Memorial Day Weekend Events in Atlanta 2022
CL's guide to the start of the summer
Memorial Day
Happy Memorial Day! The Memorial Day Weekend tends to kick off the Summer in Atlanta. Look to CL's calendar for the best events for Memorial Day and the Summer.
Big Memorial Day Events
Atlanta Jazz Festival
List of Memorial Day Events
Broods, Ella Vos
Sound & Shape, New Bedlam
Broods, Ella Vos
El Da Sensei, Sixman
Thousand Below, Savage hands, Dead Lakes, The Living, Not Forgotten
Terror, Kublai Khan, Sanguisugabogg, Pain of Truth
Broods
Tickets available @ https://zwd.short.gy/Broods
MomoCon 2022
Imagine Picasso
O’Keefe: One Hundred Flowers
Rise Up 4 Abortion Rally: Nationwide
Top Gun: Maverick
TOP GUN: MAVERICK flies on the big screen here at Aurora Cineplex!
See it First at the Thur May 26th Premiere
Plus shows all day starting Fri May 27thMon May 30thMemorial Weekend!
Thur May 2... [click here for more]
DIGATL: Atlanta's First Digital Art Gallery
Blippi The Musical
Emily Wells, Abby Dear
Get Funky With Punk Bingo
Atlanta Braves vs. Philadelphia Phillies
Atlanta Braves vs. Philadelphia Phillies, May 26, 7:20PM.
Tickets available @ https://zwd.short.gy/Braves-Phillies5
Heather McMahan
Demons
Atlanta Symphony Orchestra: Elizabeth Koch Tiscione - Marcello Concerto
Leonid & Friends
Joss Stone
Crimeapple
R&B & Reggae Night
Hosted By:
HERMSHOCK
Sounds By:
DJ FYEMEUP
Must be 21+
Thursday, 5/26
8PM - 2:30AM
339 Edgewood Ave SE, Atlanta, GA 30312
Visit www.ourbaratl.com/events to see our full schedule!
$ 2.00 Summer Family Flicks at Aurora Cineplex-10 Weeks of Summer
Our SUMMER FAMILY FLICKS is back!
$ 2.00 Movies playing at 10:00am and 2:00pm
10 Classic Family Films over 10 Weeks!
Fri May 27thThur Aug 4th each week a movie opens on Friday, then plays a... [click here for more]
CL Articles on Memorial Day
array(100) { ["title"]=> string(28) "End Confederate Memorial Day" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2022-01-28T13:37:32+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2018-01-09T14:23:58+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(28) "End Confederate Memorial Day" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(13) "Payson Schwin" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(13) "Payson Schwin" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "148431" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(34) "Long live Civil War History Month!" ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(34) "Long live Civil War History Month!" ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2015-04-27T18:02:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(38) "Content:_:End Confederate Memorial Day" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(7791) " *Eric Cash/CL File *Why not Civil War History Month? From the Very Unofficial Governor of the State of Georgia for Today A Proclamation Civil War History Month WHEREAS: All state offices are closed today for Confederate Memorial Day, a state holiday not to be confused with next month’s (Unionist?) Memorial Day; WHEREAS: Since Gov. Nathan Deal is out of the office today, and because he did not issue a proclamation this year about Confederate History and Heritage Month, I hereby issue my own proclamation through the wholly imaginary power of proclamatus in guberno abstentia; WHEREAS: Confederate Memorial Day falls on the 27th this year, but in 1874, the Georgia Assembly officially named the “26th day of April in each year” as Confederate Memorial Day. The day recognizes Confederate States Army Gen. Joe Johnston’s surrender to Union Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett’s Farm in North Carolina 150 years ago. The Civil War ended for more than 89,000 Southern soldiers on this day a century and a half ago, representing the largest surrender of the Civil War, even larger than Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. While the fighting wouldn’t truly end until later that year, April 26, 1865 marked the end of major hostilities; WHEREAS: Georgia’s governors have issued many proclamations over the years in the lead up to Confederate History and Heritage Month. In recent years, these proclamations have recognized southern white women (2002, 2003, 2014), Native Americans (2005, 2010), Jewish Americans (2009), and John Pemberton, the inventor of Coca-Cola and as it turns out, a lieutenant colonel in the Confederate Army (2006). Conspicuously omitted is any mention whatsoever of slavery or the plight of African-Americans. In 2012, the proclamations stopped referencing the “Civil War,” instead calling the conflict the “War Between the States,” a label supported for more than a century by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a group whose false claims include saying that it is “difficult for historians to agree on the war’s basic causes” (no, it isn’t) and the Confederate flag was “recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation” separate from the U.S. (no, it wasn’t). Perhaps we should just be thankful we’re not calling it “The War of Northern Aggression”; WHEREAS: For years, the state of Georgia informally recognized all of April as Confederate History and Heritage Month, though it became official when the Georgia Assembly passed Senate Bill 27 in 2009 . A shockingly small number of Georgia’s state senators and representatives voted against SB 27. (Current Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Senator Ronald B. Ramsey, Sr. provided the only two “Nay” votes in the state Senate ); WHEREAS: SB 27 urged all Georgians to “honor, observe, and celebrate the Confederate States of America, its history, those who served in its armed forces and government, and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which they held so dear”; WHEREAS: I wonder who these “millions” of contributors of “various races and ethnic groups and religious” could possibly have been considering the Confederates were a pasty bunch; WHEREAS: The name of the particular “cause which they held so dear” goes unspoken, though I can tell you it starts with “s-” and ends with “-lavery.” (Not “-tates rights.”) Georgia’s ordinance of secession wasn’t so bashful about the “cause” of the war, as shown in its second sentence: “For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.” Robert Toombs, in his farewell address to the U.S. Senate, excoriated his Northern colleagues for their efforts to “upturn our social system,” “steal our slaves,” “make them freemen to vote against us,” and “bring an inferior race in a condition of equality, socially and politically, with our own people.” The Confederate Constitution, largely cribbed from the original U.S. version, differed significantly in one way: it very specifically made slavery the eternal law of the land, and included the phrase, “No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed.” Or put succinctly, no backsies on slavery; WHEREAS: SB 27 urged Georgians to “commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance.” I imagine most African-Americans, who make up 31 percent of the state’s population, might not want to celebrate the Confederacy. Nor would the Hispanic-Americans and Asian-Americans who make up 14 percent of the state, or any minority group for that matter. Nor would the millions of Northerners who have moved to Georgia over the past few decades, many of whom had ancestors fight for the Union. Come to think of it, I don’t think most white people like me who were born and raised in the South — owners of the Confederate flag license plate notwithstanding — identify in the slightest with Georgia’s antebellum culture of enslavement; WHEREAS: The story of the Civil War is complex, as we can see in the pro-Union bent of the people living in the South’s mountain regions. Even the case of Gen. William “Make Georgia Howl” Sherman, the burner of Atlanta, isn’t a simple one. In 1864, he wrote to Atlanta Mayor James Calhoun, “When peace does come, you may call on me for anything. Then I will share with you the last cracker, and watch with you to shield your homes and families against danger from every quarter.” The following year at Bennett’s Farm, Sherman offered his Confederate counterpart Gen. Johnston terms of surrender much more generous than Grant had offered Lee. They were so generous, in fact, that the Cabinet had to rescind Sherman’s original offer; WHEREAS: The Confederate Memorial Day and Confederate History and Heritage Month neither represents modern Georgia, nor captures the complexity that makes the our state’s Civil War past so interesting. The Civil War, a conflict in which more Americans died than in all other U.S. wars combined, deserves and demands to be studied in all its various aspects; WHEREAS: This month should be a time when Georgians make every effort to learn something new about the Civil War. We could visit the battlefield at Kennesaw Mountain instead of the granite relief at Stone Mountain. We could get a close-up a view of the Confederate Constitution (and all its warts) at the University of Georgia. We could make a brief stop at the Confederate soldier burial ground in Oakland Cemetery or the Slave Life exhibition at the Atlanta History Center. We could get out of our cars to view the monuments dedicated to Union General McPherson and CSA General Walker, both in East Atlanta. Or we could take a day trip to Andersonville prison, Fort Pulaski, and the Tubman African-American Museum in Macon. (Really, y’all should just get out there and do anything that teaches you about this painful, yet fascinating era in Georgia’s history); THEREFORE: I, PAYSON SCHWIN, Very Unofficial Governor For A Day of the State of Georgia, do hereby proclaim April as CIVIL WAR HISTORY MONTH and April 26 as CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL DAY in Georgia. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and have as of yet not figured out how to cause the Seal of the Executive Department to be affixed this 27th day of April in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen. Payson Schwin Very Unofficial Governor For A Day Payson Schwin is an Atlanta writer." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(10090) "{img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/atlanta/imager/why-not-civil-war-history-month/u/original/14124511/1430156740-civil_war_reenactment_-_004.jpg"} *[http://clatl.com/atlanta/ImageArchives?by=6474407|Eric Cash/CL File] *Why not Civil War History Month? ::__From the Very Unofficial Governor of the State of Georgia for Today__:: ::__A Proclamation __:: ::__Civil War History Month__:: __WHEREAS__: All state offices are closed today for Confederate Memorial Day, a state holiday not to be confused with next month’s (Unionist?) Memorial Day; __WHEREAS__: Since Gov. Nathan Deal is out of the office today, and because he did not issue a proclamation this year about Confederate History and Heritage Month, I hereby issue my own proclamation through the wholly imaginary power of ''proclamatus in guberno abstentia''; __WHEREAS__: Confederate Memorial Day falls on the 27th this year, but in 1874, the Georgia Assembly officially named the “26th day of April in each year” as Confederate Memorial Day. The day [http://www.11alive.com/news/article/239524/40/Did-you-know-Confederate-Memorial-Day-is-still-a-state-holiday|recognizes] Confederate States Army Gen. Joe Johnston’s surrender to Union Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett’s Farm in North Carolina 150 years ago. The Civil War ended for more than 89,000 Southern soldiers on this day a century and a half ago, representing the largest surrender of the Civil War, even larger than Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. While the fighting wouldn’t truly end until later that year, April 26, 1865 marked the end of major hostilities; __WHEREAS__: Georgia’s governors have issued many proclamations over the years in the lead up to Confederate History and Heritage Month. In recent years, these proclamations have recognized southern white women ([http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GADOOLY/2002-03/1017583584|2002], [http://sonnyperdue.georgia.gov/gov/proclamations/archive/Confederate_History_2003.pdf|2003], [http://spofga.org/flag/2005/april/confederate_proclamations.php|2014]), Native Americans ([http://spofga.org/flag/2005/april/confederate_proclamations.php|2005], [http://sonsofconfederateveterans.blogspot.com/2010/01/georgia-governor-signs-confederate.html|2010]), Jewish Americans ([http://sonnyperdue.georgia.gov/vgn/images/portal/cit_1210/60/46/133301207Confederate History Month 2009.pdf|2009]), and John Pemberton, the inventor of Coca-Cola and as it turns out, a lieutenant colonel in the Confederate Army ([http://sonnyperdue.georgia.gov/gov/proclamations/2006/CONFEDERATE_HISTORY_MONTH_2006.pdf|2006]). Conspicuously omitted is any mention whatsoever of slavery or the plight of African-Americans. In 2012, the proclamations stopped referencing the “Civil War,” instead [https://gov.georgia.gov/sites/gov.georgia.gov/files/related_files/site_page/CHMonthProc2012.pdf|calling] the conflict the “War Between the States,” a label [http://www.hqudc.org/about_udc/WBTS.htm|supported] for more than a century by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a group whose false claims include saying that it is “difficult for historians to agree on the war’s basic causes” ([http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military-jan-june11-civilwar_04-12/|no, it isn’t]) and the Confederate flag was “recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation” separate from the U.S. ([https://history.state.gov/milestones/1861-1865/confederacy|no, it wasn’t]). Perhaps we should just be thankful we’re not calling it “The War of Northern Aggression”; __WHEREAS__: For years, the state of Georgia informally [http://www.legis.ga.gov/Legislation/en-US/display/20092010/SB/27|recognized] all of April as Confederate History and Heritage Month, though it became official when the Georgia Assembly passed Senate Bill 27 in 2009 . A shockingly small number of Georgia’s state senators and representatives voted against SB 27. (Current Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Senator Ronald B. Ramsey, Sr. [http://www.legis.ga.gov/Legislation/en-US/vote.aspx?VoteID=6064|provided] the only two “Nay” votes in the state Senate ); __WHEREAS__: SB 27 urged all Georgians to “honor, observe, and celebrate the Confederate States of America, its history, those who served in its armed forces and government, and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which they held so dear”; __WHEREAS__: I wonder who these “millions” of contributors of “various races and ethnic groups and religious” could possibly have been considering the Confederates were a pasty bunch; __WHEREAS__: The name of the particular “cause which they held so dear” goes unspoken, though I can tell you it starts with “s-” and ends with “-lavery.” (Not “-tates rights.”) Georgia’s ordinance of secession wasn’t so bashful about the “cause” of the war, as [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_geosec.asp|shown] in its second sentence: “For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.” Robert Toombs, in his farewell address to the U.S. Senate, [https://books.google.com/books?id=LvQtAAAAYAAJ&vq=toombs&pg=PA144#v=snippet&q=toombs&f=false|excoriated] his Northern colleagues for their efforts to “upturn our social system,” “steal our slaves,” “make them freemen to vote against us,” and “bring an inferior race in a condition of equality, socially and politically, with our own people.” The Confederate Constitution, largely cribbed from the original U.S. version, differed significantly in one way: it very specifically made slavery the eternal law of the land, and [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_csa.asp|included the phrase], “No bill of attainder, ''ex post facto'' law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed.” Or put succinctly, no backsies on slavery; __WHEREAS__: SB 27 urged Georgians to “commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance.” I imagine most African-Americans, who make up 31 percent of the state’s population, might not want to celebrate the Confederacy. Nor would the Hispanic-Americans and Asian-Americans who [http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/13000.html|make up] 14 percent of the state, or any minority group for that matter. Nor would the millions of Northerners who have [http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/08/13/upshot/where-people-in-each-state-were-born.html?