wholeheartedly support
your efforts to gain full and open debate on
the Vietnam situation.
HAROLD BECKER.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We strongly support your efforts to stop
the illegal war in Vietnam. More people are
with you than you might think, and the
number is increasing daily. Please continue
the fight.
CHARLES SOPHIE.
RICHARD ELLEN.
KENNETH AND ALLAN WALD.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Be assured of my support and that of mil-
lions. of Americans in your efforts to end
brutal Vietnam war.
Bless you.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
WILTON, CONN.,
January 30, 1966.
We support you wholeheartedly in your ef-
fort to rescind the broad powers given John-
son in 1964, in the conduct of the Vietnam
war.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
DENVER, COLO.,
January 30, 1966.
Agreeing with Mansfield report that failure
of negotiations probably means general Asian
war, we favor both Morse resolutions for
Senate to investigate Vietnam policies and
terminate President's war-waging authority
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:;n that Congress maintains right to declare
YONKERS, N.Y.,
CHICAGO, ILL.,
war or seek peace,
January 30, 1966.
January 30, 1966.
Dr. and Mrs. JOHN C. COBB.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Dr. and Mrs. STANLEY COBB.
Senate Building,
Senate Office Building,
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
Washington, D.C.:
Washington, D.C.:
We strongly support your stand for peace
You are not alone in your courageous fight
MILWAUKEE, WISn,
I. Vietnam.
for peace.
January 30, 1966.
IRVING and HANNAH SCHWART3.
W. SALTZMAN.
.Creator WAYNE MOR:.E,
Senate Office Building,
WYNNEWOOD, VA.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICII_,
Washington, D.C.:
January 31, 1966.
January 30, 1966.
We support your policy on Vietnam.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
God bless you.
U.S. Senate.,.
U.S. Senate,
ltir, and Mrs. J. A. DoM.KE.
Washington, D.C.:
Washington, D.C.:
Your views over the air today meets our
You are a credit to our Nation.
iVII1.WAIJKEE, WIS.,
100 percent unqualified approval. God Ideas
Tom and BETTY O'CONNOR.
January 30, 1966.
you in your efforts.
donator MORSE,
Mr. and Mrs. JOHN H. STui r.
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.,
Senate Office Building,
January 30, 1966.
Washington, D.C.:
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
We support your policy on Vietnam.
January 31,19( 6.
Washington, D.C.:
God bless you.
Sean ator WAYNE MORSE,
Heard television debate. Support your
Washington, D.C.:
stand. Urgent people hear truth of Our
.i support your position against the im-
position.
NEW YoRK, N.Y.,
moral, illegal, and unconstitutional Asian
January 29, 1966.
war.
deflator WAYNE AC)RSE,
WHITTLER, CALIF.,
Senate Office Building,
January 30, 1966.
Washington, D.C.:
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
We strongly support resolution limiting
January 31, 1956.
Washington, D.C.:
president's powers re military action. Work
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
WAYNE MORSE, man of greatness, I salute
for peace through U.N.
Senate Office Building,
you. Down with the war hawks. End this
Mr. i IId Mrs. MANUEL GELLESS.
Washington, D.C.:
immoral war in Vietnam before catastrophe
Its an American I congratulate you on your
engulfs the world,
PHOENIX, ARIZ.,
extraordinary courage on CBS today.
Mrs. BERTHA DERKOWrrZ.
January 20, 1966.
>enator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I admire your courage and intelligence In
advocating the rescinding of that misbegot-
ten mandate.
11,w YORK, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate O trice Building,
Washington, D.C..
Hundreds of members, friends, relatives
congratulate you for your courage, wisdom,
tiuma.nitarism in opposing escalation of Viet-
nain war.
Now Y"osi, N.Y.,
January 29, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support your position on Viet-
nam. Grateful far your voice of sanity.
Mvlr. and Mrs. E. SHINE.
:;EBASTOPOL, CALIF.,
January 9. 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate O f)ice Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I ask you to support Senator FoLBRIGHT'S
challenge of Vietnam policy.
Mrs. A. L. COLEMAN.
MOBILE, ALA.,
January 30. 1966.
:;cantor WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I asrl for WAYN e; MoasE's policy in dealing
Vietnam.
Mrs. RALPH C. STANARD.
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.,
January 30, 1966.
',,cna.tor WAYNE MOOSE,
U.S. Senate Buitctinq,
Washington, D.C.:
Your remarks on television today are
sound, responsible, and courageous. Please
continue your struggle against a dreadful
war in Asia. Please teach your colleagues
what revolutions are all about.
MARTIN,
Ramard University faculty.
Mr. and Mrs. WALTER B. BAK'. R.
MIAMI, FLA.,
January 31, 1956.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I am in complete agreement with your
views.
ST. LOUIS, MO.,
January 30, 1956.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.
Concur completely inquiry presidentia war
powers and Asian policies. Advocate U.N.
arbitration.
I'OUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y.,
January 30, 1906.
Senator WAYNE M.oRsE,
Washington, D.C.
Complete agreement remarks on "CBZ Re-
ports" deepest appreciation an Amc ican
family.
MADISON, WIS.,
January 30, 19006.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.
Congratulations on your courage, hor esty,
and intelligence, keep it up.
VIRGINIA CRONICK.
PLACEN'TIA, CALIF.,
January 30, 19u6.
Senator WAYNE MoRSE,
Washington, D.C.
In full support of your resolution on Viet-
nam, best of luck.
BOSTON MASS.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you Senator for your stand on
Vietnam. I agree with you 100 percent.
Lot us have an open debate in the Senate
and Congress and all over the country, not
for 10 hours, but for 10 weeks. Let us also
let the U.N. handle it.
AARON SIIPIEGELM^,N.
SHORTHILLS, N.J.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Urge you take action regarding your state-
ment and convictions on Vietnam, am ap-
palled at path our Government is taking.
I speak as a loyal American, a student of
foreign policy, and a believer in the U.N. as
a potential arbitrator,
Mrs. WILLIAM CAVANAGH.
KALAMAZOO, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
May you rank with Washington, Lincoln,
Jefferson, F.D.R., and J.F.K. and be nomi-
nated for Nobel Peace in 1966. Bless you,
Senator, for perhaps guiding our country
to the United Nations. Your television out-
spoken convictions regenerated our hope in
America.
Sincerely,
URBANA, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
DEAR SENATOR: We applaud your courage
and Integrity and. support your position on
Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. MICHAEL LEwIS.
NEW YoRK, N. Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
I hope that your will persist in year efforts
for peace in Vietnam. Thank you.
JOHN DUFFY.
BERKELEY, CALIF.,
January 3.1,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
As conservative Democrat horrified re-
sumption bombing. My support to you and
others seeing danger clearly.
Mrs. ARTHUR W. LANE.
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CLAREMONT, CALIF.,
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
above all your contemporaries.
For me
you
January 31, 1966.
January 31, 1966.
walk with Isaiah.
,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We support you in opposing further esca-
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Sincerely yours,
lating war in Vietnam.
We wholeheartedly support your efforts to
BLOOMFIELD HILLS, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Cannot praise you enough for your speech
in regard to war declaration.
SUZANNAII HATT.
SEPULVEDA, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your courageous Vietnam position.
Cease fire pending United Nations mediation
is only solution.
Mr. and Mrs. MARK LUSTICA.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CALIF.
January 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
One thousand Stanford students support
your opposition. Keep up the good work,
make information public.
Mr. and Mrs. DENNIS PIRAGES.
Washington, D.C.
SENATOR MORSE: We are most deeply
ashamed of our country's action of the past
24 hours. As voting constituents of the State
of Oregon we heartily endorse your criticisms
of America's Vietnam policy and urge you to
press for full and open debate on the Viet-
nam war in the U.S. Senate.
JAMES L. SWENSON,
GEOFFREY A. MORSE,
ARTHUR E. WILSON.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
NUTLEY, N.J.
January 1, 1966.
Support your views Vietnam. Keep fight-
ing for legality, morality, sanity, and the
preservation of the species.
CONSTANCE BARTEL.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We strongly commend your recent pro-
posed resolutions in opposition to existing
administration policy on Vietnam. Congres-
sional debate on this topic is essential now.
Mr. and Mrs. CHARLES W. STEELE.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
curb Presidential power re Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. JAMES BRYANS.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations, Thank God for courage-
ous men that I think and act like you for
our country.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
BOSTON, MASS.,
January 31, 1966.
Congratulate you on yesterday's broadcast.
We are proud of your courageous leadership.
PENELOPE TURTON.
MARGARET WELCH.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Have wired Senators KUCHEL and MURPHY
to support your stand. Rescind President's
war power immediately.
MABEL M. ROCKWELL.
RIVER FALLS, WIS.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE, January 31, 1966.
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Keep up the good fight on Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. L. FELDHAMMER.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
IOWA CITY, IOWA,
January 30, 1966.
I am and always have been a Republican.
I have in the past disagreed with you on
many of your domestic and foreign policies.
However support whole heartedly your view-
points on Vietnam as presented on CBS this
Sunday afternoon January 30.
Mrs. VIGGO M. JENSEN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
JACKSON, MISS.,
January 30, 1966.
The position you took nationwide tele-
vision today took great personal courage.
May I offer my grateful appreciation.
Roy BENKE.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I agree with you 100 percent, good luck,
keep up the good work.
B. E. HUFFMAN.
Resist America's abhorrent and cynical
warring.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE, January 31, 1966.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I protest the resumption of bombing in
Vietnam. Work for peace.
SHAREN NLTING.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
RICHMOND, VA.,
January 31, 1966.
DEAR SENATOR MORSE: I can't help but ex-
press my boundless admiration for your stand
on the Vietnamese war, on Sunday's tele-
vision program. The morality of your posi-
tion, uniquely consistent in all your think-
ing, breaks through the fog of murky seman-
tics. For me, you stand head and shoulders
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
1555
Washington, D.C.:
Am completely in accord with your views
regarding Vietnam as outlined by you in the
Sunday's CBS panel discussion.
