FACTOID # 10: Indians go out to the movies 3 billion times a year - much more than any other nation.
 
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Encyclopedia > 60th United States Congress

Senators

Nelson Wilmarth Aldrich (November 6, 1841 - April 16, 1915) was an American politician. ... William Boyd Allison (March 2, 1829 - August 4, 1908) was an American lawyer and politician. ... John Hollis Bankhead (September 13, 1842–March 1, 1920) was a U.S. senator from the state of Alabama. ... Albert Jeremiah Beveridge ( October 6, 1862 – April 27, 1927 ) was an historian and United States Senator from Indiana. ... William Edgar Borah (NSHC statue) William Edgar Borah (June 29, 1865 – January 19, 1940) was an American politician. ... Statue of James Paul Clarke, marble by Pompeo Coppini. ... Winthrop Murray Crane (1853 - 1920) was a U.S. political figure. ... Charles Allen Culberson (June 10, 1855–March 19, 1925) was a U.S. political figure. ... Shelby Moore Cullom (1829 - 1914) was a U.S. political figure. ... Categories: Stub | 1850 births | 1926 deaths | Governors of Iowa | United States Senators ... Categories: Stub ... Stephen Benton Elkins (September 26, 1841 - January 4, 1911) was an American industrialist and political figure. ... Frank Putnam Flint (July 15, 1862–February 11, 1929) was a politician and banker. ... William Pierce Frye William Pierce Frye (September 2, 1830—August 8, 1911) was an American politician from the U.S. state of Maine. ... Philander C. Knox Philander Chase Knox (May 6, 1853–October 12, 1921) was an American lawyer and politician who served as Attorney General and U.S. Senator and was Secretary of State from 1909-1913. ... Henry Cabot Lodge (May 12, 1850 – November 9, 1924), was a Republican statesman and noted historian. ... John Tyler Morgan (June 20, 1824–June 11, 1907) was a U.S. senator from the state of Alabama. ... Lee Slater Overman Lee Slater Overman ( 3 January 1854 - 12 December 1930) was a Democratic U.S. senator from the state of North Carolina between 1903 and 1930. ... Edmund Winston Pettus (July 6, 1821–July 27, 1907), for whom the civil rights landmark Edmund Pettus Bridge was named, was born in Limestone County, Alabama. ... John Walter Smith (b. ... William Alden Smith (May 12, 1859 – October 11, 1932) was a U.S. Representative and U.S. Senator from the state of Michigan. ... Robert Love Taylor (July 31, 1850–March 31, 1912) was a U.S. Representative from Tennessee from 1879 to 1881, Governor of Tennessee from 1887 to 1891 and from 1897 to 1899, and subsequently a United States Senator from that state from 1907 until his death. ... Henry Moore Teller (1830–1914) was a U.S. political figure. ... Benjamin Ryan Tillman (August 11, 1847 _ July 3, 1918) was an American politician who served as governor of South Carolina from 1890 to 1894 and as a United States Senator from 1895 until his death. ... William Pinkney Whyte William Pinkney Whyte (August 8, 1824 – March 17, 1908), a member of the United States Democratic Party, was a politician who served the State of Maryland as a State Delegate, the State Comptroller, a United States Senator, the State Governor, the Mayor of Baltimore, Maryland, and the...