_r=0|moved to Georgia] over the past few decades, many of whom had ancestors fight for the Union. Come to think of it, I don’t think most white people like me who were born and raised in the South — [http://nation.time.com/2014/02/20/confederate-flag-georgia-license-plate/|owners of the Confederate flag license plate notwithstanding] — identify in the slightest with Georgia’s antebellum culture of enslavement; __WHEREAS__: The story of the Civil War is complex, as we can see in the pro-Union bent of the people living in the South’s mountain regions. Even the case of Gen. William “[http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/11/17/rethinking-shermans-march/?_r=0|Make Georgia Howl]” Sherman, the burner of Atlanta, isn’t a simple one. In 1864, he [https://books.google.com/books?id=b7lMAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA21&lpg=PA21&dq=When peace does come, you may call on me for anything&source=bl&ots=AVUUyP5r6B&sig=ANdwfl1JOJ56FrhGPQFW-Ip_uQ4&hl=en&sa=X&ei=taM2VdyfO4LnsASJm4CoDg&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=When peace does come, you may call on me for anything&f=false|wrote] to Atlanta Mayor James Calhoun, “When peace does come, you may call on me for anything. Then I will share with you the last cracker, and watch with you to shield your homes and families against danger from every quarter.” The following year at Bennett’s Farm, Sherman offered his Confederate counterpart Gen. Johnston terms of surrender much more generous than Grant had offered Lee. They were so generous, in fact, that the Cabinet had to [http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/end-of-war/johnston-surrenders.html|rescind] Sherman’s original offer; __WHEREAS__: The Confederate Memorial Day and Confederate History and Heritage Month neither represents modern Georgia, nor captures the complexity that makes the our state’s Civil War past so interesting. The Civil War, a conflict in which more Americans died than in all other U.S. wars combined, deserves and demands to be studied in all its various aspects; __WHEREAS__: This month should be a time when Georgians make every effort to learn something new about the Civil War. We could visit the battlefield at Kennesaw Mountain instead of the granite relief at Stone Mountain. We could get a close-up a view of the Confederate Constitution (and all its warts) at the University of Georgia. We could make a brief stop at the Confederate soldier burial ground in Oakland Cemetery or the Slave Life exhibition at the Atlanta History Center. We could get out of our cars to view the monuments dedicated to Union General McPherson and CSA General Walker, both in East Atlanta. Or we could take a day trip to Andersonville prison, Fort Pulaski, and the Tubman African-American Museum in Macon. (Really, y’all should just get out there and do anything that teaches you about this painful, yet fascinating era in Georgia’s history); __THEREFORE__: I, PAYSON SCHWIN, Very Unofficial Governor For A Day of the State of Georgia, do hereby proclaim April as CIVIL WAR HISTORY MONTH and April 26 as CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL DAY in Georgia. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and have as of yet not figured out how to cause the Seal of the Executive Department to be affixed this 27th day of April in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen. Payson Schwin Very Unofficial Governor For A Day ''Payson Schwin is an Atlanta writer''." 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From the Very Unofficial Governor of the State of Georgia for Today A Proclamation Civil War History Month WHEREAS: All state offices are closed today for Confederate Memorial Day, a state holiday not to be confused with next month’s (Unionist?) Memorial Day; WHEREAS: Since Gov. Nathan Deal is out of the office today, and because he did not issue a proclamation this year about Confederate History and Heritage Month, I hereby issue my own proclamation through the wholly imaginary power of proclamatus in guberno abstentia; WHEREAS: Confederate Memorial Day falls on the 27th this year, but in 1874, the Georgia Assembly officially named the “26th day of April in each year” as Confederate Memorial Day. The day recognizes Confederate States Army Gen. Joe Johnston’s surrender to Union Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett’s Farm in North Carolina 150 years ago. The Civil War ended for more than 89,000 Southern soldiers on this day a century and a half ago, representing the largest surrender of the Civil War, even larger than Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. While the fighting wouldn’t truly end until later that year, April 26, 1865 marked the end of major hostilities; WHEREAS: Georgia’s governors have issued many proclamations over the years in the lead up to Confederate History and Heritage Month. In recent years, these proclamations have recognized southern white women (2002, 2003, 2014), Native Americans (2005, 2010), Jewish Americans (2009), and John Pemberton, the inventor of Coca-Cola and as it turns out, a lieutenant colonel in the Confederate Army (2006). Conspicuously omitted is any mention whatsoever of slavery or the plight of African-Americans. In 2012, the proclamations stopped referencing the “Civil War,” instead calling the conflict the “War Between the States,” a label supported for more than a century by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a group whose false claims include saying that it is “difficult for historians to agree on the war’s basic causes” (no, it isn’t) and the Confederate flag was “recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation” separate from the U.S. (no, it wasn’t). Perhaps we should just be thankful we’re not calling it “The War of Northern Aggression”; WHEREAS: For years, the state of Georgia informally recognized all of April as Confederate History and Heritage Month, though it became official when the Georgia Assembly passed Senate Bill 27 in 2009 . A shockingly small number of Georgia’s state senators and representatives voted against SB 27. (Current Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Senator Ronald B. Ramsey, Sr. provided the only two “Nay” votes in the state Senate ); WHEREAS: SB 27 urged all Georgians to “honor, observe, and celebrate the Confederate States of America, its history, those who served in its armed forces and government, and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which they held so dear”; WHEREAS: I wonder who these “millions” of contributors of “various races and ethnic groups and religious” could possibly have been considering the Confederates were a pasty bunch; WHEREAS: The name of the particular “cause which they held so dear” goes unspoken, though I can tell you it starts with “s-” and ends with “-lavery.” (Not “-tates rights.”) Georgia’s ordinance of secession wasn’t so bashful about the “cause” of the war, as shown in its second sentence: “For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.” Robert Toombs, in his farewell address to the U.S. Senate, excoriated his Northern colleagues for their efforts to “upturn our social system,” “steal our slaves,” “make them freemen to vote against us,” and “bring an inferior race in a condition of equality, socially and politically, with our own people.” The Confederate Constitution, largely cribbed from the original U.S. version, differed significantly in one way: it very specifically made slavery the eternal law of the land, and included the phrase, “No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed.” Or put succinctly, no backsies on slavery; WHEREAS: SB 27 urged Georgians to “commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance.” I imagine most African-Americans, who make up 31 percent of the state’s population, might not want to celebrate the Confederacy. Nor would the Hispanic-Americans and Asian-Americans who make up 14 percent of the state, or any minority group for that matter. Nor would the millions of Northerners who have moved to Georgia over the past few decades, many of whom had ancestors fight for the Union. Come to think of it, I don’t think most white people like me who were born and raised in the South — owners of the Confederate flag license plate notwithstanding — identify in the slightest with Georgia’s antebellum culture of enslavement; WHEREAS: The story of the Civil War is complex, as we can see in the pro-Union bent of the people living in the South’s mountain regions. Even the case of Gen. William “Make Georgia Howl” Sherman, the burner of Atlanta, isn’t a simple one. In 1864, he wrote to Atlanta Mayor James Calhoun, “When peace does come, you may call on me for anything. Then I will share with you the last cracker, and watch with you to shield your homes and families against danger from every quarter.” The following year at Bennett’s Farm, Sherman offered his Confederate counterpart Gen. Johnston terms of surrender much more generous than Grant had offered Lee. They were so generous, in fact, that the Cabinet had to rescind Sherman’s original offer; WHEREAS: The Confederate Memorial Day and Confederate History and Heritage Month neither represents modern Georgia, nor captures the complexity that makes the our state’s Civil War past so interesting. The Civil War, a conflict in which more Americans died than in all other U.S. wars combined, deserves and demands to be studied in all its various aspects; WHEREAS: This month should be a time when Georgians make every effort to learn something new about the Civil War. We could visit the battlefield at Kennesaw Mountain instead of the granite relief at Stone Mountain. We could get a close-up a view of the Confederate Constitution (and all its warts) at the University of Georgia. We could make a brief stop at the Confederate soldier burial ground in Oakland Cemetery or the Slave Life exhibition at the Atlanta History Center. We could get out of our cars to view the monuments dedicated to Union General McPherson and CSA General Walker, both in East Atlanta. Or we could take a day trip to Andersonville prison, Fort Pulaski, and the Tubman African-American Museum in Macon. (Really, y’all should just get out there and do anything that teaches you about this painful, yet fascinating era in Georgia’s history); THEREFORE: I, PAYSON SCHWIN, Very Unofficial Governor For A Day of the State of Georgia, do hereby proclaim April as CIVIL WAR HISTORY MONTH and April 26 as CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL DAY in Georgia. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and have as of yet not figured out how to cause the Seal of the Executive Department to be affixed this 27th day of April in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen. Payson Schwin Very Unofficial Governor For A Day Payson Schwin is an Atlanta writer. 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" "William T. Sherman" "Confederate Memorial Day" "Civil War History Month" "Civil War" "Burning of Atlanta" 14121847 13082838 End Confederate Memorial Day " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(81) "End Confederate Memorial Day" }
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Among the greatest surprises in my film going experience is this final number from Mervyn LeRoy's Gold Diggers of 1933, a pre-code backstage musical featuring elaborate Busby Berkeley choreographed dance numbers. Trojan Horsed into the film's climactic finale is this poignant and striking indictment of the treatment of World War I veterans, depicted as homeless, neglected, and down & out. The juxtaposition of stark politics, and grim reality with the lavish fantasy of a stage musical is revelatory. What's old is new again as contemporary filmmakers address some of these same issues with documentaries showcasing the lives of returning veterans: Oscar-nominated doc Hell and Back Again slated to air on PBS' Independent Lens on Monday May 28, (I've looked and can't seem to find it on any of the local channels - please add times to the comments section if you can find them) follows US Marine Sergeant Nathan Harris, 27 as he returns home from Afghanistan in the Wounded Warrior Regiment at Camp Lejeune recovering from a gunshot wound." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1313) "While Memorial Day was established to honor fallen soldiers, what better way to honor their memory than to see to it that those who survived are welcomed back home. Among the greatest surprises in my film going experience is this final number from Mervyn LeRoy's ''Gold Diggers of 1933'', a pre-code backstage musical featuring elaborate Busby Berkeley choreographed dance numbers. 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Among the greatest surprises in my film going experience is this final number from Mervyn LeRoy's Gold Diggers of 1933, a pre-code backstage musical featuring elaborate Busby Berkeley choreographed dance numbers. Trojan Horsed into the film's climactic finale is this poignant and striking indictment of the treatment of World War I veterans, depicted as homeless, neglected, and down & out. The juxtaposition of stark politics, and grim reality with the lavish fantasy of a stage musical is revelatory. 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That’s Memorial Day. image-2Bill: A day we honor the people willing to put aside personal interest for their country. It’s become a long weekend for most people. Hopefully this country will realize again that when you send kids to war, you have a responsibility to take care of them afterward. We’re not doing that. Honor the dead by supporting the living. Go to a VA Hospital and visit these guys. I was a paramedic in the Air Force. I had 47 combat rescues in Vietnam. image-3Professor: I’m not going to a Memorial Day parade. When I came back from Vietnam, the first woman I talked to told me I was a baby killer and an Uncle Tom. If I do anything, I would go to Arlington Cemetery. Twenty-seven friends there. I counted. I was in Kilo Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine. I was treated pretty bad and I’m still treated pretty bad. I wouldn’t tell anybody for years that I was a Vietnam vet. A parade, I don’t want to participate." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1385) "[image-1]__No Show:__ There is no Memorial Day to me. I love my country, but am I to memorialize all my brothers I lost? I watched them get shot in front of me. Memorial Day for me, brother, there is none. I got my own Memorial Day in my heart. Im pretty mixed about Memorial Day. I live and breathe it every day. Its a delicate situation. The parade I had was getting shit on. Thats Memorial Day. [image-2]__Bill:__ A day we honor the people willing to put aside personal interest for their country. Its become a long weekend for most people. Hopefully this country will realize again that when you send kids to war, you have a responsibility to take care of them afterward. Were not doing that. Honor the dead by supporting the living. Go to a VA Hospital and visit these guys. I was a paramedic in the Air Force. I had 47 combat rescues in Vietnam. [image-3]__Professor:__ Im not going to a Memorial Day parade. When I came back from Vietnam, the first woman I talked to told me I was a baby killer and an Uncle Tom. If I do anything, I would go to Arlington Cemetery. Twenty-seven friends [there]. I counted. I was in Kilo Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine. I was treated pretty bad and Im still treated pretty bad. I wouldnt tell anybody for years that I was a Vietnam vet. A parade, I dont want to participate." 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ben.eason Ben Eason Jeff Slate 2008-05-20T14:00:00+00:00 image-1No Show: There is no Memorial Day to me. I love my country, but am I to memorialize all my brothers I lost? I watched them get shot in front of me. Memorial Day for me, brother, there is none. I got my own Memorial Day in my heart. I’m pretty mixed about Memorial Day. I live and breathe it every day. It’s a delicate situation. The parade I had was getting shit on. That’s Memorial Day. image-2Bill: A day we honor the people willing to put aside personal interest for their country. It’s become a long weekend for most people. Hopefully this country will realize again that when you send kids to war, you have a responsibility to take care of them afterward. We’re not doing that. Honor the dead by supporting the living. Go to a VA Hospital and visit these guys. I was a paramedic in the Air Force. I had 47 combat rescues in Vietnam. image-3Professor: I’m not going to a Memorial Day parade. When I came back from Vietnam, the first woman I talked to told me I was a baby killer and an Uncle Tom. If I do anything, I would go to Arlington Cemetery. Twenty-seven friends there. I counted. I was in Kilo Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine. I was treated pretty bad and I’m still treated pretty bad. I wouldn’t tell anybody for years that I was a Vietnam vet. A parade, I don’t want to participate. 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" 1439869 13041844 Streetalk: What does Memorial Day mean? " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(101) "Streetalk: What does Memorial Day mean?" }
