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Page 9 text:
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, W Q X tl. Z ,.4 Q 9 x M. si, . fl 1--W Veany? fl 1 tt 'F- '. 3 wth wt l A ' : ' .I Wi fs- 4 ai . Q-ri t 1 'le . , 'U' lr A l . H-s . ati D E' s t 5 l 'X 'l'-, 'T Ti ? ,, i gk it . , 3. 1 -. fa. A N 1 4: V all . X l L 'T ' , ' X' 3 ' it l if fs , L in r I ti 4, - c 'X ' 1' F Q '-,Q V ' ' i Narita- y Q ttfsi tra., 'Transportation was setting the pattern lor the Ameritan wav ot hte The countrv laetame a mobile society with electrit trollevs, automo- liiles, farm machinery, and lucvtles, all the rage. Along with the atcessihilitv ot travel name a new era of nationalism A lNorld tVar talled upon the nation sa young rnen to unite and tight After the war in Europe, the nation pulled itself together and industrv flourished once again. A carefree America tiurf ied war memories in the new moving pittures, telephones, light hulhs, electric generators, stoclc marlcet titlcer tape machines, phono- graphs and a wealth of inventions from the ter- tile minds ot its young inventors Baseball be- came the national sport and prohibition was law. Black Thursday, October 24, 1020, saw the Amerie an stotlc market crash to the lowest level in history. Panit set in as the unemployment level sleyrocketed. The country was in its worst economic trists, Slowly, but surely, the wounds ot the crash, the 'dust bowl, and poverty healed. nam on if ti cl 3 - s1-menu. 341 llll Q T ' RA ,idiii 4, t ,...- t ,tg i t - suuvno. rrnmqu. aa p V. 'ag inwriott nxriou 3 - STAMPIQ. ,L 1 stamina. at 42 y 43 i iurriou RATTON ' STAMP NO. STAMP NO. 46 y 47 The steel industrv geared up lor the revival while rumors were whispered in the Roosevelt administration ot another impending war The nations leaders stotled: until Decemher 7, 1041 l'eail l larhor' Industrial :vroduction rear hed a pcalt during the war vt-ars. Upon their return trom Four vears ot laattle, the veterans forged ahead with an CVC on a hetter lite lor everyone, Several mod- erate rites-,ions in the 5-O s and ciOs reminded i autious eitiyens ol' past decades, Huge strides were heing taken in the scientific tield. Telex' sion hfxame a part of every tamilvs life Natiortal events were household topics M- while they happened - thanks to the new medi- um. individuals and groups were seen on the tuhe as thev advocated new social reform, or iustire, or special tauses of their own. TV gave individuals and political systems power greater than ever helure, Audio-visual journalism had made its imnact. Nearly 100 years of struggling for civil liberties were realized when President Lyndon Baines johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of1964 into law. The Act outlawed segregation in any form. The seventies shed light on a new trouble for the nation as it approat hed its 100th hirthday The worlds energy sources and natural re- sourres were hc-ing used up faster than they could he replenished. Americans once again waded into a new frontier The ' energy crisis' and ecology were prominent words in the language lfvavs to save nature from the neglect of rnanlcind anti ways ot preserving pretious iuel without damaging that balante of nature were the ohtettn es ot Americans across the countrv t f 'fel . I e , Mi ' , L ,. ,Jf V 'lfffvs iff ir ' Q: 'I f .-Jn-:fit'1 f ' ' T ff' LJ glgfig fg1':-fj,431,xf,- ' ,At j:,,c ' V jff 1 V ' .1-12' ,2 n A f .- ,45l,':A,., viii Ea 2-, ,ff ,, A 'l u , 1 ,aye a f If N '-felt .ts -1 ?f1 U27 4 '-1-1 ,41 15 'ig ,' 9,1 ' I, I ' ' ,fI'!MgV 5, I tit, ff .fit , H .J .- X, 3' ihvudf Y 1 f f ft ta t , .fe ff .-.,f N' .-'.5'.,,f' .ggi , gf f ,fflwf A' C, As. ' 'f' 341+ A -t, .wiv Y ftff.-a . e J f tif fs A x .. A 1 tg K' ala ll all? fo eff' , 'V Earths Crises spurred Americans into further pioneering. This time outer space Ameri- can astronauts were the tirst on the surface ol' the moon and the US. was first to build a sky- labw lor more scientific study, Ameritan is still learning and growing after a mere 200-year inlancy. The original determina- tion of our forefathers was told again in the words of Neil Armstrong as he made the First step on the moon a small step for man, but a giant step for mankind,
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Page 11 text:
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louisiana Purchase villlttl AU ltlllii -,N - 1 'Jr n N'qM. mmmftwv -' f, annie ' I V sf lst T anscont nenlal Ra I oad 518691 ull'n,,hg,n, irn.,,rm,,u Dsc eed Co1oma.CaHona4la 121475 f Themamo. Sa 1 Anton o Ie an 'Teasl oedec M L ,x 4 all. 1. THE CHANG NG ATIO HAWAII 150th staiel Admitted to the Union IH 1959 Ownership of land had been just a dream to most of the colonists from feudal England. With the great expanse of cheap land opening up in the West, the dream became reality. The Louisiana Purchase of 1803 opened the first sizable frontier in the Midwest, but the nation was not ready for it yet. It took a growing market in the East, where land was getting high-priced and scarce, and develop- ment of good transportation, to really start the frontier movement. The Gold Rush caused hordes of settlers to take various routes to the Pacific Coast and its yellow riches. The railroads brought farmers and ranchers, along with the miners, who decided to stop all along the routes and build their homes. Railroads were instrumental in the quick civilization of the West, bringing people in num- bers so large that the resentful Indians were finally pushed back into unwanted and infertile areas. America became a haven for immigrants from every na- tion as freedom beckoned them to the teeming cities of the East, the plains, and the rich west coast farmlands. Sick of the Civil War and with their own lands divided up and lost, many Southerners set out to begin again in the virgin territories. Westering soon became the national tradition as North and South moved together toward a new life. Americanism was advanced socially, by the hard-working, bare-fisted types who settled the frontiers.
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