Mrs. EVELYN W. BOWEN.
SAN LORENZO, CALIF.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Broad based bay area group prepared to
call meeting in San Francisco to push for
full and open congressional debate on Viet-
nam in support of your challenge and efforts
of other Senators and Representatives. We
could draw 15,000 to 20,000 with 2 weeks'
notice, including the pro- and anti-war com-
munity and the many still undecided ques-
tions. Would such an electorate mandate for
debate be pivotal? Could we get California
Congressman and yourself or FULBRIGHT or
McGovERN here for a Sunday meeting if we
pay the bill? Can we reach you by phone for
your answer today or tomorrow?
Dr. FRED GORDON.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I applaud your strong statements to stop
the war in Vietnam. You have gained the
respect and gratitude of all peace-loving
Americans for your intelligence and human
integrity.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
The opinions and proposals expressed by
yourself on the "Congressional Debate" mod-
erated by Eric Severeid on television this
afternoon, were by far the most reasonable
I have yet encountered on the Vietnam prob-
lem. I am in complete agreement with your
position. However, I am not at all familiar
with the "Mansfield report" from which you
quoted. The report from your discussion
seems most pertinent. I would therefore ap-
preciate information as to where I might ob-
tain a copy.
Sincerely yours,
FREDERICK S. ZIMNOCH.
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Please make every effort to work for peace
in Vietnam. Thank you. Praying for you.
Mr. and Mrs. HAROLD COCHRANE.
Senator MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Please stop this insane war in Vietnam
let the United Nations settle everything,
bring any Vietnamese who don't want to be
Communist. We'll take one family in with
us. I worked in an Army hospital, McGuire
General in Richmond, Va., in World War II,
we had amputees. i have four sons now
ages 15, 13, 11, and 3 and I won't let them
come home without arms and legs for the
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
military group In this country who are tak-
ing over and idiars like Senator DIRKSEN. I
have always been a Democrat but now I'll
vote for anyone who will promise not to try
:Ind boss the whole world. President John
lion got in under false pretenses. Goldwater,
at least, let us know he would have a war
like this.
LONG BEACH, CALIF.,
January 30,1966.
senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C..
We commend you and support your posi-
tion on war in Vietnam.
;'.AN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 30,1966.
donator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Bu'i'lding,
Washington, D.C.:
Mothers all over the United States support
your stand on legality Vietnam war. Save
ilr;RMOSA BEACH, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building.
SIR: You were magnificent on Eric
Sovareid's program Sunday. Many Ameri-
cans, I am sure, got the message. Don't give
up. Take care of your health. Regards.
Al; ever,
17r. and Mrs. IRwIN COLE.
(h;OTON ON HUDSON, N.Y.,
February 1, 1966.
:Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your long courageous fight against war is
beginning to yield results. Congratulations.
RICHARD O. and SOPHIA A. BOYER.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE VIORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations. firm Vietnam stand, hope
success for full Senate investigation.
'WILLIAM C. BOHN.
BJ NIVERSITY CITY, MO.,
January S0, 1966.
Senator WAYNE: MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.(.,.:
We, oiler you our firm support on your
courageous stand with regard to Vietnam.
7'rof_ and Mrs. PAUL CHASSY.
FITCHBURG, MASS.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I applaud your position on Vietnam and
urge your cols Linuance of it despite at-
)CKTON SPRINGS, MAINE,
January 30, 1966.
HEWLETT, N.Y.,
January 30, 191;6.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We heartily agree with your position.
Keep up the fight. Thank you.
Mr. and Mrs. IRVING PRESC11R.L.
DETROIT, MICH.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.
DEAR SIR: Wholeheartedly with you. rake
the question to the United Nations.
JossPH N. RICE.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Once Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I heartily support your efforts to achieve
ST. LOUIS, Mo.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your peace efforts.
SAUL NIEDORF, M.D.
BERKELEY, CALIF.,
1966.
January 31
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
January 31, 1966.
Senate Office Building,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
D.C.:
Washington
Washington, D.C.:
,
Full support to you and FULDRIGHT against
We appreciate your
forthright Vietnam
Johhsons illegal, ridiculous war.
stand. Please preserve.
You have the sup-
MIKE RAUGH,
port of most Americans.
PRINCETON, N.J.,
January 31, 1/66.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Endorse your Vietnam position, urge con-
tinuous forthright explanation to people as
on today's TV.
Mr. and Mrs. MELVIN SCHULMAN.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D C.:
We continue to applaud your courageous
stand on Vietnam. You are not alone.
Mr. and Mrs. JULIAN BERC0vICI.
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
PHIL ALMA
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Bravo. Acknowledge with deep gratitude
your peace efforts In best interests of our. Na-
tion.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington., D.C.:
Bravo. Your sensibility, integrity, and
courage are the very things our country
needs in these perilous times.
ROSE and WILLIAM COLAVITO.
Senator WAYNE MORSE, --
Senate Office Building, SWARTHMORE, PA.,
Washington, D.C.: January 31, 1966.
Time is right for responsible opposition to
Vietnam escalation. Nation desperately needs
more national leaders such as your.,elf to
lead responsible defense to this illegal and
immoral war. I support your position and
urge continued active organization of re-
sponsible calls for peace.
RICHARD L. BISIOP.
EDMONTON, ALB7:RTA.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
C.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
As an American citizen I extend finn sup-
port for your opposition to Johnson's actions
in Vietnam which go far beyond the limits
of constitutional authority, international
law or civilized morality. Johnson's :actions
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
policy submission to U.N. recognition NLF
continued bombing pause.
JOHN and JANE NEVIN.
LEAWOOD, KANS.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We wholeheartedly support your position
on Vietnam and have so advised our Sena-
tors from Kansas today.
Mr. and Mrs. LEE BREKKE.
are degrading American prestige here in YONKERS, N.Y.,
Canada. January 30, 1966.
ST. PAUL, MINN . Washington, D.C.:
January 31, 1966. We endorse every effort
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations. We thank God there are
still men like you. We thank you for being
t:oday's man without fear. With deep re-
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Listening CiiS broadcast. With you 100
percent. Keep hollering.
:MAYNARD and AIMEE MACEWEN.
VALLEY STREAM, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Bravo. Keep up the fight.
Mr. and Mrs. NAT HARRm.
EUREKA, CALIF,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations. Your views expressed on
Vietna.rn today were 10(1 percent in agree-
ment with ours. You carried the ,how in
spite of the stacked opposition. The opposi-
tion may be interested to know the people
are not behind Johnson 100 percent. Keep
up the good work.
Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT TAU CFEST.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Chambers,
Washington, D.C.:
We endorse your policy completely and are
thankful for a WAYNE MORSE in our Senate.
Bravo for your courage and commitment.
SHIRLEY and IRVING MICHELIVIAN.
BROOKLYN, N.Y..
January 30, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Your Senate service has been a long record
of iconoclastic independence. I believe your
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efforts to restore the rule of law and control
of reason to our course in Vietnam is the
peak of your career, requiring sheer tough-
ness and scarce courage.
PAUL LION.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
As. a citizen I agree with you for reasons
not political, but humanitarian, believe in
practicality and life.
MARGARET MCGREGOR.
ST: PETERSBURG, FLA.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator MoRsz,
Washington, D.C.:
Am in favor of limiting President's power
in Vietnam.
Dr. and Mrs. CHARLES CRIST.
LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
My family and I thank you for trying to
secure peace.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
DETROIT, MICH.,
January 30,1966.
We applaud your position as stated on TV.
You clarified in our minds the peculiarity of
the Vietnam situation. What secret papers
are you talking about? We are thankful that
you are in Washington fighting our battle for
commonsense and peace.
Dr. and Mrs. MORTON BARNET.
DALLAS, TEXAS.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Over the years your courageous, often soli-
tary stand in the Senate has been supported
by millions of your constituents. Today,
we, in Texas wish you to know that you are
respected and admired more than ever.
Thank you for speaking the thoughts of
silent Americans who are often misrepre-
sented and seldom understood. Your cour-
age has further renewed our hopes for the
reclamation of man who, by his very origin,
is disposed to peace and good will.
Sincerely,
Mr. and Mrs. GARDNER.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Hon. Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Please continue strong efforts, peaceful
settlement Vietnam. Our faith and prayers
are with you.
KALAMAZOO, MICH.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Buliding,
Washington, D.C.:
We are in complete accord with your views
in the Vietnam debate expressed today.
Mr. and Mr. W. T. TUBERTY.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.,
January 31, 1966.
U.S. Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Building,
Washington, D.C.:
God bless you. Have just heard the TV
debate and your fine presentation.
I have traveled and lectured in Asia and I
know you are so right. Hundreds of mil-
lions of people in the world deplore our
country's cynical disregard of the United Na-
tions and our military policy in Vietnam.
More power to you.
PAUL GREEN.
DETRorr, MICH.,
January 30,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
I am a strong Republican but my greatest
respect and admiration I pay to you for
stand on the war in Vietnam. Regardless of
party we should have more Senators like you.
Sincerely,
MIAMI, FLA.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
The following telegram was sent to Sena-
tors GEORGE SMATHERS, SPESSARD HOLLAND,
and Congressman CLAUDE PEPPER. I strongly
urge you as my Representative to give Sena-
tor WAYNE MORSE your full support and co-
operation in bringing the Vietnam war be-
fore the U.N. Security Council.
BARBARA DIAMOND.
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
The Congress and the war, atta boy, keep
it up and cheers for the voters of Oregon.
KATHERINE MOONEY.
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your position re Vietnam. Am
advising President and others.
DAVID G. FUNK.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
We urge an immediate and peaceful set-
tlement of the conflict in Vietnam.
LARRY and DIANE LITTEN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Fully support your position Vietnam.
Urge joining with other Senators for maxi-
mum pressure on President to prevent bomb-
ing resumption and instead seeking disen-
gagement through referral Security Council
United Nations.