array(100) { ["title"]=> string(33) "Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2022-01-26T16:33:18+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2017-12-30T18:47:07+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(33) "Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(12) "Taylor Eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(12) "Taylor Eason" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "144340" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(50) "The right libations for your Memorial Day cookout." ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(50) "The right libations for your Memorial Day cookout." ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2007-05-23T04:04:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(43) "Content:_:Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(3774) "They say variety is the spice of life, but really it's cayenne pepper. Sprinkle enough of this pungent, piquant seasoning on anything and watch mouths water and tears run. But it's worth it – adding spicy sauce or pepper to a half-pound burger imparts excitement to an otherwise dreary clump of meat. And Memorial Day is definitely the unofficial raw-meat-on-the-grill-day. But its unofficial side dish isn't the ghastly, mayo-laden potato salad; it's alcohol. The after-effects of spice need something that will quell the fire when your mouth feels like blacktop on a summer Florida day. But should you choose red, white or brew to ease your pain? Back when I only knew about Bud, Miller and Milwaukee's "Beast," food and beer pairing wasn't my goal. As I aged (read: could afford), I discovered the beautiful world of craft beers, whose sharp, clean yet sweeter wheat brews toned down my atomic hot wings. But no matter how refreshing a beer tastes going down, an entire day of it still leaves me feeling like someone blew up a balloon in my stomach. So I stick with perhaps the original "tastes great, less filling" beverage, wine. Essentially, for anything to meld with strong spices, a spoonful of sugar helps the pepper go down. This goes for wine and beer. Wine has the natural fruit acids and tannins that help harmonize and tame strong seasonings, especially on protein-laden grill goodies. Lighter whites, such as riesling and pinot gris/grigio, refresh the palate and pair nicely with seafood items like fiery fish or shrimp. Dry rosés, far from the syrupy, inane rep they're battling, help quench the thirst built up under a sweltering sun, but also drink nicely with peppery items. And then there's the king of bland: the hot dog. If I had my druthers, every American would drink rosé with their nitrate-laden "beef' franks, if only to drown the flavor. With burly barbecued vittles, think bold and beautiful reds. Also think that the wine should match the sauce on the meat, rather than the meat itself, since the sauce becomes the dominant taste component. The zesty smoky-sweet stuff we slather on beef or chicken is far from wimpy, so your wine shouldn't be, either. Think something that sings with berries, with plenty of pepper and spice (not tannic and oaky), to stand up to all that brawn. Zinfandel and syrah/shiraz are considered classic BBQ wines because they have lots of fruit and peppery spice, without too much oak and tannin to cloud flavor. But if you're feeling exotic, pop open a smoky Spanish Rioja or California tempranillo (the grape in Rioja). For those wanting to stay in their comfort zone, medium to full-bodied merlots are also good matches for BBQ fare – especially mild brats and delicious, full-flavored sausages. A quick tip for the barbecue set-up: Since wine glasses just feel wrong when hanging at a barbecue, it's fine to use plastic cups. But avoid Styrofoam – all you'll taste is wine-scented Styrofoam. Recommended Wines Pink Criquet 2006 Bordeaux Rosé (France) Soft raspberry and strawberries with firm acidity and a gorgeous finish. A hint of plum and mint make it interesting. Sw = 1. $15. 3.5 stars Gravity Hills Tumbling Tractor 2004 Zinfandel Paso Robles (California) Fragrant jammy blackberries waft up to the nose, and the mouth experiences bold cherry, with a creamy vanilla elegance. A tiny bit spicy, with white pepper, tobacco. Great with grilled items. Sw = 2. $15. 4 stars Chateau Ste. Michelle 2006 Riesling Cold Creek Vineyard (Washington) Slightly sweet, with tart tangerine and citrus. Stainless steel aftertaste that's kind of cool. Sw = 4. $14. 3.5 stars Sweetness (Sw) rating is out of 10, 10 being pure sugar. 1(star) rating is out of 5, 5 being wine nirvana." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(3810) "They say variety is the spice of life, but really it's cayenne pepper. Sprinkle enough of this pungent, piquant seasoning on anything and watch mouths water and tears run. But it's worth it – adding spicy sauce or pepper to a half-pound burger imparts excitement to an otherwise dreary clump of meat. And Memorial Day is definitely the unofficial raw-meat-on-the-grill-day. But its unofficial side dish isn't the ghastly, mayo-laden potato salad; it's alcohol. The after-effects of spice need something that will quell the fire when your mouth feels like blacktop on a summer Florida day. But should you choose red, white or brew to ease your pain? Back when I only knew about Bud, Miller and Milwaukee's "Beast," food and beer pairing wasn't my goal. As I aged (read: could afford), I discovered the beautiful world of craft beers, whose sharp, clean yet sweeter wheat brews toned down my atomic hot wings. But no matter how refreshing a beer tastes going down, an entire day of it still leaves me feeling like someone blew up a balloon in my stomach. So I stick with perhaps the original "tastes great, less filling" beverage, wine. Essentially, for anything to meld with strong spices, a spoonful of sugar helps the pepper go down. This goes for wine and beer. Wine has the natural fruit acids and tannins that help harmonize and tame strong seasonings, especially on protein-laden grill goodies. Lighter whites, such as riesling and pinot gris/grigio, refresh the palate and pair nicely with seafood items like fiery fish or shrimp. Dry rosés, far from the syrupy, inane rep they're battling, help quench the thirst built up under a sweltering sun, but also drink nicely with peppery items. And then there's the king of bland: the hot dog. If I had my druthers, every American would drink rosé with their nitrate-laden "beef' franks, if only to drown the flavor. With burly barbecued vittles, think bold and beautiful reds. Also think that the wine should match the sauce on the meat, rather than the meat itself, since the sauce becomes the dominant taste component. The zesty smoky-sweet stuff we slather on beef or chicken is far from wimpy, so your wine shouldn't be, either. Think something that sings with berries, with plenty of pepper and spice (not tannic and oaky), to stand up to all that brawn. Zinfandel and syrah/shiraz are considered classic BBQ wines because they have lots of fruit and peppery spice, without too much oak and tannin to cloud flavor. But if you're feeling exotic, pop open a smoky Spanish Rioja or California tempranillo (the grape in Rioja). For those wanting to stay in their comfort zone, medium to full-bodied merlots are also good matches for BBQ fare – especially mild brats and delicious, full-flavored sausages. A quick tip for the barbecue set-up: Since wine glasses just feel ''wrong'' when hanging at a barbecue, it's fine to use plastic cups. But avoid Styrofoam – all you'll taste is wine-scented Styrofoam. __Recommended Wines__ __Pink Criquet 2006 Bordeaux Rosé (France)__ Soft raspberry and strawberries with firm acidity and a gorgeous finish. A hint of plum and mint make it interesting. ''Sw = 1''. $15. 3.5 stars __Gravity Hills Tumbling Tractor 2004 Zinfandel Paso Robles (California)__ Fragrant jammy blackberries waft up to the nose, and the mouth experiences bold cherry, with a creamy vanilla elegance. A tiny bit spicy, with white pepper, tobacco. Great with grilled items. ''Sw = 2''. $15. 4 stars __Chateau Ste. Michelle 2006 Riesling Cold Creek Vineyard (Washington)__ Slightly sweet, with tart tangerine and citrus. Stainless steel aftertaste that's kind of cool. ''Sw = 4''. $14. 3.5 stars ''Sweetness (Sw) rating is out of 10, 10 being pure sugar. 1(star) rating is out of 5, 5 being wine nirvana.''" 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Sprinkle enough of this pungent, piquant seasoning on anything and watch mouths water and tears run. But it's worth it – adding spicy sauce or pepper to a half-pound burger imparts excitement to an otherwise dreary clump of meat. And Memorial Day is definitely the unofficial raw-meat-on-the-grill-day. But its unofficial side dish isn't the ghastly, mayo-laden potato salad; it's alcohol. The after-effects of spice need something that will quell the fire when your mouth feels like blacktop on a summer Florida day. But should you choose red, white or brew to ease your pain? Back when I only knew about Bud, Miller and Milwaukee's "Beast," food and beer pairing wasn't my goal. As I aged (read: could afford), I discovered the beautiful world of craft beers, whose sharp, clean yet sweeter wheat brews toned down my atomic hot wings. But no matter how refreshing a beer tastes going down, an entire day of it still leaves me feeling like someone blew up a balloon in my stomach. So I stick with perhaps the original "tastes great, less filling" beverage, wine. Essentially, for anything to meld with strong spices, a spoonful of sugar helps the pepper go down. This goes for wine and beer. Wine has the natural fruit acids and tannins that help harmonize and tame strong seasonings, especially on protein-laden grill goodies. Lighter whites, such as riesling and pinot gris/grigio, refresh the palate and pair nicely with seafood items like fiery fish or shrimp. Dry rosés, far from the syrupy, inane rep they're battling, help quench the thirst built up under a sweltering sun, but also drink nicely with peppery items. And then there's the king of bland: the hot dog. If I had my druthers, every American would drink rosé with their nitrate-laden "beef' franks, if only to drown the flavor. With burly barbecued vittles, think bold and beautiful reds. Also think that the wine should match the sauce on the meat, rather than the meat itself, since the sauce becomes the dominant taste component. The zesty smoky-sweet stuff we slather on beef or chicken is far from wimpy, so your wine shouldn't be, either. Think something that sings with berries, with plenty of pepper and spice (not tannic and oaky), to stand up to all that brawn. Zinfandel and syrah/shiraz are considered classic BBQ wines because they have lots of fruit and peppery spice, without too much oak and tannin to cloud flavor. But if you're feeling exotic, pop open a smoky Spanish Rioja or California tempranillo (the grape in Rioja). For those wanting to stay in their comfort zone, medium to full-bodied merlots are also good matches for BBQ fare – especially mild brats and delicious, full-flavored sausages. A quick tip for the barbecue set-up: Since wine glasses just feel wrong when hanging at a barbecue, it's fine to use plastic cups. But avoid Styrofoam – all you'll taste is wine-scented Styrofoam. Recommended Wines Pink Criquet 2006 Bordeaux Rosé (France) Soft raspberry and strawberries with firm acidity and a gorgeous finish. A hint of plum and mint make it interesting. Sw = 1. $15. 3.5 stars Gravity Hills Tumbling Tractor 2004 Zinfandel Paso Robles (California) Fragrant jammy blackberries waft up to the nose, and the mouth experiences bold cherry, with a creamy vanilla elegance. A tiny bit spicy, with white pepper, tobacco. Great with grilled items. Sw = 2. $15. 4 stars Chateau Ste. Michelle 2006 Riesling Cold Creek Vineyard (Washington) Slightly sweet, with tart tangerine and citrus. Stainless steel aftertaste that's kind of cool. Sw = 4. $14. 3.5 stars Sweetness (Sw) rating is out of 10, 10 being pure sugar. 1(star) rating is out of 5, 5 being wine nirvana. 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" "Memorial Day" "grilling" 1267615 13024637 Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(91) "Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" }
