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University Microfilms. Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan the UNIVERSITY of OKLAHOMA
This dissertation has been 65-12,998 microfilmed exactly as received MATHENY, David Leon, 1931- A COMPAEISON OF SELECTED FOREIGN POLICY SPEECHES OF SENATOR TOM CONNALLY. The University of Oklahoma, Ph.D., 1965 ^eech-Theater University Microfilms. Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA GRADUATE COLLEGE A COMPARISON OP SELECTED FOREIGN POLICY SPEECHES OF SENATOR TOM CONNALLY A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY BY DAVID LEON MATHENY Norman, Oklahoma 1965 A COMPARISON OP SELECTED FOREXON POLICY SPEECHES OP SENATOR TOM CONNALLY APPROVED BY L-'iJi'Ui (^ A -o ç.J^\AjLôLe- DISSERTATION COMMITTEE ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The writer wishes to express thanks to Professor Wayne E. Brockriede and members of the University of Oklahoma Speech Faculty for guidance during the preparation of this dissertation. A special word of thanks should go to Profes sor George T. Tade and the Administration of Texas Christian University for encouragement during the latter stages of the study and to the three M's — Mary, Melissa and Melanie — for great understanding throughout the entire project. TABLE OP CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS..................................... Ill Chapter I. INTRODUCTION ......................... 1 Purpose of the S t u d y ..................... 6 Previous Research......................... 8 Sources of Material....................... 9 Method of Organization ................... 10 II. CONNALLY, THE SPEAKER....................... 12 Connally's Non-Congresslonal Speaking Career.......... 12 General Attributes of Connally's Speaking............................... 17 Conclusion . ........................... 31 III. THE NEUTRALITY ACT DEBATE, 1939............. 32 Connally's Audience for the Neutrality Act Debate.............. 32 The Quest for Neutrality ............ 44 The Senate, Connally and Neutrality. -
THE NORTH DAKOTA SUPREME COURT: a CENTURY of ADVANCES by Herb Meschke and Ted Smith
1 THE NORTH DAKOTA SUPREME COURT: A CENTURY OF ADVANCES By Herb Meschke and Ted Smith This history was originally published in North Dakota Law Review [Vol. 76:217 (2000)] and is reprinted with permission. The history has been supplemented by Meschke and Smith, A Few More Footnotes for The North Dakota Supreme Court: A Century of Advances, presented to the Judge Bruce M. Van Sickle American Inn of Court (April 26, 2001). Added material in footnotes begins with "+". Links and photographs have been added to the original article. The Appendices contain updated and corrected material. Foreword Lawyers use history, mostly legal precedents, to help guide their clients in their lives and businesses. But not all legal history gets collected and published in appellate opinions, or even in news accounts. History is often scattered in ways that are difficult to follow, and facts are frequently obscured by the fogs of memory. As lawyers, though, we should keep track of the people, politics, and developments that shaped our judicial system, particularly in North Dakota our state Supreme Court. Whether good, bad, or indifferent, the current conditions of the Court and of the judicial system it governs certainly affect how we lawyers practice our profession. Consider these glimpses of how our Court and judicial system came to where they are today. I. LEAVING THE 19TH CENTURY 2 A. The Territorial Courts Before statehood, written appellate review in this region began when the 1861 federal act for Dakota Territory created a three-judge supreme court. President Abraham Lincoln appointed the first three justices of the territorial supreme court: Chief Justice Philemon Bliss of Ohio; George P. -
Senate Journal-JANUARY 25, 2007
