Saturday, July 4, 2015

The Top 5 Myths About the Fourth of July

Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesAn illustration of American seamstress Betsy Ross showing the first design of the American flag to George Washington in PhiladelphiaHistory News Network

This post is in partnership with the History News Network, the website that puts the news into historical perspective. A version of the article below was originally published at HNN.

#1 Independence Was Declared on the Fourth of July.

Americas independence was actually declared by the Continental Congress on July 2, 1776. The night of the second the Pennsylvania Evening Post published the statement:This day the Continental Congress declared the United Colonies Free and Independent States.

So what happened on the Glorious Fourth? The document justifying the act of Congress-you know it as Thomas Jeffersons Declaration of Independence-was adopted on the fourth, as is indicated on the document itself, which is, one supposes, the cause for all the confusion. As one scholar has observed, what has happened is that the document announcing the event has overshadowed the event itself.

When did Americans first celebrate independence? Congress waited until July 8, when Philadelphia threw a big party, including a parade and the firing of guns. The army under George Washington, then camped near New York City, heard the new July 9 and celebrated then. Georgia got the word August 10. And when did the British in London finally get wind of the declaration? August 30.

John Adams, writing a letter home to his beloved wife Abigail the day after independence was declared (i.e. July 3), predicted that from then onthe Second of July, 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America. I am apt to believe it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. A scholar coming across this document in the nineteenth century quietly corrected the document, Adams predicting the festival would take place not on the second but the fourth.

#2 The Declaration of Independence was signed July 4.

Hanging in the grand Rotunda of the Capitol of the United States is a vast canvas painting by John Trumbull depicting the signing of the Declaration. Both Thomas Jefferson and John Adams wrote, years afterward, that the signing ceremony took place on July 4. When someone challenged Jeffersons memory in the early 1800s Jefferson insisted he was right. The truth? As David McCullough remarks in his new biography of Adams,No such scene, with all the delegates present, ever occurred at Philadelphia.

So when was it signed? Most delegates signed the document on August 2, when a clean copy was finally produced by Timothy Matlack, assistant to the secretary of Congress. Several did not sign until later. And their names were not released to the public until later still, January 1777. The event was so uninspiring that nobody apparently bothered to write home about it. Years later Jefferson claimed to remember the event clearly, regaling visitors with tales of the flies circling overhead. But as he was wrong about the date, so perhaps he was wrong even about the flies.

The truth about the signing was not finally established until 1884 when historian Mellon Chamberlain, researching the manuscript minutes of the journal of Congress, came upon the entry for August 2 noting a signing ceremony.

As for Benjamin Franklins statement, which has inspired patriots for generations,We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall hang separately well, theres no proof he ever made it.

#3 The Liberty Bell Rang in American Independence.

Well of course you know now that this event did not happen on the fourth. But did it happen at all? Its a famous scene. A young boy with blond hair and blue eyes was supposed to have been posted in the street next to Independence Hall to give a signal to an old man in the bell tower when independence was declared. It never happened. The story was made up out of whole cloth in the middle of the nineteenth century by writer George Lippard in a book intended for children. The book was aptly titled, Legends of the American Revolution. There was no pretense that the story was genuine.

If the Liberty Bell rang at all in celebration of independence nobody took note at the time. The bell was not even named in honor of American independence. It received the moniker in the early nineteenth century when abolitionists used it as a symbol of the antislavery movement.

A visit to the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, encased in a multi-million dollar shrine leaves the impression that the bell indeed played a role in American independence. The guides are more forthcoming, though when we last visited they did not expressly repudiate the old tradition unless directly asked a question about it. Our guide sounded a bit defensive, telling our little group it didnt really matter if the bell rang in American independence or not. Millions have come to visit, she noted, allowing the bell to symbolize liberty for many different causes. In other words, it is our presence at the bell that gives the shrine its meaning. It is important because we think its important. Its the National Park Services version of existentialism.

As for the famous crack it was a badly designed bell and it cracked. End of story.

#4 Betsy Ross Sewed the First Flag.

A few blocks away from the Liberty Bell is the Betsy Ross House. There is no proof Betsy lived here, as the Joint State Government Commission of Pennsylvania concluded in a study in 1949. Oh well. Every year the throngs still come to gawk. As you make your way to the second floor through a dark stairwell the feeling of verisimilitude is overwhelming. History is everywhere. And then you come upon the famous scene. Behind a wall of Plexiglas, as if to protect the sacred from contamination, a Betsy Ross manikin sits in a chair carefully sewing the first flag. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, this is where Betsy sewed that first famous symbol of our freedom, the bars and stripes, Old Glory itself.