Senator MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
GOYNDON, MD.,
January 30, 1966.
Keep up'the good work about Vietnam.
S. J. EBELING.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Emphatically behind your position. Con-
gratulations Vietnam perspective. Await in-
formation as to procedure. Thank you.
JOSEPH TREGGOR.
1557
ST. LOUIS, Mo.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thanks for your excellent presentation on
the debate Sunday. Continue your fight for
arbitration by the U.N. Save the lives of
youth. No war. We are with you. Persevere.
RUTH M. HARRIS.
Senator WAYNE MORSE, .
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Grateful for your leadership on policy in
Vietnam. - Completely support your position.
RALPH and JOSEPHINE POMERANCE.
BLOOMFIELD, CONN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Senator, we"wish to express our full sup-
port in your responsible and worthy effort
to return this administration authority to
the limits of reason.
Dr. and Mrs. JOHN H. FELBER.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 30, 1966.
Thank you for voicing so eloquently your
opinion on the CBS television program.
EDNA and CARLA SNYDER.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I fully endorse and support your position
on the Vietnam crisis. The Senate has re-
sponsibility in time of serious decision. We
are not yet a dictatorship.
MARGARET ST. AUBYN.
OAKLAND CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Commend your courage in denunciation
of correct position on CBS Vietnam special.
JOE FELT.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
CHICO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
We agree on illegality of Vietnam war and
urge full congressional debate.
Mr. and Mrs. LEE A. STUKEY.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
MALIBU, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Deeply admire your courageous stand. The
world has never needed patience and reason
more.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your position on Viet-
nam.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
FLUSHING, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator Moass: We young people offer
thanks for wonderful statement. We have
fought against war. It is good to know
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there are so ma:iy sane voices in adult
community.
JUDITH, DAVID, and ESTHER TEICH.
PITTSDURGH, PA.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building.
Washington. D.C.:
Bravo for your frank words and determined
stand for peace. Keep it up.
k:T,TAS CRITCHLOW.
:BERKELEY, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your brave battle and admire
your courage.
Los ANGELES, CALIF,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Heartily approve your present actions in
bringing resolution to Senate for debate.
Deeply grateful for facts as presented on TV
today. Urge that you continue as spokes-
nian for American people are demanding
President Johnson take Vietnam issue to
U.N.
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
lion. WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate.
Washington, D.C.:
We commend your present stand. Please
do all possible to stop bombing resumption.
SUZANNE WERNER,
JUDITH GARTUND.
NEW YoRK, N.Y.,
January .31, 1966.
ScnatOr WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulation;:: on your move to stop the
illegal war.
ARCADIA, CALIF.,
January 31. 1966.
Senator WAYNE M')RSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I am ex-World War II veteran and I am
100 percent on your stand of Vietnam.
? line itoWE.
SEATTLE, WASH.,
January 31. 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C..
Your courageous stand on Vietnam is
heartening to all Americans who want a just
peace. Stand firm.
I FW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
-:orator WAYNE
Senate Office Buil(I'mcl,
Washington, D.C.'
Thank you for an articulate, ini'ormative,
rid courageous stand in the face of an in-
coherent and uninformed opposition.
Jul. f,REINLIEE.
Niew YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
:>ENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
[hood luck with your bird hunting. And
may your efforts. cause the hawks to take
NEW YOBS, N.Y.,
Janual y 31, 1966.
SENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C :
I applaud. your stand on TV Sunday 1'.m.
against escalating the war in Vietnam.
Second your proposal to withdraw blanket
approval to Johnson to conduct undeclared
war. Urge you to support Popc Paul's sug-
gestion for neutral arbitration by the United
Nations.
LONG BEACH CALis.
SENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We salute your courage and Birthright icss
in opposing so firmly the unlimited powers of
the President to accelerate the War in Viet-
nam when we could be acting through the
United Nations to maintain the peace. Y our
bold and direct language and yoar fierce light
to bring the whole truth of Our situation
before the American public without de, ep-
tioll and without flattery. So that we might
take full responsibility for our Nations poli-
cies in chewing aggression instead of excusing
it does you credit as a brave critic.
AUBREY B. HARTER.
SENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Strong support here for your stand on Viet-
iiain; urge speedy investigation of U.S.
policy.
MARY and THOMAS C. MosER.
HOUSTON, TEX.,
January 31, 19tth.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Completely in agreement with your Viet-
nam policies. Keep up the gocd work. God
bless you,.
SAN BERNARDINO. CALIF.,
January 31, 1966,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building.
Washington, D.C.:
You have kinship with mankind. Support
you all the way.
WINTER PARK, FLA.,
January 31, 19;6.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your staid on ,,iet-
na.m war on Sunday TV. You changed :ionic
votes.
EVANSTON, ILL.,
January 31, 1936.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Support appeal to United Nations Security
Council. North Vietnam attaclis will prob-
ably strengthen Communist cause.
CARL KEI'PII.
UR.BAITA, ILL.,
January 31, 1936.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I give you my support on your stand of
the U.S. role in the Asian war.
MARY J A:INTE SN'TIL:R.
BOSTON, MASS.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
W ashing ton, D.C.:
I support your stand on Vietnam policy.
RICHAFD L. MARI IN.
NOVATO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations and thank you for force-
full clear antiwar stand.
A. V. BRERETON.
DETROIT, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your excellent broad-
cast yesterday. Stick to your guns. Let's gent
it to the United Nations. MORSE for Pres-
ident. Regards.
HARTFORD, CONN.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Foreign Affairs Committee,
Washington. D.C.:
Heartily support your current efforts to
open congressional debate on Vietnam
policy.
PROVIDENCE, R.I.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Keep up the fight.
HOUSTON, TEX.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Completely in agreement with your Viet-
nam policies. Keep up the good work. Clod
bless you.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support and commend you on your posi-
tion on Vietnam.
MEREF'ORD, TEX.,
January 31, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
You have my respect and admiration for
your stand on issues concerning Vietnam war.
Don't let Mr. BOGGS snow you with around-
the-bush talk. United Nations is the answer.
GEORGE MASSO.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Keep up your good fight on Vietnam. Mil-
lions of us are behind you.
JOHN M. THEA LOGAET.
SIHEBOYGAN, WIS.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your Vietnamese position all the
way.
SOL BENSMAN.
ATLANTA, CA.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations excellent television ap-
pearance. We support your resolutions.
Must stop bombing.
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Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Commend introduction resolution rescind-
ing powers of President to make illegal war,
support you for peace.
wasnzngton, D.U.:
Keep up the good work, we need more like
you to make people think.
CORA L. STEFFES.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
GLENCOE, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
NEW YoRK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Support fully your resolutions to rescind
1964 congressional approval Presidential
action Vietnam and complete investigation
all aspects U.S. policies Vietnam. Will advise
my congressional representatives accord-
ingly and urge submission of problem to U.N.
HEDRERT WEISBERG, M.D.
CAROLINE HUBER.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Issue a call, we will answer, 500 students
faculty, local citizens lead us.
STANFORD COMMITTEE FOR PEACE IN
VIETNAM.
bombing Hanoi and further escalation. Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Mr. and Mrs. MARVIN MANDEL. Senate Office Building,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We respectfully suggest that you vote to
revoke the Presidential mandate on Vietnam.
DR. and Mrs. GUSTAV MARTIN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
My deep appreciation to your excellent
presentation for peace on special Vietnam
program yesterday.
Mrs. CARL JENSEN.
PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C.:
Keep up the fight to persuade those Sen-
ators to sign your resolution curtailing the
President's war powers. We citizens are 100
percent back of you. That $12 billion supple-
mental appropriation for Vietnam must not
go through.
Senate House, Washington, D.C.:
Support your views on Vietnam whole-
heartedly. Please continue your fight.
Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT G. FLEURIOT.
COLLEGEVILLE, PA.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.:
Fight like We're with you. Fili-
buster if need be.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Executive war illegal. Urge Senate take
stand. Resind Asia resolution. Stop bomb-
ing.
Prof. KEITH and ELIZABETH BOYLE.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your courageous TV
appearance, agree with you 100 percent, keep
up good fight.
ALLAN BLACK.
Horror and shame, President's resumption
bombing. Urge you continue fight against
the new Hitlers.
WILLIAM and MARY GANDALL.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank God for you, the only voice pro-
testing the war.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your presentation on CBS was reasonable
and persuasive, we urge you to continue your
campaign to inform the American people of
the facts of our involvement in Vietnam.
P.S.-We particularly support your effort
to involve the United Nations.
FRED and RUTH HOEHLER.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We approve your resolution to rescind the
blank check given the executive branch on
Vietnam. It has been grossly and stupidly
misused and should be, as your second reso-
lution demands, thoroughly investigated and
exposed. We, too, would like to know how
every Member of the Senate stands. Best
wishes.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your heroic efforts urging for solu-
tion ending war in Vietnam, urge you con-
tinue.
Mr. and Mrs. RIVING LEANER.
Senator WAYNE MoRSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington D C
Total in agreement your desires re, John-
son's illegal war. Fire office boys Rusk and
McNamara. My letter Armistice Day 1965 to
Johnson via Mrs. Johnson and ridiculously
answered by Fenilist Greenfield, State De-
partment Assistant, in direct contrariness of
my ardent views, copy of which I will furnish
upon request, strictly advocates to stop this
Mongolian holocaust before it is too late.
Mongolians are not Causasians. Johnson
great disappointment to me, just another
Truman.
Sincerely,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.: .
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
Congratulations for your courage and
greatness on Sunday TV.
Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM BECIC.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
The Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Congratulations, your marvelous, on criti-
cisms of Vietnamese Insanity.
MARGURrrE YOUNG.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
We applaud your stand on Vietnam.
Mr. and Mrs. E. HARRITON.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
With your continued zeal peace-loving
desires of our people will not bog down.