17th DAY THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 2007 187 JOURNAL OF THE SENATE Sixtieth Legislative Assembly ***** Bismarck, January 25, 2007 The Senate convened at 1:00 p.m., with President Pro Tem J. Lee presiding. The prayer was offered by Father Paul Becker, Corpus Christi, Bismarck. The roll was called and all members were present except Senators Andrist and Bowman. A quorum was declared by the President Pro Tem. CONSIDERATION OF AMENDMENTS SB 2205: SEN. HECKAMAN (Industry, Business and Labor Committee) MOVED that the amendments on SJ page 179 be adopted and then be REREFERRED to the Appropriations Committee with DO PASS, which motion prevailed. CONSIDERATION OF AMENDMENTS SB 2036: SEN. HACKER (Industry, Business and Labor Committee) MOVED that the amendments on SJ pages 176-177 be adopted and then be placed on the Eleventh order with DO PASS, which motion prevailed. CONSIDERATION OF AMENDMENTS SB 2072: SEN. WANZEK (Industry, Business and Labor Committee) MOVED that the amendments on SJ page 177 be adopted and then be placed on the Eleventh order with DO PASS, which motion prevailed. CONSIDERATION OF AMENDMENTS SB 2073: SEN. POTTER (Industry, Business and Labor Committee) MOVED that the amendments on SJ page 177 be adopted and then be placed on the Eleventh order with DO PASS, which motion prevailed. CONSIDERATION OF AMENDMENTS SB 2096: SEN. HEITKAMP (Natural Resources Committee) MOVED that the amendments on SJ pages 177-178 be adopted and then be placed on the Eleventh order with DO PASS, which motion prevailed. CONSIDERATION OF AMENDMENTS SB 2123: SEN. KLEIN (Industry, Business and Labor Committee) MOVED that the amendments on SJ page 178 be adopted and then be placed on the Eleventh order with DO PASS, which motion prevailed. -
Laws Passed at Session of the Legislative
718 RESOLUTIONS Be It Further Resolved, That copies of this resolution be transmitted by the Honorable Norman Brunsdale, governor of the state of North Dakota; and by the Honorable Ben Meier, secretary of state of North Dakota; to the Honorable Dwight D. Eisenhower, president of the United States; to the Congress of the United States; to the Honorable Sinclair Weeks, secre tary of the department of commerce; to the Honorable Charles E. Wilson, secretary of defense; to the Honorable C. D. Cur- tiss, chief of administration for the bureau of public roads; to the Honorable Milton R. Young and the Honorable William Langer, United States Senators from North Dakota; to the Honorable Otto Krueger and the Honorable Usher L. Bur- dick, Congressmen from North Dakota. Filed February 23, 1955. HOUSE RESOLUTION No. 10 (Committee on Industry and Business) LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH COMMITTEE STUDY OF MILL STORAGE A resolution commending the Select Committee appointed by the Thirty-third Legislative Session of the House of Representatives, and directing the Legislative Research Committee to study the laws of North Dakota relating to mill storage of grain, and to confer with surrounding states on the problems of mill storage. Whereas, the 1953 session of the house of representatives deemed it advisable to appoint an interim committee to investi gate the practices of mill storage grain and to report their findings to the thirty-fourth session of said house of represen tatives; and ' Whereas, the said committee, at great sacrifice of their time and convenience, have made exhaustive and minute study of said charged practices, the result of which have revealed flagrant violations and misuse of mill storage grain. -
The Career of James /. T)Avis
The Career of James /. T)avis HE depression of the 1890*3 weakened the faith of many Americans in the ability of the nation's economic system to Tfulfill its promises of prosperity and abundance, but James J. Davis emerged from the harrowing decade with a renewed commit- ment to capitalism and individualism. It was not that the young iron puddler did not experience deprivation and hardship, for the coming of the depression threw him out of work and forced him to ride the rails from Pennsylvania and Ohio to Alabama and Louisiana. He met hungry and desperate men and with them cadged meals from trackside families. He witnessed the grinding poverty of rural blacks and saw at first hand how employers used the business down- turn to slash wages. Yet, while other Americans interpreted similar experiences as a call for reform or as a summons to revolution, Davis saw them