Alas, the story is no more authentic than the house itself. It was made up in the nineteenth century by Betsys descendants.

The guide for our group never let on that the story was bogus, however. Indeed, she provided so many details that we became convinced she really believed it. She told us how General George Washington himself asked Betsy to stitch the first flag. He wanted six point stars; Betsy told him that five point stars were easier to cut and stitch. The general relented.

After the tour was over we approached the guide for an interview. She promptly removed her Betsy Ross hat, turned to us and admitted the story is all just a lot of phooey. Oh, but it is a good story, she insisted, and one worth telling.

Poor Betsy. In her day she was just a simple unheralded seamstress. Now the celebrators wont leave her alone. A few years ago they even dug up her bones where they had lain in a colonial graveyard for 150 years, so she could be buried again beneath a huge sarcophagus located on the grounds of the house she was never fortunate enough to have lived in.

So who sewed the first flag? No one knows. But we do know who designed it. It was Frances Hopkinson. Records show that in May 1780 he sent a bill to the Board of Admiralty for designing theflag of the United States. A small group of descendants works hard to keep his name alive. Just down the street from Betsys house one of these descendants, the caretaker for the local cemetery where Benjamin Franklin is buried, entertains school children with stories about Hopkinson, a signer of the Declaration, who is also credited with designing the seal of the United States. We asked him what he made of the fantasies spun at the Betsy Ross house. He confided he did not want to make any disparaging remarks as he was a paid employee of the city of Philadelphia, which now owns the house.

The city seems to be of the opinion that the truth doesnt matter. Down the street from the cemetery is a small plaque posted on a brick building giving Hopkinson the credit he rightly deserves.

As long as the tourists come.

#5 John Adams and Thomas Jefferson Died on the Fourth of July.

Ok, this is true. On July 4, 1826, Adams and Jefferson both died, exactly fifty years after the adoption of Jeffersons Declaration of Independence, which the country took as a sign of American divinity. But there is no proof that Adams, dying, uttered,Jefferson survives, which was said to be especially poignant, as Jefferson had died just hours before. Mark that up as just another hoary story we wished so hard were true we convinced ourselves it is.

Rick Shenkman is the editor of the History News Network and the author of the forthcoming book, Political Animals: How Our Stone-Age Brain Gets in the Way of Smart Politics (Basic Books, 2015).

Source: http://time.com/3933976/myths-fourth-of-july/

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Five ways the Declaration of Independence is relevant today

Brett HerrmannNewsTribune Reporter

To quote Creed Bratton of The Office (the American version, obviously) I already won the lottery. I was born in the US of A, baby.

Where would Creed or any of us be today if it hadnt been for a group of rabble-rousers who decided to draw up an announcement of sovereignty?

The Declaration of Independence was drafted 11 score and 19 years ago. Its older than the hot- air balloon, crackers and the suspension bridge. It also started a revolution, which *Spoiler Alert* we won. Even after all these years, this document is held sacred among the people of this country. Its a national treasure that even Nick Cage thought worth stealing. Its a document that still has an effect on life in America to this day, some ways more visible than others.

Pursuit of Marital HappinessThe famous lines about our unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness, are some of the most celebrated written words in American history. This past week the Supreme Court made a decision that will help protect these rights.

Across the country, many people rejoiced at the high-court decision to legalize same-s*x marriage. The announcement was a long time coming as many states were beginning to follow the trend of legalizing it on the state level.

Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote that under constitutional protection couples of the same-s*x may not be deprived of that right and that liberty.

Illinois Valley Community College political science professor Amanda Cook-Fesperman saw this pursuit of liberties as something that has always been relevant in America, in every civil action that has taken place since we became a nation.

We have come a long way in this country toward reaching that goal, through Lincolns struggle to end slavery, Alice Pauls struggle for womans suffrage, Dr. Kings struggle for civil rights, and now to the gay rights struggle for equal rights, Cook-Fesperman said.

President Lincoln saw the Declaration as a document that placed men as equals. He even argued that the Declaration is a set of principles that the U.S. Constitution should be inferred through. The justices that interpret the Constitution happened to agree.

Lincoln believed firmly in the words of the Declaration of Independence, five members of the Supreme Court echoed them last week, Cook Fesperman said. The decision to make same-s*x marriage legal passed with a 5-4 vote. The decision furthers the rights of any American who wishes to pursue marital happiness.

Human RightsJoe Furlan, a Hall High School history teacher, saw the Declaration as the backbone of American heritage.

