Memorial Day History

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A Brief History of Memorial Day

http://www.pbs.org/memorialdayconcert/meaning/

Originally called Decoration Day, Memorial Day is a day of remembrance for those who have died in service to our country. It was first widely observed on May 30, 1868, to commemorate the sacrifices of Civil War soldiers, by proclamation of General John A. Logan of the Grand Army of the Republic, an organization of former sailors and soldiers.

During the first national celebration, General James Garfield made a speech at Arlington National Cemetery, after which 5,000 participants helped to decorate the graves of the more than 20,000 Union and Confederate soldiers who were buried there. This event was inspired by local observances of the day that had taken place in several towns throughout America in the three years since the Civil War. By the late 1800s, many more cities and communities had begun to observe Memorial Day, and after World War I, it became an occasion for honoring those who had died in all America’s wars.

Memorial Day is celebrated at Arlington National Cemetery each year with a ceremony in which a small American flag is placed on each grave. Traditionally, the President or Vice President lays a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. About 5,000 people attend the ceremony annually.

When is Memorial Day?
In 1971, Congress declared Memorial Day a national holiday to be celebrated on the last Monday of May. Several southern states, however, have an additional, separate day for honoring the Confederate war dead: January 19 in Texas; April 26 in Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Mississippi; May 10 in South Carolina; and June 3 in Louisiana and Tennessee.

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Lawrence of Arabia Dies

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Lawrence of Arabia dies. (2012). The History Channel website. Retrieved 1:45, May 19, 2012, from www.history.com/this-day-in-history/lawrence-of-arabia-dies.
Lawrence_Arabia

T.E. Lawrence, known to the world as Lawrence of Arabia, dies as a retired Royal Air Force mechanic living under an assumed name. The legendary war hero, author, and archaeological scholar succumbed to injuries suffered in a motorcycle accident six days before.

Thomas Edward Lawrence was born in Tremadoc, Wales, in 1888. In 1896, his family moved to Oxford. Lawrence studied architecture and archaeology, for which he made a trip to Ottoman (Turkish)-controlled Syria and Palestine in 1909. In 1911, he won a fellowship to join an expedition excavating an ancient Hittite settlement on the Euphrates River. He worked there for three years and in his free time traveled and learned Arabic. In 1914, he explored the Sinai, near the frontier of Ottoman-controlled Arabia and British-controlled Egypt. The maps Lawrence and his associates made had immediate strategic value upon the outbreak of war between Britain and the Ottoman Empire in October 1914.

Lawrence enlisted in the war and because of his expertise in Arab affairs was assigned to Cairo as an intelligence officer. He spent more than a year in Egypt, processing intelligence information and in 1916 accompanied a British diplomat to Arabia, where Hussein ibn Ali, the emir of Mecca, had proclaimed a revolt against Turkish rule. Lawrence convinced his superiors to aid Hussein’s rebellion, and he was sent to join the Arabian army of Hussein’s son Faisal as a liaison officer.

Under Lawrence’s guidance, the Arabians launched an effective guerrilla war against the Turkish lines. He proved a gifted military strategist and was greatly admired by the Bedouin people of Arabia. In July 1917, Arabian forces captured Aqaba near the Sinai and joined the British march on Jerusalem. Lawrence was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In November, he was captured by the Turks while reconnoitering behind enemy lines in Arab dress and was tortured and sexually abused before escaping. He rejoined his army, which slowly worked its way north to Damascus, which fell in October 1918.

Arabia was liberated, but Lawrence’s hope that the peninsula would be united as a single nation was dashed when Arabian factionalism came to the fore after Damascus. Lawrence, exhausted and disillusioned, left for England. Feeling that Britain had exacerbated the rivalries between the Arabian groups, he appeared before King George V and politely refused the medals offered to him.

After the war, he lobbied hard for independence for Arab countries and appeared at the Paris peace conference in Arab robes. He became something of a legendary figure in his own lifetime, and in 1922 he gave up higher-paying appointments to enlist in the Royal Air Force (RAF) under an assumed name, John Hume Ross. He had just completed writing his monumental war memoir, The Seven Pillars of Wisdom, and he hoped to escape his fame and acquire material for a new book. Found out by the press, he was discharged, but in 1923 he managed to enlist as a private in the Royal Tanks Corps under another assumed name, T.E. Shaw, a reference to his friend, Irish writer George Bernard Shaw. In 1925, Lawrence rejoined the RAF and two years later legally changed his last name to Shaw.

In 1927, an abridged version of his memoir was published and generated tremendous publicity, but the press was unable to locate Lawrence (he was posted to a base in India). In 1929, he returned to England and spent the next six years writing and working as an RAF mechanic. In 1932, his English translation of Homer’s Odyssey was published under the name of T.E. Shaw. The Mint, a fictionalized account of Royal Air Force recruit training, was not published until 1955 because of its explicitness.

