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  1. Borah of Idaho focuses on William Borah: an all-time giant of the Senate and one of the most enigmatic of American statesmen. He was the nonconformist par excellence: a Republican by inheritance, a Democrat ...

  2. William E. Borah, the chief prosecutor in the Haywood trial, was born at the close of the Civil War, the son of a stern, puritanical Illinois farmer. In college at the University of Kansas, Borah befriended William Allen White, later to become the famed editor of the Emporia Gazette, who described his college buddy as a "hardworking, substantial, serious student who smiled easily but rarely ...

  3. Borah was first climbed in 1912 by T. M. Bannon, a USGS surveyor. In 1934 it was named for state senator William Borah aka "The Lion of Idaho" who ran in the presidential election of 1936. On October 28, 1983 a massive earthquake caused the summit to rise 7 feet.

  4. William Borah est l'un des 12 républicains qui se sont joints aux démocrates pour s'opposer au projet de loi, qui a été adopté par le Sénat à 44 contre 42. William est candidat aux élections de 1930 et, malgré un effort de campagne minime, il obtient plus de 70 % des voix dans une mauvaise année pour les républicains.

  5. This is a letter from Senator William E. Borah of Idaho, who was part of the progressive movement, to W.E.B. Du Bois, a scholar, civil rights leader, and one of the founders of the NAACP. Senator Borah expresses his disapproval of the Fifteenth Amendment, yet believes it should be carried out in good faith. He maintains to Du Bois that the ...

  6. William E. Borah, now approaching 70, his shaggy brown mane long since tinged with gray, will turn over the chairmanship of the Foreign Rela-tions Committee .to some successor-presumably Claude A. Swanson of Virginia. Borah is now in his fifth term, for he has been in the Senate ever since the muckraking days of 1907, when he arrived with all the

  7. 2 de nov. de 2023 · Mount Borah was named after William Borah, a U.S. Senator from Idaho who was known as the “Lion of Idaho.” In the early 20th century, several attempts were made to climb Mount Borah, but it wasn’t until the 1950s that it was successfully summited.