It is what our heritage is based on. It set the tone for everything we have done after that. We became the United States because of that document, Furlan said.

Lincoln saw the Declaration in the same way. He used it as his jumping off point for one of the greatest speeches in American history, the Gettysburg Address. The speech touched on the issues of equality, that all men are created equal. Lincoln saw the declaration as a document that laid out our basic human rights as citizens of this country, rights that every person is allotted, no matter their differences.

Art Havenhill, a local Tea Party organizer, agreed with the politics of Mr. Lincoln.To my mind what that says is that those rights are given to us by our creator, and that they are rights that no man can take away, he said.

The Declaration also states that whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it. The Declaration was a declaration from freedom of tyranny, Havenhill said.This is a right we still hold today. If the government becomes too oppressive, the citizens of the United States have the authority to overthrow it. It is actually something Thomas Jefferson expected when he said, A little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical.

Havenhill agreed that it was our right to resist an oppressive government, although he said rebel might not be the best word. A less violent way would be more suiting in todays society, such as a petition, which is essentially what the Declaration was.

Complaints DepartmentThe majority of the Declaration of Independence is a list of complaints the founding fathers had against Parliament and King George III. The authors of the document voiced their opinions on how their government had wronged them. Today we share this right to suggest areas our government can improve upon.

We can air our grievances just like the Continental Congress did. Except now we dont have to worry about being hanged for treason.

Furlan said the political party system could be improved upon.

Party politics have become front and center lately. I want to see the politicians be more for the people, he said.

Havenhill said the main flaw in our system of government is a deficiency in participation among the voters.

One of the most severe problems we have today is the lack of involvement. We have very few people determining who gets elected. Our system of government is set up to be a system of participation, he said.

HempOne reason we have to thank for the longevity of the Declaration of Independence is that it was written on hemp paper. Hemp is a very durable material that doesnt deteriorate as quickly as wood-pulp paper, according to the living tree paper company.

Section 7606 of the farm bill has made it legal to grow industrial hemp under the direction of state departments and four year agriculture programs at universities. The bill was signed in 2014 and the hemp can only be grown for research purposes. Trudy Kriven, a professor of material sciences and engineering at the University of Illinois, has expressed interest in researching the material for its uses in car composites.

The strongest natural fiber is hemp, Kriven said.

Hemp became outlawed in America due to its relation to the marijuana plant. In recent years, hemp has made its way back into favorable light in the community because of its many uses. People often associate hemp with the psychoactive component THC, but industrial hemp can only have a concentration of 0.3 percent THC compared to medicinal marijuana, which can be up to 35 percent, according to the Indiana Hemp Industries Association. Hemp wont give you the reefer madness that 1950s public service announcements warned us about.

I have no idea how to get marijuana out of it. Im more interested in getting the strong fibers, Kriven said.

Today 21 states follow the same regulations as Illinois where hemp can be grown for research purposes. There are thousands of different uses for hemp including clothing, industrial materials, personal hygiene and it is considered a super food.

The crop has been used in America throughout history from its use in colonial times for every-day necessities, to the Hemp for Victory program in World War II, which helped supply rope and parachutes, up until its ban in the 1950s.

Fun Fact: Eight of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were not born in America. These American patriots were actually British citizens. How is that relevant today? Many biopics of American heroes have British born actors playing the staring roles. Last year there was Unbroken, the year before 12 Years a Slave and before that Lincoln. All of these films had British actors playing the roles of American legends.

BeerSamuel Adams, a founding member of the Sons of Liberty, signed the Declaration of Independence. One of the most popular beers in the United States is Samuel Adams, the Boston Lager in particular. Their current seasonal beer is a summer ale, which has a lemon finish to it. Beer sales during the Fourth of July tend to skyrocket and why not?

The founding fathers probably werent sitting around drinking water when they celebrated their independence. That might be because people were known to die by drinking from polluted water sources. Today the tradition of alcohol consumption continues.

This is probably the best beer selling weekend of the year, said Ted Biagioni, operational manager at Euclid Beverage. Its better than Memorial Day and the holidays. We sell twice as much this weekend.

Biagioni said the summer months had a direct effect on the number of sales.Its all about the weather, he said.

The only thing slowing them down is the flooding. Biagioni said Euclid hasnt been able to make sales or deliveries to the boat clubs or other establishments close to the river because of the high waters.

The Founding Fathers had a reputation for running up enormous bar tabs. Celebrate the Declaration with a beer that has the namesake of one of the signers. Or drink whatever you want. Its a free country.