array(101) { ["title"]=> string(37) "Is Memorial Day a meaningful holiday?" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2022-01-26T13:44:45+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2017-12-25T18:26:50+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(37) "Is Memorial Day a meaningful holiday?" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(10) "Jeff Slate" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(10) "Jeff Slate" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "145732" ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2001-05-23T04:04:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(46) "Content:_:Is Memorial Day a meaningful holiday" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(1555) "CHRIS, ATLANTA Yeah. All the cats that died get this day. My Dad was in the military for 29 years. He deserves his day. To me it's letting them know what they went through and that they got fucked. I respect that. It's tough going to the other side of the world, killing people, people you don't know, and maybe half not knowing what you're there for. I'm against war, but most of them were against war, too. If I killed someone, I would be so disturbed I would kill myself. But I'd definitely kill a Nazi, point-blank, and I wouldn't kill myself after killing the Nazi. JEFF, ATLANTA Folks have more appreciation for the Korean Vets and those earlier but not Vietnam vets. I try not to hold anything in my heart or mind that's negative. But the military taught me discipline. It put me on the right path and gave me a second chance in life. But we've managed to forget Memorial Day and what's important in life. On Memorial Day, I'm packing my bags and leaving town. It's just a matter of timing. I'm going to Oregon and sit in a 200-year-old fir tree so they won't cut the damn thing down. ALISA, ATLANTA My grandfather was a P.O.W. He was shot down somewhere in Asia and to this day he won't eat rice. My Dad was a vet. My father's best friend was killed in Vietnam and my brother is named after him. So it means a lot to me in that sense because I have such a family history. You don't want to forget that. I'll call my dad and my grandfather on Memorial Day, and then I'm going to go to Universal Studios. I've never been to Orlando.?? " ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1567) "__CHRIS, ATLANTA__ Yeah. All the cats that died get this day. My Dad was in the military for 29 years. He deserves his day. To me it's letting them know what they went through and that they got fucked. I respect that. It's tough going to the other side of the world, killing people, people you don't know, and maybe half not knowing what you're there for. I'm against war, but most of them were against war, too. If I killed someone, I would be so disturbed I would kill myself. But I'd definitely kill a Nazi, point-blank, and I wouldn't kill myself after killing the Nazi. __JEFF, ATLANTA__ Folks have more appreciation for the Korean Vets and those earlier but not Vietnam vets. I try not to hold anything in my heart or mind that's negative. But the military taught me discipline. It put me on the right path and gave me a second chance in life. But we've managed to forget Memorial Day and what's important in life. On Memorial Day, I'm packing my bags and leaving town. It's just a matter of timing. I'm going to Oregon and sit in a 200-year-old fir tree so they won't cut the damn thing down. __ALISA, ATLANTA__ My grandfather was a P.O.W. He was shot down somewhere in Asia and to this day he won't eat rice. My Dad was a vet. My father's best friend was killed in Vietnam and my brother is named after him. So it means a lot to me in that sense because I have such a family history. You don't want to forget that. I'll call my dad and my grandfather on Memorial Day, and then I'm going to go to Universal Studios. I've never been to Orlando.?? 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ben.eason Ben Eason Jeff Slate 2001-05-23T04:04:00+00:00 CHRIS, ATLANTA Yeah. All the cats that died get this day. My Dad was in the military for 29 years. He deserves his day. To me it's letting them know what they went through and that they got fucked. I respect that. It's tough going to the other side of the world, killing people, people you don't know, and maybe half not knowing what you're there for. I'm against war, but most of them were against war, too. If I killed someone, I would be so disturbed I would kill myself. But I'd definitely kill a Nazi, point-blank, and I wouldn't kill myself after killing the Nazi. JEFF, ATLANTA Folks have more appreciation for the Korean Vets and those earlier but not Vietnam vets. I try not to hold anything in my heart or mind that's negative. But the military taught me discipline. It put me on the right path and gave me a second chance in life. But we've managed to forget Memorial Day and what's important in life. On Memorial Day, I'm packing my bags and leaving town. It's just a matter of timing. I'm going to Oregon and sit in a 200-year-old fir tree so they won't cut the damn thing down. ALISA, ATLANTA My grandfather was a P.O.W. He was shot down somewhere in Asia and to this day he won't eat rice. My Dad was a vet. My father's best friend was killed in Vietnam and my brother is named after him. So it means a lot to me in that sense because I have such a family history. You don't want to forget that. I'll call my dad and my grandfather on Memorial Day, and then I'm going to go to Universal Studios. I've never been to Orlando.?? 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" 1231346 13004428 Is Memorial Day a meaningful holiday? " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(98) "Is Memorial Day a meaningful holiday?" }
Past Memorial Days
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Beer tasting? Cooking class? Let us know. Create a CL account and submit your Food and Drink happs here. Friday SweetWater Brewing Company May 26, 2017, 4:20-7 p.m. I Survived I85 ReOpening Party After a long struggle following the great collapse of I-85, SweetWater will attempt to bring Atlanta's shell-shocked traffic commuters back together again. The brewery will host a weekend party with food provided by Fox Bros Bar-B-Q, live music from MAGIC GIANT and, of course, plenty of SweetWater brews. 21+ Details Smokebelly BBQB May 26, 2017, 11 a.m. to May 29, 2017, 10 p.m. Smokebelly Red, White, and Q Smokebelly BBQ's Memorial Day weekend in Buckhead will feature live music from Andrew Velez Duo, Jon Q Duo, and the Noah Cothern Trio. Sunday's Memorial Day brunch offers bottomless mimosas, a bloody mary bar and Smokebelly's spin on classic brunch dishes. Order to-go packs on Memorial Day, or use Uber Eats or Postmates for delivery service. Details Red Brick Brewing May 26, 2017, 5-8 p.m. Zest in Show Beer Release Zest in Show is Red Brick Brewing's new summer beer, farmhouse brewed with lemon and tangerine peel. Try it at this release party and take home a six-pack before it hits retailers. Details Saturday Zoo Atlanta May 27, 2017, 5:30-9:30 p.m. Brew at the ZooB Atlantabs favorite day of exotic animals and booze is turning 10 this year! Celebrate with more than 70 different types of beer, wine, keeper talks and animal demos with some of the zoobs 1,000 nonhuman residents. Live music will come from local bands the Geeks, 8 Second Ride, RTW and Brad Jackson. General admission tickets get you unlimited samples and a commemorative tasting cup. VIP tickets include access to the Brew Preview Party and a surprise up-close-and-personal animal encounter.B B Details Orpheus Brewing May 27, 2017, noon to May 29, 2017, 5 p.m. Orpheus Brewing: Year ThreeB To celebrate its third anniversary, Orpheus Brewing is opening its doors for a three-day Memorial Day weekend bash. Festivities kick off on Sat., May 27. Along with brewery tours and tastings, there will be food trucks, a lineup of bourbon barrel-aged stouts and a new pineapple sour. Beer geeks note b a limited number of bottles of celebration beer bLike a White Curtain Blowing in the Draft from a Half-Opened Window Beside a Chair on Which Nobody Sitsb will be available. Who says itbs difficult to name beers these days?B Details Gwinnett Place Mall May 27, 2017, noon to May 28, 2017, 11 p.m. Asian Summer Festival The Asian Summer Festival is a celebration of Asian history and diversity, experienced through the traditions, music, food and art of local and national artists with ancestry from all over the continent. The goal of the festival is to strengthen Atlanta's Asian economic community, as well as build awareness and appreciation for the cultures. Details Sunday Gypsy KitchenB May 28, 2017, 4-11 p.m.B Basque in the SunB Gypsy KitchenB will be closed for Memorial Day, so they are celebrating early. A Flamenco artist will perform and a DJ will play live music all day while guests partake in half-off bottles of wine, $6 rosC), spiked snow cones and chorizo dogs.B Details Bellina Alimentari May 28, 2017, 5:30-10 p.m. Meet the Farmer Dinner Charlotte Swancy of Riverview Farms will be at Bellina Alimentari's third installment of their bMeet the Farmerb dinner series. A four-course menu featuring fresh produce from Riverview Farms will be paired with house Italian wines. Details Grant Park Farmers Market May 28, 2017, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Canning Demo and Q&A with Preserving Now Lyn Deardorff, owner of The Learning Kitchen, teaches how to preserve seasonal Georgia produce with demos on strawberry jam, Vidalia onion relish and pickled cherry tomatoes. Details The Heretic May 28, 2017, 3-9 p.m. Party Benefiting Joining Hearts Support local charity Joining Hearts in raising funds to provide care and housing assistance to Atlantans living with HIV/AIDS. The party is $5, and BBQ and beer can be purchased for an additional $10. DJ Kidd Madonny will provide the tunes. Details Cooks and Soldiers May 28, 2017, 5-9 p.m. Paella NightB The Sunday before Memorial Day, Cooks and Soldiers is offering a special deal on their classic Spanish dish: paella for just $9. Reservations not required for this event, but the party stops when the paella runs out. Details " ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(6489) "%{[data-embed-type="image" data-embed-id="5925c2826cdeea960b0a5854" data-embed-element="span" data-embed-size="640w" contenteditable="false"|data-embed-type=%22image%22 data-embed-id=%225925c2826cdeea960b0a5854%22 data-embed-element=%22span%22 data-embed-size=%22640w%22 contenteditable=%22false%22]}% ''Wine dinner? Beer tasting? Cooking class? Let us know. Create a ''CL'' account and [http://clatl.com/atlanta/Events/AddEvent|submit your Food and Drink happs here].'' __Friday__ [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/sweetwater-brewery|SweetWater Brewing Company] May 26, 2017, 4:20-7 p.m. __I Survived I85 ReOpening Party__ After a long struggle following the great collapse of I-85, SweetWater will attempt to bring Atlanta's shell-shocked traffic commuters back together again. The brewery will host a weekend party with food provided by Fox Bros Bar-B-Q, live music from MAGIC GIANT and, of course, plenty of SweetWater brews. 21+ [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/sweetwater-brewery/i-survived-i85-reopening-party|Details] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/smokebelly|Smokebelly BBQ]B May 26, 2017, 11 a.m. to May 29, 2017, 10 p.m. __Smokebelly Red, White, and Q__ Smokebelly BBQ's Memorial Day weekend in Buckhead will feature live music from Andrew Velez Duo, Jon Q Duo, and the Noah Cothern Trio. Sunday's Memorial Day brunch offers bottomless mimosas, a bloody mary bar and Smokebelly's spin on classic brunch dishes. Order to-go packs on Memorial Day, or use Uber Eats or Postmates for delivery service. [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/smokebelly/smokebelly-red-white-and-q|Details ] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/red-brick-brewing|Red Brick Brewing] May 26, 2017, 5-8 p.m. __Zest in Show Beer Release__ Zest in Show is Red Brick Brewing's new summer beer, farmhouse brewed with lemon and tangerine peel. Try it at this release party and take home a six-pack before it hits retailers. [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/red-brick-brewing/zest-in-show-beer-release|Details] __Saturday__ [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/zoo-atlanta|Zoo Atlanta] May 27, 2017, 5:30-9:30 p.m. __Brew at the Zoo__B Atlantabs favorite day of exotic animals and booze is turning 10 this year! Celebrate with more than 70 different types of beer, wine, keeper talks and animal demos with some of the zoobs 1,000 nonhuman residents. Live music will come from local bands the Geeks, 8 Second Ride, RTW and Brad Jackson. General admission tickets get you unlimited samples and a commemorative tasting cup. VIP tickets include access to the Brew Preview Party and a surprise up-close-and-personal animal encounter.B B [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/zoo-atlanta/brew-at-the-zoo.9Kd7yM|Details] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/orpheus-brewing|Orpheus Brewing] May 27, 2017, noon to May 29, 2017, 5 p.m. __Orpheus Brewing: Year Three__B To celebrate its third anniversary, Orpheus Brewing is opening its doors for a three-day Memorial Day weekend bash. Festivities kick off on Sat., May 27. Along with brewery tours and tastings, there will be food trucks, a lineup of bourbon barrel-aged stouts and a new pineapple sour. Beer geeks note b a limited number of bottles of celebration beer bLike a White Curtain Blowing in the Draft from a Half-Opened Window Beside a Chair on Which Nobody Sitsb will be available. Who says itbs difficult to name beers these days?B [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/orpheus-brewing/orpheus-brewing-memorial-day-weekend-bash|Details] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/gwinnett-place-mall|Gwinnett Place Mall] May 27, 2017, noon to May 28, 2017, 11 p.m. __Asian Summer Festival__ The Asian Summer Festival is a celebration of Asian history and diversity, experienced through the traditions, music, food and art of local and national artists with ancestry from all over the continent. The goal of the festival is to strengthen Atlanta's Asian economic community, as well as build awareness and appreciation for the cultures. [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/gwinnett-place-mall/asian-summer-festival|Details] __Sunday__ [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/gypsy-kitchen|Gypsy Kitchen]B May 28, 2017, 4-11 p.m.B __Basque in the SunB __Gypsy KitchenB will be closed for Memorial Day, so they are celebrating early. A Flamenco artist will perform and a DJ will play live music all day while guests partake in half-off bottles of wine, $6 rosC), spiked snow cones and chorizo dogs.B [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/gypsy-kitchen/basque-in-the-sun.VTpQMM|Details] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/bellina-alimentari|Bellina Alimentari] May 28, 2017, 5:30-10 p.m. __Meet the Farmer Dinner__ Charlotte Swancy of Riverview Farms will be at Bellina Alimentari's third installment of their bMeet the Farmerb dinner series. A four-course menu featuring fresh produce from Riverview Farms will be paired with house Italian wines. [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/bellina-alimentari/meet-the-farmer-dinner.sYHGxM|Details] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/grant-park-farmers-market|Grant Park Farmers Market] May 28, 2017, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. __Canning Demo and Q&A with Preserving Now__ Lyn Deardorff, owner of The Learning Kitchen, teaches how to preserve seasonal Georgia produce with demos on strawberry jam, Vidalia onion relish and pickled cherry tomatoes. [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/grant-park-farmers-market/canning-demo-and-q-and-a-with-preserving-now.qzcKNM|Details ] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/the-heretic|The Heretic] May 28, 2017, 3-9 p.m. __Party Benefiting Joining Hearts__ Support local charity Joining Hearts in raising funds to provide care and housing assistance to Atlantans living with HIV/AIDS. The party is $5, and BBQ and beer can be purchased for an additional $10. DJ Kidd Madonny will provide the tunes. [http://local.creativeloafing.com/event/the-heretic/summer-kickoff-patio-party-benefiting-joining-hearts|Details ] [http://local.creativeloafing.com/location/cooks-and-soldiers|Cooks and Soldiers] May 28, 2017, 5-9 p.m.__ ____Paella Night__B The Sunday before Memorial Day, Cooks and Soldiers is offering a special deal on their classic Spanish dish: paella for just $9. Reservations not required for this event, but the party stops when the paella runs out. 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Beer tasting? Cooking class? Let us know. Create a CL account and submit your Food and Drink happs here. Friday SweetWater Brewing Company May 26, 2017, 4:20-7 p.m. I Survived I85 ReOpening Party After a long struggle following the great collapse of I-85, SweetWater will attempt to bring Atlanta's shell-shocked traffic commuters back together again. The brewery will host a weekend party with food provided by Fox Bros Bar-B-Q, live music from MAGIC GIANT and, of course, plenty of SweetWater brews. 