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World News

9/11 households, survivors ask Biden to not attend memorial occasions over Saudi docs

Nearly 1,800 9/11 survivors, victims’ family members and first responders are telling President Joe Biden that he should skip memorial events this year unless he declassifies U.S. documents detailing Saudi Arabia’s role in the deadly attacks. 

Next month will mark 20 years since the terrorist attacks that killed nearly 3,000 Americans at the World Trade Center in New York, at the Pentagon and in Pennsylvania.

The group argued that Biden has failed to fulfill his campaign promise to release as much information as possible on the attacks and has ignored their numerous letters and requests that called on him to do so. 

“Twenty years later, there is simply no reason — unmerited claims of ‘national security’ or otherwise — to keep this information secret,” the group said in their statement. 

“But if President Biden reneges on his commitment and sides with the Saudi government, we would be compelled to publicly stand in objection to any participation by his administration in any memorial ceremony of 9/11,” the group said.

A White House spokesperson said in a statement that its Office of Public Engagement and National Security Council staff have met with 9/11 victims’ family members to discuss their requests for documents and “hear their thoughts on policy priorities,” NBC News reported Friday.

In his campaign promise, Biden pledged to direct his Department of Justice to examine cases where the disclosure of FBI information related to the 9/11 attacks is recommended. He said that releasing such information would be “narrowly tailored” to protect against the risk of harm to national security. 

“I intend to be a President for all Americans, and will hear all of their voices,” Biden said. “The 9/11 Families are right to seek full truth and accountability.”

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The group said they had “great hopes” that Biden would diverge from previous administrations and said they were disappointed that he did not live up to his words after his inauguration.

They said that since the 9/11 Commission investigation concluded, in 2004, there has been investigative evidence found “implicating Saudi government officials” in supporting the attacks. 

The 9/11 Commission found it likely that Saudi government-funded charities supported the attacks but did not find any evidence of direct funding from the government, according to NBC News. 

The group particularly called for the release of FBI documents from a 2016 investigation of Saudi Arabia. They said they believe the documents would reveal whether any individuals associated with al Qaeda, the group that carried out the terrorist attacks, received assistance or financing from the Saudi Arabian government. 

Fifteen of the 19 attackers in the 9/11 attacks were Saudi citizens, and mastermind Osama Bin Laden was born in Saudi Arabia, but the country’s government has denied allegations that it was involved.

Multiple presidential administrations have cited “security concerns” in their reasoning for withholding documents related to the terrorist attacks, the group’s statement said. 

Most recently, the Trump administration invoked the state secrets privilege in 2019 to justify keeping documents classified, according to NBC News.

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Politics

Biden commemorates Pleasure Month, names Pulse Nightclub a nationwide memorial

President Joe Biden commemorated Pride Month at the White House Friday and designated the location of the 2016 Pulse Nightclub shooting a national memorial.

Biden signed a bill honoring the 49 people killed in a mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida on Nov.

The bill passed the Senate by vote earlier this month and the House of Representatives passed its own version in May.

The president also announced the appointment of Jessica Stern, leader of New York’s human rights group OutRight Action International, as special envoy to the State Department. Stern will help guide U.S. diplomatic efforts to advance the human rights of LGBTQI + people around the world.

Biden signed the bill along with survivors of the shooting and the victim’s family members, as well as members of the Florida Congressional Delegation and the Congressional Equality Caucus.

“The site of the deadliest attack on the LBGTQ + community in American history is now a national memorial,” said Biden.

The President, along with Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, made remarks who broke barriers by becoming the first openly gay man to serve in the Cabinet. The president was introduced by 16-year-old transgender advocate Ashton Mota. In attendance were LGBTQ + advocates, elected state and local officials, and members of Congress.

“The fact that we are here shows how much change is possible in America,” said Buttigieg on the podium.

Biden is also urged that the Senate pass the Equality Act, a landmark bill on LGBTQ + rights that would create legal protection for LGBTQ + Americans. The bill was passed by the House of Representatives on February 25, but faces an tougher battle in the evenly divided Senate.

He also condemned the recent proliferation of anti-LGBTQ + laws passed in several states. According to the National Center for Transgender Equality, 23 states reviewed more than 50 bills targeting transgender youth during the 2021 legislature.