Brett Herrmann can be reached at (815) 220-6933 or svreporter@newstrib.com. Follow him on Twitter @NT_SpringValley.

Source: http://newstrib.com/main.asp?SectionID%3D2%26SubSectionID%3D27%26ArticleID%3D45005

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"Grateful Dead" has ties to Pennsylvania town

The night before Easter April 10, 1971 students packed Franklin & Marshall College"s Mayser Gymnasium for an evening of psychedelic music.

For just $4.50, students saw the legendary Grateful Dead, with New Riders of the Purple Sage as openers.

These days, $4.50 likely won"t even buy a beer at one of the upcoming Grateful Dead reunion shows.

The band announced in January that four original Grateful Dead members Mickey Hart, Bill Kreutzmann, Phil Lesh and Bob Weir will reunite for the band"s 50th anniversary. (Notably absent will be Jerry Garcia, the band"s most famous face, who died in 1995, and Rob "Pigpen" McKernan, who died in 1972.)

The surviving bandmates, joined by Phish"s Trey Anastasio and other musicians, will play a total of five shows two in Santa Clara, California, this weekend, and three at Chicago"s Soldier Field on July 3-5.

These, they say, will be their last performances together.

The Chicago performances will be broadcast live at select theaters. Local Deadheads can watch them at Penn Cinema 14 in Lititz.

Despite being an iconic symbol of the San Francisco music scene, the Grateful Dead has more connections to Lancaster County than just that one groovy night at F&M.

Lititz-based Clair Global, the world"s biggest concert-tour audio company, worked with the Grateful Dead before it was supporting Taylor Swift and Justin Timberlake.

And the people at Clair aren"t the only local folks who can put the Grateful Dead on their resume.

Timothy Truman, a Manheim Township artist, writer and musician, has worked with the Dead since 1991. He was the main contributor to Kitchen Sink"s Grateful Dead Comix. He also contributes to the Grateful Dead Almanac, illustrated album covers for 2013"s "Dave"s Picks" live series, and illustrated the Grateful Dead-opoly board game.

His work with the band started the way most of his projects start: He was asked to send a portfolio and told the publishing company would get back to him.

"They called back 10 minutes later and said, "No use to send your portfolio Jerry Garcia knows your work," " Truman says.

Truman"s work offered him insight into Garcia"s little-known comic book hobby.

"I got to be pretty good buds with Robert Hunter, the lyricist," Truman says. "He said he remembered sitting with Garcia in the middle of Jerry"s apartment floor with this big collection of EC comics an old 1950s pub outfit, did mostly horror stuff . like, sorting them in chronological order, by date, and putting them in a box and putting them in Jerry Garcia"s closet."

When working on Grateful Dead Comix, based on the band"s songs, Truman almost always goes with the first images that pop into his head while reading the lyrics, he says.

"I get a chance to tell Robert Hunter and the band what I"m seeing when I listen to the song," Truman says.

Some of Truman"s work appeared on T-shirts, and in some cases helped him discern which Deadheads were devoted enough to travel to their shows.

"It was also a kick I used to do a shirt that was particular to certain areas," Truman says. "It was fun to see people in Pennsylvania wearing those southern tour T-shirts."

In honor of the 50th anniversary, Alvarez guitars recreated Truman"s cover of "Dave"s Picks: Vol. 8" on one of its Grateful Dead Series Guitars ("AF65GD/F-Flag"). Alvarez gave Truman one of the guitars, which he proudly displays in his living room "so everyone who walks in the door can see it."

F&M"s student newspaper, The College Reporter, covered the Dead"s performance, noting it opened with "Casey Jones" and closed with "Uncle John"s Band." The article, provided by the archives and special collections of F&M, says Garcia was onstage for a whopping five hours 90 minutes playing pedal steel with New Riders of the Purple Sage, and 31-w hours with the Dead.

It seems Garcia might have acquired a souvenir at the show, too. Multiple Grateful Dead online message boards questioned a shirt he wore in 1977"s "Grateful Dead Movie" emblazoned with the legend "FUM SUB."

The meaning? "FUM" is a slang term for F&M, and SUB stands for "Student Union Board."

The class memory collection on F&M"s website also includes a detail about a student, in accordance with the impending Easter holiday, dressing as the Easter bunny, hopping around onstage and delivering candy to each band member in a ploy to get a good seat.

The document says the student got to sit onstage for the show, and a photo of someone in a rabbit suit appears in the 1971 F&M Oriflamme yearbook.

Despite forming five decades ago, the Grateful Dead is still selling merchandise.

