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9 people who once lived in North Dakota served as governors of other states

9 people who once lived in North Dakota served as governors of other states Did You Know That columnist Curt Eriksmoen explains what people like Theodore Roosevelt, Gary Johnson and Happy Chandler all have in common. Written By: Curt Eriksmoen | × Theodore Roosevelt (from left), Gary Johnson and Albert Happy Chandler. Special to The Forum The following nine people who once lived in North Dakota shared a similar political achievement: Theodore Roosevelt, Gary Johnson, Happy Chandler, Hazen Pingree, Arthur Crane, Horace Austin, Arthur Langlie, Ralph Herseth and Donald Nutter. They all served as governors of states other than North Dakota. Austin (Minnesota), who later became the register of the U.S. Land Office in Fargo, was the only governor to move to North Dakota after he had served as a state chief executive. Johnson (New Mexico), who was from Minot, was the only one born in North Dakota, and Langlie (Washington), who lived in Divide Coun

Slog AM: Morse Code Morsels for QAnon, Kyle Rittenhouse Is Chilling with Proud Boys, Pray for Officer Arlo

by Nathalie Graham • Jan 14, 2021 at 8:30 am The way his hands move here is Morse code for I want give Mike Pence a smooch. WIN MCNAMEE / GETTY IMAGES Trump s weird doctor is dead: Dr. Harold N. Bornstein used to be Trump s doctor. You remember him, right? He had luscious gray locks and he said Trump would be “the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency. Bornstein had hoped to become the White House physician, but he was expelled from Trump s orbit, as the New York Times put it, for saying in 2017 that Trump takes medication to make his hair grow. Bornstein recently died at 73. The cause of death is unknown.

Washington Senate passes resolution extending COVID emergency orders

Buchheit once again participates in Wreaths Across America

Buchheit once again participates in Wreaths Across America
randolphcountyheraldtribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from randolphcountyheraldtribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How the IWW Grew after the Centralia Tragedy

On November 11, 1919, tensions came to a head between members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) known as the Wobblies and members of the American Legion in Centralia, Washington, at the first Armistice Day parade after World War I. The conflict between the two groups was deep-seated. The American Legion had been chartered as a patriotic veteran’s organization just after the war. Meanwhile, the IWW had opposed U.S. participation; it was the only American labor organization to do so. A fatal confrontation between the two parties began when, as documented in the IWW’s The Centralia Case: A Chronological Digest, “an armed mob charged on the [Wobblies’] union hall from the rear rank of the Armistice Parade.” Legionnaires Warren Grimm, Arthur McElfresh, and Ben Casagranda were killed in the initial blow between the Legionnaires and the Wobblies.

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