as a warning against extremism and self-pity. To him, the lesson of adversity was clear: the American way still offered bright promise, provided that the individual cultivate qualities of comradeship and charity. During a long career as fraternal order leader and businessman, Davis' emphasis on homey virtues and personal good fellowship stood him in good stead. The perspective first gained during the adversity of the nineties and validated in his private career remained with him through his twenty-four years as United States Secretary of Labor and Senator from Pennsylvania. It earned for him the reputation of a cheerful conciliator which pro- vided much of his political appeal. -
SENATE Back in His Accustomed Seat, and We Wish Thomas H
<ronyrrssional Rrcor~ United States PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 84th CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION of America happy to see the Senator from Texas California.-William F. Knowland and SENATE back in his accustomed seat, and we wish Thomas H. Kuchel. for him in the years ahead good health Colorado.-Eugene D. Millikin and TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1956 and happiness. [Applause.] Gordon Allott. The 3d day of January being the day Mr. JOHNSON of Texas. Mr. Presi Connecticut.-Prescott Bush and Wil prescribed by the Constitution of the dent, I appreciate very much the state liam A. Purtell. United States for the annual meeting ment the Vice President has just made ' Delaware.-John J. Williams and J. of Congress, the 2d session of the 84th about me. No one can know how glad I Allen Frear, Jr. Congress commenced this day. am again to be able to stand by this Florida.-Spessard L. Holland and The Senate assembled in its Cham desk, in the company of my treasured George A. Smathers. ber at the Capitol. friends on both sides of the aisle. I am Georgia.-Walter F. George and Rich RICHARD M. NIXON, of California, grateful to all of them for their under ard B. Russell. Vice President of the United States, standing, their patience, and the affec Idaho.-Henry C. Dworshak and Her called the Senate to order .at 12 o'clock tion which they expressed during the man Welker. meridian. dark days through which I have jour Illinois.-Paul H. Douglas and Everett The Chaplain, Rev. Frederick Brown neyed. M. -
FGM Self Guided Tour
STATE SELF-GUIDED TOUR HISTORICAL SOCIETY of North Dakota Former Governors’ Mansion State Historic Site HISTORY This house was built in 1884 as a private residence for Bismarck businessman Asa Fisher. In 1893 he sold the house for $5,000 to the state for use as the executive mansion. Twenty governors occupied the house until 1960, when a new residence was built on the state capital grounds. The former residence served as office space for the State Health Department until 1975, when the State Historical Society of North Dakota was given the house as a historic house museum. After extensive research and restoration the exterior of The house in 1884 after construction was the house has been returned to its 1893 appearance. The interior of the house completed. was restored to show how the mansion changed over the years; and restoration SHSND2005-P-06-01 features are highlighted, including samples of the more than seventy-five wallpapers that have been noted throughout the house. The south parlor (1) was traditionally used as a formal space for visitors. During the John Burke administration (1907-1912) Main Floor a Steinway grand piano was purchased. 8 It stood for many years in the bay window. In 1928 Governor Sorlie died and his casket 10 lay in this room. The 1910 Steinway grand piano now in the room was purchased The house as it appears today. 7 5 during the second Langer administration 2 (1937-1938). 6 3 1 4 9 First Lady Luella Aandahl (1945-1950) with daughters Marilyn and Margaret, The Briggs family in the north parlor, 1898. -
An Examination of Ideology and Subject Formation Among Elite And