Lancaster city"s Puff "n" Stuff store sells T-shirts, stickers and posters.

"We"ve been here since "69," says Jake Borders, the store"s assistant manager. "A lot of those people that have been following the Dead since then come in here, so of course we"re going to keep it in stock."

Borders says plenty of younger fans come in asking for Dead merchandise, too.

The band has also had a lasting influence on contemporary musicians.

Local musicians Corty Byron, Andy Mowatt, Mike Vitale and Travis Warlow performed "Jack Straw" in the LNP Studio as part of our tribute to the Grateful Dead.

Byron and Mowatt played a Grateful Dead/Allman Brothers tribute show at Tellus360 earlier this month and said it drew a crowd that was diverse in age.

All four agreed that the band had some impact on their music in particular, its ability to apply free-form jazz improvisation to rock "n" roll.

"Jerry said when you let go of wanting things to happen and hang out for a little while, while you"re playing, then other things start to happen," Byron says. "I think that was the biggest influence. It"s OK sometimes to take a minute and listen to everybody and something else will happen."

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Online:

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Source: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/entertainment/article25834813.html

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Friday, July 3, 2015

Sony PlayStation Network Undergoing Routine Maintenance After Weekend ...

(Photo : Getty)

Coming into the weekend, Sony"sonline system, the PlayStation Network, has been experiencing some rough technical issues. The biggest being download times. Anybody who tried downloading Batman: Arkham Knightwas stuck waiting hours for it to finish. Other issues included error messages when trying to load up multiplayer releases such as Call of Duty, Destinyand others. Even those who were running single player adventures that require online pay were met with issues. Those issues have since been fixed and Sony will be undergoing maintenance this Monday.

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Sony did not say what the issue was, just that the routine maintenancewill be occurring several times throughout the next few days.

"Routine maintenance and improvements for PlayStation Network will be performed for approximately 1.5 hours on Monday, June 29, 9:30 p.m. PDT (June 30, 4:30 a.m. GMT) to June 29, 11:00 p.m. PDT (June 30, 6:00 a.m. GMT). Anyone who already has a PlayStation Network account can still sign in to their PlayStation Network profile, play games, and use most applications while this maintenance is carried out," Sony saidon their page.

During this time users won"t be able to access certain features such as PlayStation Video and Account Management on their PSNaccounts. All other features will still be okay according to them. Sony advises anybody with a PlayStation 4 should turn on their system before the maintenance.

"We strive to ensure that PlayStation Network services are available at all times," the company continued. "Occasionally we must take PlayStation Network offline to perform essential maintenance and implement feature enhancements. We are working hard to reduce the duration of each maintenance."

2015 Mstars News, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Source: http://www.mstarz.com/articles/73457/20150629/sony-playstation-network-undergoing-routine-maintenance-weekend-download-issues.htm

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Jim Webb Writes His Own Books

From our July 1984 issue, a review of James Webbs third novel, A Country Such As This (Doubleday). Yesterday Webb announced hes running for president, the fifth Democrat to declare, and certainly the most distinguished literary talent in the race for either party. Which cant be good news for Hillary Clinton. Webb of course writes his own books. Clintons latest is egregiously plagiarized. (See this Washington Free Beacon report, which has yet to receive the attention it so richly deserves.) Maybe when they debate, Webb and Clinton could be asked about their different approaches to the art of writing and what it is they stand for as authors. Ed.

Why is everyone lying around like cowed puppies, peeing on their own tummies? Big Red Lesczynski

In modern fiction, popular acclaim and critical acclaim jibe infrequently, so its exciting when a new author comes along who attracts both. James Webb is such an authora popular novelist whom critics cant ignore, despite his penchant for coherent plots, genuine heroes, and the celebration of virtues which, in the root sense of the word virtue, are manly as well as admirable. His first novel, Fields of Fire (1978), tells it as it was in Vietnam, seen through minds unfogged by academic posturings: i.e., Marine Corps grunts, most of whom learn to be dependable even as they prefer to be anywhere else. His second novel, A Sense of Honor (1981), chronicles six hectic days in the lives of Annapolis midshipmen and junior officers, during which a wavering plebe must work out an answer to a blunt question proffered by an energetic first classman: Are you bigger than your g*****n self? Ignoring a modern preference for literary sludge, both novels nonetheless drew kudos from critics. Webb is popular, all rightbut how could the critics fault his shrewd perception and his near flawless craftsmanship?