21+ Details Smokebelly BBQB May 26, 2017, 11 a.m. to May 29, 2017, 10 p.m. Smokebelly Red, White, and Q Smokebelly BBQ's Memorial Day weekend in Buckhead will feature live music from Andrew Velez Duo, Jon Q Duo, and the Noah Cothern Trio. Sunday's Memorial Day brunch offers bottomless mimosas, a bloody mary bar and Smokebelly's spin on classic brunch dishes. Order to-go packs on Memorial Day, or use Uber Eats or Postmates for delivery service. Details Red Brick Brewing May 26, 2017, 5-8 p.m. Zest in Show Beer Release Zest in Show is Red Brick Brewing's new summer beer, farmhouse brewed with lemon and tangerine peel. Try it at this release party and take home a six-pack before it hits retailers. Details Saturday Zoo Atlanta May 27, 2017, 5:30-9:30 p.m. Brew at the ZooB Atlantabs favorite day of exotic animals and booze is turning 10 this year! Celebrate with more than 70 different types of beer, wine, keeper talks and animal demos with some of the zoobs 1,000 nonhuman residents. Live music will come from local bands the Geeks, 8 Second Ride, RTW and Brad Jackson. General admission tickets get you unlimited samples and a commemorative tasting cup. VIP tickets include access to the Brew Preview Party and a surprise up-close-and-personal animal encounter.B B Details Orpheus Brewing May 27, 2017, noon to May 29, 2017, 5 p.m. Orpheus Brewing: Year ThreeB To celebrate its third anniversary, Orpheus Brewing is opening its doors for a three-day Memorial Day weekend bash. Festivities kick off on Sat., May 27. Along with brewery tours and tastings, there will be food trucks, a lineup of bourbon barrel-aged stouts and a new pineapple sour. Beer geeks note b a limited number of bottles of celebration beer bLike a White Curtain Blowing in the Draft from a Half-Opened Window Beside a Chair on Which Nobody Sitsb will be available. Who says itbs difficult to name beers these days?B Details Gwinnett Place Mall May 27, 2017, noon to May 28, 2017, 11 p.m. Asian Summer Festival The Asian Summer Festival is a celebration of Asian history and diversity, experienced through the traditions, music, food and art of local and national artists with ancestry from all over the continent. The goal of the festival is to strengthen Atlanta's Asian economic community, as well as build awareness and appreciation for the cultures. Details Sunday Gypsy KitchenB May 28, 2017, 4-11 p.m.B Basque in the SunB Gypsy KitchenB will be closed for Memorial Day, so they are celebrating early. A Flamenco artist will perform and a DJ will play live music all day while guests partake in half-off bottles of wine, $6 rosC), spiked snow cones and chorizo dogs.B Details Bellina Alimentari May 28, 2017, 5:30-10 p.m. Meet the Farmer Dinner Charlotte Swancy of Riverview Farms will be at Bellina Alimentari's third installment of their bMeet the Farmerb dinner series. A four-course menu featuring fresh produce from Riverview Farms will be paired with house Italian wines. Details Grant Park Farmers Market May 28, 2017, 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Canning Demo and Q&A with Preserving Now Lyn Deardorff, owner of The Learning Kitchen, teaches how to preserve seasonal Georgia produce with demos on strawberry jam, Vidalia onion relish and pickled cherry tomatoes. Details The Heretic May 28, 2017, 3-9 p.m. Party Benefiting Joining Hearts Support local charity Joining Hearts in raising funds to provide care and housing assistance to Atlantans living with HIV/AIDS. The party is $5, and BBQ and beer can be purchased for an additional $10. DJ Kidd Madonny will provide the tunes. Details Cooks and Soldiers May 28, 2017, 5-9 p.m. Paella NightB The Sunday before Memorial Day, Cooks and Soldiers is offering a special deal on their classic Spanish dish: paella for just $9. Reservations not required for this event, but the party stops when the paella runs out. Details 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day events" 20862560 http://dev.creativeloafing.com/image/2017/05/CL_food_pic_2.5925c282083d2.png Memorial Day weekend events 2017 " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(89) "Memorial Day weekend events 2017" }
array(100) { ["title"]=> string(28) "End Confederate Memorial Day" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2022-01-28T13:37:32+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2018-01-09T14:23:58+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(28) "End Confederate Memorial Day" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(13) "Payson Schwin" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(13) "Payson Schwin" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "148431" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(34) "Long live Civil War History Month!" ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(34) "Long live Civil War History Month!" ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2015-04-27T18:02:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(38) "Content:_:End Confederate Memorial Day" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(7791) " *Eric Cash/CL File *Why not Civil War History Month? From the Very Unofficial Governor of the State of Georgia for Today A Proclamation Civil War History Month WHEREAS: All state offices are closed today for Confederate Memorial Day, a state holiday not to be confused with next month’s (Unionist?) Memorial Day; WHEREAS: Since Gov. Nathan Deal is out of the office today, and because he did not issue a proclamation this year about Confederate History and Heritage Month, I hereby issue my own proclamation through the wholly imaginary power of proclamatus in guberno abstentia; WHEREAS: Confederate Memorial Day falls on the 27th this year, but in 1874, the Georgia Assembly officially named the “26th day of April in each year” as Confederate Memorial Day. The day recognizes Confederate States Army Gen. Joe Johnston’s surrender to Union Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett’s Farm in North Carolina 150 years ago. The Civil War ended for more than 89,000 Southern soldiers on this day a century and a half ago, representing the largest surrender of the Civil War, even larger than Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. While the fighting wouldn’t truly end until later that year, April 26, 1865 marked the end of major hostilities; WHEREAS: Georgia’s governors have issued many proclamations over the years in the lead up to Confederate History and Heritage Month. In recent years, these proclamations have recognized southern white women (2002, 2003, 2014), Native Americans (2005, 2010), Jewish Americans (2009), and John Pemberton, the inventor of Coca-Cola and as it turns out, a lieutenant colonel in the Confederate Army (2006). Conspicuously omitted is any mention whatsoever of slavery or the plight of African-Americans. In 2012, the proclamations stopped referencing the “Civil War,” instead calling the conflict the “War Between the States,” a label supported for more than a century by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a group whose false claims include saying that it is “difficult for historians to agree on the war’s basic causes” (no, it isn’t) and the Confederate flag was “recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation” separate from the U.S. (no, it wasn’t). Perhaps we should just be thankful we’re not calling it “The War of Northern Aggression”; WHEREAS: For years, the state of Georgia informally recognized all of April as Confederate History and Heritage Month, though it became official when the Georgia Assembly passed Senate Bill 27 in 2009 . A shockingly small number of Georgia’s state senators and representatives voted against SB 27. (Current Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Senator Ronald B. Ramsey, Sr. provided the only two “Nay” votes in the state Senate ); WHEREAS: SB 27 urged all Georgians to “honor, observe, and celebrate the Confederate States of America, its history, those who served in its armed forces and government, and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which they held so dear”; WHEREAS: I wonder who these “millions” of contributors of “various races and ethnic groups and religious” could possibly have been considering the Confederates were a pasty bunch; WHEREAS: The name of the particular “cause which they held so dear” goes unspoken, though I can tell you it starts with “s-” and ends with “-lavery.” (Not “-tates rights.”) Georgia’s ordinance of secession wasn’t so bashful about the “cause” of the war, as shown in its second sentence: “For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.” Robert Toombs, in his farewell address to the U.S. Senate, excoriated his Northern colleagues for their efforts to “upturn our social system,” “steal our slaves,” “make them freemen to vote against us,” and “bring an inferior race in a condition of equality, socially and politically, with our own people.” The Confederate Constitution, largely cribbed from the original U.S. version, differed significantly in one way: it very specifically made slavery the eternal law of the land, and included the phrase, “No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed.” Or put succinctly, no backsies on slavery; WHEREAS: SB 27 urged Georgians to “commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance.” I imagine most African-Americans, who make up 31 percent of the state’s population, might not want to celebrate the Confederacy. Nor would the Hispanic-Americans and Asian-Americans who make up 14 percent of the state, or any minority group for that matter. Nor would the millions of Northerners who have moved to Georgia over the past few decades, many of whom had ancestors fight for the Union. Come to think of it, I don’t think most white people like me who were born and raised in the South — owners of the Confederate flag license plate notwithstanding — identify in the slightest with Georgia’s antebellum culture of enslavement; WHEREAS: The story of the Civil War is complex, as we can see in the pro-Union bent of the people living in the South’s mountain regions. Even the case of Gen. William “Make Georgia Howl” Sherman, the burner of Atlanta, isn’t a simple one. In 1864, he wrote to Atlanta Mayor James Calhoun, “When peace does come, you may call on me for anything. Then I will share with you the last cracker, and watch with you to shield your homes and families against danger from every quarter.” The following year at Bennett’s Farm, Sherman offered his Confederate counterpart Gen. Johnston terms of surrender much more generous than Grant had offered Lee. They were so generous, in fact, that the Cabinet had to rescind Sherman’s original offer; WHEREAS: The Confederate Memorial Day and Confederate History and Heritage Month neither represents modern Georgia, nor captures the complexity that makes the our state’s Civil War past so interesting. The Civil War, a conflict in which more Americans died than in all other U.S. wars combined, deserves and demands to be studied in all its various aspects; WHEREAS: This month should be a time when Georgians make every effort to learn something new about the Civil War. We could visit the battlefield at Kennesaw Mountain instead of the granite relief at Stone Mountain. We could get a close-up a view of the Confederate Constitution (and all its warts) at the University of Georgia. We could make a brief stop at the Confederate soldier burial ground in Oakland Cemetery or the Slave Life exhibition at the Atlanta History Center. We could get out of our cars to view the monuments dedicated to Union General McPherson and CSA General Walker, both in East Atlanta. Or we could take a day trip to Andersonville prison, Fort Pulaski, and the Tubman African-American Museum in Macon. (Really, y’all should just get out there and do anything that teaches you about this painful, yet fascinating era in Georgia’s history); THEREFORE: I, PAYSON SCHWIN, Very Unofficial Governor For A Day of the State of Georgia, do hereby proclaim April as CIVIL WAR HISTORY MONTH and April 26 as CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL DAY in Georgia. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and have as of yet not figured out how to cause the Seal of the Executive Department to be affixed this 27th day of April in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen. Payson Schwin Very Unofficial Governor For A Day Payson Schwin is an Atlanta writer." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(10090) "{img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/atlanta/imager/why-not-civil-war-history-month/u/original/14124511/1430156740-civil_war_reenactment_-_004.jpg"} *[http://clatl.com/atlanta/ImageArchives?by=6474407|Eric Cash/CL File] *Why not Civil War History Month? ::__From the Very Unofficial Governor of the State of Georgia for Today__:: ::__A Proclamation __:: ::__Civil War History Month__:: __WHEREAS__: All state offices are closed today for Confederate Memorial Day, a state holiday not to be confused with next month’s (Unionist?) Memorial Day; __WHEREAS__: Since Gov. Nathan Deal is out of the office today, and because he did not issue a proclamation this year about Confederate History and Heritage Month, I hereby issue my own proclamation through the wholly imaginary power of ''proclamatus in guberno abstentia''; __WHEREAS__: Confederate Memorial Day falls on the 27th this year, but in 1874, the Georgia Assembly officially named the “26th day of April in each year” as Confederate Memorial Day. The day [http://www.11alive.com/news/article/239524/40/Did-you-know-Confederate-Memorial-Day-is-still-a-state-holiday|recognizes] Confederate States Army Gen. Joe Johnston’s surrender to Union Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett’s Farm in North Carolina 150 years ago. The Civil War ended for more than 89,000 Southern soldiers on this day a century and a half ago, representing the largest surrender of the Civil War, even larger than Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. While the fighting wouldn’t truly end until later that year, April 26, 1865 marked the end of major hostilities; __WHEREAS__: Georgia’s governors have issued many proclamations over the years in the lead up to Confederate History and Heritage Month. In recent years, these proclamations have recognized southern white women ([http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GADOOLY/2002-03/1017583584|2002], [http://sonnyperdue.georgia.gov/gov/proclamations/archive/Confederate_History_2003.pdf|2003], [http://spofga.org/flag/2005/april/confederate_proclamations.php|2014]), Native Americans ([http://spofga.org/flag/2005/april/confederate_proclamations.php|2005], [http://sonsofconfederateveterans.blogspot.com/2010/01/georgia-governor-signs-confederate.html|2010]), Jewish Americans ([http://sonnyperdue.georgia.gov/vgn/images/portal/cit_1210/60/46/133301207Confederate History Month 2009.pdf|2009]), and John Pemberton, the inventor of Coca-Cola and as it turns out, a lieutenant colonel in the Confederate Army ([http://sonnyperdue.georgia.gov/gov/proclamations/2006/CONFEDERATE_HISTORY_MONTH_2006.pdf|2006]). Conspicuously omitted is any mention whatsoever of slavery or the plight of African-Americans. In 2012, the proclamations stopped referencing the “Civil War,” instead [https://gov.georgia.gov/sites/gov.georgia.gov/files/related_files/site_page/CHMonthProc2012.pdf|calling] the conflict the “War Between the States,” a label [http://www.hqudc.org/about_udc/WBTS.htm|supported] for more than a century by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a group whose false claims include saying that it is “difficult for historians to agree on the war’s basic causes” ([http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/military-jan-june11-civilwar_04-12/|no, it isn’t]) and the Confederate flag was “recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation” separate from the U.S. ([https://history.state.gov/milestones/1861-1865/confederacy|no, it wasn’t]). Perhaps we should just be thankful we’re not calling it “The War of Northern Aggression”; __WHEREAS__: For years, the state of Georgia informally [http://www.legis.ga.gov/Legislation/en-US/display/20092010/SB/27|recognized] all of April as Confederate History and Heritage Month, though it became official when the Georgia Assembly passed Senate Bill 27 in 2009 . A shockingly small number of Georgia’s state senators and representatives voted against SB 27. (Current Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Senator Ronald B. Ramsey, Sr. [http://www.legis.ga.gov/Legislation/en-US/vote.aspx?VoteID=6064|provided] the only two “Nay” votes in the state Senate ); __WHEREAS__: SB 27 urged all Georgians to “honor, observe, and celebrate the Confederate States of America, its history, those who served in its armed forces and government, and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which they held so dear”; __WHEREAS__: I wonder who these “millions” of contributors of “various races and ethnic groups and religious” could possibly have been considering the Confederates were a pasty bunch; __WHEREAS__: The name of the particular “cause which they held so dear” goes unspoken, though I can tell you it starts with “s-” and ends with “-lavery.” (Not “-tates rights.”) Georgia’s ordinance of secession wasn’t so bashful about the “cause” of the war, as [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_geosec.asp|shown] in its second sentence: “For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.” Robert Toombs, in his farewell address to the U.S. Senate, [https://books.google.com/books?id=LvQtAAAAYAAJ&vq=toombs&pg=PA144#v=snippet&q=toombs&f=false|excoriated] his Northern colleagues for their efforts to “upturn our social system,” “steal our slaves,” “make them freemen to vote against us,” and “bring an inferior race in a condition of equality, socially and politically, with our own people.” The Confederate Constitution, largely cribbed from the original U.S. version, differed significantly in one way: it very specifically made slavery the eternal law of the land, and [http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_csa.asp|included the phrase], “No bill of attainder, ''ex post facto'' law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed.” Or put succinctly, no backsies on slavery; __WHEREAS__: SB 27 urged Georgians to “commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance.” I imagine most African-Americans, who make up 31 percent of the state’s population, might not want to celebrate the Confederacy. Nor would the Hispanic-Americans and Asian-Americans who [http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/13000.html|make up] 14 percent of the state, or any minority group for that matter. Nor would the millions of Northerners who have [http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/08/13/upshot/where-people-in-each-state-were-born.html?