“More than a dozen of them have already passed … let’s get that straight, this is nothing more than bullying disguised as legislation,” Biden said.

Biden also outlined the steps his government has taken to advocate for equality for LGBTQ + Americans. This includes, among other things, the recognition of Pride Month in a proclamation from 1.

“Representation is important, recognition is important. Another thing that matters is results, ”Biden said at the White House. “I am proud to lead the most professional LGBTQ equality administration in US history.”

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Health

U.S. Covid instances lowest in a 12 months as Memorial Day journey picks up

A crowd of travelers check in for their flights at LAX on Friday, May 28, 2021.

Allen J. Schaben | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

The U.S. has reported the lowest number of Covid-19 cases in more than a year, as the nation’s airports over Memorial Day weekend experienced the largest number of travelers since the pandemic began.

The 11,976 new cases reported on May 29 were the lowest since March 23, 2020, when 11,238 new cases were reported, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

The seven-day average of 21,007 is the lowest since March 31 of last year, when it was 19,363.

Friday also saw the TSA report the highest number of travelers since the pandemic began, with more than 1.9 million people taking to the skies for the long weekend. At the same point last year, the TSA counted just 327,000 passengers at its checkpoints.

The World Health Organization officially declared Covid-19 a global pandemic on March 11, 2020. The U.S. reported 1,147 Covid cases that day. The pandemic would go on to infect more than 33 million people in the U.S. and kill nearly 600,000 people.

Within a week of the WHO declaration, daily TSA travel numbers dropped from 1.7 million to 620,000. By March 25, the number was at 203,000. Since March 11, 2021, the daily number of fliers has remained above 1 million.

More than 60% of U.S. adults have at least one dose of a Covid vaccine, while 40.5% of adults are fully vaccinated, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. President Biden announced earlier this month that his administration is aiming to increase the number of adults with at least one dose to 70% by July 4. He also said he wants 160 million American adults fully vaccinated by the same date.

“If we succeed in this effort,” Biden said during his announcement, “then Americans will have taken a serious step toward a return to normal.”

The CDC recently said fully vaccinated people do not need to wear masks in most settings, though masks are still required on airplanes, buses, trains and public transportation. Cities across the country are lifting restrictions on indoor dining and gatherings as cases fall and vaccinations increase.

White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci has repeatedly said that he wants to see daily case numbers drop below 10,000 before a broad relaxation of safety measures takes place.

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Business

US anticipated to spend $4.7 billion on gasoline over Memorial Day weekend

Americans are expected to spend roughly $4.7 billion on gas during the Friday through Monday of Memorial Day weekend, according to GasBuddy, an app and website focused on finding real-time fuel prices.

That breaks down to about $1.18 billion spent on gas each day, give or take $1 million, Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, tells CNBC Make It. 

GasBuddy predicts the national average price of gasoline will be $2.98 per gallon during Memorial Day weekend, the highest price on record for the May holiday weekend since 2014 when gas hit $3.66 per gallon. (AAA is reporting slightly higher averages at $3.04 per gallon, as of Thursday.) 

“Gas prices have been increasing for months due to the continued rise in gasoline demand as a myriad of destinations reopen ahead of the summer driving season. The Colonial Pipeline shutdown only highlighted how much more reliant consumers have become on gasoline since the pandemic hit,” De Haan says. 

Gas prices should start to ease up after Memorial Day, but De Haan warns that a rebound may happen and gasoline prices could rise again around the middle of summer.

If you are planning a road trip this summer, here are a few tips to help you save at the pump. 

1. Compare prices

Whether it’s through GasBuddy or other driving apps that show local gas costs, such as the AAA Mobile app or Waze, it’s worth looking around for the best price. A small difference can add up.

The average summer road trip is 568 miles round trip, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Assuming you have a car with an average 12-gallon gas tank, you’d be saving over $20 if you shave off just 5 cents per fill-up. 

You should also be aware that fuel prices can fluctuate by location. AAA recommends getting gas before you arrive at your destination because many popular beach and vacation locations tend to have more expensive gas prices. 