One might cavil at portions of Webbs third novel, A Country Such As This. The cultural detail, though lush and resonant, clunks now and then with some off-key dialogue: e.g., the accent of a Japanese whose English is inconsistently broken (advancing within six pages from the preposterous You are surprise I speak your ranguage to the perfect General MacArthur came to Yokohama after he landed at Atsugi back to the labored You go Korea soon?), or the anachronism that butts into the raw diction of a Korean War serviceman (in the early 1950s, American males didnt yet speak with ironic passivity of getting laid). But the few linguistic blemishes quickly fade amid the exuberance of Webbs narrative and the ambitious sweep of his plot.

A Country Such As This tells of one generation in the life of a country James Webb loves; a story of Americas great leap, well, sideways: from reluctant world power assuming terrible responsibilities in 1951 to world-weary democracy about to articulate its Weltschmerz with the election of Jimmy Carter in 1976; a sprawling, boisterous, tender, violent, sad, funny, agonizing tale of the good and the bad, the lovely and the ugly, the great and the small in a nation of grand ideals and grandiose uncertainties. Thats quite a haul, even for 534 pages, and even for James Webb, whotrue to form after Fields of Fire and A Sense of Honormisses little detail yet wastes few words.

Webb secures a tight pace by channeling the sprawl of his narrative through the tributaries of three principal characters, classmates at the Naval Academy. On Graduation Day in 1951, Judd Smith, Red Lesczynski, and Joe Dingenfelderinseparable as midshipmenlook forward now to separate choices of assignment. Juddsonia Smith, a Virginia hillbilly of Celtic-Indian stock, is the wild one, eagerly anticipating his commission in the Marine Corps and a combat tour in Korea; Stanislaus (Red) Lesczynski, Polish-American and Catholic, is the proper one, due shortly to marry his Sophia before entering Naval flight school; and Joseph Dingenfelder, Jewish and vaguely intellectual, is the sensitive one, ready for a Navy-sponsored stint at MIT. At their last meeting at Marios Bar in downtown Annapolis, the three become, literally, blood brothers. With the help of a steak knife and Judds Indian bravado, a promise is sealed. They will meet again, in exactly 25 years, right here in Marios. Well drink the Scotch and count each others wrinkles and tell lies. Just the three of us. No excuses, unless youre dead.

But we already know from the short prologue, set in 1976, that only one of them will be at the Old Town Tavern (formerly Marios Bar) 25 years after the promise, sipping the Scotch alone, scarred by those 25 years, and quietly missing his two friends. We dont yet know who returnsWebb drops enough hints in the prologue to suggest, in retrospect, any one of the threebut we arent too far into the rest of the novel before Webb makes it matter, deeply, that not all these three young men are going to reach age 47.

In Country, Webb repeats the technical formula of his two previous novels: a prologue neatly anticipating the novels mood, mise en scne, and consequent action; a studied omniscient viewpoint allowing him to set the private doubts of his characters in supple counterpoint to their actions; a military backdrop affording his brushstrokes a canvas whose texture he knows intimately. Working within that formula is Webbs agile prose, alternately laconic and expansive, matching dry comment to lucid image. For a sample, try this description of a minor character in Country:

He was not a big man but he had a sort of power in him; not the affirmative directness of the achiever who must win, but the simple tenacity of a man who has never won and thus does not really even think about winning, but rather sees life as a daily refusal to be beaten. His body carried the stringy, acquiescent toughness of the mountains. With his gnarled look and his mousy, gray-tinged hair, he could have been anywhere from thirty to sixty years old. He had clear blue eyes and a certain set in his square, creased face, a posture to it, the thin mouth wide and firm, unyielding, the hollows of his cheeks and the slight tilt of his head a promise that he meant exactly what he said, and the world be damned all to h**l.

Thats the Webb touch, whether hes nailing your attention to a combat scene, or just evoking your wonder at the quiet heroism of normal human endurance.

Webb himself is a certified American hero, graduate of Annapolis (class of 1968, a year which he says in Country went through America like a chainsaw out of control), Marine Corps company commander in Vietnam, twice wounded: Navy Cross, Silver Star Medal, two Bronze Stars, two Purple Hearts, National Achievement Medalthe works. He is also a writer disinclined to parade his own valor up and down the main street of his readers imaginations, a man taken up with the lives of othersof the young troops he led in Vietnam, of the veterans he has championed as a lawyer and congressional aide, of his family and friends, and of the characters in his novels.

A man of great ingenuity as well as a splendid character, Webb displays in his fiction a keen sense of human motivation. He is almost ruthless in his depiction of human foibles, yet never gives in to an easy cynicism, for he knows what humans are made of. A true artist, Webb lets go his characters, content to watch in fascination as they work out their destinies under the burden of their weaknesses and the fickleness of events.