_r=0|moved to Georgia] over the past few decades, many of whom had ancestors fight for the Union. Come to think of it, I don’t think most white people like me who were born and raised in the South — [http://nation.time.com/2014/02/20/confederate-flag-georgia-license-plate/|owners of the Confederate flag license plate notwithstanding] — identify in the slightest with Georgia’s antebellum culture of enslavement; __WHEREAS__: The story of the Civil War is complex, as we can see in the pro-Union bent of the people living in the South’s mountain regions. Even the case of Gen. William “[http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/11/17/rethinking-shermans-march/?_r=0|Make Georgia Howl]” Sherman, the burner of Atlanta, isn’t a simple one. In 1864, he [https://books.google.com/books?id=b7lMAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA21&lpg=PA21&dq=When peace does come, you may call on me for anything&source=bl&ots=AVUUyP5r6B&sig=ANdwfl1JOJ56FrhGPQFW-Ip_uQ4&hl=en&sa=X&ei=taM2VdyfO4LnsASJm4CoDg&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=When peace does come, you may call on me for anything&f=false|wrote] to Atlanta Mayor James Calhoun, “When peace does come, you may call on me for anything. Then I will share with you the last cracker, and watch with you to shield your homes and families against danger from every quarter.” The following year at Bennett’s Farm, Sherman offered his Confederate counterpart Gen. Johnston terms of surrender much more generous than Grant had offered Lee. They were so generous, in fact, that the Cabinet had to [http://www.civilwar.org/education/history/end-of-war/johnston-surrenders.html|rescind] Sherman’s original offer; __WHEREAS__: The Confederate Memorial Day and Confederate History and Heritage Month neither represents modern Georgia, nor captures the complexity that makes the our state’s Civil War past so interesting. The Civil War, a conflict in which more Americans died than in all other U.S. wars combined, deserves and demands to be studied in all its various aspects; __WHEREAS__: This month should be a time when Georgians make every effort to learn something new about the Civil War. We could visit the battlefield at Kennesaw Mountain instead of the granite relief at Stone Mountain. We could get a close-up a view of the Confederate Constitution (and all its warts) at the University of Georgia. We could make a brief stop at the Confederate soldier burial ground in Oakland Cemetery or the Slave Life exhibition at the Atlanta History Center. We could get out of our cars to view the monuments dedicated to Union General McPherson and CSA General Walker, both in East Atlanta. Or we could take a day trip to Andersonville prison, Fort Pulaski, and the Tubman African-American Museum in Macon. (Really, y’all should just get out there and do anything that teaches you about this painful, yet fascinating era in Georgia’s history); __THEREFORE__: I, PAYSON SCHWIN, Very Unofficial Governor For A Day of the State of Georgia, do hereby proclaim April as CIVIL WAR HISTORY MONTH and April 26 as CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL DAY in Georgia. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and have as of yet not figured out how to cause the Seal of the Executive Department to be affixed this 27th day of April in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen. Payson Schwin Very Unofficial Governor For A Day ''Payson Schwin is an Atlanta writer''." 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From the Very Unofficial Governor of the State of Georgia for Today A Proclamation Civil War History Month WHEREAS: All state offices are closed today for Confederate Memorial Day, a state holiday not to be confused with next month’s (Unionist?) Memorial Day; WHEREAS: Since Gov. Nathan Deal is out of the office today, and because he did not issue a proclamation this year about Confederate History and Heritage Month, I hereby issue my own proclamation through the wholly imaginary power of proclamatus in guberno abstentia; WHEREAS: Confederate Memorial Day falls on the 27th this year, but in 1874, the Georgia Assembly officially named the “26th day of April in each year” as Confederate Memorial Day. The day recognizes Confederate States Army Gen. Joe Johnston’s surrender to Union Gen. William T. Sherman at Bennett’s Farm in North Carolina 150 years ago. The Civil War ended for more than 89,000 Southern soldiers on this day a century and a half ago, representing the largest surrender of the Civil War, even larger than Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. While the fighting wouldn’t truly end until later that year, April 26, 1865 marked the end of major hostilities; WHEREAS: Georgia’s governors have issued many proclamations over the years in the lead up to Confederate History and Heritage Month. In recent years, these proclamations have recognized southern white women (2002, 2003, 2014), Native Americans (2005, 2010), Jewish Americans (2009), and John Pemberton, the inventor of Coca-Cola and as it turns out, a lieutenant colonel in the Confederate Army (2006). Conspicuously omitted is any mention whatsoever of slavery or the plight of African-Americans. In 2012, the proclamations stopped referencing the “Civil War,” instead calling the conflict the “War Between the States,” a label supported for more than a century by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, a group whose false claims include saying that it is “difficult for historians to agree on the war’s basic causes” (no, it isn’t) and the Confederate flag was “recognized all over the world as belonging to a nation” separate from the U.S. (no, it wasn’t). Perhaps we should just be thankful we’re not calling it “The War of Northern Aggression”; WHEREAS: For years, the state of Georgia informally recognized all of April as Confederate History and Heritage Month, though it became official when the Georgia Assembly passed Senate Bill 27 in 2009 . A shockingly small number of Georgia’s state senators and representatives voted against SB 27. (Current Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed and Senator Ronald B. Ramsey, Sr. provided the only two “Nay” votes in the state Senate ); WHEREAS: SB 27 urged all Georgians to “honor, observe, and celebrate the Confederate States of America, its history, those who served in its armed forces and government, and all those millions of its citizens of various races and ethnic groups and religions who contributed in sundry and myriad ways to the cause which they held so dear”; WHEREAS: I wonder who these “millions” of contributors of “various races and ethnic groups and religious” could possibly have been considering the Confederates were a pasty bunch; WHEREAS: The name of the particular “cause which they held so dear” goes unspoken, though I can tell you it starts with “s-” and ends with “-lavery.” (Not “-tates rights.”) Georgia’s ordinance of secession wasn’t so bashful about the “cause” of the war, as shown in its second sentence: “For the last ten years we have had numerous and serious causes of complaint against our non-slave-holding confederate States with reference to the subject of African slavery.” Robert Toombs, in his farewell address to the U.S. Senate, excoriated his Northern colleagues for their efforts to “upturn our social system,” “steal our slaves,” “make them freemen to vote against us,” and “bring an inferior race in a condition of equality, socially and politically, with our own people.” The Confederate Constitution, largely cribbed from the original U.S. version, differed significantly in one way: it very specifically made slavery the eternal law of the land, and included the phrase, “No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed.” Or put succinctly, no backsies on slavery; WHEREAS: SB 27 urged Georgians to “commemorate and honor our shared history and cultural inheritance.” I imagine most African-Americans, who make up 31 percent of the state’s population, might not want to celebrate the Confederacy. Nor would the Hispanic-Americans and Asian-Americans who make up 14 percent of the state, or any minority group for that matter. Nor would the millions of Northerners who have moved to Georgia over the past few decades, many of whom had ancestors fight for the Union. Come to think of it, I don’t think most white people like me who were born and raised in the South — owners of the Confederate flag license plate notwithstanding — identify in the slightest with Georgia’s antebellum culture of enslavement; WHEREAS: The story of the Civil War is complex, as we can see in the pro-Union bent of the people living in the South’s mountain regions. Even the case of Gen. William “Make Georgia Howl” Sherman, the burner of Atlanta, isn’t a simple one. In 1864, he wrote to Atlanta Mayor James Calhoun, “When peace does come, you may call on me for anything. Then I will share with you the last cracker, and watch with you to shield your homes and families against danger from every quarter.” The following year at Bennett’s Farm, Sherman offered his Confederate counterpart Gen. Johnston terms of surrender much more generous than Grant had offered Lee. They were so generous, in fact, that the Cabinet had to rescind Sherman’s original offer; WHEREAS: The Confederate Memorial Day and Confederate History and Heritage Month neither represents modern Georgia, nor captures the complexity that makes the our state’s Civil War past so interesting. The Civil War, a conflict in which more Americans died than in all other U.S. wars combined, deserves and demands to be studied in all its various aspects; WHEREAS: This month should be a time when Georgians make every effort to learn something new about the Civil War. We could visit the battlefield at Kennesaw Mountain instead of the granite relief at Stone Mountain. We could get a close-up a view of the Confederate Constitution (and all its warts) at the University of Georgia. We could make a brief stop at the Confederate soldier burial ground in Oakland Cemetery or the Slave Life exhibition at the Atlanta History Center. We could get out of our cars to view the monuments dedicated to Union General McPherson and CSA General Walker, both in East Atlanta. Or we could take a day trip to Andersonville prison, Fort Pulaski, and the Tubman African-American Museum in Macon. (Really, y’all should just get out there and do anything that teaches you about this painful, yet fascinating era in Georgia’s history); THEREFORE: I, PAYSON SCHWIN, Very Unofficial Governor For A Day of the State of Georgia, do hereby proclaim April as CIVIL WAR HISTORY MONTH and April 26 as CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL DAY in Georgia. In witness thereof, I have hereunto set my hand and have as of yet not figured out how to cause the Seal of the Executive Department to be affixed this 27th day of April in the year of our Lord two thousand fifteen. Payson Schwin Very Unofficial Governor For A Day Payson Schwin is an Atlanta writer. 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" "William T. Sherman" "Confederate Memorial Day" "Civil War History Month" "Civil War" "Burning of Atlanta" 14121847 13082838 End Confederate Memorial Day " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(81) "End Confederate Memorial Day" }