AN EXAMINATION OF IDEOLOGY AND SUBJECT FORMATION AMONG ELITE AND ORDINARY RESIDENTS IN THE BAKKEN SHALE, NORTH DAKOTA, 2015-2016 A Dissertation by THOMAS ANDREW LODER Submitted to the Office of Graduate and Professional Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Chair of Committee, Christian Brannstrom Committee Members, Forrest Fleischman Wendy Jepson Kathleen O’Reilly Head of Department, David Cairns August 2018 Major Subject: Geography Copyright 2018 Thomas Andrew Loder ABSTRACT The US shale energy boom of the late 2000s and 2010s has brought both economic growth and negative externalities to communities undergoing extraction. Building on previous research on fracking landscapes – as well as geographies of energy and natural resources and case studies of environmental subjectivity in extractive zones – this dissertation employed a suite of qualitative methods to examine the discourses and ideology used to support and oppose fracking-led development in North Dakota’s Bakken Shale. The dissertation consists of three substantive chapters. The first employs key actor interviews and participant observation to examine how pro-oil ideology is advanced by economic and political elites in North Dakota. This chapter concludes that elites frame support for oil as an extension of existing conservative ideologies prevalent in the state. The second substantive chapter consists of content analysis of coverage of oil- related events in state-level newspapers, specifically concentrating on a 2014 conservation ballot measure and the Keystone XL pipeline. This chapter concludes that pro-oil writers are more effective in their messaging due to focusing on economic and emotional appeals. -
50T'h Anniversary Hettinger County, North Dakota
50t'h Anniversary Hettinger County, North Dakota "A Tribute To Our Pioneers' As we mark the fiftieth anniversary of the county of Hettinger, we wish to pay our sincere homage and respect to all those who helped in any way to develop this land from untouched plains. Whether they lie in well-tended burial plots or in the forgotten graves that 50 Years dol the prairies, or whether they are listed in this book or not, we honor them all, for each and every one of then) gave of something of himself or herself thai this mighl be a better land. Now we who are privU to be here and benefiting from Progress their hard work, privations and foresight, sincerely hope and trust that in our brief span of life, we too can leave as lasting a memorial lor Hie future gcner aiions as has been left by those who came before us. 3 3105 00662 3522 New County Register of Deeds, Rudolf Grosz; took up homesteads like every Treasurer, Peter Greff; Super one else did. Organized intendent of Schools, Agnes E. Dr. Converse was one of the Svihovec; States Attorney, R. J. pioneer doctors whom we first Hettinger County as it is to Bloedau. have any known knowledge of day came into existence officially Of the first officers appointed in this immediate vicinity al with the issuance of a proclama by Gov. Burke, Robert Berry and though there was also a Dr. tion by Gov. John Burke provid Arnold Bannon were still living Morris and a Dr. Mauzey record ing for the dividing of old Het- ; on July 15, 16, & 17, 1957, the ed a little later. -
1 in the SUPREME COURT STATE of NORTH DAKOTA Doug Burgum, in His Capacity As North Dakota's Governor, Petitioner, Vs. Alvin J
20200298 FILED IN THE OFFICE OF THE IN THE SUPREME COURT CLERK OF SUPREME COURT STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA NOVEMBER 17, 2020 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA Doug Burgum, in his capacity as North SUPREME COURT NO. 20200298 Dakota’s Governor, Petitioner, vs. Alvin Jaeger, in his capacity as North Dakota’s Secretary of State; the North Dakota Legislative Assembly, Chet Pollert, Chairman of Legislative Management; and the District 8 Republican Committee, Loren DeWitz, District Chairperson, Respondents. PETITION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTIVE RELIEF, DECLARATORY JUDGMENT, WRIT OF INJUNCTION, AND WRIT OF MANDAMUS AMICUS CURIAE BRIEF OF TYLER YEARGAIN IN SUPPORT OF PETITION OF DOUG BURGUM Tyler Yeargain Pro se 195 Prospect Street New Haven, CT 06511 Phone: (407) 362-8822 [email protected] 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. STATEMENT OF INTEREST AND IDENTITY ......................................................4 II. RULE 29(C)(4) STATEMENT ...................................................................................4 III. ARGUMENT ...............................................................................................................5 A. STATE GOVERNORS’ INHERENT AUTHORITY TO FILL VACANCIES PLAINLY EXTENDS TO LEGISLATIVE VACANCIES ........................................... 