Thus, in Country, Judd Smith stumbles from Marine Corps hero to FBI agent to podunk preacher, wounded more by a troubled marriage than by Chinese bullets in Korea or by a gun blast from a fugitive criminal; Joe Dingenfelder gives up his own happiness in a hopeless attempt to bring happiness to his wife Dorothy, herself caught up in the shrill demands of her temperament and flaky insistence of her New Age politics; Red and Sophia Lesczynski both have, above all, each other, their children, and a close-knit Polish-American community in Pennsylvania, a place to come to amid the frequent displacements of Reds military career, but a hometown threatened by labor troubles and bewildering social change. From his depiction of authentic characters buffeted by real events, Webb achieves a moving commentary on the character of a whole nation.

We are left to suppose that Americans make up a nation worthy of love, intense loyalty, and genuine pridein a word, patriotismyet a nation in whose character quite a bit has gone awry. And this has been Webbs consistent theme. In A Sense of Honor, for example, a midshipman AWOL for a compelling personal reason is involved in a fender-bender in Washington, D.C. while racing back to Annapolis during the wee hours of the morning to beat reveille. A lone sentence dropped in Webbs offhand description of that minor incident sums up what James Webb stands against and what his novelists eye can see that too much of America, a country such as this, has let itself become: The driver of the other car was walking around holding his neck, feigning whiplash.

Source: http://spectator.org/articles/63349/jim-webb-writes-his-own-books

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Women"s World Cup semifinals: Japan vs. England

Reigning champion Japan defeated England, 2-1, after an own goal in the 92nd minute in the Women"s World Cup semifinals on Wednesday at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton, Alberta.

(Credit: Getty Images / Ronald Martinez)

Japan celebrates a last-minute winning goal during the FIFA Women"s World Cup semifinal match against England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada.

(Credit: Getty Images / GEOFF ROBINS)

Japan players celebrate their first-half goal against England during the FIFA Women"s World Cup semi-final match in Edmonton, Canada on July 1, 2015. AFP PHOTO / GEOFF ROBINSGEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images

(Credit: Getty Images / Kevin C. c*x)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Karen Bardsley of England hangs from the cross bar during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

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Japan"s Yuki Ogimi (17) is pulled down by England"s Laura Bassett (6) during the second half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Claire Rafferty of England looks dejected after conceding a penalty during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

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Japan"s Rumi Utsugi and England"s Katie Chapman (16) vie or the ball during the second half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Goalkeeper Karen Bardsley #1 of England kicks the ball during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

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Japan"s Aya Miyama (R) tries to jump over England"s Jill Scott during their FIFA Women"s World Cup semi-final in Edmonton, Canada on July 1, 2015. AFP PHOTO / GEOFF ROBINSGEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images

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England"s goalkeeper Karen Bardsley runs into the net after making a save during their semifinal match against Japan at the FIFA Women"s World Cup in Edmonton, Canada on July 1, 2015. AFP PHOTO/GEOFF ROBINSGEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Aya Miyama of Japan is mobbed by team mates after scoring a penalty to make it 1-0 during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

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England"s Claire Rafferty (3) and Japan"s Yuki Ogimi (17) watch as goalkeeper Karen Bardsley (1) makes a save during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Fara Williams #4 of England celebrates her penalty kick goal during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Fara Williams of England scores a penalty to make it 1-1 during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Aya Miyama of Japan scores a penalty to make it 1-0 during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

(Credit: AP / JASON FRANSON)

England keeper Karen Bardsley lets in a goal on a penalty kick by Japan"s Aya Miyama during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: AP / Jeff McIntosh)

England"s Lucy Bronze, Jade Moore and Fara Williams react after Japan scored on a penalty shot during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

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Japan players celebrate a goal on a penalty kick by Aya Miyama against England during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: Getty Images / Todd Korol)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Fara Williams #4 of England scores on her penalty kick during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

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England"s Claire Rafferty (3) knocks down Japan"s Saori Ariyoshi (19) in the box during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Japan scored on a penalty shot following the play. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

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Japan keeper Ayumi Kaihori reacts after England"s Fara Williams scored on a penalty shot during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Toni Duggan #18 of England loses the ball to Nahomi Kawasumi #9 of Japan during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

(Credit: Getty Images / Kevin C. c*x)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Jill Scott of England in action with Aya Miyama of Japan during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Nahomi Kawasumi of Japan controls the ball during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: England manager Mark Sampson looks on during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Claire Rafferty of England fouls Saori Ariyoshi of Japan to concede a penalty during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