JOHN ABRAMS.
BROOKLYN, N.Y., January 31, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MoRsE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Keep up the fight we must stop this
war.
Mrs. BETTY F. GOLDBLOOM.
ROCHESTER, N.Y., January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We strongly support and congratulate you
for your stand against resumption of bomb-
ing of North Vietnam and for a full debate
on the issue.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE,
Liberal Party of Monroe County.
BROOKLYN, N.Y., January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Endorse every word by Senator MORSE on
Vietnam perspective, January 30, 1966.
MCKINLEY WHEELER.
NEW YORK, N.Y., January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
You were heroic, magnificent on CBS.
Keep fighting for peace and sanity.
ROBERT and JOAN HOLT.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations for your admirable and
courageous stand re terminating Vietnam
war and for turning matter over to the
United Nations.
MAXWELL J. MARDER, M.D.
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE February 1, 1966
ii3ROOKLYN, N.Y..
Jae.uary 3.1, 1966.
1I011. WAYNE MORSE,
'rrnate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Kecp up the fighl;. We most stop this war.
1\171'S. BETTY 1". GOLDBLOOM.
At msrWOuo MANOR, WASH.,
January 30, 1966.
i r`nntor WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
'T'hank God for your voice of truth on
Vietnam. I pray that it shall be heard be-
fore it is too late.
Sri OKIE, t1.1, ,
January 30, 1966.
::Senator WAYNE is] use,
t,?/ashington, D.C.:
Again today you spoke for reason, pru-
dence, peace, national morality, and inter-
.Lr tioilal law. Heartfelt' gratitude.
nr., DAVID B. BARRON.
Wrr,cs:SI.EY HILLS, MASS.,
January 30. 1966.
1i011:1,101` WAYNE MORSEL,
t mate Of/ice Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I strongly oppose resumption of bombing
find escalation in Vietnam.
Mr:;,. STEWART A. ARMSTRONG.
.`.'ALo ALTO, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Wsnator WAYNE.. MORSE,
WVashington, D.C.:
We strongly sul:ilort your call for thorough
investigation of our Government's objectives
and policies in Vietnam and we oppose re-
:;umption of bombing in North.
HELEN and EDWARD COLBY.
a'.EI.MONT, MASS.,
January 30, 1966.
it`Tlator WAYNE CrO1SE,
!I.S. Senate,
Washington. D.C.:
have just heard congressional debate on
Vietnam on CBS Television. Wish to express
100-percent endorsement for position of
cienator WAYNE MORSE. We are conservative
tfepublican.s who voted for Goldwater.
Mr. trod Mrs. MARC G. WOLMAN.
tIOUSTON, 'IBEX.,
January 30. 1966.
:senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Your public pursuit of truth and law
applauded. How call we secure Mansfield
report?
tirLl. VALLEY. CAL.n'.,
January 30, 1966.
'.ieriator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Our support to you and Senator FULBRIGHT
for your Vietnam policy.
Dr. arils Mrs. KURT SCIIIESINGER.
0,S ANGELES. CALIF.,
January .30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MoasE.
senate Office Building, Washington, D.C..
Americans owe you eternal gratitude con-
tinue your efforts for peace. Many support
you view.
'hi. is;t:RNARDINO, CALIF.,
January .31, 1966.
crla.tor WAYNE MORSE,
Sonat'? 0/lice Building, Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations- your present struggle to
help restore sanity and commonsense to our
foreign policy with regard to Vietnam and
elsewhere is typical of your boundless cour-
age. Your long unbroken Washington re, Ord
of vigorously fighting for justice, integr,ty,
honesty, compassion, morality, , nd ethic.. in
domestic and international affairs has long
been greatly admired by both of us. Please
accept our humble thank you an:i a,ppreo;ia-
tion.
.i?ARR.ISBUSG, PA.,
:r.
inanely 30, 1.9.
inenator WAYNE AlORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
To those of us who share you views rid
fears regarding the Vietnam situaiaon, it's
most heartening to hear you on Eric S! t':1-
eid's pro6;r:un on Sunday afternoon. Thin,
you and cungr.rtulations for your hi,;lily
articulate and sane presentation.
Mrs. HENRY M. MILL:'.. 1.
SAN JOSE, CALIF.,
Janueu';/ 30, 1963,
Senator WAYNE. MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Our most sincere congratulations on sour
courageous effort to limit tho President's
authorization on the war in Vietnam and in-
stitute It Federal investigation of the U.S.
role in that country.
Ito J. Dii is, Preside it,
Congregation All Souls
Unilaria z Chum.;.
FRAMINCHAM, MA.-;S.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your CBS discussion.
Yours is still a minority position but the
questions you have raised hopefully will 'Lead
more people to rethink the problem.
Mr. and Mrs. EDWARD F. IsNCOLN.
EVANSTC-?N, ILL.,
January :10, 19? 6.
Senator WAY NE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
W17e support your position an3 efforts to
cold the tragedy in Vietnam. Thank yet,:..
i'ERRY and BVELY WINOKIR.
SAN FRANCISCO. CALIF.,
Jann.rr y 30,19:,6.
Ser:.a.tor WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Continue heroic Vietnam struggle for sake
of America, history. Will cond on_e. Can. I
help'?
FORT Wolu H, TEX.,
January 30, 1916.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate O,fcc Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your discussion on the TV rogram Sun-
day was the only part of the discussion that
made sense. I am with you 100 percent
Mrs. X. R. WALL,I 5.
EI,KIIA n', IND.,
Janua"z/ 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We agree with views expreetel on today's
TV panel show. We sincerely lope your ad-
vice will be heeded.
EDNA and P IITL Wn,M JT.
CAMBRIDG,:, MASS.,
January 30, 1966,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Wish to congratulate you and to express
great admiration for your honesty, wisdom,
and courage.
KEZAII FALLS, MAINE,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
SENATOR MoosE: Thank you for so elo-
quently and articulately expressing our senti-
ments concerning Vietnam. Please contirnue
your efforts v;th Senator FuLBRICIIT 11?1'
peace.
Mr. and Mrs. R. GlovAi'IELLA.
Mr. and Mrs. H. CIIAIIS:LIN.
Miss LOUIS GIOVANELL.I,
Airs. K. RASTY.
LARCIIPMMONT, N.Y.,
January 30, 191 1.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Applaud your heroic fight for end to Viet-
nam war.
Prof. and Mrs. PAUL DAV:rDOFF.
ANN ARBOR, MICIi.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington. D.C.:
Congratulations on Senate speech. Keep
up opposition to hawks, autocrats.
Thank you, thank you.
FLUSHING, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Senator MORSE, on your heroic television
statement you have our full support. Please
continue your efforts for peace.
SELMA and MICTOR TIECTI.
PITTSBURGH, PC..,
January 30. 1966'
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Keep up the great work on your sl sold
against bombing of Vietnam.
DORIS HEnao N.
ST. PAUL, MINN.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations. Your forthright eluci-
dation on today's television conference ',vas
great,
SHF.RMAN OAKS, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We gratefully strongly support Vietnam
position you clearly responsibly expressed
on CBS Sunday P.M.
BOB and ESTHER Mrs cH#.1:[,
EAST WILI.ISTON, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.
Senate of Chamber Building,
Washington., D.C.:
Congratulate you on your courage on to-
day's TV program. We agree with your
opinions and program and have when Presi-
dent, our Senators, and Congressmen.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross BUCIIALTF:?.
NEWPORT, R.I.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for what you said on television
this afternoon. You made great sense. Please
keep the pressure on,
Gratefully yours,
Mr. and Airs. JAMES G. VERMILLIOS.
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February 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
CAMPBELL, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
God bless you. Keep up the good work.
Mrs. EARL RICE.
BROOKLYN, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Heartily endorse your stand on our Viet-
nam policy.
Mr. and Mrs. S. DOROFF.
MAPLEWOOD, N.J.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for the good fight to save
humanity from a terrible fate.
Mr. and Mrs. MILTON SCHACHTER.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for bringing Vietnam issue
forcibly before the people. We all want
peace.
RAPID CITY, S. DAK.,
January 31, 1966.
U.S. Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Commend highly your argument over net-
work opposing U.S. policy in Vietnam. Con-
tinue your fearless fight for the sake of
America and the world. The people must
know the truth. Soon it could be too late.
Don't let opposition silence you (WAYNE
MORSE knows his rights), I salute you.
Mrs. GRACE KTOFT.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Fully support your resolutions to retrieve
congressional authority and responsibility
from Johnson and the Pentagon.
KENNETH H, and RUTH R. GLASGOW.
CULVER CITY, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We commend your courageous efforts
against war in Vietnam, Urge U.N. action.
NORMAN BAILOW AND FAMILY.
SHERMAN OAKS, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Approve action to rescind President's Viet-
nam war mandate and support peace efforts
through U.N.
ELEANOR and ROBERT SCI3MORLEITZ.
DENVER, COLO.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
After World War I Germany was, according
to the Versailles Treaty, to be policed to pre-
vent rearming for 20 years by the United
States, France, and England and was forbid-
den submarines forever but $90 million per
year. The U.S. Army policed Germany and
prevented them from rearming from 1918 un-
til 1924, the French Rothchilds from 1924 un-
til 1928 did the same. The English Roths-
childs paradoxically instead of preventing
Germany rearming rearmed Hitler to fight
Communistic Russia and In 1933 in violation
of the Versailles Treaty gave Hitler the right
to build 10 submarines which grew to 400 and
they would have in World War II, as in
World War I, have starved England if the
United States had not entered World War II
that the English Rothschilds started by
not policing Germany and preventing their
rearming from 1928 until 1932. After France
pulled out of Germany the Rothschild
Industries of France and England are now
selling munitions to Hanoi and our troops are
a proving ground for the developing of deadly
Russian weapons. According to trade jour-
nals L.B.J. has used up the stockpile of World
War II 1,000-pound bombs and to tool up
to make them again would cost millions of
dollars, wreck our economy and take a years
time to get started. The 1,200 tons of bombs
we dropped per day for the past year is a lot
of bombs to make every day this year. Actu-
ally the French tried to save the Rothschilds
rubber plantations in Laos but failed and
actually that is what the United States is
trying to do now. You according to my
thinking were the only sensible Senator on
the TV panel today.