Representtatives

  • Ernest Francis Acheson (R-PA)
  • John Alfred Adair (D-IN)
  • William Charles Adamson (D-GA)
  • Wyatt Charles Aiken (D-SC)
  • De Alva Alexander (R-NY)
  • Joshua Willis Alexander (D-MO)
  • Amos Lawrence Allen (R-ME)
  • Butler Lawrence Ames (R-MA)
  • John Emory Andrus (R-NY)
  • Timothy Thomas Ansberry (D-OH)
  • Daniel Read Anthony (R-KS)
  • William Albert Ashbrook (D-OH)
  • Henry Towne Bannon (R-OH)
  • Andrew Jackson Barchfeld (R-PA)
  • Charles Frederick Barclay (R-PA)
  • Henry A. Barnhart (D-IN)
  • Richard A. Bartholdt (R-MO)
  • Charles Lafayette Bartlett (D-GA)
  • George Arthur Bartlett (D-NV)
  • Arthur Laban Bates (R-PA)
  • Joseph Grant Beale (R-PA)
  • James Andrew Beall (D-TX)
  • James Adam Bede (R-MN)
  • Thomas Montgomery Bell (D-GA)
  • William Stiles Bennet (R-NY)
  • Joseph Bentley Bennett (R-KY)
  • Henry Harrison Bingham (R-PA)
  • Benjamin Pixley Birdsall (R-IA)
  • Robert William Bonynge (R-CO)
  • Charles Ferris Booher (D-MO)
  • Henry Sherman Boutell (R-IL)
  • Eaton Jackson Bowers (D-MS)
  • John Frank Boyd (R-NE)
  • Thomas Wilson Bradley (R-NY)
  • William Gordon Brantley (D-GA)
  • Abraham Lincoln Brick (R-IN)
  • Joseph Davis Brodhead (PA)
  • Robert Foligny Broussard (D-LA)
  • Walter Preston Brownlow (R-TN)
  • Charles Napoleon Brumm (R-PA)
  • Stephen Napoleon Brundidge (D-AR)
  • George Farmer Burgess (D-TX)
  • James Francis Burke (R-PA)
  • Edwin Chick Burleigh (R-ME)
  • Albert Sidney Burleson (D-TX)
  • John Lawson Burnett (D-AL)
  • Hiram Rodney Burton (R-DE)
  • Theodore Elijah Burton (R-OH)
  • Thomas Stalker Butler (R-PA)
  • Adam Monroe Byrd (D-MS)
  • William Musgrave Calder (R-NY)
  • William Alexander Calderhead (R-KS)
  • Ben Franklin Caldwell (D-IL)
  • Philip Pitt Campbell (R-KS)
  • Ezekiel Samuel Candler (D-MS)
  • Joseph Gurney Cannon (R-IL)
  • Adin Ballou Capron (R-RI)
  • Charles Creighton Carlin (D-VA)
  • Charles David Carter (D-OK)
  • William Joseph Cary (R-WI)
  • Henry Burd Cassel (R-PA)
  • Henry Stewart Caulfield (R-MO)
  • John Crawford Chaney (R-IN)
  • Pleasant Thomas Chapman (R-IL)
  • Frank Thomas Clark (D-FL)
  • James Beauchamp Clark (D-MO)
  • Henry De Clayton (D-AL)
  • William Bourke Cockran (D-NY)
  • William Willets Cocks (R-NY)
  • Ralph Dayton Cole (R-OH)
  • James Perry Conner (R-IA)
  • George Washington Cook (R-CO)
  • Joel Washington Cook (R-PA)
  • Allen Foster Cooper (R-PA)
  • Henry Allen Cooper (R-WI)
  • Samuel Bronson Cooper (D-TX)
  • Harry Marcy Coudrey (R-MO)
  • Robert Gordon Cousins (R-IA)
  • William Elijah Cox (D-IN)
  • William Benjamin Craig (D-AL)
  • William Ben Cravens (D-AR)
  • William Thomas Crawford (D-NC)
  • Edgar Dean Crumpacker (R-IN)
  • Frank Dunklee Currier (R-NH)
  • Francis Wellington Cushman (R-WA)
  • John Wellington Dalzell (R-PA)
  • Archibald Bard Darragh (R-MI)
  • James Sanford Davenport (D-OK)
  • Robert Charles Davey (D-LA)
  • James Henry Davidson (R-WI)
  • Charles Russell Davis (R-MN)
  • Beman Gates Dawes (R-OH)
  • Albert Foster Dawson (R-IA)
  • David Albaugh De Armond (D-MO)
  • Edwin Albaugh Denby (R-MI)
  • Matthew Rombach Denver (D-OH)
  • Gerrit John Diekema (R-MI)
  • Lincoln John Dixon (D-IN)
  • Albert John Douglas (R-OH)
  • William Henry Draper (R-NY)
  • Michael Edward Driscoll (R-NY)
  • Charles Tappan Dunwell (R-NY)
  • Cyrus Tappan Durey (R-NY)
  • John Wilbur Dwight (R-NY)
  • Charles Gordon Edwards (D-GA)