(Credit: AP / Jeff McIntosh)

Japan"s Saori Ariyoshi (19) and Mizuho Sakaguchi (6) celebrate after their Aya Miyama scored on a penalty shot against England during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

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England"s Fara Williams celebrates after scoring on a penalty shot against Japan during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: Getty Images / Todd Korol)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Katie Chapman #16 of England and Azusa Iwashimizu #3 of Japan go up for a header during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

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England"s Fara Williams (4) and Japan"s Mizuho Sakaguchi (6) vie for the ball during the first half of a semifinal in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: Getty Images / Todd Korol)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Lucy Bronze #12 of England tries to stop the kick of Nahomi Kawasumi #9 of Japan during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

(Credit: Getty Images / Kevin C. c*x)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Laura Bassett of England in action with Shinobu Ohno of Japan during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

(Credit: Getty Images / Todd Korol)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Lucy Bronze #12 of England is pulled back by Aya Miyama #8 of Japan during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

(Credit: Getty Images / Kevin C. c*x)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: The England team line up during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 1: Team members from Japan pose for a team photo during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Canada Semi Final match between England and Japan at Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Photo by Todd Korol/Getty Images)

(Credit: AP / JASON FRANSON)

A Japan fan watches the team warm up for a FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer semifinal against England in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on Wednesday, July 1, 2015. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: AP / JASON FRANSON)

An England fan watches the team warm up before a FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer semifinal against Japan in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on Wednesday, July 1, 2015. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: AP / Jeff McIntosh)

An England fan wears his team"s jersey and also sports Canadian flags before a FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer semifinal between Japan and England in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on Wednesday, July 1, 2015. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: AP / Jeff McIntosh)

A Japan fan holds flags before a FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament semifinal between Japan and England in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on Wednesday, July 1, 2015. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

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EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Japan fans soak up the atmosphere before the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

(Credit: Getty Images / Kevin C. c*x)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: A fan looks on during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

(Credit: AP / Jeff McIntosh)

Japan fans cheer before a semifinal between Japan and England in the FIFA Women"s World Cup soccer tournament, Wednesday, July 1, 2015, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press via AP)

(Credit: Getty Images / Kevin C. c*x)

EDMONTON, AB - JULY 01: Fans look on during the FIFA Women"s World Cup Semi Final match between Japan and England at the Commonwealth Stadium on July 1, 2015 in Edmonton, Canada. (Photo by Kevin C. c*x/Getty Images)

Source: http://www.newsday.com/sports/soccer/women-s-world-cup-semifinals-japan-vs-england-pictures-1.10600067

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Why Rihanna Almost Didn"t Wear Her Show-Stopping Met Gala Dress

07/02/2015 at 11:59 AM ET

We need you to take your eyes away from Rihannas just-released NSFW music video, b***h Better Have My Money, just for a second. Because her famous Met Gala dress is also making headlines. Why? Because the designer, Chinese couturier Guo Pei, didnt want her to wear the canary yellow gown and fur-trim cape that sent the Internet into a meme-frenzy.

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The singer arrived fashionably late to the red carpet wearing the intricate designthat required the assistance of three people to help her up the famous Met steps. The look weighed 55 lbs. (thanks to the statement train-slash-cape) and according to Womens Wear Daily, took Pei two years to make.

RELATED PHOTOS: Last Nights Look: Love It or Leave It? Vote Now!

And, of course, itended up being the most talked-about style moment (really, people were comparing it to pizza, Big Bird, scrambled eggs and more) atthe star-studded event. But Pei said she was surprised the look got so much attention. I actually didnt think the dress was the right one for her, shetold WWD. I thought it would be too heavy and too hot, but she was so touched the moment she put it on.

Before collaborating on the design with Rihanna, Pei was relatively unknown in the West, but is working on expanding her business internationally, with an exhibit this month at Paris Muse des Arts Dcoratifs. She alsorecently launched a Parisian boutique that caters to Western tastes.

RELATED VIDEO: Did Rihanna Steal Her Latest Song #BBHMM?

Rihanna is also expanding her fashion design chops with an accessories line called $CHOOL KIlls set to feature bags and purses with a launch date still TBD.

What do you think of the Peis comments? Do you think the dress was a good choice for Rihanna? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

Colleen Kratofil

Source: http://stylenews.peoplestylewatch.com/2015/07/02/rihanna-met-gala-2015-guo-pei-dress/

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