array(100) { ["title"]=> string(32) "Memorial Day Weekend Events 2013" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2022-01-31T03:39:30+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2018-01-10T12:58:30+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(32) "Memorial Day Weekend Events 2013" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(7) "Gina Yu" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(7) "Gina Yu" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "148244" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(52) "Check out this Memorial Weekend's Atlanta food happs" ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(52) "Check out this Memorial Weekend's Atlanta food happs" ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2013-05-24T12:01:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(42) "Content:_:memorial day weekend events 2013" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(1155) "https://media2.fdncms.com/atlanta/imager/join-south-city-kitchen-for-a-three-course/u/original/8280070/1369234264-south_city_kitchen.jpg *James Camp/ CL file *Join South City Kitchen for a three-course meal, followed by a concert by Michael Feinstein at the Atlanta Symphony Hall Wine dinner? Beer Tasting? Cooking Class? Let us know. Create a CL account and submit your Food and Drink happs here. Fri., May 24 Lobby at Twelve Fri., May 24, 7-9 p.m. Seafood cooking class Join Chef Russell Hays in Lobby's private cellar space and learn about buying, butchering, storing and cooking seafood correctly. Includes wine pairings with each dish. Details South City Kitchen Fri., May 24, and Sat., May 25 Michael Feinstein Dinner and Show Join South City Kitchen for a three-course prix fixe dinner, followed by a concert by Michael Feinstein at the Atlanta Symphony Hall at 8 p.m. Reservations will be for 5:30, 6, or 6:30 p.m. Details Amura Fri., May 24- Sun., May 26, 10 p.m. Sushi and Jazz This Memorial Day weekend, treat yourself to a jazz experience from legendary Chicago jazz club, Close Up 2 and the Atlanta Jazz Festival. Details" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1820) "[https://media2.fdncms.com/atlanta/imager/join-south-city-kitchen-for-a-three-course/u/original/8280070/1369234264-south_city_kitchen.jpg|{img src="https://media2.fdncms.com/atlanta/imager/join-south-city-kitchen-for-a-three-course/u/original/8280070/1369234264-south_city_kitchen.jpg"}] *[http://clatl.com/atlanta/ImageArchives?by=7309071|James Camp/ CL file] *Join South City Kitchen for a three-course meal, followed by a concert by Michael Feinstein at the Atlanta Symphony Hall Wine dinner? Beer Tasting? Cooking Class? Let us know. Create a CL'' account and [http://clatl.com/atlanta/Events/AddEvent|submit your Food and Drink happs here].'' Fri., May 24 __[http://clatl.com/atlanta/lobby_at_twelve/Location?oid=1294449|Lobby at Twelve]__ Fri., May 24, 7-9 p.m. __Seafood cooking class__ Join Chef Russell Hays in Lobby's private cellar space and learn about buying, butchering, storing and cooking seafood correctly. Includes wine pairings with each dish. [http://clatl.com/atlanta/seafood-cooking-class/Event?oid=8240384|Details] __[http://clatl.com/atlanta/south_city_kitchen/Location?oid=1293336|South City Kitchen]__ Fri., May 24, and Sat., May 25 __Michael Feinstein Dinner and Show__ Join South City Kitchen for a three-course prix fixe dinner, followed by a concert by Michael Feinstein at the Atlanta Symphony Hall at 8 p.m. Reservations will be for 5:30, 6, or 6:30 p.m. [http://clatl.com/atlanta/michael-feinstein-dinner-and-show/Event?oid=8082811|Details] __[http://clatl.com/atlanta/amura/Location?oid=8171864|Amura]__ Fri., May 24- Sun., May 26, 10 p.m. __Sushi and Jazz__ This Memorial Day weekend, treat yourself to a jazz experience from legendary Chicago jazz club, Close Up 2 and the Atlanta Jazz Festival. 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Atlanta Symphony Hall Wine dinner? Beer Tasting? Cooking Class? Let us know. Create a CL account and submit your Food and Drink happs here. Fri., May 24 Lobby at Twelve Fri., May 24, 7-9 p.m. Seafood cooking class Join Chef Russell Hays in Lobby's private cellar space and learn about buying, butchering, storing and cooking seafood correctly. Includes wine pairings with each dish. Details South City Kitchen Fri., May 24, and Sat., May 25 Michael Feinstein Dinner and Show Join South City Kitchen for a three-course prix fixe dinner, followed by a concert by Michael Feinstein at the Atlanta Symphony Hall at 8 p.m. Reservations will be for 5:30, 6, or 6:30 p.m. Details Amura Fri., May 24- Sun., May 26, 10 p.m. Sushi and Jazz This Memorial Day weekend, treat yourself to a jazz experience from legendary Chicago jazz club, Close Up 2 and the Atlanta Jazz Festival. 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array(100) { ["title"]=> string(47) "Remember Our Forgotten Men: Memorial Day Movies" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2021-04-13T18:06:24+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2018-01-09T13:45:30+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(47) "Remember Our Forgotten Men: Memorial Day Movies" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(12) "Gabe Wardell" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(12) "Gabe Wardell" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "146416" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(42) "A few Memorial Day films worth remembering" ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(42) "A few Memorial Day films worth remembering" ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2012-05-27T14:00:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(57) "Content:_:Remember Our Forgotten Men: Memorial Day Movies" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(1233) "While Memorial Day was established to honor fallen soldiers, what better way to honor their memory than to see to it that those who survived are welcomed back home. Among the greatest surprises in my film going experience is this final number from Mervyn LeRoy's Gold Diggers of 1933, a pre-code backstage musical featuring elaborate Busby Berkeley choreographed dance numbers. Trojan Horsed into the film's climactic finale is this poignant and striking indictment of the treatment of World War I veterans, depicted as homeless, neglected, and down & out. The juxtaposition of stark politics, and grim reality with the lavish fantasy of a stage musical is revelatory. What's old is new again as contemporary filmmakers address some of these same issues with documentaries showcasing the lives of returning veterans: Oscar-nominated doc Hell and Back Again slated to air on PBS' Independent Lens on Monday May 28, (I've looked and can't seem to find it on any of the local channels - please add times to the comments section if you can find them) follows US Marine Sergeant Nathan Harris, 27 as he returns home from Afghanistan in the Wounded Warrior Regiment at Camp Lejeune recovering from a gunshot wound." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1313) "While Memorial Day was established to honor fallen soldiers, what better way to honor their memory than to see to it that those who survived are welcomed back home. Among the greatest surprises in my film going experience is this final number from Mervyn LeRoy's ''Gold Diggers of 1933'', a pre-code backstage musical featuring elaborate Busby Berkeley choreographed dance numbers. Trojan Horsed into the film's climactic finale is this poignant and striking indictment of the treatment of World War I veterans, depicted as homeless, neglected, and down & out. The juxtaposition of stark politics, and grim reality with the lavish fantasy of a stage musical is revelatory. What's old is new again as contemporary filmmakers address some of these same issues with documentaries showcasing the lives of returning veterans: Oscar-nominated doc ''[http://hellandbackagain.com/|Hell and Back Again]'' slated to air on [http://video.pbs.org/video/2189845957/|PBS' Independent Lens] on Monday May 28, (I've looked and can't seem to find it on any of the local channels - please add times to the comments section if you can find them) follows US Marine Sergeant Nathan Harris, 27 as he returns home from Afghanistan in the Wounded Warrior Regiment at Camp Lejeune recovering from a gunshot wound." 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Among the greatest surprises in my film going experience is this final number from Mervyn LeRoy's Gold Diggers of 1933, a pre-code backstage musical featuring elaborate Busby Berkeley choreographed dance numbers. Trojan Horsed into the film's climactic finale is this poignant and striking indictment of the treatment of World War I veterans, depicted as homeless, neglected, and down & out. The juxtaposition of stark politics, and grim reality with the lavish fantasy of a stage musical is revelatory. What's old is new again as contemporary filmmakers address some of these same issues with documentaries showcasing the lives of returning veterans: Oscar-nominated doc Hell and Back Again slated to air on PBS' Independent Lens on Monday May 28, (I've looked and can't seem to find it on any of the local channels - please add times to the comments section if you can find them) follows US Marine Sergeant Nathan Harris, 27 as he returns home from Afghanistan in the Wounded Warrior Regiment at Camp Lejeune recovering from a gunshot wound. 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" 5467873 13068264 Remember Our Forgotten Men: Memorial Day Movies " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(118) "Remember Our Forgotten Men: Memorial Day Movies" }
array(99) { ["title"]=> string(32) "Memorial Day Weekend Events 2012" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2020-04-16T22:20:51+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2018-01-09T13:45:30+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(32) "Memorial Day Weekend Events 2012" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(12) "Bryan Cronan" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(12) "Bryan Cronan" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "147787" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(52) "Our Calendar of Events for Memorial Day Weekend 2012" ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(52) "Our Calendar of Events for Memorial Day Weekend 2012" ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2012-05-21T19:15:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(42) "Content:_:memorial day weekend events 2012" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(1256) " *Joeff Davis * 35th Annual Atlanta Jazz Festival The Office of Cultural Affairs celebrates the 35th annual Atlanta Jazz Festival this Memorial Day weekend in Historic Park. The festival will feature music on three stages with performances by jazz legends and young guns, as well as a Jazz Eco Village, interactive kids play areas, jazz education workshops, and vendors displaying some of the city's finest arts and crafts, food and drinks, and merchandise. Sat.-Mon., May 26-28. Free. Piedmont Park, 1071 Piedmont Ave. 404-546-6820. www.atlantafestivals.com. 5th Annual Blues, Brews, and BBQ Festival Memorial Day weekend is synonymous with lots of beer, music, and barbecue, and there's no better place to find that than the fifth annual Blues, Brews, and BBQ Festival at Park Tavern. Sun., May 27, 2 p.m. $20. Park Tavern, 500 10th St. 404-249-0001. www.parktavern.com. Brew at the Zoo Zoo Atlanta hosts its fifth annual Brew at the Zoo, where attendees can enjoy music from Arrested Development as they sample various beers and wines at different stations and goggle the zoo's 1,500-plus animals. Come thirsty because samples are unlimited. Sat., May 26, 5:30-9:30 p.m. $38-$48. Zoo Atlanta, 800 Cherokee Ave. 404-624-5600. www.zooatlanta.org." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1796) "{img src="https://media1.fdncms.com/atlanta/imager/memorial-day-weekend-events/u/original/5430535/1337626582-memorial_day_honors_022_jd.jpg"} *[http://clatl.com/atlanta/ImageArchives?by=1224161|Joeff Davis] * __[http://clatl.com/atlanta/35th-annual-atlanta-jazz-festival/Event?oid=4692445|35th Annual Atlanta Jazz Festival]__ The Office of Cultural Affairs celebrates the 35th annual Atlanta Jazz Festival this Memorial Day weekend in Historic Park. The festival will feature music on three stages with performances by jazz legends and young guns, as well as a Jazz Eco Village, interactive kids play areas, jazz education workshops, and vendors displaying some of the city's finest arts and crafts, food and drinks, and merchandise.'' Sat.-Mon., May 26-28. Free. Piedmont Park, 1071 Piedmont Ave. 404-546-6820. [http://www.atlantafestivals.com|www.atlantafestivals.com.]'' __[http://clatl.com/atlanta/5th-annual-blues-brews-and-bbq-festival-3b-fest/Event?oid=5260863|5th Annual Blues, Brews, and BBQ Festival]__ Memorial Day weekend is synonymous with lots of beer, music, and barbecue, and there's no better place to find that than the fifth annual Blues, Brews, and BBQ Festival at Park Tavern. ''Sun., May 27, 2 p.m. $20. Park Tavern, 500 10th St. 404-249-0001. [http://www.parktavern.com|www.parktavern.com].'' __[http://clatl.com/atlanta/brew-at-the-zoo/Event?oid=5308576|Brew at the Zoo]__ Zoo Atlanta hosts its fifth annual Brew at the Zoo, where attendees can enjoy music from Arrested Development as they sample various beers and wines at different stations and goggle the zoo's 1,500-plus animals. Come thirsty because samples are unlimited.'' Sat., May 26, 5:30-9:30 p.m. $38-$48. Zoo Atlanta, 800 Cherokee Ave. 404-624-5600. [http://www.zooatlanta.org|www.zooatlanta.org].''" 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The festival will feature music on three stages with performances by jazz legends and young guns, as well as a Jazz Eco Village, interactive kids play areas, jazz education workshops, and vendors displaying some of the city's finest arts and crafts, food and drinks, and merchandise. Sat.-Mon., May 26-28. Free. Piedmont Park, 1071 Piedmont Ave. 404-546-6820. www.atlantafestivals.com. 5th Annual Blues, Brews, and BBQ Festival Memorial Day weekend is synonymous with lots of beer, music, and barbecue, and there's no better place to find that than the fifth annual Blues, Brews, and BBQ Festival at Park Tavern. Sun., May 27, 2 p.m. $20. Park Tavern, 500 10th St. 404-249-0001. www.parktavern.com. Brew at the Zoo Zoo Atlanta hosts its fifth annual Brew at the Zoo, where attendees can enjoy music from Arrested Development as they sample various beers and wines at different stations and goggle the zoo's 1,500-plus animals. Come thirsty because samples are unlimited. 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That’s Memorial Day. image-2Bill: A day we honor the people willing to put aside personal interest for their country. It’s become a long weekend for most people. Hopefully this country will realize again that when you send kids to war, you have a responsibility to take care of them afterward. We’re not doing that. Honor the dead by supporting the living. Go to a VA Hospital and visit these guys. I was a paramedic in the Air Force. I had 47 combat rescues in Vietnam. image-3Professor: I’m not going to a Memorial Day parade. When I came back from Vietnam, the first woman I talked to told me I was a baby killer and an Uncle Tom. If I do anything, I would go to Arlington Cemetery. Twenty-seven friends there. I counted. I was in Kilo Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine. I was treated pretty bad and I’m still treated pretty bad. I wouldn’t tell anybody for years that I was a Vietnam vet. A parade, I don’t want to participate." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1385) "[image-1]__No Show:__ There is no Memorial Day to me. I love my country, but am I to memorialize all my brothers I lost? I watched them get shot in front of me. Memorial Day for me, brother, there is none. I got my own Memorial Day in my heart. Im pretty mixed about Memorial Day. I live and breathe it every day. Its a delicate situation. The parade I had was getting shit on. Thats Memorial Day. [image-2]__Bill:__ A day we honor the people willing to put aside personal interest for their country. Its become a long weekend for most people. Hopefully this country will realize again that when you send kids to war, you have a responsibility to take care of them afterward. Were not doing that. Honor the dead by supporting the living. Go to a VA Hospital and visit these guys. I was a paramedic in the Air Force. I had 47 combat rescues in Vietnam. [image-3]__Professor:__ Im not going to a Memorial Day parade. When I came back from Vietnam, the first woman I talked to told me I was a baby killer and an Uncle Tom. If I do anything, I would go to Arlington Cemetery. Twenty-seven friends [there]. I counted. I was in Kilo Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine. I was treated pretty bad and Im still treated pretty bad. I wouldnt tell anybody for years that I was a Vietnam vet. A parade, I dont want to participate." 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ben.eason Ben Eason Jeff Slate 2008-05-20T14:00:00+00:00 image-1No Show: There is no Memorial Day to me. I love my country, but am I to memorialize all my brothers I lost? I watched them get shot in front of me. Memorial Day for me, brother, there is none. I got my own Memorial Day in my heart. I’m pretty mixed about Memorial Day. I live and breathe it every day. It’s a delicate situation. The parade I had was getting shit on. That’s Memorial Day. image-2Bill: A day we honor the people willing to put aside personal interest for their country. It’s become a long weekend for most people. Hopefully this country will realize again that when you send kids to war, you have a responsibility to take care of them afterward. We’re not doing that. Honor the dead by supporting the living. Go to a VA Hospital and visit these guys. I was a paramedic in the Air Force. I had 47 combat rescues in Vietnam. image-3Professor: I’m not going to a Memorial Day parade. When I came back from Vietnam, the first woman I talked to told me I was a baby killer and an Uncle Tom. If I do anything, I would go to Arlington Cemetery. Twenty-seven friends there. I counted. I was in Kilo Company, 2nd Battalion, 3rd Marine. I was treated pretty bad and I’m still treated pretty bad. I wouldn’t tell anybody for years that I was a Vietnam vet. A parade, I don’t want to participate. 0,0,10 memorial day weekend events "memorial day 2020" 1439869 13041844 Streetalk: What does Memorial Day mean? " ["score"]=> float(0) ["_index"]=> string(35) "atlantawiki_tiki_main_628dc5e1a8f38" ["title_link"]=> string(101) "Streetalk: What does Memorial Day mean?" }
