Word: hartleys
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School faculty members on occasion venture out of their Quonset hut offices to participate in fact-finding boards and investigating committees in specific labor controversies. One faculty member helped to advise a Congressional committee studying possible revisions in the Taft-Hartley Law. Dean Catherwood himself has served on groups investigating the New York waterfront situation and the recent dispute between the railroads and their non-operating employees...
...President praised the A.F.L.'s "absolute opposition to Communism," promised to push his Taft-Hartley Act amendments and noted that they were killed this year "by a solid Democratic vote in the Senate." The delegates cheered the 18-minute speech, gave Ike a standing ovation at the end. He was the third President to come personally before the A.F.L. in its 73 years (the other two: Wilson in 1917, Hoover in 1930), and afterward even Meany noted "a lot of nice things" about the Eisenhower Administration. Obviously, the A.F.L.'s condemnation was neither unanimous nor strongly felt...
...Action and the C.I.O. By last week Republican State Chairman Samuel L. Bodine considered the attack serious enough to issue a point-by-point reply. Selvage's material, said Bodine, was a collection of "false statements, distortions and misrepresentations." Example: Selvage said Case "voted to kill the Taft-Hartley Act." Bodine pointed out that, in fact, Case voted for the Taft-Hartley Act, against recommittal, and for its passage over Harry Truman's veto...
...announced aim of the anti-Case forces is to drive him out of the race. A suggested replacement: former U.S. Representative Fred Hartley Jr. (of Taft-Hartley). But even the leaders of the movement know that they cannot force Case out. Their long-range aim: to make Case look weak so that they can seize control of the party if he loses...
...Administration suffered critical losses on the legislative front. It had to take only a one-year extension of the Reciprocal Trade Act, and it lost nearly all of the related measures to improve and expand foreign trade. It was unable to meet its pledge to revise the Taft-Hartley law. It was unable to honor its platform promise to give statehood to Hawaii. But it had more victories than it had defeats, and is pledged to return to do battle on all these issues when the new Congress convenes in January...