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US [5]

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http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/marines.mayaguez.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/marines.mayaguez.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/kennedy.complaint.reut/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/kennedy.complaint.reut/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/jackson.sierra.leone.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/jackson.sierra.leone.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/internet.child.privacy.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/internet.child.privacy.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/firefighters.funds.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/firefighters.funds.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/fire.losing.history.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/fire.losing.history.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/detroit.police.shootings.ap/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/detroit.police.shootings.ap/index.html

CNN.com delivers the latest breaking news and information on the latest top stories, weather, business, entertainment, politics, and more. For in-depth coverage, CNN.com provides special reports, video, audio, photo galleries, and interactive guides.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/cocacola.diversity.reut/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/cocacola.diversity.reut/index.html

Don't open that love letter! ILOVEYOU, a computer virus spread by e-mail messages, has been wreaking havoc in Asian, European and American companies since early Thursday morning. Although expected to be short-lived, the virus is raising questions about the effectiveness of so-called
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/05/virus5_4.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/05/virus5_4.a.tm/index.html

A California judge Wednesday dismissed two more criminal convictions in connection with the Los Angeles police corruption investigation.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/17/lapd.corruption/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/17/lapd.corruption/index.html

Four Thunderbirds from the U.S. Air Force precision flying team apparently got lost in bad weather around Washington on Monday and created temporary havoc for air traffic controllers. Two of the aircraft came close to a jetliner near Dulles International Airport, FAA officials said.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/23/thunderbirds.lost/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/23/thunderbirds.lost/index.html

The ultimate victor, if there is one, in the battle between Time Warner and Disney/ABC over cable access is yet to be declared. For the moment, though, the winner appears to be ABC, which, after being excluded from Time Warner's cable operations for more than 36 hours, was reinstated on Tuesday afternoon. Time Warner, under pressure from a Federal Communications Commission demanding fast answers a...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/03/cable5_2.b.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/03/cable5_2.b.tm/index.html

The ultimate victory, if there is one, in the battle between Time Warner and Disney/ABC over cable access is a story yet to be told. For the moment, though, the winner appears to be ABC, which, after being excluded from Time Warner's cable operations for more than 36 hours, was reinstated on Tuesday afternoon. Time Warner, under pressure from a Federal Communications Commission demanding fast answ...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/02/cable5_2.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/02/cable5_2.a.tm/index.html

Two new professional assessments on the mental and emotional health of Elian Gonzalez will say the 6-year old Cuban boy is getting along well in relationships with his immediate family and friends at a secluded site in Maryland, according to Justice Department officials.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/11/cuba.boy.01/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/11/cuba.boy.01/index.html

Good news for purveyors of pint-size coats and ties: School uniforms are storming back onto public school curriculums. The latest evidence of this trend came Monday when the Philadelphia school board approved a plan requiring each of the school system's 217,000 students to ditch their logo tees and up-to-the-minute fashion statements in favor of school-mandated shirts, skirts and pants (to be deci...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/09/uniforms5_9.b.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/09/uniforms5_9.b.tm/index.html

Two new professional assessments on the mental and emotional health of Elian Gonzalez will say the 6-year old Cuban boy is getting along well in relationships with his immediate family and friends at a secluded site in Maryland, according to Justice Department officials.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/10/cuba.boy.01/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/10/cuba.boy.01/index.html

In a way, the victims, families and friends of those affected by last year's massacre at Columbine High School were bound to be disappointed by Monday's dissection on the tragedy. After all, no law enforcement report was likely to get into the minds of Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold. But the fact that the first detailed account of the massacre last April 20 fails to address other
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/columbine5_16.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/16/columbine5_16.a.tm/index.html

Two new professional assessments on the mental and emotional health of Elian Gonzalez will say the 6-year old Cuban boy is getting along well in relationships with his immediate family and friends at a secluded site in Maryland, according to Justice Department officials.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/08/cuba.boy.report/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/08/cuba.boy.report/index.html

Is this a sign of things to come in the Internet age? Two multimedia monoliths, Time Warner and Disney, are playing a high-stakes tug of war, not only putting the immediate fate of TV one network's programming at risk, but also raising questions about the future of a totally Web-based news and information future. After time ran out on their most recent usage agreement, Time Warner Cable and Disney...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/cable5_1.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/cable5_1.a.tm/index.html

Is this a sign of things to come in the Internet age? Two multimedia monoliths, Time Warner and Disney, are playing a high-stakes tug-of-war, not only putting the immediate fate of one TV network's programming at risk, but also raising questions about the shape of a totally web-based news and information future. After time ran out on their most recent usage agreement, Time Warner Cable and Disney ...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/02/cable5_1.b.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/02/cable5_1.b.tm/index.html

White supremacist Buford O. Furrow Jr. expressed no regrets over the August 1999 shooting death of postal worker Joseph Santos Ileto and the wounding of five people at the North Valley Jewish Community Center, according to federal prosecutors, who are seeking the death penalty.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/17/jewish.center.shooting/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/17/jewish.center.shooting/index.html