5 B. ARTICLE IV, SECTION 11, OF THE NORTH DAKOTA CONSTITUTION IMPLICITLY AND NECESSARILY REQUIRES ENABLING LEGISLATION ..... 10 IV. CONCLUSION............................................................................................................12 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ..........................................................................................12 -
SEPTEMBER 2017 BULLETIN North Dakota High School Activities Association 350 2Nd St
SEPTEMBER 2017 BULLETIN North Dakota High School Activities Association 350 2nd St. NW • PO Box 817 • Valley City • ND Phone (701) 845-3953 • FAX (701) 845-4935 PICTURED ABOVE: 2017/2018 NDHSAA/Farmers Union Insurance Distinguished Students with North Dakota Farmers Union Insurance General Manager Mark Anderson NDHSAA PREMIER PARTNER: SUPPORTING SPONSORS: Inside This Issue High School Activities Bring Communities Together 3 North Dakota High School Activities Association 4 CHECK IT OUT! Brian Bubach named NFHS Speech Committee Chair 5 Wayne Sanstead to receive NDHSAA Distinguished Service Award 5 T 2017 NDHSAA Spring Team State Champions 6 2017 NDHSAA Spring Team State Champions 7 PAGES 6-7 2017-18 NDHSAA Board of Directors 8 A NDHSAA Website Login Information 8 2017 NDHSAA SPRING NDHSAA HELP (FAQ) 8 CHAMPIONSHIP PHOTOS B Participants Must Be Accompanied 8 Two Board Members Join NDHSAA 9 L Concussions in Sports Course Available 9 2017-18 NDHSAA/Farmers Union Insurance Distinguished Students 10 PAGE 10 E NDHSAA Award of Excellence Nominations 10 NDHSAA Distinguished Service Nominations 10 2017-18 NDHSAA/FARMERS NDHSAA Staff Contacts 11 UNION INSURANCE Mandatory Administrator Meetings 11 NDHSAA Constitution & By-Laws 12 DISTINGUISHED STUDENTS O Fall NDHSAA Website Requirements 12 Student Congress, Play, Music, Debate & Speech Clinics Online 12 F Coaches & Officials Mandatory Online Testing 13 Online Rules Clinics for Activity Advisors, Coaches & Officials 13 2017-18 Tennis Regulation Changes 13 NDHSAA Boys Tennis Region & State Tournament -
North Dakota Events Share Your Pet with Cass County Reporter Readers! Dancing, Lunch and a Visit and Treats from Santa Were on the Agenda
Oldest Weekly Newspaper in North Dakota • Published Continuously with the Same Name in the Same City Since 1880 Cops and Kids Page A6 Cass CountyCasselton Reporter • Kindred Tribune • Hunter Times REPORTERDecember 15, 2010 • 131st Year • No. 41 • Casselton, ND 58012 • www.ccreporter.com • $1 Hunter businesses latest hit in burglaries Casselton native son back home to greet neighbors Two more businesses can be added to the list of at least five at- By Lin Smithwick Dakota issues and politics. stepped down to take his seat in the tempted and successful break-ins in A Casselton native son has no idea And just why has Casselton been U.S. Senate. As Dalrymple took the rural Cass County. why a small community in the Red able to produce five people who oath of office, Betsy, and the four The C & I Bar, Hunter was bro- River Valley has been able to provide would go on to become governor? “I grown Dalrymple daughters, were ken into on Dec. 8 between 3 and 9 fertile governor-growing ground. The have no idea,” Dalrymple said. “We among those witnessing the historic p.m. A bar employee reported the Peace Garden state’s 32nd governor have come from all different eras, dif- event. incident at 9:18 p.m. – the fifth to come from the Casselton ferent political parties – everything. This is the first time in North The person responsible was able area – was in town Sunday to visit I really can’t explain it.” He does Dakota’s 121-year history that a to get inside the storage area but with well-wishers during a reception believe Casselton is a microcosm of governor has voluntarily stepped not the bar.