Word: hartley
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Hurry & Anxiety. Four hours after the strike began, the White House asked Mitchell to round up a fact-finding board, paving the way for a Taft-Hartley injunction. Big Jim Mitchell, recognized as one of the country's top labor-relations men (for New York's Macy's and Bloomingdale's) before he went to Washington, lined up the board. But he did more: he called C.I.O. General Counsel Art Goldberg to talk settlement...
...major legislative items proposed by the Administration, two-the St. Lawrence Seaway and the tax revisions-have passed as clear-cut victories for Ike. Two other bills-Hawaiian statehood and the revisions of the Taft-Hartley law-have been blocked by Democratic action, will probably die with the current Congress. Foreign aid and the broadening of social security have passed the House in good form, with Senate approval very likely...
...Taft-Hartley...
Died. Robert N. (for Newton) Denham, 68, onetime (1947-50) general counsel of the NLRB, whose ouster in 1950 climaxed a running three-year battle between Republican Denham and President Truman over the interpretation and jurisdiction of the Taft-Hartley Act; of a heart attack; in St. Louis...
...McFarland of Arizona lobbies for Western Union and RCA, and Missouri's Albert Reeves looks after the interests of the Dominican Republic. Former Senator Burton K. Wheeler, a brilliant lawyer, represents Robert R. Young and a group of railroads. Other lobbyists are James P. Kem of Missouri, Fred Hartley Jr. of the Taft-Hartley Act, Scott Lucas of Illinois. Gerald P. Nye is now the president of a records-management and microfilm company, hasn't been in North Dakota in years. Joe Ball has left Minnesota for greener pastures in Manhattan, where he is an official...