  • Don Calvin Edwards (R-KY)
  • James Edwin Ellerbe (D-SC)
  • Edgar Clarence Ellis (R-MO)
  • William Russell Ellis (R-OR)
  • William Fellows Englebright (R-CA)
  • John Jacob Esch (R-WI)
  • Albert Jacob Estopinal (D-LA)
  • George Winthrop Fairchild (R-NY)
  • Jacob Sloat Fassett (NY)
  • George Kent Favrot (D-LA)
  • Scott Kent Ferris (D-OK)
  • David Edward Finley (D-SC)
  • John Joseph Fitzgerald (D-NY)
  • Henry De Flood (D-VA)
  • John Charles Floyd (D-AR)
  • Benjamin Kurtz Focht (R-PA)
  • Otto Godfrey Foelker (R-NY)
  • Joseph Warren Fordney (R-MI)
  • Charles Vincent Fornes (D-NY)
  • George Edmund Foss (R-IL)
  • David Johnson Foster (R-VT)
  • John Hopkins Foster (R-IN)
  • Martin David Foster (D-IL)
  • William Walker Foulkrod (R-PA)
  • Charles Newell Fowler (R-NJ)
  • Burton Lee French (R-ID)
  • Charles Eugene Fuller (R-IL)
  • Elmer Lincoln Fulton (D-OK)
  • John Wesley Gaines (D-TN)
  • Joseph Holt Gaines (R-WV)
  • Augustus Peabody Gardner (R-MA)
  • John James Gardner (R-NJ)
  • Washington James Gardner (R-MI)
  • John Nance Garner (D-TX)
  • Finis James Garrett (D-TN)
  • Clarence Chauncey Gilhams (R-IN)
  • John Chauncey Gill (D-MD)
  • Oscar William Gillespie (D-TX)
  • Frederick Huntington Gillett (R-MA)
  • Carter Huntington Glass (D-VA)
  • Hannibal Lafayette Godwin (D-NC)
  • Herman Philip Goebel (R-OH)
  • Henry Mayer Goldfogle (D-NY)
  • George Washington Gordon (D-TN)
  • Joseph Aloysius Goulden (D-NY)
  • Joseph Verdi Graff (R-IL)
  • William Harrison Graham (R-PA)
  • Daniel Larned Granger (D-RI)
  • William Stedman Greene (R-MA)
  • Alexander White Gregg (D-TX)
  • James Mathews Griggs (D-GA)
  • Asle Jorgenson Gronna (R-ND)
  • Frank Edward Guernsey (R-ME)
  • Richard Nathaniel Hackett (D-NC)
  • Thomas Nathaniel Hackney (D-MO)
  • Warren Armstrong Haggott (R-CO)
  • Nathan Wesley Hale (R-TN)
  • Philo Wesley Hall (R-SD)
  • James Alphonsus Hamill (D-NJ)
  • Daniel Webster Hamilton (D-IA)
  • Edward La Hamilton (R-MI)
  • Courtney Walker Hamlin (D-MO)
  • Winfield Scott Hammond (D-MN)
  • John Eugene Harding (R-OH)
  • Thomas William Hardwick (D-GA)
  • Rufus William Hardy (D-TX)
  • Francis Burton Harrison (D-NY)
  • Kittredge Burton Haskins (R-VT)
  • Gilbert Nelson Haugen (R-IA)
  • Willis Chatman Hawley (R-OR)
  • James Chatman Hay (D-VA)
  • Everis Anson Hayes (R-CA)
  • James Thomas Heflin (D-AL)
  • Harvey Thomas Helm (D-KY)
  • Edward Stevens Henry (R-CT)
  • Robert Lee Henry (D-TX)
  • William Peters Hepburn (R-IA)
  • Edwin Werter Higgins (R-CT)
  • Ebenezer J. Hill (R-CT)
  • Wilson Shedric Hill (D-MS)
  • Edmund Howard Hinshaw (R-NE)
  • Gilbert Monell Hitchcock (D-NE)
  • Richmond Pearson Hobson (D-AL)
  • Elias Selah Holliday (R-IN)
  • William Cannon Houston (D-TN)
  • William Marcellus Howard (D-GA)
  • Benjamin Franklin Howell (R-NJ)
  • Joseph Franklin Howell (R-UT)
  • Leonard Paul Howland (R-OH)
  • Elbert Hamilton Hubbard (R-IA)
  • William Pallister Hubbard (R-WV)
  • George Franklin Huff (R-PA)
  • James Anthony Hughes (R-WV)
  • William Anthony Hughes (D-NJ)
  • Cordell Anthony Hull (D-TN)
  • John Albert Hull (R-IA)
  • William Ewart Humphrey (R-WA)
  • Benjamin Grubb Humphreys (D-MS)
  • William Humphreys Jackson (R-MD)
  • Addison Davis James (R-KY)
  • Ollie Murray James (D-KY)
  • John James Jenkins (R-WI)
  • Ben James Johnson (D-KY)
  • Joseph Travis Johnson (D-SC)
  • Wesley Livsey Jones (R-WA)
  • William Atkinson Jones (D-VA)
