Word: hillmans
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With might & main, the House committee investigating campaign expenditures pried into Sidney Hillman's P.A.C. last week, searching for some legal misstep which would give the committee a chance to crack down hard. But after diligent search through the woodpile, all they found was Sidney Hillman. And in him, they discovered, they had caught a Tartar. His political footwork made most of them look like stumblebums...
Caparisoned in a neat, double-breasted suit and alert amiability, Sidney Hillman acted as if he were just sitting down with the investigators to talk things over. It was more in sorrow than in anger that he reminded the Congressmen that his P.A.C. had already been officially investigated three times (twice by the FBI, once by a Senate campaign expenditures committee). He deeply resented the Communist label: "You're trying to prejudice the public against us. You're hitting below the belt!" But he welcomed this opportunity to help scotch the "fantastic stories" about P.A.C.'s huge...
...role in this matter has been uncertain and vacillating. This latest dissension, moreover, raises once more much wider questions about the President's administrative policies. It is, after all, merely the latest of a long series of such disagreements-between General Short and Admiral Kimmel, Mr. Hillman and Mr. Knudsen, Mr. Ickes and Mr. Henderson, Mr. Eberstadt and Mr. Wilson, Mr. Patterson and Mr. Jeffers, Mr. Jeffers and Elmer Davis, Mr. Byrnes and the War Labor Board, Mr. Ickes and the War Labor Board, Chester Davis and Mr. Vinson, and, most notorious of all, between Vice President Wallace...
American Labor Party, here we are, Browder, Hillman, and F.D.R.; We've come to give you the government's keys, And I'm their spokesman, Harold Ickes...
Sirs: I expect to see in your "Letters" column much praise but far more criticism of your feature article on Sidney Hillman and the P.A.C. of C.I.O. [TIME, July 24]. Put me down as one who says it is a fair, unbiased article. I find it refreshing to read something impartial about this movement. Here on the West Coast practically all the large newspapers are so violently anti-Administration and anti-labor that they grow hysterical when writing about the P.A.C. . . . Those who oppose the candidates and principles of the P.A.C. have for many years played and are now playing...