Word: hartleys
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...decision stunned Government attorneys and operators. The miners had worked out a way to beat the Taft-Hartley Act injunction, which was designed to handle labor disputes in a national crisis. While Welly Hopkins received the congratulations of friends, President Truman took the only course that was still left open to him. Shaking his finger with mild indignation at the union and the operators, he asked Congress for authority to seize the mines. The power he asked for could put the mines under Government ownership until July 1, 1951. With such a chilling prospect before the operators, Lewis knew that...
...Chill in Court. "My Lord," began the Prosecutor, Attorney General Sir Hartley Shawcross, his grey wig clamped firmly forward over his forehead, "this is a case of the utmost gravity . . . The prisoner is a Communist, and that is at once the explanation and indeed the tragedy of this case . . ." Shawcross went over the story that Fuchs had told in his confession -the course of a brilliant, morally blind man from confusion to total, irretrievable corruption (TIME...
...Government, which had waited so long before acting-until Harry Truman could bring himself to invoke the Taft-Hartley Act-moved laboriously along the legal front. This week, in the ultimate stage of the crisis, the United Mine Workers' bow-tied, bass-voiced Attorney Welly Hopkins appeared before Federal Judge Richmond Keech. In obedience to Judge Keech's Taft-Hartley order, the union had twice instructed its 370,000 idle miners to go back to work. They had disregarded the instructions. But the Government maintained that the union was still responsible for their actions. The judge had ordered...
Federal Judge Richmond Keech, who had ordered Lewis to send his men back to work, ordered the U.M.W. into court later this week. The union would have to show why it should not be held in contempt of the Taft-Hartley injunction that its men were defying. With his two instructions on the record, Lewis himself had an obvious defense. In any case, that argument might drag out. Meanwhile, what about the coal? What was the country's defense against a strike that brought about economic paralysis? Harry Truman had declared that he had no right to seize...
since Lewis orders have not been heeded, an eighty-day national emergency injunction has been requested by Presdent Truman under the provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act. The fact-finding board was the first step taken preliminary to requesting the injunction...