  • Julius Atkinson Kahn (R-CA)
  • Joseph Warren Keifer (R-OH)
  • John Austin Keliher (D-MA)
  • Charles Augustus Kennedy (R-IA)
  • James Augustus Kennedy (R-OH)
  • William Preston Kimball (D-KY)
  • Moses Pierce Kinkaid (R-NE)
  • George Washington Kipp (D-PA)
  • Claude Washington Kitchin (D-NC)
  • William Walton Kitchin (D-NC)
  • Charles Luman Knapp (R-NY)
  • Philip Luman Knopf (R-IL)
  • Joseph Russell Knowland (R-CA)
  • Gustav Russell Küstermann (R-WI)
  • Daniel Franklin Lafean (R-PA)
  • James Robert Lamar (D-MO)
  • William Bailey Lamar (D-FL)
  • John Bailey Lamb (D-VA)
  • Charles Beary Landis (R-IN)
  • John Wesley Langley (R-KY)
  • Jay Ford Laning (R-OH)
  • Francis Rives Lassiter (D-VA)
  • Charles Blakeslee Law (R-NY)
  • George Pelton Lawrence (R-MA)
  • Eugene Walter Leake (D-NJ)
  • Gordon Walter Lee (D-GA)
  • John Thomas Lenahan (D-PA)
  • Asbury Francis Lever (D-SC)
  • Elijah Banks Lewis (D-GA)
  • George Leavens Lilley (R-CT)
  • Charles August Lindbergh (R-MN)
  • George Henry Lindsay (D-NY)
  • Charles Edgar Littlefield (R-ME)
  • Leonidas Felix Livingston (D-GA)
  • James Tilghman Lloyd (D-MO)
  • Nicholas Tilghman Longworth (R-OH)
  • William Tilghman Lorimer (R-IL)
  • George Alvin Loud (R-MI)
  • Henry Clay Loudenslager (R-NJ)
  • William Croad Lovering (R-MA)
  • Frank Orren Lowden (R-IL)
  • Robert Bruce Macon (D-AR)
  • Martin Barnaby Madden (R-IL)
  • Edmond Haggard Madison (R-KS)
  • George Roland Malby (R-NY)
  • James Robert Mann (R-IL)
  • Thomas Frank Marshall (R-ND)
  • Eben Wever Martin (R-SD)
  • Harry Lee Maynard (D-VA)
  • Samuel Walker Mccall (R-MA)
  • George Deardorff Mccreary (R-PA)
  • James Thomas Mcdermott (D-IL)
  • Charles Thomas Mcgavin (R-IL)
  • Bird Segle Mcguire (R-OK)
  • John Geiser Mchenry (D-PA)
  • Duncan E. Mckinlay (R-CA)
  • William Brown Mckinley (R-IL)
  • James Brown Mckinney (R-IL)
  • James Brown Mclachlan (R-CA)
  • Frank Alexander Mclain (D-MS)
  • James Campbell Mclaughlin (R-MI)
  • Samuel Campbell Mcmillan (R-NY)
  • Henry Gordon Mcmorran (R-MI)
  • Adolph Gordon Meyer (D-LA)
  • James Monroe Miller (R-KS)
  • Franklin Wheeler Mondell (R-WY)
  • John Austin Moon (D-TN)
  • Reuben Osborne Moon (R-PA)
  • John Matthew Moore (D-TX)
  • Joseph Hampton Moore (R-PA)
  • Elmer Addison Morse (R-WI)
  • Grant Earl Mouser (R-OH)
  • Sydney Emanuel Mudd (R-MD)
  • Victor Emanuel Murdock (R-KS)
  • James William Murphy (D-WI)
  • James Carson Needham (R-CA)
  • John Mandt Nelson (R-WI)
  • Thomas David Nicholls (Indepe D-PA)
  • George William Norris (R-NE)
  • Frank Mellen Nye (R-MN)
  • Joseph Francis O'connell (D-MA)
  • Jacob Van Olcott (R-NY)
  • Marlin Edgar Olmsted (R-PA)
  • Jesse Edgar Overstreet (R-IN)
  • Lemuel Phillips Padgett (D-TN)
  • Robert Newton Page (D-NC)
  • Richard Wayne Parker (R-NJ)
  • William Henry Parker (SD)
  • Herbert Henry Parsons (R-NY)
  • James O'hanlon Patterson (D-SC)
  • Sereno Elisha Payne (R-NY)
  • George Alexander Pearre (R-MD)
  • James Breck Perkins (R-NY)
  • Andrew James Peters (D-MA)
  • Ernest Mark Pollard (R-NE)
  • Peter Augustus Porter (Indep R-nNY)
  • Edward William Pou (D-NC)
  • Llewellyn William Powers (R-ME)
  • Le Gage Pratt (D-NJ)
  • Charles Nelson Pray (R-MT)
  • George Washington Prince (R-IL)
  • Arsène Paulin Pujo (D-LA)
  • Henry Thomas Rainey (D-IL)
  • Choice Boswell Randell (D-TX)
  • Joseph Eugene Ransdell (D-LA)
  • George Washington Rauch (D-IN)