2. Make sure your car maintenance is up-to-date

3. Drive calmly

Being a zen driver can not only reduce your stress, but it may also help you save on gas. That’s because driving aggressively with lots of lane-changing, braking and rapid acceleration can increase fuel consumption by 30% on the highway.

Driving over 50 miles per hour can also have an impact because it increases the vehicle’s wind resistance. For every five miles per hour you drive over 50, you’re likely paying an additional $0.21 for gas. 

4. Take advantage of loyalty programs

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Business

How Memorial Day Weekend Journey in U.S. Could Be Completely different

Memorial Day weekend is underway in the US, and it looks decidedly different for travelers than it was a year ago.

More than half of all adults in the United States are now fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A federal mandate stipulates that travelers on airplanes or public transport must wear masks, although most airlines at the time asked passengers to wear them. And this year, far, far more people are likely to be leaving for vacation than they were in 2020.

Darby LaJoye, the acting administrator of the Transportation Security Administration, said the number of travelers at U.S. airports rose steadily in the spring, reaching nearly 1.9 million last Sunday, almost eight times the figure as of May 17, the comparable Sunday in 2020.

That number is likely to be exceeded over the holiday weekend, the latest high point in recent waves of returning travelers. The agency predicts airports will likely see two million passengers a day. Mr LaJoye said the increasing number of passengers could lead to longer waiting times at security checkpoints.

AAA, the group of car owners, predicted earlier this month that a total of more than 37 million people would cover 50 miles or more from Thursday to Monday – a 60 percent increase from a year earlier but still 9 percent below 2019. A big one Majority will travel by car.

“We will continue to see a very steady increase as we approach the summer travel season,” said LaJoye. “As vaccinations continue to rise and confidence continues to grow, the country’s planes, trains, buses and roads will be busy.”

To control the spread of the virus, the TSA has built acrylic barriers, installed new machines to allow some passengers to scan their own documents, and adjusted the rules to allow passengers to have up to 12 ounces of hand sanitizer in their carry-on bags.

A year ago there was no approved coronavirus vaccine in the United States, mask requirements were left to local officials and individual airlines, and air traffic was sparse.

Now people 12 and older can be vaccinated, and those who choose to travel have a sense of security of their own that even the most daring travelers haven’t had in the past year. (Still, travel and many other activities can be complicated for younger children and their families).

“Thanks to vaccines, tens of millions of Americans can go back to something normal and visit friends and family,” said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC, at a press conference this week.

This year’s holiday falls at a time when parts of the world like the United States and the European Union may gradually reopen their borders and resume tourism. However, the virus continues to devastate other areas, particularly India, South America and Southeast Asia, where vaccine supplies are scarce and worrisome variants of the virus have been discovered.

Coincidentally, the average number of new cases reported in the U.S. is about the same as it was on Memorial Day last year, about 23,000 a day, although tests were far less frequent than the pandemic initially emerged. In any event, the number had fallen from a recent high in mid-April.

Last year, reports of revelers ignoring mask and social distancing rules over the holiday weekend were legion. Within weeks of some states reopening, virus cases began to surge to record levels. Jumps in virus cases have been observed after other holiday weekends, noted Dr. Walensky this week.

According to Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, an epidemiologist at Columbia University, is likely to see many viral outbreaks in the US look different after vacation after vaccinating many people. She said she was concerned about “micro-epidemics” in vulnerable areas.

“We could potentially focus these surges in specific communities where there are low vaccination rates and low masking rates,” said Dr. El-Sadr.

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Business

Memorial Day field workplace could possibly be first to high $100 million throughout pandemic

Emma Stone stars in Disney’s “Cruella.”

Disney

This Memorial Day weekend could have the right combination of new movie releases, number of cinemas open and increased consumer confidence to break the $100 million mark at the box office.

Since the pandemic began, theaters have struggled to lure back moviegoers, even with enticing titles like “Godzilla vs. Kong,” “Mortal Kombat” and “Wonder Woman 1984.”

The weekend of April 23 is currently has the highest-grossing weekend box office tally since the pandemic locked down theaters last spring. Ticket sales reached $57 million, with only around 60% of movie theaters open, according to data from Comscore. The weekend’s top earners were “Demon Slayer: Mugen Train” and “Mortal Kombat.”