In February 1935, Lawrence was discharged from the RAF and returned to his simple cottage at Clouds Hill, Dorset. On May 13, he was critically injured while driving his motorcycle through the Dorset countryside. He had swerved to avoid two boys on bicycles. On May 19, he died at the hospital of his former RAF camp. All of Britain mourned his passing.

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Oldest woman to climb Mount Everest

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73-year-old becomes oldest woman to climb Mount Everest – CNN.com
By Manesh Shrestha, for CNN
updated 10:38 AM EDT, Sat May 19, 2012
http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/19/world/asia/nepal-everest-cimb/index.html?hpt=hp_t3
climbs_everest
Tamae Watanabe, pictured in June 2004, joins the 4,000 people who have climbed Everest.

Kathmandu, Nepal (CNN) — A 73-year-old Japanese woman on Saturday became the oldest woman to climb Mount Everest breaking her own 10-year-old record.

Tamae Watanabe reached the top of the 8,848-meter (29,028 feet) peak at 7 a.m, according to Ang Tshering, of the China Tibet Mountaineering Association. Watanabe climbed Everest from the nothern slope in Tibet-China and started on her final part of her climb at 8:30 p.m. Friday leaving the 8,300-meter staging area with three sherpas.

82-year-old hiking Everest on Mom’s Day

The final push to the summit was made at night because it becomes very windy after mid-morning.

In 2002, at the age of 63, she reached the summit from the southern slope in Nepal. Everest lies on the border of Nepal and Tibet-China.

U.S. teen sets world climbing record

The oldest person to climb Everest is Nepali national Min Bahadur Sherchan who achieved the feat at the age of 76 in 2008. The youngest person is American teenager Jordan Romero from California who reached the summit in 2010 when he was 13.

In 2011, an 82-year-old man died on the mountain while trying to set the record of being the oldest person to reach the summit.

So far about 4,000 people have climbed Everest.

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Historic IPO

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 Robert Hof, Contributor
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5/17/2012 @ 5:16PM |1,310 views

It’s Official! Facebook Raises $16 Billion in Historic IPO

facebook_founder

Image via CrunchBase

It may be no surprise, but Facebook just announced it will indeed go public at $38 a share, raising $16 billion in an initial public offering that values the No. 1 social network at $104 billion. That’s the highest ever for a U.S. company, at least at the time of its offering, and easily the highest for a technology company.

The big question now: How higher (or, hard to believe, lower) will the shares go on the first day of trading Friday? The $38 a share is at the very top of the range, already raised, that Facebook set, and Facebook this week  raised the number of shares it’s offering as well.

But that doesn’t mean enthusiastic investors can’t bid it even higher starting at 11 a.m. Eastern. And given all the frenzy over this IPO, it’s hard to imagine it wouldn’t.

A first-day pop seems likely despite new doubts this week about whether the company can fulfill the huge expectations inherent in the IPO. General Motors this week revealed that it’s dropping its $10 million budget for Facebook advertising, saying it essentially doesn’t work. That apparently didn’t dim demand among at least the institutional investors buying the lion’s share of the initial offering.

Indeed, enthusiasm over the IPO, which is as much a coming-out publicity event as a way to raise funds that even Facebook says it doesn’t yet know how it will use, could force even more marketers to pay closer attention to the service as a way to reach their customers. “This is a massive awareness event to appeal to the C-suite,” says Reggie Bradford, CEO of the Facebook social marketing services firm Vitrue. Facebook, he says, will usher in a new age of social business not just in marketing, but customer service, sales, human resources and every other corporate function.

At the same time, the pressure of public investors and Wall Street, which Facebook long sought to avoid until shareholder rules more or less forced it to go public, may in turn force the company to amp up its offerings to marketers, including new ad formats such as mobile ads, better ways to measure impact of its advertising on ultimate sales, and related services such as payments. Facebook’s sales grew 88% last year, to $3.8 billion. But in the first quarter, revenue growth slowed to 45%, and revenues even fell below fourth-quarter levels.

CEO and cofounder Mark Zuckerberg will ring the opening bell for the Nasdaq from Facebook’s headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. The shares will trade under the ticker symbol FB.

Facebook employees, however, will be coding more than toasting. Tonight, they’re holding a 24-hour “hackathon,” a common event during which caffeinated engineers write software into the night to create new services intended to help keep Facebook ahead of its many rivals.


This article is available online at:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/roberthof/2012/05/17/its-official-facebook-raises-16-billion-in-historic-ipo/

 

 

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