  • William Augustus Reeder (R-KS)
  • Charles Chester Reid (D-AR)
  • John Edgar Reyburn (R-PA)
  • John Merriman Reynolds (R-PA)
  • Joseph Lafayette Rhinock (D-KY)
  • William Lafayette Richardson (D-AL)
  • Daniel Joseph Riordan (D-NY)
  • John Franklin Rixey (D-VA)
  • Ernest William Roberts (R-MA)
  • Joseph Taylor Robinson (D-AR)
  • William August Rodenberg (R-IL)
  • John Hoover Rothermel (D-PA)
  • William Waller Rucker (D-MO)
  • Gordon James Russell (D-TX)
  • Joseph James Russell (D-MO)
  • William Henry Ryan (D-NY)
  • Adolph Joachim Sabath (D-IL)
  • Edward Watts Saunders (D-VA)
  • Charles Frederick Scott (R-KS)
  • Dorsey William Shackleford (D-MO)
  • Morris William Sheppard (D-TX)
  • Joseph Swagar Sherley (D-KY)
  • James Schoolcraft Sherman (R-NY)
  • Isaac R. Sherwood (D-OH)
  • Thetus Willrette Sims (D-TN)
  • James Luther Slayden (D-TX)
  • Campbell Luther Slemp (R-VA)
  • Campbell Bascom Slemp (R-VA)
  • John Humphrey Small (D-NC)
  • George Washington Smith (R-IL)
  • Madison Roswell Smith (D-MO)
  • Samuel William Smith (R-MI)
  • Sylvester Clark Smith (R-CA)
  • Walter Inglewood Smith (R-IA)
  • William Robert Smith (D-TX)
  • Howard Malcolm Snapp (R-IL)
  • George Newell Southwick (R-NY)
  • Stephen Milancthon Sparkman (D-FL)
  • Nehemiah Day Sperry (R-CT)
  • Thomas Day Spight (D-MS)
  • William Henry Stafford (R-WI)
  • Augustus Owsley Stanley (D-KY)
  • Halvor Owsley Steenerson (R-MN)
  • John Hall Stephens (D-TX)
  • John Allen Sterling (R-IL)
  • Frederick Clement Stevens (R-MN)
  • George Cookman Sturgiss (R-WV)
  • Cyrus Adams Sulloway (R-NH)
  • William Adams Sulzer (D-NY)
  • John Philip Swasey (R-ME)
  • Joshua Frederick Talbott (D-MD)
  • James Albertus Tawney (R-MN)
  • Edward Livingston Taylor (R-OH)
  • George Washington Taylor (D-AL)
  • Napoleon Bonaparte Thistlewood (R-IL)
  • Charles Randolph Thomas (D-NC)
  • William Aubrey Thomas (R-OH)
  • Charles Quincy Tirrell (R-MA)
  • William Ellsworth Tou Velle (D-OH)
  • Charles Elroy Townsend (R-MI)
  • Oscar Wilder Underwood (D-AL)
  • Andrew John Volstead (R-MN)
  • Edward Butterfield Vreeland (R-NY)
  • George Ernest Waldo (R-NY)
  • Robert Minor Wallace (D-AR)
  • Irving Price Wanger (R-PA)
  • Charles Grenfill Washburn (R-MA)
  • John Thomas Watkins (D-LA)
  • James Eli Watson (R-IN)
  • Edwin Yates Webb (D-NC)
  • John Wingate Weeks (R-MA)
  • Capell Lane Weems (R-OH)
  • Charles Herman Weisse (D-WI)
  • Nelson Platt Wheeler (R-PA)
  • Ariosto Appling Wiley (D-AL)
  • Oliver Cicero Wiley (D-AL)
  • William Forte Willett (D-NY)
  • John Sharp Williams (D-MS)
  • William Bauchop Wilson (D-PA)
  • William Warfield Wilson (R-IL)
  • Harry Benjamin Wolf (D-MD)
  • Ira Wells Wood (R-NJ)
  • Harry Chapman Woodyard (R-WV)
  • Horace Olin Young (R-MI)
Joshua Willis Alexander Joshua Willis Alexander (January 22, 1852 February 27, 1936) was United States Secretary of Commerce from December 16, 1919 - March 4, 1921 in the administration of President Woodrow Wilson. ... Albert Sidney Burleson (1863-1937) was a United States Postmaster General and Congressman. ... U.S. Congresman Joseph Gurney Cannon, smoking a cigar, 1920. ... John Wilbur Dwight (1859 - 1928) was a U.S. political figure. ... John Nance Cactus Jack Garner ( November 22, 1868 – November 7, 1967) was a Representative from Texas and the thirty-second Vice President of the United States. ... Hannibal Lafayette Godwin (3 November 1873 - 9 June 