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  1. ROBINSON, JOSEPH. Joseph Taylor ("Joe T") Robinson (1872–1937) was the Democratic leader of the Senate from 1922 to 1937 (the majority leader from 1933 to 1937) and in 1928 was the Democratic candidate for vice president on the unsuccessful ticket headed by Al Smith. Born August 26, 1872, in rural Lonoke County, Arkansas, Robinson, the ninth ...

  2. Joseph Taylor Robinson ( 26. elokuuta 1872 – 14. heinäkuuta 1937) oli yhdysvaltalainen demokraattisen puolueen poliitikko. Robinson syntyi Lonokessa, Arkansas 'ssa. Hän istui vuodesta 1913 Yhdysvaltain senaatissa ja oli vuonna 1928 ehdolla Yhdysvaltain varapresidentiksi. Yhdysvaltain edustajainhuoneeseen hän oli päässyt jo vuonna 1903.

  3. JOSEPH TAYLOR ROBINSON IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS* By Gilbert Richard Grant THE ARKANSAS HISTORICAL QUARTERLY Vol. IX Autumn, 1950 No. 3 The general purpose of the following pages is to delineate the work of Joseph Taylor Robinson in the foreign affairs of this nation. In order to gain an insight into the factors that determine his politics and ...

  4. Joseph Taylor Robinson (26. august 1872–14. juli 1937) var ein amerikansk politikar for Det demokratiske partiet. Han representerte Arkansas i Representanthuset og Senatet gjennom fleire tiår først på 1900-talet, og var òg guvernør i Arkansas frå januar til mars 1913.

  5. Joseph Taylor Robinson and the Robinson-Patman Act By CECIL EDWARD WELLER, JR.* Post Office Box 29104, Texas Christian University Fort Worth, Texas 76129 ^mall independent "mom and pop" stores were rapidly vanishing from the marketplace during the 1920s - and for good reason. With reduced

  6. Robinson Center (Little Rock) Coordinates: 34°44′57″N 92°16′28″W. Joseph Taylor Robinson Memorial Auditorium. U.S. National Register of Historic Places. Robinson Center Music Hall, located at the intersection of Markham and Broadway Streets in downtown Little Rock. Location in Arkansas. Location in United States.

  7. Joseph Taylor Robinson, 1872–1937, U.S. legislator, b. Lonoke co., Ark. He was admitted (1895) to the bar and served (1903–13) in the U.S. House of Representatives.In 1913 he became governor of Arkansas but resigned from this post within the year on being elected to the U.S. Senate.