. Regards,
JOSEPH P. RUTH.
PARAMOUNT, CALIF.,
January 31, 1968.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Have wired California Senators urging
they support your upcoming resolution. We
endorse your views.
BENJAMIN and MARY SALAZAR.
MISSOULA, MONT,,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I applaud your views about Vietnam and
trust you can make them prevail.
HARVEY CURTIS,
Webster University of Montana.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Please continue and intensify your cou-,
rageous protest against escalating war.
Prof. RONALD A. REBHOLZ.
CANTON, MASS.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Fine broadcast on Sunday, Please con-
tinue your fight for peace not too late.
SHERWOOD HOUSEHOLD.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I support your new resolution to force Sen-
ate vote on Vietnam.
SENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.
We think you are taking the right position
on Vietnam.
Dr. and Mrs. LEONARD B. THOMPSON,
SENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.
Your opinion wholeheartedly supported.
Organizing support Severeid's TV historical.
President Johnson's reports must be
published.
JEAN B. PETERS.
BELLINGHAM, WASH.,
January 31,1966.
HOD. WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.
We thoroughly support you in your stand
on the Vietnam Issue.
WILLIAM R. PIERRON,
THELMA M. PIERRON,
OLIVIA X. HAMELIN.
WEST Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
SENATOR WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
Completely support position against re-
sumption of bombing. Beg you continue
fighting for national sanity.
Mr. and Mrs. HAROLD FOSTER.
BELLINGHAM, WASH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
We were moved by your courage and con-
cern over the dangers in Vietnam which you
expressed on televigion today. We fully sup-
port your conviction.
Mr. and Mrs. MARTIN TUCKER,
Department of Art,
Western Washington State College.
SEATTLE, WASH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for opposing illegal, self-de-
feating, disastrous Viet war from bottom of
my heart.
GEORGE HILL, M.D.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We agree with your ideas on Vietnam. All
success in continuing the fight.
LILLIAN COHEN,
A New Yorker.
BERKELEY, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your statements on the Sevareid program
were magnificent. You speak for millions of
Americans,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
DEAR SENATOR MORSE: We wholeheartedly
support your stand on the war in Vietnam
and endorse your proposed legislation which
will limit the President's broad powers to
escalate the war in Vietnam. We sincerely
hope your efforts will win widespread support.
Dr. and Mrs. I. D. PODoaE,
Mrs. HENRY KLEINMAN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
The Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
I fully support the actions being taken by
yourself and others to bring about a ra-
tional end to the war in Vietnam. The Gov-
ernment must know that perhaps a silent
majority of private citizens do not support
this futile war and wish it a speedy end.
ROBERT KOLKER.
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FALL RIVER, MASS.,
January 30, 1966..
Sr. Lotus Mo,
Januar_r :10, 1966.
SEATTLE, WASH.,
January 31, 1966.
;(, I):I,tor WAYNE Mous e,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Wati7iingtona, D.C.:
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Appreciate your support of cessation of
Washington, D.C.:
We wholehearted with you in the problem
bombing, negotiating with Vietcong, use of
I agree with your ides as expressed Sun-
peace be turned over to United Nations,
Ut_nitcd Na .iiii a arbitration,
day, January 30, on CR3 program., the Con-
ETHF:L STROM.
11eV. I:AI:.OLD MervIN.
gress aryl the war.. I am wirii';p Senator
hen~rser,as and Congre;man Cures to sup-
SAN JOSE, CAT.IF.,
i$LOOMMIFTEI,D, CONN.,
port your views on the V.etnarn ear,
January J1. 1966.
Jaral,ary 30, 1966.
Senator WF,vn_r Tloece,
1>enate Office- Building,
FVasitinglon? %).C.:
!applaud your courageous stand on Viet-
naan. Prop yo ur wisdom prevails.
,III, and Mrs. 13ENTON Bi:nnl'is,
hU;'FAi o, N. V.,
Jur..n.ery 30, 19(6.
rioii, WAYN MIOR.n:,
Tutu Septic,
Yiva;tlii-ngton, 7+.C.:
I wish vat were representing New York
POise in tuft Renate. Your soggestlons of-
ferers Burin?,: the Severeid program won my
iociniira.ti.on.. You are right. The American
people do not know what; is going on. I do
not and I. r,ry to find out through all the
oiedia available to me. I believe in. the U.S.
too, and it nee+essary in declaring war. If
John Kenneth; were writing "Profiles iii
Courage" today he would write about you.
Vaya 'in dial.
MADISON, WIS.,
January 30,, 1966.
P1i, Senator' WAYNE MoRsr,
Washington, D.C.:
Appreciate and agree with your stand ex-
l~res2ed on CI 3,S today. Carry on.
,.i,ev. Iii 7'rIIFit RoaGL:N.
Saa:w Yor,.x, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAY NNE MORSE,
Washington. /).C.:
We agree a Uh you 100 percent about Viet-
nam.
IlR.IDGEPOR'r, CONN,
Jan?iary 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE Mollie,
Senate Office iMildi-ng,
Washington, 1).C.:
Civil to yon r attention much active and
latent; support, iri Connecticut for your dis-
t;rnt, continrur.
CmautY Hu,t S, N.J.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNi, Moese.,
Senate office Iacilding,
Washington,
'I'V good. :Full support. Amen.
.;Ot7N WartE.
If eNGS ON HUDSON, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
St'na,tr r WAYN TI MORSE,
Senate Of ..ce Bonding,
Washington, D.C.:
My wife and I and numerous friends sup-
port your position on Vietnam and urge
to Lion_
floss, MEEROPOL.
'DAYTON, OHIO,
January 30, 1966.
Pr' rr ator WAYN'rss M,inSE,
Satiate Office Building?
Washington, DC_^.,:
:Bravo for your timely and valiant stand on,
she Vietnam situation.. Please let me know
:tow r may help.
VERA f,. ".MM.
JANE H. YOUNT.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
NORTH EASe TIA.,
Was7i ingt oft, D.C.:
Januari 30, 1966.
Our hearts, hopes, thanks are with you i:i
Senator vi AY:VE MOOSE,
your continued initiative toward negotiating,
Sane/c O3%ce Building,
Vietnam peace.
Was/tng',It:. D.C.:
God blc.,s you. Keep -;kiting.
Ms. Ca _L Rieso.
Coi,:farms, C,rlo,
January ;Z), 1966.
Set a.t??ter Wit ars Motive,
Washington., D.C.:
Urge you continue investigation' involve-
ment in Vietnam regarding possib'.?a U.N. ac-
tion, negotiation, or enslavement.
LOUISE ':;: [IACON.
LYUrROOK, Td V.,
lire-nary :3, 1966.
Senator W. YNE MORSE,
Senate Or/c., Building,
Wasr,.inq/o e, D.C.:
t admire your courage and agree .vith your
sol;;z:..,iota of how to settle Vietm it war.
tiAR.AH R I1TenT.
RiiTHERFORD, N J.,
.'anuary .;i!, 1966.
Hon. WAYa F. MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
ITorvoMIBLE DEAR SIR.: Y-nt. ; re to be com-
mended for your courageous stanCl during
0115 Congress in the War TV appearance.
Would that a majority rf your roileagues
were as sincerely committed to of r cause.
If available would appreciate copy of
MANSFIELD and Galbraith reports.
itospectfully,
,)?, ii.i'.G.'IRY .".TREY,
1:I,a issoN, W?.
January 36' 1966.
BERItELE`:, CAI IT.'.,
January :;0, 196f).
Senator WAYNis TvtoS.?E,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for this afternoon; congratula-
tions and stc,nd fact.
MIAMI TEACH, PI.A.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We applaud your position on Vietnam and
urge you to continue pressure for negotiated
peace through U.N.
Rabbi LEON KRONrser.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
I heartily concur in your thoughtful and
courageous stand on Vietnam. We rely ou
you to safeguard our liberties at home and
abroad at this critical time.
Sincerely yours,
ESTHER EHR&IAN LAZARD,
NEW YORK, N.Y..
January 31. 1966,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for your courageous, patriotic.
and wise presentation of the case for peace
in Vietnam.
WAYNE M,-,n-E,
Washington D.C.:
We completely support your Vietn in posi-
tion and appreciate your courage.
EL;-,A FAIrER1.:.rra,
is -w.'J ';Y AND'.... t? ON,
VTTIVeeNIA Li,'KE,
PALO Aiao, CALL
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate Office Building,
Washrn,gton, D.C.:
We fully support your v ewe on '. ietnam
toted January 30. Take conflict 'o U.N.
Veep 10, the good work.
Cul0s,rrmr, OR '111TH,
/3ALL'Y CROSS.
Cn:CAGO. ILI
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C..:
Army officer with son hi 'Vietnan, agree
completely your policy: plea.: e continua so.
GARY. IND.
January 31, _966.
senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington., D.C..:
Congratulations on your television a.ppear-
nnce. We agree.
?/1'A ton M" :Ore,
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.
DEAR SENATOR MORSE: God bless you for
your stand on Vietnam.
Mrs. F. E. HYDE,
Mrs. ISABEL MCLArcim N,
CHICAGO, ILL..
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Along with others in our commuidl.y we
stand behind your stand in the Senate to get
United States on the road to peace and with-
drawn from Vietnam. Congratulations.,
Mr. and Mrs. ELMER JoI-eN .o:-r,
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Very pleased with your stand in asking for
Senate study of Vietnam problem. .Ate seri-
ously concerned[ least we play into 'Russian
hands by being drawn deeper into war. As
we and China struggle, Russia enjoys our
former peacemaker role and grows strong.