1929) was a Democratic U.S. Congressman from North Carolina between 1907 and 1921. ... Winfield Scott Hammond (November 17, 1863 – December 30, 1915) was an American politician. ... Francis Burton Harrison (December 18, 1873–November 21, 1957) was an American political figure. ... James Thomas Heflin, (April 9, 1869–April 22, 1951), nicknamed Cotton Tom, was a colorful United States Senator from Alabama. ... Wesley Livsey Jones (October 9,1863 - November 19,1932) was an American politician. ... Categories: Substubs | 1866 births | 1924 deaths | Governors of North Carolina ... James Tilghman Lloyd (August 28, 1857 - April 3, 1944) was a U.S. political figure and a Representative from Missouri from 1897 to 1917. ... Frank Orren Lowden (1861 - 1943) was a U.S. political figure. ... George William Norris (July 11, 1861 - September 2, 1944) was a U.S. political figure. ... John Merriman Reynolds (March 5, 1848–September 14, 1933) was a U.S. Representative from the state of Pennsylvania. ... Joseph Taylor Robinson Joseph Taylor Robinson (August 26, 1872 - July 14, 1937) was a Democratic United States Senator, Senate Majority Leader, member of the United States House of Representatives, Governor of Arkansas, and U.S. Vice Presidential candidate. ... James Schoolcraft Sherman (October 24, 1855–October 30, 1912) was a Representative from New York and the 27th Vice President of the United States. ... Samuel William Smith (23 August 1852-13 June 1931), was an American politician. ... James Albertus Tawney (1855 - 1919) was a U.S. political figure. ... Charles Elroy Townsend (August 15, 1856–August 3, 1924) was a U.S. Representative and U.S. Senator from the state of Michigan. ... Andrew John Volstead (October 31, 1860 _ January 20, 1947) was a member of the United States House of Representatives from Minnesota from 1903 to 1923. ... James Eli Watson (November 2, 1864? – July 29, 1948) was a U.S. Representative and U.S. Senator from the state of Indiana. ... John Sharp Williams (July 30, 1854 - September 27, 1932) was a prominent American politician in the Democratic Party from the 1890s through the 1920s, and served as the Minority Leader of the United States House of Representatives from 1903 to 1908. ... William Bauchop Wilson (1862 - 1934) was a U.S. (Scottish-born) labor leader and political figure. ...

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We The People Features - Kosovo Lawsuit - Memorandum of Law (6453 words)
Congress’ power to declare war works in conjunction with the authority granted to the President under the Constitution to act as "Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several States, when called into the actual Service of the United States." (U.S. Constitution, Art.
In effect, Congress knew that the armed forces of the United States were engaged in hostilities against the sovereign nation of Yugoslavia, unconstitutionally, and they deliberately chose by their official actions to allow for the collapse of fundamental republican principles and with it the rule of law.
This case is directed at the long standing practice whereby the President of the United States, without the involvement of the people’s representatives in Congress, defines and punishes what he considers to be offenses by sovereign nations, by engaging the armed forces of the United States in military attacks and operations against that nation.
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