Heading into this Memorial Day weekend, more than 70% of theaters are open and Hollywood has two blockbuster releases: “Cruella” and “A Quiet Place Part II.”

The last time the box office topped $100 million over the weekend was March 6, 2020. In non-pandemic times, Memorial Day weekend has averaged around $200 million in ticket sales.

Memorial Day weekend in 2020 shrunk to just $842,000 in ticket sales, driven almost entirely by drive-in movie theaters.

“What a difference a year makes as we now look toward what will be a pivotal Memorial weekend for movie theaters and, thankfully, the start of a true summer movie season, something the industry hasn’t seen in two years,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore.

While “Cruella” will have a dual release in theaters and on Disney+ Premiere Access, “A Quiet Place Part II” will only be available in theaters. The sequel has been widely praised by critics and been earmarked as a must-see film, especially in theaters. In reviews, critics touted how seeing the film in a theater heightened the experience because sounds — whether on the screen or in the seats nearby — made the thriller more suspenseful.

With more theaters open and the pent-up demand, Dergarabedian foresees a chance that Paramount’s “A Quiet Place Part II” could usurp “Godzilla vs. Kong” for the highest opening weekend debut since the health crisis started. “Godzilla vs. Kong” opened with a $32 million haul during the first weekend in April. At that time only 55% of theaters were open in North America.

The fate of Disney’s “Cruella” is a little less certain because it will be available in theaters and through Disney+ for $30 on the same day. Some consumers may venture out to the cinema to see the film, but others may choose to stay on the couch and stream. Plus, the film is getting mixed reviews.

“The performance of the two new films will serve as a bellwether of consumer confidence and enthusiasm for the movie theater experience,” said Dergarabedian. “[They will] also help to bolster the perception of the movie theater experience as more viable and essential than ever before and not as some had erroneously predicted a pre-ordained casualty of the pandemic.”  

Categories
Entertainment

Ephrat Asherie, Frederick Ashton and a Solemn Memorial

Sometimes you see an excerpt from a dance and wistfully wish you had seen the show. That happened some time ago when I saw a trailer for Ephrat Asherie’s “Odeon”, which managed to suggest irrepressible cheers and good-humored inventions in a short sequence of clips from the hour-long dance. The work premiered at Jacob’s Pillow in 2018 and – Hurray! – Available now through April 28th on the Joyce Theater website, it features Asherie’s magnificent group of six dancers and four musicians under the direction of her brother, jazz pianist Ehud Asherie.

They play the infectiously melodic, dance music of the Brazilian composer Ernesto Nazareth from the early 20th century, and Asherie combines the various forms of music – sambas, waltzes, tangos, ragtime, African rhythms and classical varieties – with their own choreographic hothouse mix. Street and club dance, fashion and breaking, tap rhythms, capoeira and contemporary dance idioms are part of the mix. But Asherie has a keen eye for structure as she mixes lively group sequences with solos and smaller groupings, and often the silence underpins the energetic business.

“Odeon”, the title of the second Nazareth composition in the piece, is an ancient Greek name for a small theater in which poets, musicians and singers presented their works. It’s a perfect title for a dance that celebrates a community of artists with the kind of generosity that makes the viewer feel part of things too.

“I am honestly bored with too much characterization in ballet,” said choreographer Frederick Ashton after the end of World War II. In the following year, 1946, he created “Symphonic Variations”, an 18-minute abstract work for six dancers that plays on César Franck’s score of the same name, which the Royal Ballet will be showing online until May 2nd.

The piece is pure joy, from his first picture of three men and three women standing in a meditative pose, one leg crossed in front of the other – a motif Ashton comes back to throughout the piece. At the beginning of the piano the women begin to dance and a man joins them, similar to George Balanchine’s “Apollo” when the young god is playing sports with his muses. But there is no story in “Symphonic”, just a gentle, cool flow of movement in which the dancers configure and reconfigure in lyrical pas de deux, trios, quartets and solos in front of Sophie Fedorovitch’s yellow-green cyclorama, which is decorated with loop curves.

