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Page 73 text:
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. ww. 61111012 Fam, uvmcf srnucruns WFFH commmo emamxmeur uv BACKGROUND, MAY 1952. 'i '5 2'v.7.Q S The Garrison Dam project means very much to the farmers of today and of tomorrow. This project is doing and will do much more to help the farmers. Its irrigation will make the land very fertile and profitable. This dam is the largest earth filled dam in the United States. North Dakota might someday be known as a great oil producing anea. One of the first wells to be dug was right southwest of Turtle Lake. Tioga oil wells were the first to produce. An oil refinery is being built in Mandan now during the summer of 1953. Both the dam and the oil are proving that North Dakota is advancing. Someday North Dakota will be known as one of the most important states in the United States. 69 AG 'Zh' 1 5 ug pjfi Q '14 .gli rf' L. d. Kit 1-'w Kf'ixf, l A 4 1 A P ll f u BTANDOLIFD - MCLEAN f 1 Turtle Lake, N. Dak. ya A I Same oil well taken at different angles w,iiF19 I . -ii 1, Ms 'N---... r 'Q K '- .K A' '-.4-X llc f as g is K V AA.,-.Y lf' 4 l riigpaff,-A g ' 4 1.x-K33f,,L5m 4 h CT L' MA. ,mu in F- , . :gs-11.5, .. .W WM '.,.',g,,.gL. , n 3 ,Q iw H g r 7 1 V xx k . v ..
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Page 72 text:
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Landslide Sweeps Eisenhower Into White Houses, Republicans Control Both Houses of Congress History finally caught up with the Democrats, and the coalition that ruled the nation for twenty years now lies crushed beneath one of the most spec- tacular upsets sinee the Civil VVar. In popular vote, the COP won by about 5,000,000 and in electoral votes its ratio ot victory was about four to one. In winning election as the 34th Presi- dent of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower eut deeply into every bloc that had made up the Democratic coali- tion, except the Negroes. He piled up spectacular votes in the big industrial cities of thc North. He proved amazingly popular with organized labor. He ran strongly in neighborhoods that were pre- voritism in the Administrationg by the suspieion that lleds still played an under- cover role in the State Department. Eisenhower promised to solve the problems that beset the nation, and the people believed in his capacity to re- deem this promise, Looking to the past, the Democrats said: You never had it so good. But the people were looking to the future and they wanted something from it which they didnlt think the Democrats otlered them. They wanted, however big the order, restoration of peace to the worldg an end to ever-mounting government expendi- tures and taxes, an end to careless moral- ity in Washingtong and at the same time a move to the right. away from big gov- ernment and toward traditional concepts of a free enterpnse economy. The voters ehose the future. And they ehose Eisenhower and the Republican Party as its custodians. l-How Great the Victory Herbert Hoover swept -10 of the 48 states. but Eisenhowerls victory over Stevenson nevertheless was far more spectacular than Hoover's over Alfred E. Smith, and far more signitieanl. Hoover was running as the candidate of the ma- jority party: Eisenhower was thc standard-bearer of a party that had been in the minority for twenty-years. dominantly Irish-American and Italian- Aineriean. And he won back the farm vote for the COP. Most important of all, he smashed the Solid South, almost certainly beyond re- pair. Virginia, Texas, and Florida, at least, never again will be one-party states. So overwhelming was Ilce's victory over Adlai E. Stevenson. in fact, that he swept Republican majorities into the House and Senate with him. The Republican landslide was only partly the result of Eisenhowefs popu- larity, though his popularity, even with longtime, devoted Democrats, could hardly be overestimated. Sooner or later, the Democratic coalition was bound to eiumble. Many Republicans believe it would have fallen apart in 1948. had it been pounded hard enough. The reason was the nature of the coali- tion, It was an alliance that included the extremes of conservatism in the Old South and radicalism in the urban North. lt was brought together by Franklin D. Roosevelt in the days of depression and it started disintegrating during the Truman Administration in the days of postwar prosperity. Voters generally had grown tired of Democratic rule. They were troubled by the war in Ko- rea, which seemed like an endless blood- lettingg by the spread of Communism in the worldg by the draftg by high prices, by the revelations of corruption and fa- Mamie and Ike: A call for unity and dedication in a moment of triumph ,wo Ike and Nixon This years election was an 1 important event as far as the ' students were concerned. P. D. P. and hlstory classes were following the election closely. Just before our PTSSld6Dt was elected we held a mock election in which the entire student body took part. fIke wonj Ike's victory speech was recorded by some of the students and run off the next day for the benefit of the hlgh school. Stevenson gnllnntly hailed Ike Alter the convention: A talk on strategy and fish
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Page 74 text:
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F fe A ll ,l :: LHHIH .gl 'gl :hub U' HHHIU Hnilll Hug Wuhin K . or Ill' 59 5 .zz Governor Norman Brunsdale our Capital Trial in the Capital Senator Stucke Cstandingj . . Q H ESQA K ' Ap 5 tiff f Q -ogg? N -' . A ' f f , 1, it ws, Q- N My l ' M,i5 vm: 5dwm,,gW Gravel for the foundation Swing poles, slide, and teetor on the new play ground, in front of the school house. Ground on which the new addition will be. The new addition will be to the left of the school. fWffdv?aw'W ,eff H' Q wefiql W .fgfie The juniors and seniors were given a half of a day off to visit the awgffi olv'l capital while the senate and house of representatives were in action. We witnessed seeing the governor, a trial of Nkick backsn from the , different offices, the senate in ' action and our own senator, Senator Stucke. Senator Stucke's name is the third one down in the last list of names on the voting board. Sen. Stucke just had the students from Turtle Lake stand when his picture This is the second year that the Community Hospital has been in operation. Even though the hospital has was snaped . nothing to do with the school it is still a great addition to our oommunityg therefore the students have a great respect for it. ! M, HS graduates of 1953, BTU G3-ad to 599 the begi-U55-ng ele Ili tiixv 5 Yi Xiii of a project that will greatly if ' Z igi improve our school. We know N ' that all the students will f greatly appreciate the many conveniences that this new addition will have to offer. Congratulations to those S ET - .h H I . ' vs! 5 1 hfWa:W5qQ? ' b,g.A .. We whose efforts of trying to make our school more convenient A,,?Q have not been in vain. as
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