Possibly she waits for South American erup-
tion if we wear out men and wealth and lose
allies from. illogical. war in wrong p'_I:cc,
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD -SENATE 1563
The bull in a bull ring dies because an
obvious red flag distracts him from a clever
enemy. I pray our Nation's intelligence can
win over our blind pride in brute strength.
Sincerely,
MARION BORELL.
DOWNEY, CALIF.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your courageous stand opposing
Vietnamese war. Bring this undeclared war
to declared peace.
Mr. and Mrs. SAMUEL BERLAND.
BROOKLYN, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We applaud your efforts and support your
position on Vietnam.
FRANCES and PHILLIP BRODSKY, WENDY
and ROBERT REASENBERG, EUGENE
BRODSKY, SALLY MORRIS.
OAKLAND, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MoRSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We fully back your stand on Vietnam.
May your voice always ring loud and clear,
Mr. and Mrs. FRANK SKURSKI.
MENLO PARK, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support your opposition to esca-
lation of war. Continue to press for nego-
tiation.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1968.
Senator WAYNE Moms,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your Vietnamese policy.
DAVID HELLERSTEIN,
ROGER KOHN,
TOM ZANIELLO.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washingto:t, D.C.:
Support your position against bombing.
Urge continuous protest and recognition of
Vietcong in negotiations.
JOHN W. LrrTLA.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your efforts to end Vietnam
war. Keep up the battle for peace.
Mr. and Mrs. M. KELEMAN.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
ST. PAUL, MINN.,
January 31, 1966.
MERCER ISLAND, WASH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
MY DEAR SENATOR MORSE: We fully support
your position on the war in Vietnam and
wish you success in your effort to rescind
the President's authority to wage an Execu-
tive war.
JESSIE BLOOM,
MARCELLA BENDITT,
MORTIMEa RAYMAN,
MICKEY and LEO SREEBNY,
CYRUS and GRACE RUSIN.
PALO ALTO, CALIF?
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations. Stand against bombing
in Vietnam. Urge United Nations investiga-
tion and control of consulate.
MARION DUNLAP.
SAN DIEGO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.:
The following Democrats condemn the
present illegal U.S. involvement in Vietnam
and demand issue be placed before United
Nations. Stop Johnson's dictatorial usurpa-
tion of legislative powers.
PAUL A. HALL,
PAUL J. HALL,
FRANCES M. HALL,
MARK ROSEN,
JOSEPH SCHULTZ,
JACK SCHULTZ,
SAPPHIRE HALL
RADNOR, PA,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C.:
I completely support your courageous
stand and agree with your political view.
Keep up the good work.
Mrs. RICHARD V. ZIMMERMANN, Jr.,
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Washington, D.C.:
Americans everywhere applaud your ques-
tioning our so-called commitments.in Viet-
nam. Congress alone can make war or peace.
Why has Congress failed to protect this
power?
JOHN UPTON, M.D.
ANNA LOGAN UPTON.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I support your position on Vietnam and
urge you to keep up your campaign to ob-
tain peace.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We admire and support your efforts to
bring an end to Vietnam war.
Mr. and Mrs. PETER LEACH.
SAN LEANDRO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C.:
We commend you and urge your continued
efforts to move Vietnam problem to United
Nations.
DIANNE and PAUL NEWMAN.
Bravo * ? ? let them explain hypocrisy of
defeating tyranny by aiding tyranny.
RAY E. DE DARPA.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your excellent debate
on CBS program of yesterday (secrets) in
State Department save on Vietnam should
we as you so admirably stated to the Amer-
ican public for their own appraisal.
Very sincerely yours,
BREWER AND BREWER & SON,
PAUL BREWER CONAWAY, President.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We concur in the courageous stand you
are taking to clarify position in Vietnam.
LEONARD AND MARY HILDEBRANDT.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
DULUTH, MINN.,
January 30, 1966.
Heard your comments on Vietnam perspec-
tive today, For God's sake stay healthy and
keep talking or we are lost.
BRUNO SCIPIONI.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We heartily endorse your stand to rescind
the 1964 resolution and your solution in Viet-
nam.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support your position on Vietnam
urge use of U.N. for arbitration.
Mr. and Mrs. JOHN A. PRICE.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your stand on Viet.
nam.
NEWTON, MASS.,
January 31,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate O ffiee Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Warmly applaud your forthright statement
in today's televised Vietnam discussion re-
garding honorable course for America.
Mr, and Mrs. E. B. KovAR.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
LILLIAN, ALA.,
January 31,1966.
We are grateful for your stand in reference
to the bombing of North Vietnam. Keep up
the good work.
I. B. and C. H. RUTLEDGE.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
You were magnificent. Have my complete
support. Please keep fighting.
Dr. GoRELiCK.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulation on your stand today con-
cerning Vietnam. United Nations must be
used.
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1564 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
NEw Yom,, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
STONY POINT, N.Y.,
SACRAMENTO, CAI IV.,
SACRAMENTO, CALIF.,
January 31,1966.
January 31, 1966.
January 3.1, 1966,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senator WAYNE .MORSE,
Senator MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Senate Office Building,
Senate Office Building,
Washington. D.C,:
Washington, D.C.:
Washington, D.C.:
Dismayed by resumption of bombing North
Urgent you continue outspoken remarks
Am in accord with your opinions 100 per-
Vietnam. This action violates international
regarding administration's policies Civili-
cent our country needs many more honest
law and brand:; the United States as deter-
zation's future at stake. Keep it T.
unselfish legislators.
mined to bring :about world war III.
Lois ESTER,
Jones and DORIC KTGH'r,
Lwaf F, KocTI.
ItIARY W. Kovii,
New Yoax, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U-8. Senate,
Washington? D.C,:
Congratulations NBC debate, agree your
position completely. So advised JAVITS, KEN-
NEDY. Please keep pressure up.
L'e'es SABIO.
:SAN CARLOS, CALIF..
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAY NR M.ORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington. D.C:
Debate tremendous, what can we do to sup-
port you?
:iT`o NEITAM, MASS.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNP: MonsF?
''enate Office Luilding,
Washington, D.C.:
Your views o,n. Vietnam war have my com-
plete support, let United Nations do the job,
R,Urrr BARTON.
CUAYr:I, IIrLT., N.C.,
January .31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your Vietnam stand.
J. W. LAST?EY,
Attorney.
W1c.'r l os AINiET.ES, CAI IF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE: MORSE,
Senate O jlice Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly protest resumption of bombing,
doubt President's sincerity about peace, urge
Senate Initiative for peace.
ARIs ANAGNn-,
Cu, n nn SPRINGS, COLO.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE A TORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We highly approve your courageous stand
and hope you continue your questioning of
the war.
`11St.RNA CHASE JOHNSON,
NLI,w3I KERN and FAMir..Y,
New YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966-
.-senator WAYNE TVII IRSF,
11.5. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
We are grateful for your determined, con-
latent, and courngenus leadership against
involvement In the Vietnam war.
Mr. and Mrs. ARTHUR Irsr enuRG-
Nnw YORK, N. Y.,
January 31, 1966.
lhnntor WAYNE Mc'}tse?
R..nate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your courageous Vietnam stand.
Cress on Foreign Relations Committee se-
'recy.
X. S.ANDERSON.
GALLIPOI.IS, Cf':0,
?January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support without reserv:sion, your remarks
CBS show Sunday.
CIIART_es E. HoL"ER, Jr.
NORTH HIGHL:NDS, CAI.F-
Ju nuary 31 1966.
:senator WAYNE MORSE,
.:enatc Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Gratified to hear your timely rem irks on
TV debate. Saddened by President's decision
to resume bombing.
Mrs. Ttvm vN C' R.TER.
ALRTON, MICA
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Heard you on TV. Congratulat::'ns on
peace efforts.
New Yosx, N.Y
January 31, :966.
senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I support you in. full in your action re-
garding, Vietnam.
Mrs. RosE L. BR' w N.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1366.
Senator WAYNE. MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Palo Alto Chapter, American Associ.ietion
United Nations, representing 350 members,
thank you for your efforts to limit Vic?tllarn
war and urges you to continue,
ISABRIJ, ROSE,
Presid 'i t.
POUGHKaF.esIE, N.Y.,
January 31, Iii' d.
Senator WAYNE MossE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Beg you redouble effort along line of fine
and important letter to Johnson on Viet am.
It cannot be too late to stop this escal:.tion
by administrative fiat.
NeercY STOVI:R,
PALO Aura, CALIF.,
January 31, 198.;,
Seciator WAYNE I1ToRSE?
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Sincere thanks and deepest gratitude for
your leadership on Vietnam.
7.VI1?RY WRIGHr.
GLENDALE, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Sen:..tor WAY NE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank you for your fine and courage~,us
presentation of Vietnam situation. Keep it
up.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Fully support two resolutions you offered
in Senate Saturday, January 29.
GERTRUDE GOTTI.IF,B.
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE L. Moans,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Following telegrams to Senator TYDING3,
Senator BREwSTER, of Maryland. I wish to
express support for position taken by Sena-
tor WAYNE L. MORSE, of Oregon on the CBS
program January 30, 1966,
Bost wishes,
FsesroNT, OHIO,
January ,31, 1966.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Completely support your Vietnam state-
ments. Both veterans World War II Republi-?
cans. Please continue opposition.
Rev, and Mrs. REUBEN RACER.
PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y.,
January 31, 1965.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I love my country best and WAYNE MORSE
next. Your continued leadership is crucial
to the peace of the world.
FLAW KLEIN.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREG.,
January 31, 196,6,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I appreciate your courageous words on this
immoral involvement in Vietnam, please
stand firm.
February 1, 1966
ANN ARBOR, MICH.,
January 3.1, 1966,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I applaud your courageous denunciation of
Johnson's immoral and illegal Asian war.
CLIFFORD BORBAS.