The dancers (Marianela Nuñez and Vadim Muntagirov are the central couple in this recording) never leave the stage; On some transitions, they just join hands and run to a new place. In “Symphonic” there is a lot that Ashton would use again and again later in his choreography: watch out for the smooth sideways curves, the low skimming lifts and the curved arms. Dancers have talked about how hard the work is to do, but its impact is, as writer Luke Jennings put it, “peace after war, spring after winter, space after compression”.

These two short solos are well worth a visit. They’re very different, but both were shot by cameraman Trevor Tweeten, whose eye is precisely tuned to the drama of the moving body.

In Gallop Apace, a film produced by the Seattle Dance Collective and available until April 25, Sara Mearns offers an incarnation of Shakespeare’s Juliet in a short, almost static dance of compressed intensity by Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber . In a press release, Mearns said she “longed but was never cast in the role of Julia”. Her appearance here is a tour de force of erotic passion, waiting, grief, shame and anger, and Tweeten’s cinematography makes the most of Ms. Mearns’ beauty and inwardness. Lingering close-ups alternate with her figure, which is framed by a large, almost empty room, in a room filled with the haunting sounds of Heitor Villa-Lobos’ “Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5”. sung by countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo.

David Adrian Freeland Jr., a member of the LA Dance Project, is delighted to be able to offer online classes on the company’s app. But he’s a somber ghost in his new solo “It Could Have Been Me … It Could Be Me” (on the LA Dance Project website), which is performed at the Hauser & Wirth gallery in Los Angeles amid paintings by Amy Sherald becomes.

Joel Thompson’s The Seven Last Words of the Unarmed, recorded by the University of Michigan Men’s Glee Club, recalls the words and actions of Kenneth Chamberlain, Trayvon Martin, Amadou Diallo, Michael Brown and Oscar Grant III, John Crawford and Eric Garner . Mixing ballet and more contemporary techniques as he moves through the gallery spaces, Freeland offers a distinctive little portrait of each man in his final moments. It’s a moving homage – and a protest too.

Is it that slightly hoarse voice that you once called “doing my best, Lauren Bacall”? Is it benji the dog? Is it their tenderness (“Hello my dear friends”) or their awareness that things may be getting too sensitive (“If you don’t relate to them at all, just breathe”)?

Whatever it is, Yoga With Adriene is an incredibly compelling series on YouTube that featured Adriene Mishler, a former actress who started posting videos in 2012, long before the pandemic made home exercise a necessity. Mishler offers sequences for “renewal”, “new beginning”, “uncertainty” and even for “when you feel dead inside”. There are months of courses, wake-up and sleep sequences, and everything in between.

Everyone is free and you can count on Mishler’s calm, humorous encouragement and lack of ego. There is no showing off, no pursuit of achievement, no leaving anyone out. That’s not to say that she doesn’t encourage you to aim high. As she often says, “If you fall, I’ll catch you.”

Categories
Politics

World Struggle I Memorial in Washington Raises First Flag After Years of Wrangling

WASHINGTON – Monuments to the war dead of the 20th century are one of the central attractions in the country’s capital. So it has always been remarkable that one of the most momentous American conflicts, World War I, failed to find national recognition.

Now that the United States is pulling out of its longest war, a memorial to one of the most complicated is due to open on Friday, which officially opened in Washington after years of entanglements between monument preservers, city planners, federal officials and the commission that brought it about.

The first flag was hoisted at the memorial in Pershing Park near the White House – rather than along the National Mall where many devotees had imagined it – in a place where office workers once hurried to ice skate, sip cocoa, and nibble lunch sandwiches sat underneath the crepe myrtle. Battles over the monument’s location, accuracy, and size were part of his journey.

“Our goal was to create a memorial that would go hand in hand with other monuments and raise World War I in American consciousness,” said Edwin L. Fountain, deputy chairman of the World War I Centennial Commission, recognizing that this was the case In contrast to these monuments there must be a monument and a city park. “

The only original allusion to the war in the park, a statute of General John J. Pershing who commanded the American expeditionary forces in Europe, will remain on the edge of space. At the center of the monument, however, is a large wall that has its final feature: a 58-foot bronze sculpture that, depending on your point of view, is either a bold testimony to the importance of the mission or an impairment of its natural environment.