Donato Dalrymple, the self-described savior of 6-year-old Elian Gonzalez, is suing Attorney General Janet Reno and Immigration and Naturalization Commissioner Doris Meissner for allegedly violating his civil rights during the raid that removed the boy from the Gonzalez's home.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/22/elian.fisherman.sues/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/22/elian.fisherman.sues/index.html

He's baaaack! Little Elian Gonzalez, whose every moment on his swing set once reached America's living rooms in real time, is returning to the headlines. After a couple of weeks of inactivity, the case of the young Cuban boy will be in the spotlight again when the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday hears oral arguments on his great-uncle Lazaro's appeal against the Justice Department's refu...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/09/elian5_9.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/09/elian5_9.a.tm/index.html

Judge J. L. Edmondson knew a lot of emotions rested on the Elian Gonzalez appeal hearing, so before donning his robe he warned the crowd gathered inside the Atlanta courtroom of two things: No outbursts of emotion would be tolerated; and the audience shouldn't impute opinions from the judges' questions, since justices often play devil's advocate when hearing an appeal. Still, there was little surp...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/12/elian5_12.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/12/elian5_12.a.tm/index.html

The FBI is investigating 27 members of the press who hold
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/12/pentagon.reporters/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/12/pentagon.reporters/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/11/cuba.boy.02/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/11/cuba.boy.02/index.html

The next Federal Reserve meeting on interest rates isn't until May 16, but the numbers Alan Greenspan was waiting on are already out. April's unemployment (3.9 percent, down from 4.1 in March) and average hourly earnings figures (up 6 cents last month to $13.64) hit the Street on Friday, and the way the markets see it, Father Greenback just raised interest rates again. Twice.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/05/labor5_5.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/05/labor5_5.a.tm/index.html

Once upon a time in March, when the NASDAQ hit its record high of 5048 points, tech investors were seen all over Wall Street's bars and restaurants, hoisting microbrews and declaring they couldn't be bothered with the insipid Fed-watching that had gripped their Old Economy brethren ever since
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/24/nasdaq5_24.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/24/nasdaq5_24.a.tm/index.html

The irresistible baby boom generation has a way of imposing its will upon history. Sheer force of numbers (40 million) has blessed the boomers with a sublime sense of their own entitlement and a willful generational narcissism that empowers them in sibling teamwork toward rational solutions.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/26/morrow5_26.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/26/morrow5_26.a.tm/index.html

In a column a few days ago, I stated that I had changed my mind about capital punishment -- that where once I thought execution a good idea in some cases (because I believed the social contract called for it), I have for various reasons come to oppose it.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/08/morrow5_8.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/08/morrow5_8.a.tm/index.html

We checked into a hotel a few years ago on the south rim of the Grand Canyon and peered out the window into majestic, blueish prehistory -- one of the planet's more powerful astonishments.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/31/morrow5_30.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/31/morrow5_30.a.tm/index.html

Spring is being difficult this year.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/morrow5_1.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/morrow5_1.a.tm/index.html

Bobby Knight, famous in American college basketball as head coach at Indiana University, is much given to what commentaries on the Old Testament refer to as
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/17/morrow5_17.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/17/morrow5_17.a.tm/index.html

Christina Marie Riggs, a nurse in Arkansas and a single mother, killed her two children -- Justin, 5, and Shelby Alexis, 2 -- by giving them injections of potassium chloride and then smothering them with a pillow. She wrote a suicide note, and apparently tried to kill herself with an overdose of 28 antidepressant tablets. She survived.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/03/morrow5_3.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/03/morrow5_3.a.tm/index.html

In 1963, I watched the March on Washington on a grainy black-and-white television set. I reacted first with surprise -- at so many Negroes (as one said then) assembled in the great white marble public spaces (Mall, Lincoln Memorial, Reflecting Pool) of a city I knew to be so intensely segregated that it replicated a southern plantation (grand edifices for the whites, slave quarters off somewhere o...
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/15/morrow5_15.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/15/morrow5_15.a.tm/index.html

Why do some people succeed, and some not? The answer may seem obvious. Jim Hightower, the liberal humorist from Texas, used to say that the elder George Bush
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/10/morrow5_10.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/10/morrow5_10.a.tm/index.html

Got a fake ID? Looking to embarrass the federal government in your spare time? Have we got a job for you: A group of agents working for Congress's General Accounting Office managed to wheedle their way into 19 of the federal government's most
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/25/agents5_25.a.tm.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/25/agents5_25.a.tm.tm/index.html

Pentagon officials say the next test of the National Missile Defense Program will be delayed.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/18/missile.defense/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/18/missile.defense/index.html

The Pentagon's Inspector General has concluded that Pentagon spokesman Ken Bacon and one of his deputies, Cliff Bernath, violated the Federal Privacy Act by releasing information from Linda Tripp's security file to a magazine reporter. Defense Secretary William Cohen reprimanded Bacon and Bernath in written memoranda released by the Pentagon on Thursday.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/25/bacon.tripp.security/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/25/bacon.tripp.security/index.html