WASHINGTON, D.C.,
January 31,. 1966-
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Strongly support your views expressed on
CBS program, yesterday.
DuBois, PA.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thank God we have a man like you in
Congress. Rescind the mandate, and let's
turn this over to the United Nations as Pope
Paul and you suggest.
ROBERT F. Coeusa K
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February 1, 1966 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
ROSLYN, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your voice yesterday was like a breath of
fresh air in a smoked-filled room. Congratu-
lations.
Mr. and Mrs. SAMUEL PANZER.
PLEASANTVILLE, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on brave and forthright
TV statement Sunday. Heartily support your
resolution and have informed my Senators.
CONSTANCE HOGARTH.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your magnificent per-
formance on CBS. We fully support your
position on Vietnam war.
Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM ROTH.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREG.,
January, 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Bravo. Your words on Sunday telecast
were apathetically expressed and urgently
Mr. and Mrs. DELBERT E. BLAKE.
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Highly commend and support your con-
tinued position on Vietnam. Hope you can
convince your colleagues to work with you
for peace efforts and cessation of bombing.
EVELYN ELDRIDGE.
CHICAGO, ILL.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your efforts to debate Vietnam
policy in Congress, protest bombing North
STROUDSBURG, PA.,
January 31,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Full approval and deep appreciation for
your stand Sunday. Letter follows with pol-
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Resumption of Vietnam bombing Contrary
to human ethics seed UN peace.
JEROME B. and JOAN AFALLERT.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We support your courageous efforts to
bring peace to Vietnam.
STUART and JANET DOWTY.
EAST LANSING, MICH., SAN BERNARDINO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966. January 31, 1966.
STOCKTON, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We are behind you 100 percent. We would
like your views discussed more.
PHOEBE AND JOE WALSH.
FULLERTON, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We salute you on your position in Viet-
nam.
JAMES E. GROOM.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We pray for your good health to keep up
your good work for real peace.
Dr, and Mrs. LEONARD SCHEINASAN.
UTICA, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Listened to CBS. Thought your views ex-
cellent. More Senators should share same.
If our so-called allies do not do something
we should pull all men, money, equipment
out of Europe and Asia and let them take the
burden of defending themselves.
Sincerely yours,
GEORGE ACEE.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.
DUNKIRK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
DEAR MR. SENATOR: The Government of the
United States has again outraged the tenu-
ous peace of the world. Best wishes for the
success of your effort to bring the Govern-
ment to reason. All those recognize the wis-
dom of restraint and judgment at this criti-
cal time. We congratulate you on your
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Expenditure, lives, money, Vietnam, In-
sane. Present U.S. bombing nullifies power
of Congress and foundation UN.
DULCIE THORSTENSON.
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
As a concerned American I urge you and
the committee on Foreign Relations to con-
tinue and to intensify your questioning of
administration policy in Vietnam. You are
the last resort of the American people.
EDWARD M. KEATING.
HANCOCK, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your TV presentation
January 30th. Keep up the good work on
insisting the war in South Vietnam be
brought before the United Nations.
GORDON J. JAASKEi.AINEN.
HEREFORD, TEX.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your courageous stand on the Vietnam
war merits the highest praise. Please accept
my thanks.
Rev. V. W. MARCONTELL.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Fully support your efforts. Full debate on
present illegal Vietnam policy.
GEORGE C. KISKADDON.
BOULDER, COLO.,'
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I commend your excellent Vietnam stand
and value your continued leadership toward
1565
DENVER, COLO.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Wish to commend you most heartily for
your courageous position and statements in
Senate and on CBS radio panel Sunday op-
posing administrations dangerous policies in
Vietnam believe increasing number of Amer-
icans support you even if not heard from
hope you can secure many other Senators to
support prompt study of U.S. position in
Vietnam.
EDWARD L. WHITTEMORE.
EL CERRITO, CALIF.,
January 31,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
My family and I thank you for frankness
instead of claptrap.
PATRICK DEVANEY.
EAST LANSING, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Continue your courageous struggle against
the war. You speak for millions of Ameri-
cans.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Heard you yesterday on CBS Forum.
Appreciate your work and support your posi-
tion wholeheartedly.
JACQUELINE LOWENGARD.
BOULDER, COLO.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We are deeply concerned with the pursuit
of bombing diplomacy. We support your Im-
portant efforts to bring the Vietnam holo-
caust to an end.
DOROTHY and JULIUS LONDON.
SPOKANE, WASH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MoRSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
We commend you for your views as ex-
pressed on Eric Severeid's broadcast. Time
for open discussion in Congress before the
American people is long overdue. Today
there is doubt and dissension in our coun-
try regarding our foreign policy and com-
mitment in Vietnam. Let this policy be
carefully examined and also effect some disci-
pline and control over foreign aid given to
these allies shipping supplies to be used
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CONGRESSIONAL RECORD --SENATE February 1, 1966
against our fighting forces and endanger-
ing them.
Very sincerely,
KATHERINE SCHUSTER.
BERKELEY, CALIF..
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate.
Washington, D.C.:
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Agree now time to withdraw 1964 resolu-
tion. American people deserve debate. Keep
up your dissent.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your courageous action is uniting the
opposition to our militaristic administration.
'f'ell alt you can.
DOROTHY HILL.
PALO ALTO, CALIF..
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Buiilding,
Washington, D C..
I support your stand on Vietnam. Do
what you can.
I'AI.o ALTO, CALIF.,
January :31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I protest the resumption of bombing in
Vietnam. Stop the bombing now.
WILLIAM G. GARWOOD.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D r.:
Fully support, your position in Vietnam.
PATRICIA JUDSON.
PALO ALTO, CAI,IF.,
Senator WAYNE: MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I support your stand on Vietnam. Stop
the bombing. Recognize the Vietcong.
GEORGE PETERS.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
Urge continuation of your efforts to bring
Vietnam policy under congressional. exami-
nation. Your constituent.
TERENCE EMMONS.
OAKLAND, CALIF.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
,Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
The Eastbay Joint ILWU Legislativ(: Com-
mittee represent more than 5,000 ILWU
members and their families support your
position on Vietnam as expressed on tele-
vision Sunday. We urge you to continue
your efforts for full debate on this para-
mount issue so that an informed citizenry
may help put our Government on the right
road to a policy consistent with law ::nd the
aspirations of all Americans for a sound and
lasting peace.
WILLIAM BURKF,
Seer( Lary.
BROOKLYN, N.Y..
ienator WAYNE MORSE,
;ie.nate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Persist in your efforts to clip Johnson's
war wings. Withdrawal of all our forces is
the solution to the ungodly mess in south-
east Asia.
SUF. BROWDE.R.
EAST LANSING, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Please continue your efforts to store war.
Dissent means freedom.
I'}rTA C. ADRAIIAMS.
Los ANGELES, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
''Washington, D.C.:
DEAR SENATOR MORSE: Continue support of
opposition to war. Americans will yet see
the light. God bless you.
THEODORE HERSHRERG.
iAN JOSE, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building.
Washington, D.C.:
We who are denied the truth support you.
Mr. and Mrs. H. If. ZANIER.
81rRNSVILLE, MINN.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE.,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on your Vietnam stand.
Ws.i.s R LUND,
i:L DORADO, ARK.,
.la'nnari/ 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Thanking you for present stand taken in
yard to Vietnam conflict.
VICTOR DUMAS.
l sST LANSING, MICH.,
January 31, 1966.
:_ruilator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,,
Washington, D.(:.:
We absolutely stand behind you in your
'aeroic rationality. We cheer and support
,you.
Mr and Mrs. RONALD PHIPPS.
Bravo and thanks on your CBS Vict.nam
presentation yesterday, agree 100 percent.
Mrs. GRACE DOWPfiAN.
:3UFrALO, N.Y..
Jaituary 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Capitol,
Washington, D.C.:
Our hopes are still with you in your
struggle for a sane policy on Vietnam To-
(lay's tragic decision must be reversed.
I ''ins NIciiof.s.
Los ANGELES, CALIF..
Ja-'iuary 1, 7966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulation on your Stand (in Vieoiani.
Keep up the good Work.
JOSEPH MOORS.
CHELTENHAM, PA.,
January 1, 1966.
Senator WAYN7: MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.
SIR: Your appearance on Sunday's TV de-
be.te was absolutely thrilling. It is a rare
occasion that a Senator has the guts to can-
didly speak out, on TV about true facts on
Vietnam to the people and to the President
Who has been less than truthful to the Na-
tion. I agree with your enlightened position
100 percent. Please send a copy of the Gil-
braith report,
WILLIAM Toro.
RICHARD R. T.HOMr''soN.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
The American people want democracy by
debate; not by dictatorship. Keep calling
for Vietnam debate.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Please do not allow the President to end
debate on Vietnam.
JOHN and ANN MATIIIIAS.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY.
Senator WAYNE. MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
OAK PARK, ILL.,
February 1, 1966.
Millions of frustrated compassionate
Americans thank you for opposing Johnson's
war. Please keep up your fight to bring
truth and reason to our executives.
EUGENE FRANCES BARDOIIR.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
We applaud your stand on Vietnam and
support efforts to end his Illegal war.
BARRY LOEWER,
Department of Philosophy,
Stanford University.
MARJORIE LOEWER,
Department of Classics,
Stanford University.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Vietnam bombing immoral. We are trad-
ing lives for prestige and affluence. Please
make us heard.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senale Building,
Washington, D.C.:
No, don't bomb. Urge acceptance Vietcong
legitimate bargainers. Supervised free elec-
tions.
LARRY BASIL.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C..:
Hang on. Continue to be the sole voice
of reason in Congress. We admire your gilts
and only hope that you may somehow save
us from world war.
gRIC, MARSHA, AND BJORN KILO(?N.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Support your position. Deplore ret umed
bombing. Push for Senate debate to stop
war escalation.
Mr. and Mrs. PETER B. YouNNe,,
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February 1, 1966
Hon. WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE 1567
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
January 1,1966.