array(100) { ["title"]=> string(33) "Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" ["modification_date"]=> string(25) "2022-01-26T16:33:18+00:00" ["creation_date"]=> string(25) "2017-12-30T18:47:07+00:00" ["contributors"]=> array(1) { [0]=> string(9) "ben.eason" } ["date"]=> string(47) "No value for 'tracker_field_eventDate'" ["tracker_status"]=> string(1) "o" ["tracker_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["view_permission"]=> string(13) "view_trackers" ["parent_object_id"]=> string(2) "11" ["parent_object_type"]=> string(7) "tracker" ["field_permissions"]=> string(2) "[]" ["tracker_field_contentTitle"]=> string(33) "Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" ["tracker_field_contentCreator"]=> string(9) "ben.eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_text"]=> string(9) "Ben Eason" ["tracker_field_contentCreator_unstemmed"]=> string(9) "ben eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline"]=> string(12) "Taylor Eason" ["tracker_field_contentByline_exact"]=> string(12) "Taylor Eason" ["tracker_field_contentBylinePerson"]=> string(6) "144340" ["tracker_field_description"]=> string(50) "The right libations for your Memorial Day cookout." ["tracker_field_description_raw"]=> string(50) "The right libations for your Memorial Day cookout." ["tracker_field_contentDate"]=> string(25) "2007-05-23T04:04:00+00:00" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage"]=> string(43) "Content:_:Corkscrew - Memorial Day Grilling" ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_text"]=> string(3774) "They say variety is the spice of life, but really it's cayenne pepper. Sprinkle enough of this pungent, piquant seasoning on anything and watch mouths water and tears run. But it's worth it – adding spicy sauce or pepper to a half-pound burger imparts excitement to an otherwise dreary clump of meat. And Memorial Day is definitely the unofficial raw-meat-on-the-grill-day. But its unofficial side dish isn't the ghastly, mayo-laden potato salad; it's alcohol. The after-effects of spice need something that will quell the fire when your mouth feels like blacktop on a summer Florida day. But should you choose red, white or brew to ease your pain? Back when I only knew about Bud, Miller and Milwaukee's "Beast," food and beer pairing wasn't my goal. As I aged (read: could afford), I discovered the beautiful world of craft beers, whose sharp, clean yet sweeter wheat brews toned down my atomic hot wings. But no matter how refreshing a beer tastes going down, an entire day of it still leaves me feeling like someone blew up a balloon in my stomach. So I stick with perhaps the original "tastes great, less filling" beverage, wine. Essentially, for anything to meld with strong spices, a spoonful of sugar helps the pepper go down. This goes for wine and beer. Wine has the natural fruit acids and tannins that help harmonize and tame strong seasonings, especially on protein-laden grill goodies. Lighter whites, such as riesling and pinot gris/grigio, refresh the palate and pair nicely with seafood items like fiery fish or shrimp. Dry rosés, far from the syrupy, inane rep they're battling, help quench the thirst built up under a sweltering sun, but also drink nicely with peppery items. And then there's the king of bland: the hot dog. If I had my druthers, every American would drink rosé with their nitrate-laden "beef' franks, if only to drown the flavor. With burly barbecued vittles, think bold and beautiful reds. Also think that the wine should match the sauce on the meat, rather than the meat itself, since the sauce becomes the dominant taste component. The zesty smoky-sweet stuff we slather on beef or chicken is far from wimpy, so your wine shouldn't be, either. Think something that sings with berries, with plenty of pepper and spice (not tannic and oaky), to stand up to all that brawn. Zinfandel and syrah/shiraz are considered classic BBQ wines because they have lots of fruit and peppery spice, without too much oak and tannin to cloud flavor. But if you're feeling exotic, pop open a smoky Spanish Rioja or California tempranillo (the grape in Rioja). For those wanting to stay in their comfort zone, medium to full-bodied merlots are also good matches for BBQ fare – especially mild brats and delicious, full-flavored sausages. A quick tip for the barbecue set-up: Since wine glasses just feel wrong when hanging at a barbecue, it's fine to use plastic cups. But avoid Styrofoam – all you'll taste is wine-scented Styrofoam. Recommended Wines Pink Criquet 2006 Bordeaux Rosé (France) Soft raspberry and strawberries with firm acidity and a gorgeous finish. A hint of plum and mint make it interesting. Sw = 1. $15. 3.5 stars Gravity Hills Tumbling Tractor 2004 Zinfandel Paso Robles (California) Fragrant jammy blackberries waft up to the nose, and the mouth experiences bold cherry, with a creamy vanilla elegance. A tiny bit spicy, with white pepper, tobacco. Great with grilled items. Sw = 2. $15. 4 stars Chateau Ste. Michelle 2006 Riesling Cold Creek Vineyard (Washington) Slightly sweet, with tart tangerine and citrus. Stainless steel aftertaste that's kind of cool. Sw = 4. $14. 3.5 stars Sweetness (Sw) rating is out of 10, 10 being pure sugar. 1(star) rating is out of 5, 5 being wine nirvana." ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(3810) "They say variety is the spice of life, but really it's cayenne pepper. Sprinkle enough of this pungent, piquant seasoning on anything and watch mouths water and tears run. But it's worth it – adding spicy sauce or pepper to a half-pound burger imparts excitement to an otherwise dreary clump of meat. And Memorial Day is definitely the unofficial raw-meat-on-the-grill-day. But its unofficial side dish isn't the ghastly, mayo-laden potato salad; it's alcohol. The after-effects of spice need something that will quell the fire when your mouth feels like blacktop on a summer Florida day. But should you choose red, white or brew to ease your pain? Back when I only knew about Bud, Miller and Milwaukee's "Beast," food and beer pairing wasn't my goal. As I aged (read: could afford), I discovered the beautiful world of craft beers, whose sharp, clean yet sweeter wheat brews toned down my atomic hot wings. But no matter how refreshing a beer tastes going down, an entire day of it still leaves me feeling like someone blew up a balloon in my stomach. So I stick with perhaps the original "tastes great, less filling" beverage, wine. Essentially, for anything to meld with strong spices, a spoonful of sugar helps the pepper go down. This goes for wine and beer. Wine has the natural fruit acids and tannins that help harmonize and tame strong seasonings, especially on protein-laden grill goodies. Lighter whites, such as riesling and pinot gris/grigio, refresh the palate and pair nicely with seafood items like fiery fish or shrimp. Dry rosés, far from the syrupy, inane rep they're battling, help quench the thirst built up under a sweltering sun, but also drink nicely with peppery items. And then there's the king of bland: the hot dog. If I had my druthers, every American would drink rosé with their nitrate-laden "beef' franks, if only to drown the flavor. With burly barbecued vittles, think bold and beautiful reds. Also think that the wine should match the sauce on the meat, rather than the meat itself, since the sauce becomes the dominant taste component. The zesty smoky-sweet stuff we slather on beef or chicken is far from wimpy, so your wine shouldn't be, either. Think something that sings with berries, with plenty of pepper and spice (not tannic and oaky), to stand up to all that brawn. Zinfandel and syrah/shiraz are considered classic BBQ wines because they have lots of fruit and peppery spice, without too much oak and tannin to cloud flavor. But if you're feeling exotic, pop open a smoky Spanish Rioja or California tempranillo (the grape in Rioja). For those wanting to stay in their comfort zone, medium to full-bodied merlots are also good matches for BBQ fare – especially mild brats and delicious, full-flavored sausages. A quick tip for the barbecue set-up: Since wine glasses just feel ''wrong'' when hanging at a barbecue, it's fine to use plastic cups. But avoid Styrofoam – all you'll taste is wine-scented Styrofoam. __Recommended Wines__ __Pink Criquet 2006 Bordeaux Rosé (France)__ Soft raspberry and strawberries with firm acidity and a gorgeous finish. A hint of plum and mint make it interesting. ''Sw = 1''. $15. 3.5 stars __Gravity Hills Tumbling Tractor 2004 Zinfandel Paso Robles (California)__ Fragrant jammy blackberries waft up to the nose, and the mouth experiences bold cherry, with a creamy vanilla elegance. A tiny bit spicy, with white pepper, tobacco. Great with grilled items. 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Sprinkle enough of this pungent, piquant seasoning on anything and watch mouths water and tears run. But it's worth it – adding spicy sauce or pepper to a half-pound burger imparts excitement to an otherwise dreary clump of meat. And Memorial Day is definitely the unofficial raw-meat-on-the-grill-day. But its unofficial side dish isn't the ghastly, mayo-laden potato salad; it's alcohol. The after-effects of spice need something that will quell the fire when your mouth feels like blacktop on a summer Florida day. But should you choose red, white or brew to ease your pain? Back when I only knew about Bud, Miller and Milwaukee's "Beast," food and beer pairing wasn't my goal. As I aged (read: could afford), I discovered the beautiful world of craft beers, whose sharp, clean yet sweeter wheat brews toned down my atomic hot wings. But no matter how refreshing a beer tastes going down, an entire day of it still leaves me feeling like someone blew up a balloon in my stomach. So I stick with perhaps the original "tastes great, less filling" beverage, wine. Essentially, for anything to meld with strong spices, a spoonful of sugar helps the pepper go down. This goes for wine and beer. Wine has the natural fruit acids and tannins that help harmonize and tame strong seasonings, especially on protein-laden grill goodies. Lighter whites, such as riesling and pinot gris/grigio, refresh the palate and pair nicely with seafood items like fiery fish or shrimp. Dry rosés, far from the syrupy, inane rep they're battling, help quench the thirst built up under a sweltering sun, but also drink nicely with peppery items. And then there's the king of bland: the hot dog. If I had my druthers, every American would drink rosé with their nitrate-laden "beef' franks, if only to drown the flavor. With burly barbecued vittles, think bold and beautiful reds. Also think that the wine should match the sauce on the meat, rather than the meat itself, since the sauce becomes the dominant taste component. The zesty smoky-sweet stuff we slather on beef or chicken is far from wimpy, so your wine shouldn't be, either. Think something that sings with berries, with plenty of pepper and spice (not tannic and oaky), to stand up to all that brawn. Zinfandel and syrah/shiraz are considered classic BBQ wines because they have lots of fruit and peppery spice, without too much oak and tannin to cloud flavor. But if you're feeling exotic, pop open a smoky Spanish Rioja or California tempranillo (the grape in Rioja). For those wanting to stay in their comfort zone, medium to full-bodied merlots are also good matches for BBQ fare – especially mild brats and delicious, full-flavored sausages. A quick tip for the barbecue set-up: Since wine glasses just feel wrong when hanging at a barbecue, it's fine to use plastic cups. 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If I killed someone, I would be so disturbed I would kill myself. But I'd definitely kill a Nazi, point-blank, and I wouldn't kill myself after killing the Nazi. JEFF, ATLANTA Folks have more appreciation for the Korean Vets and those earlier but not Vietnam vets. I try not to hold anything in my heart or mind that's negative. But the military taught me discipline. It put me on the right path and gave me a second chance in life. But we've managed to forget Memorial Day and what's important in life. On Memorial Day, I'm packing my bags and leaving town. It's just a matter of timing. I'm going to Oregon and sit in a 200-year-old fir tree so they won't cut the damn thing down. ALISA, ATLANTA My grandfather was a P.O.W. He was shot down somewhere in Asia and to this day he won't eat rice. My Dad was a vet. My father's best friend was killed in Vietnam and my brother is named after him. So it means a lot to me in that sense because I have such a family history. You don't want to forget that. I'll call my dad and my grandfather on Memorial Day, and then I'm going to go to Universal Studios. I've never been to Orlando.?? " ["tracker_field_contentWikiPage_raw"]=> string(1567) "__CHRIS, ATLANTA__ Yeah. All the cats that died get this day. My Dad was in the military for 29 years. He deserves his day. To me it's letting them know what they went through and that they got fucked. I respect that. It's tough going to the other side of the world, killing people, people you don't know, and maybe half not knowing what you're there for. I'm against war, but most of them were against war, too. If I killed someone, I would be so disturbed I would kill myself. But I'd definitely kill a Nazi, point-blank, and I wouldn't kill myself after killing the Nazi. __JEFF, ATLANTA__ Folks have more appreciation for the Korean Vets and those earlier but not Vietnam vets. I try not to hold anything in my heart or mind that's negative. But the military taught me discipline. It put me on the right path and gave me a second chance in life. But we've managed to forget Memorial Day and what's important in life. On Memorial Day, I'm packing my bags and leaving town. It's just a matter of timing. I'm going to Oregon and sit in a 200-year-old fir tree so they won't cut the damn thing down. __ALISA, ATLANTA__ My grandfather was a P.O.W. He was shot down somewhere in Asia and to this day he won't eat rice. My Dad was a vet. My father's best friend was killed in Vietnam and my brother is named after him. So it means a lot to me in that sense because I have such a family history. You don't want to forget that. I'll call my dad and my grandfather on Memorial Day, and then I'm going to go to Universal Studios. I've never been to Orlando.?? 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ben.eason Ben Eason Jeff Slate 2001-05-23T04:04:00+00:00 CHRIS, ATLANTA Yeah. All the cats that died get this day. My Dad was in the military for 29 years. He deserves his day. To me it's letting them know what they went through and that they got fucked. I respect that. It's tough going to the other side of the world, killing people, people you don't know, and maybe half not knowing what you're there for. I'm against war, but most of them were against war, too. If I killed someone, I would be so disturbed I would kill myself. But I'd definitely kill a Nazi, point-blank, and I wouldn't kill myself after killing the Nazi. JEFF, ATLANTA Folks have more appreciation for the Korean Vets and those earlier but not Vietnam vets. I try not to hold anything in my heart or mind that's negative. But the military taught me discipline. It put me on the right path and gave me a second chance in life. But we've managed to forget Memorial Day and what's important in life. On Memorial Day, I'm packing my bags and leaving town. It's just a matter of timing. 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Memorial Day Weekend Events - Jazz Festival and Summer Events