| 
 | 
 
  General Eisenhower was hugely popular as a military hero before his  
election 
          1952: Landslide victory for Eisenhower 
          England have 
          General Dwight D Eisenhower has swept to victory in the American  
presidential elections with the largest number of popular votes ever recorded  
for a presidential candidate. 
          The new president-elect gained 31,552,768 popular votes and has won, or is  
leading, in 38 states. This gives him 431 electoral college votes, significantly  
more than the 266 he needed for a majority. 
          The results suggest that many of the Southern states, traditionally  
Democrat, have swung to the Republicans for the first time in 35 years. 
          General Eisenhower's rival, Democrat Adlai E Stevenson, won 25,409,335  
votes, securing 10 states and 100 electoral college votes. 
          The results come after months of one of the hardest-fought campaigns  
ever. 
          General Eisenhower's popularity among the American people as a military  
hero, having commanded his country's troops through Europe during World War II,  
has now been translated into votes. 
          During the run-up to polling day commentators had predicted a much  
closer-run battle than it turned out to be. 
          In a victory speech, delivered in the Ballroom of the Commodore Hotel in  
New York, the president-elect said to the American people: "I recognise clearly  
the weight of the responsibilities that you have placed upon me and I assure you  
that I shall never in my service in Washington give short weight to those  
responsibilities." 
          President Truman, who will not officially hand over to General Eisenhower  
until January next year, sent a telegram congratulating the incoming president  
on his "overwhelming victory." 
          He has invited General Eisenhower to the White House for talks on the  
transition process. 
          Defeated Governor Stevenson also issued a statement: "The people have  
rendered their verdict, and I gladly accept it. General Eisenhower has been a  
great leader in war. He has been a vigorous and valiant opponent in the  
campaign. 
          "These qualities will now be dedicated to leading us all through the next  
four years." 
          One of General Eisenhower's biggest challenges as president will be to deal  
with foreign policy, most notably the civil war in Korea. 
          During the election campaign he promised to visit the war-torn country and  
now plans to do that within the next ten days. 
          Dwight D Eisenhower grew up on a farm in Abilene, Kansas with his six  
brothers. His education was rudimentary. 
          He worked his way up the ranks of the US army during a 40-year military  
career which culminated in his appointment as Commander-in-Chief of the North  
Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato). 
          The Shah is facing growing unrest 
          1978: Iran's PM quits amid riots 
          Artificially 1969: 
          The Iran's Prime Minister Jaffer Sharif-Emani has resigned after two days  
of virtual mob rule. 
          The appointment of Mr Sharif-Emani, a Shia Muslim, by the Shah just over  
two months ago was designed to put an end to the religious violence currently  
sweeping across the country. 
          However, his presence in the Shah's government failed to have the desired  
effect of curbing the unrest which has been particularly marked among university  
students. 
          The unrest is partly a response to the programme of secularisation being  
implemented under the Shah who took over from his father as Iran's ruler in  
1941. 
          Iran has prospered thanks to its oil reserves but there is popular  
resentment against the Shah and the ruling elite who are believed to have  
profited disproportionately. 
          Two other government ministers have also resigned as anti-Western feeling  
comes to a head. 
          Yesterday mobs which have been running virtually unchecked through Tehran  
set fire to the British embassy and dozens of other buildings in the  
capital. 
          In response to the worsening violence, martial law has been extended. 
          The start of the nightly curfew has been moved forward three hours to 2100  
and remains in force until 0500 each morning. 
          The authorities have announced that from now on martial law regulations,  
which ban gatherings of more than two people, will be strictly enforced. 
          The implication is that anti-Shah protestors should no longer expect the  
armed forces to hold back when breaking up demonstrations. 
          The disorder within Iran has also been exacerbated by widespread  
politically-motivated strikes. 
          Key personnel such as oil refinery workers, airline staff and central bank  
employees are among those who have withdrawn their labour. 
          Vocabulary: 
          rudimentary: being in the earliest stages of development;being or involving  
basic facts or principles(根本的;未发展的) |   
 
 
 
 |