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Maryland Manual, 1967-68
Volume 173, Page 31   View pdf image (33K)
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MARYLAND MANUAL 31
In 1918, Maryland became the first state to adopt the Ex-
ecutive Budget System now so widely used. In the years
which followed, the State Legislature showed an increasing
consciousness of the welfare of its citizens, enacting legisla-
tion to create old age and mothers' pensions, to aid depen-
dent children and to give assistance to the needy blind.
World War II
About 250,000 Marylanders were enrolled in the several
military services during World War II. More than ever be-
fore, the State's industrial power—that devoted to the build-
ing of ships and aircraft—fought "the Battle of Materials."
The Army enlarged and rebuilt Fort Meade, and constructed
Andrews Air Force Base near Camp Springs in Prince
George's County. At Port Deposit, the Navy built an ex-
tensive training center called Bainbridge, and the Naval
Air Station on the Patuxent River at Cedar Point to serve
as an aviation testing facility easily accessible to Washing-
ton.
The 29th Infantry Division again served with distinction
in France during 1944 and 1945. It fought on the Omaha
Beachhead, in Normandy, against the Siegfried Line, and in
the advance to the Elbe River. Medical units from the Johns
Hopkins and University of Maryland Hospitals performed
outstanding service in many theaters of operations. The
Federal government also built "Shangri-La" as a presiden-
tial retreat in Western Maryland. Here during World War
II President Roosevelt received many of the leading states-
men of the allied forces, among them Winston Churchill.
Renamed "Camp David" by President Elsenhower, the lodge
became in 1959 the focus of world-wide attention as the
scene of the meetings between the President and the Soviet
Council Chairman, Nikita Khrushchev.
After World War II
The prosperity and population growth that have accom-
panied the post-war economic boom have not been unmixed
blessings. The thousands of dwelling units erected since
1945 have provided many families better housing than ever
before, but they have also created problems of water supply
and sewage disposal. The bumper crop of war and post-war
babies continues to strain the State's school facilities, re-
quiring an ever-increasing number of teachers and many
new buildings. With practically every family owning one
or more automobiles and many cities and towns plagued
with traffic and parking problems, the State has been com-

 
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Maryland Manual, 1967-68
Volume 173, Page 31   View pdf image (33K)
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