If Senate doings were accompanied by background music, a fitting theme for last week's most notable and ignoble performance would have been the tune of the old song that runs: Oh, the noble Duke of York, He had ten thousand men, He marched them up to the top of the hill, And he marched them down again.
Up the Hill. One deceptively quiet afternoon, the Senate was considering that familiar bale of hay, the foreign aid authorization bill. The speechmakers droned away in a nearly deserted chamber. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield was off in his own office, conferring with a passel of Democratic Senators about the Administration's tax-revision bill. The only firecracker expected to make any noise in connection with the foreign aid bill was Wisconsin's Democrat William Proxmire's amendment to bar aid (but not shipments of surplus food) to Yugoslavia for one year. Even Proxmire's staffers admitted that they did not expect the amendment to pass.
All of a sudden, Ohio's scratchy, unpredictable Democratic Senator Frank Lausche reared up and offered an amendment to the Proxmire amendment.
Lausche's proposal: Ban all kinds of U.S. aid, including surplus food, to "any country known to be dominated by Communism or Marxism." That would include Poland (which was to have got $60 million worth of surplus food) as well as Yugoslavia (which was to have got $80 million in foodstuffs, plus other aid).
After 20 minutes of lackluster debate, the clerk began calling the roll for a vote on the Lausche amendment. The Senate's Democratic leadership was caught flat-footednot for the first time this year.
When word of what was going on reached Mansfield's office, the meeting abruptly broke up, and Democrats scurried toward the Senate floor. Just after the clerk finished calling the roll, some two dozen Democratic Senators surged into the chamber, began gesturing to get their votes recorded. Amid the confusion, many Senators got only a sketchy notion of what was being voted on, and since the amendment seemed to have carried anyway, several of them decided to play safe and vote against Communism. Final tally: 57 for the amendment. 24 against.
Down Again. In the State Department, it is an article of faith that aid to Yugoslavia and Poland helps the West by lessening those countries' dependence on Russiaa belief that has survived Tito's numberless demonstrations of hostility toward the U.S. So the Administration, predictably, put up a brisk fight against the Lausche amendment. President Kennedy himself telephoned Majority Leader Mansfield and Minority Leader Everett Mc-Kinley Dirksen. White House staffers and State Department officials, including Secretary of State Dean Rusk, called other Senators to ask for help.