The design, restoration of the original park, and construction of the new monument will cost $ 42 million. The commission still has $ 1.4 million available.

The sculpture “A Soldier’s Journey” tells the story of an American from reluctant service member to returned war hero in a series of scenes with 38 characters. They are designed to convey the story of the country’s transformation from an isolationist to a leader on the world stage and create a definitive visual reference to the next great war. The play had its own trip from New York to New Zealand to the Cotswolds of England, one with live models in period clothes and thousands of iPhone photos and other technology to capture the models in motion.

Critics – many of whom have fought the concept of Mr. Fountain with every available tactic – say the structure is incapable of marrying a historically significant park with a grand dream monument.

“The real question is: did the monument use the power of the place where it is now?” said Charles A. Birnbaum, president of the Cultural Landscapes Foundation, who attempted to add the park to the national register of historic places, thereby cutting down on the commemorative planners’ large-scale plans. “Has it succeeded in integrating into a place in a federal city that is unique in serving tourists and residents?”

The park, designed by M. Paul Friedberg, a well-known landscape architect, and built in 1981, was in ruins when the foundation stone for the memorial was laid in 2017. A popular ice rink was closed in 2006 due to mechanical problems and never reopened; The nooks and crannies were littered with garbage and pigeons that preferred to eat it.

Admittedly, it wasn’t anyone’s first choice for a memorial. Quarrels of a very Washington kind engulfed the effort.

Texas Republican Ted Poe spent years trying to expand the memorial effort on the National Mall before retiring. Congress considered converting the District of Columbia War Memorial at the end of the mall into a national memorial. Washington officials firmly opposed this, as did Missouri lawmakers who wanted no competition for the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City. The Ministry of the Interior was also not interested in the project.

In 2014, Congress decided on Pershing Park. In 2016, Joseph Weishaar, a 25-year-old architect, and Sabin Howard, a neo-classical sculptor in New York, were selected to create the giant sculpture after winning a design competition.

“I made a very myopic, classic male figurative sculpture that came from Hellenistic art,” said Howard. “Neither of us was ready. It’s just insane. You are entering this process that could cost you 15 years of your life. “

Given the location of the monument, the pace moved significantly faster than the National Mall, despite multiple reviews by the US Fine Arts Commission and other federal agencies.

Mr Howard began hiring models in 2016 – as did his daughter Madeleine, who played the role of the young girl in the sculpture – who dressed in antique clothes and played fight scenes when he was in a studio with 12,000 images on his iPhone made in the South Bronx. The project continued in New Zealand, where Mr. Howard made film props using special technology to create the first model for commission review.

Next, he and his models packed up for the Cotswolds, where he used a special foundry to begin his sculpting, which is now being completed at his studio in Englewood, NJ

Mr. Howard said he was aware of making the sculpture visually appealing but also educational. “My client said,” You have to do something that dramatizes World War I enough that visitors want to go home and learn more about it, “he said.

However, accuracy gave way to artistic license. The piece, which shows black, Latin American and Native American soldiers, blurs reality. At a meeting with the commission in 2018, Toni Griffin, a member, noted that in World War I black soldiers did not normally fight white soldiers as shown and suggested that “the sculpture should represent the authentic experience,” so the minutes from the meeting.

While changing the black troops’ helmets to reflect this, Mr. Howard said he was unaffected by the broader argument. “You had segregation in the army,” he said in an interview. “On the battlefield, however, there is no difference.” Even when black soldiers were portrayed in a historically incorrect way, he said, “They had to be treated as equals.”

It is a notable coincidence that the memorial opens to visitors during a pandemic, much like the flu outbreak that killed thousands of troops in the trenches during the war. “The flu wasn’t on my head,” said Mr. Howard. “What I thought was a pro-human act increase.”

The memorial is unlikely to suppress longstanding criticism that too many memorials in Washington focus on war and death.

“There are marginalized stories that could be celebrated and sobering stories about the reality of the war experience that could more effectively honor the victim,” said Phoebe Lickwar, who was a landscape architect in the early stages of the project. “Instead, we are presented with a banal narrative and a glorification of the struggle.”