We fully support your request for a full
debate of the Vietnam Issue in Congress.
BERNARD YOUNG.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Appreciate your effort to have Senate re-
view foreign policy and restore war powers
to Congress.
ERICH and ELIZABETH LINDEMANN.
MILWAUKEE, WIS.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Grateful for your courageous stand. Rec-
ommend your continuing pressure for United
Nations action toward Vietnam settlement
and congressional debate.
Roberta Roberts Klotsche, Sandra
Brown, Atty. and Mrs. Jack Eisen-
drath, Mr. and Mrs. Don Olesen, Dr. and
Mrs. Arnold Kaufman, Mrs. Aimee
Brown, Evelyn Knapp, Mrs. Richard How-
elln, Bertha Rubin, Mrs. Marian Leidgen,
Dr. and Mrs. Morton R. Phillips.
NEW YORK, N.Y.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
We cheer your courageous stand in de-
nouncing escalation in Vietnam you make us
proud as Americans.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Vietnam is matter only for U.N. action.
Profoundly grateful for your leadership in
opening Congressional debate. Applaud your
protest against executive measures, support
your attempt to rescind 1964 Congress
resolution for intervention, there is no war
SAN FRANCISCO, CA LIP.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
SIR: It is obvious to me that President
Johnson wishes to ignore and squelch con-
gressional debate concerning the constitu-
tional legal, and moral question on the Viet-
nam war. The Security Counsel of A he
United Nations cannot and will not agree
on any solution. I wholeheartly support
your challenge of the administration policy
along with several of your colleagues. This
is the best way to help American boys in
Vietnam and prevent further useless slaugh-
ter more Important If the American people
were given the truth surrounding this issue
you would gain sufficient support to prevent
a disasterous spreading Asian war. You are
one of the few true American patriots left
and I know that your courageous states-
manship will continue. Would you please
copy your supporters in the Senate.
ROBERT DRAKE.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
I oppose escalation of the war in Vietnam.
Stop the bombing.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
Thanks for your courage in questioning
our administration on Vietnam. It is indeed
heartening to have a voice echoing the con-
cern of those of us who are deeply troubled
by American colonialism in southeast Asia.
J. M. KEATING.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Please continue the fight against President
Johnson's policy in Vietnam.
L. J. RATHER,
Professor of Pathology,
Stanford University.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Urge you do all possible to halt bombing
in North Vietnam Immediately.
HARLAN ROBINSON ABRAMS.
PALO ALTO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator W. MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on courageous efforts to
stop Vietnam war many students, faculty at
Stanford behind you.
MARCELLE DABBERACCI.
CHICO, CALIF.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
Congratulations on stand on Vietnam.
Keep fighting. We can't vote for you but
you have our moral support.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom RODGERS,
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.:
I look to Congress now to do whatever in
its power to stop the present administration
from leading us ever closer to a third world
war.
MATTIE WEST CROW.
PITTSBURGH, PA.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Commend your stand on the Vietnam crisis.
Please remain outspoken on behalf of peace
in Vietnam and throughout the world. The
real world leadership of the United States is
possible only by bringing peace to the world.
MARIAN and CHARLES LUPU.
INGLEWOOD, CALIF.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Tremendously impressed by your CBS
statements on Vietnam. Would like trans-
cript if possible or other information.
C. J. BOEDEKER.
CINCINNATI, OHIO,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
You are absolutely right in your assump-
tion the majority of American people are op-
posed to the Vietnam war. Please do not re-
lax your efforts to have the southeast Asia
resolution rescinded enlisting EHA difference
of Senators Gauauise, LONG, and Chairman
FULBRIGHT.
STATE COLLEGE, PA.,
February 1, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, D.C.
Senator MORSE: We support your continu-
ing opposition to the unnecessary and unjust
war in Vietnam. Yours is the kind of fight-
ing we believe in.
JUDY BUCK.
MAX MOLINARO.
DANIEL ESTERSOHN.
DAVID FERLEGER.
PENN STATE UNIVERSITY.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Yesterday's Senators' debate should be
printed for public distribution. Our local
publisher does not even know of the debate.
R. E. HAESLY.
Mr. MORSE. Mr. President, the fol-
lowing telegrams were received and an-
swered by me. I also ask unanimous
consent that they be printed in the REc-
one at this point.
There being no objection, the tele-
grams were ordered to be printed in the
RECORD, as follows:
ROWAYTON, CONN.,
January 31, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Senate Office Building,
Washington, D.C.:
Your files will indicate my support of
much of what you fought for over these
many years. Perhaps it is time you take a
back seat. America needs no disappointed
politicians to bite at her heels. President
Johnson deserves your support. Your ego
is proving your undoing.
MANUEL HERMIDA.
FEBRUARY 1, 1966.
Mr. MANUEL HERMIDA,
Rowayton, Conn.:
You will fail as did MacBeth in washing
the blood off your hands. Ordinarily I put
such wires as yours in the file reserved for
crackpot mail. However, you should know
better.
WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senator.
SARANAC LAKE, N.Y.,
January 30, 1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senate Building,
Washington, D.C.:
I disagree with everything you said on the
Vietnam TV program. I consider your policy
un-American and pro-Communist.
Dr. F. X. IPOLYI.
Dr. F. K. IPOLYI,
Saranac Lake, N.Y.:
Your wire makes you look as ridiculous as
you apparently are. Why don't you volun-
teer to substitute yourself for a drafted boy
in Vietnam and you do the dying for him?
WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senator.
EAST AMHERST, N.Y.
January 31,1966.
Senator WAYNE MORSE,
Washington, D.C.:
It is our considered opinion that we must
not back away in Vietnam. No person and
no country has ever avoided a conflict as
long as the second party insisted on fighting
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1568 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE
;md refused to di:,cuss peace. This is a sad
fact of life and sadder fact of history. We
(ncerely believe that a failure of responsible
leaders to support Life President in Vietnam
will seriously hurt the chances of our four
children to inherit. a peaceful world and will
ultimately force is to an even greater war.
Tvf % and Mrs. ERNEST RUDA.
JANUARY 31, 1956.
ivir. and Mrs. ERNEST IIUOA,
halt Amherst, N. 1'..,
Your four children will have no world to
inherit if you support our illegal war in
~si:i wlliell will end up in world war III, if
t.'lw 1'resident isn i, stopped.
WAYNE MOR.mE,
77.15. Senator.
Ut1LFYOR'r, Msss.,
January 2d, 1856.
li,rn. WAYNE IVform.,
U Senator,
Washington, D.C.:
Catastrophe acid appeasement your battle
cry during period of ultimate survival Amer-
ioan democracy.
di.:oRGI: LANDWEHR,
New Orleans, La.
JANUARY at, 1966.
Mr. GEoRuE LANDWt:HR,
New Orleans, La.:
Your wire coli:,tituus pure nonsense.
WAYNE MORSE,
U.S. Senator.
DEDICATED SERVICE RENDERED IN
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
1)URING RECENT SNOWSTORM
Mr. MORS14. Mr. President, I want
to take a minute or two to call the atten-
tion of the Senate to the public services
being rendered in the District of Colum-
bia by a large number of dedicated pub-
lic servants who have worked on behalf
of the District of Columbia far beyond
the call of duty.
I speak for a moment as chairman of
a subcommittee of the Committee on the
District of Columbia which works closely
with the District Commissioners, the Po-
lice Department, the Fire Department,
and various welfare agencies.
I hope we are cognizant of the fact
that since the disastrous storm struck,
our District Commissioners have been at
their desks through long hours of the day
and into the night. Also, our Police De-
partment has performed great dedicated
service for all of us as has our wonderful
Fire Department.
.f have taken some time, Mr. President,
to go to the various parts of the city to
observe our Police Department and Fire
Department at work.
I wish to say to our policemen and fire-
men this morning that we are greatly
indebted to them. All of the people of
the District of Columbia are indebted to
them. The people of the District of Co-
lumbia are also indebted to the service
department in charge of cleaning the
streets.
What is being done is a herculean ef-
fort to remove this snow. A word of
commendation and. congratulation is
certainly due for the devoted public serv-?
ice that is being extended to us up and
down the line by District employees.
'T'he people whom we have hired by the
hour to work in our behalf under very
inclement weather conditions also de-
serve our thanks.
I talked with one of the Commission-
ers yesterday. He said that some of these
men have gone to work at 6 a.m. and
have worked until 9 o'clock and 10
o'clock at night with no time off for
meals except for the coffee and s:!iid-
wiches that have been handed to iooem
on the job.
'I.'.oo often in our busy lives in the ore-
cincts of the Senate we re not fallly
aware of the services beint render, ,,5 to
us by officials of the District: of Columbia
wed its employees. I am proud to ,,.and
on the flDor of the Senate today as a
member if the District of Columbia (Com-
nlittee and express my thanks and pay
this deserved tribute to not only the
Commissioners, the Police Department,
the Fire Department, the welfare :.-en-
cies, and the service department tl-oi,t is
working on the snow removal, but to each
and every one of those who have worked
so hard in behalf of all of us to mer this
emergency.
The P.RE'3iDING OFFICER (Mr.
NELSON in the chair). Is there further
morning business?
RIGHT-TO-WORK LAWS,
:i0-CALLED
Mr. VOUNU of Ohio. Mr. 'resi-
d.ent, I fully agree with the statement
of the distinguished senior Senator from
Oregon [Mr. MoesF], who urged in this
Chamber that the majority leader : hould
propose maintaining the Senate 4.-1 ses-
ion around the clock, 24 hours a day,
until such time as this prolonged dis-
cussion in depth or filibuster againss. tak-
ing up and considering repeal of erection
14(b) of the Taft-Hartley law e,n the
merits of the proposal is voted on. It
.happens that according to the calendar I
am one of the older U.S. Senators, but
I am certain that no one need fi:ar my
health will be impaired were we to have
these prolonged sessions in order to dis-
pose of legislative business that v,