Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Contributor > Busby, Horace W. (remove)

6 results

  • this history [of] chairing this poverty oversight thing. He's traditionally a Democrat although I don't know when he last voted Democratic. Known all over everywhere. I've known several men like this, who can always have a part in anything. They find a way
  • it as a union-busting bill. All the nomenclature and cliches of labor's history were dumped on that bill, and Johnson did not agree with them. What did disturb him to an extent was voting to override a Democratic president's veto. That was very uncharacteristic
  • . In the second primary, first of all, Congress. . . . You see, at the 1948 Democratic National Committee [Convention] Truman in his aggressive, feisty acceptance speech said that he was going to [be] tarring and feathering the Republican Congress
  • the to meet a deadline request-­ i.'ilstraction. number of photo requests. (Approx. 4. For the President to personally see and approve or disapprove each one of these requests before any action can be taken on it 1would seem to take a disproportionate
  • to find way• and mean• of •haring with the local official ■ in Aaia the knowled1e that America baa 1ained from facing aimilar problem•. Certain type• of machinery already exiat, auch aa the "ai ater citie•" which are ••t up throup the People to People
  • ashore to protect and escort American citizens to safety. This action, he explained, was being taken on the basis of unanimous decisions of our country team in the Dominican, the recommendation of the Ambassador, and on the recommendation of the Secretary