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  • and useful citizen of Texas to be his right­ hand man in the office of administrative assistant to the Vice President of the United States; and WHEREAS , Without fanfare or publicity, the Vice President called Harold H. Young of Dallas to Washington during
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Young, Harold [1941]"
  • Young, Harold H.
  • Folder, "Young, Harold [1941] [2 of 2]," Papers of Charles Marsh, Box 16
  • that Wilson flashed now and then across this country in an earlier year. He has the wisdom of Linooln at Gettysburg, the wisdom of Washington in his farewell address. I am proud to have been called by him "a friend." This man who leads you says
  • Commillt1 ELLSWORTH BUNKER Vfre Chairmen Gardacr Abbott Rt. R..,. H. P. AlmoD Abbott Louis Adamic Chauaccy A. Adams Julius Ochs Adler Herbert Agar Chris J. A.itrafiotis Allen D. Albert Mrs. Winthrop W . Aldrich Harold Lambert Allen ay Allen oho E.. Allw
  • In the Lafayet.te Post home las t night. They "·ere Harold Jones. 8.S Mor­ ga ntown street; Dante Oras.so. 80 Park avenue; and Martin Mehall. Brownfield. Alternates chosen were WilJiam Winning. 200 Hogsett .st.rcet: Robert Volpe. 44 Maple s lrcel; and Rob­ ert Si
  • . Look up 0 1 Daniel radio--a.nd Mann-and Dies--for the purpose of getting in front of or after them. Waco speeoh-- Agrioulture eot. Dallas advertisaments of Belden poll. Ads ahead of Harold on Sunday. · Rayburn letter to 20,000 voters of district. 8
  • of Versailles. But it is worth while to note that the Treaty of Versailles was a distinct improvement over the Treaty of' Vienna, and that the light that failed in the Wilson concept of a World Court, and in the failure of' the League of Nations
  • Follette , by a Theodore Roosevelt, by a Wilson, this is a sad thing to write. Democracy through courageous evolution is the hope of human justice and the dignity of free associa­ tion and progress for all of us. The leamer may be curcifiedwho tries
  • tramnork a.hell look l1la the one ,o be, bat beoauae all average mn mat VJ 1ll tii. apirit ot all, if '\h 'Dl• 4o 1a to be the peaoe. nt should rea'l:ate th• oa•• of an an4 goTernant. .TettU'8011, Li.D.oola, and i,re..nt are eouro••• Wilson tzioa ihe
  • --& report to the American toul fru the Commander-in-Chiet. }q mind 11 on th•
  • : The majority party since Roosevelt'sNew Deal (1932) . Considered the U.S. "liberal" party (Jefferson, Wilson, F.D.R., Truman),jt actually takes in Southern rightist " Dixiecrats," Northern leftist labor, many in­ dependents, tends to seek public welfare by law
  • initiated it, the re­ sponsibility for rejecting the finished product is thus shifted from the wreckers to the wrecked. In 1920 · the party opposition wanted the satisfaction of seeing President Wilson kill his own creature. If a treaty is so altered
  • peoples of the world insisting that .thoro be a now spiritual attitude on tho ~art of all nations a:1d all peoples . The failure of tr..e House of Rcprcscntntivos to ap:;;,ro~,o tho Housing progro.m rcconmendcd by Housing Ad...;Jinistrator Wilson Uyatt