Republican senators may be realizing there's little to be gained by flogging the Elian Gonzalez horse, but that message hasn't got through to Fidel Castro. As GOP legislators Sunday spoke a lot more cautiously than a week ago about the prospects of holding hearings into the Justice Department operation that reunited the boy with his father, the Cuban dictator did his utmost to extract whatever mil...
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/elian5_1.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/elian5_1.a.tm/index.html

Forget the Jurassic period: If you want to see giants roaming the earth, just check out your paper's business section. We're talking mergers, of course, and the latest loomed large on Thursday with Justice Department trustbusters' approval of AT&T's acquisition of cable giant MediaOne, a corporate marriage that will create America's largest cable provider. If the other regulatory body involved, th...
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/26/cable5_26.a.tm.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/26/cable5_26.a.tm.tm/index.html

The State Department Thursday said 15 department laptop computers are missing, and warned its employees about their use of laptops.
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/18/missing.laptop/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/18/missing.laptop/index.html

Don't look now, but this could be the year we witness somewhat of a rebirth in American civic involvement. Bucking the current pervasive anti-census sentiment, the nation's minority communities have posted strong returns this spring, helping to reverse a decades-long downward trend in response rates.
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/05/census5_4.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/05/census5_4.a.tm/index.html

The United States' biannual list of countries alleged to sponsor terrorism is as much a practice in politics as it is in practicalities. The State Department's
http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/terror5_1.a.tm/index.html

http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/05/01/terror5_1.a.tm/index.html

Beijing appears to have acquired U.S. nuclear secrets, and yet Washington has been unable to find any spies -- and the government wants to know why. A Justice Department internal report, leaked to the media this week, slams the FBI both for errors in its investigation of Los Alamos nuclear scientist Wen Ho Lee and for focusing too narrowly on Lee to the exclusion of other potential suspects. Despi...
http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/19/lee5_19.a.tm/index.html

http://cnn.com/2000/US/05/19/lee5_19.a.tm/index.html

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Wikipedia-Article "US [5]"

For alternative meanings, see the disambiguation page for US, USA, United States, or American.
United States of America
Flag of the United States Coat of Arms of the United States
Flag Coat of Arms
Motto:
E pluribus unum (1789 to present)
(Latin: "Out of Many, One")
In God We Trust (1956 to present)
Anthem: The Star-Spangled Banner
Location of the United States
Capital Washington, D.C.
38°53′ N 77°02′ W
Largest city New York City
Official languages None at federal level;
English de facto
Government Federal republic
George W. Bush (R)
Dick Cheney (R)
Independence
 • Declared
 • Recognized

Constitution
 • Completed
 • Ratified
 • Effective

From Great Britain
July 4, 1776
September 3, 1783


September 17, 1787
May 23, 1788
March 4, 1789

Area
 • Total
 • Water (%)
 
9,631,418 km² (3rd)
4.87%
Population
 • 2005 est.
 • 2000 census

 • Density
 
297,700,000 (3rd)
281,421,906

32/km² (140th)
GDP (PPP)
 • Total
 • Per capita
2005 estimate
$12,589,600 million (1st)
$42,367 (2nd)
HDI (2003) 0.944 (10th) – high
Currency Dollar ($) (USD)
Time zone
 • Summer (DST)
(UTC-5 to -10)
(UTC-4 to -10)
Internet TLD .us .gov .edu .mil .um
Calling code +1

The United States of America is a country situated primarily in North America. It comprises 50 states and one federal district, and has several territories. It is also referred to, with varying formality, as the United States, the U.S., the U.S.A., the States, America, or (poetically) Columbia.

Since the mid-20th century, following World War II, the United States has emerged as a dominant global influence in economic, political, military, scientific, technological, and cultural affairs. Because of its influence, the U.S. is considered a superpower and, particularly after the Cold War, a hyperpower by some.

The country celebrates its founding date as July 4, 1776, when the Second Continental Congress — representing thirteen British colonies — adopted the Declaration of Independence that rejected British authority in favor of self-determination. However, the structure of the government was profoundly changed in 1789, when the states replaced the Articles of Confederation with the United States Constitution. The date on which each of the fifty states adopted the Constitution is typically regarded as the date that state "entered the Union" to become part of the United States.

Contents

History

U.S. history
timeline & topics
Colonial America
1776 to 1789
1789 to 1849
1849 to 1865
1865 to 1918
1918 to 1945
1945 to 1964
1964 to 1980
1980 to 1988
1988 to present
Diplomatic history
Imperial history
Military history
Industrial history
Economic history
Cultural history
History of the South
edit box

Prehistory

American history began with the migration of people from Asia across the Bering land bridge approximately 12,000 years ago following large animals that they hunted into the Americas. These Native Americans left evidence of their presence in petroglyphs, burial mounds, and other artifacts. It is estimated that 2–9 million people lived in the territory now occupied by the U.S. before that population was greatly diminisehd by European contact and the foreign diseases it brought. Some advanced societies were the Anasazi of the southwest, who inhabited Chaco Canyon, and the Woodland Indians, who built Cahokia, located near present-day St Louis, a city with a population of 40,000 at its peak in AD 1200.

Colonization by Europe

External visitors had arrived before, but it was not until the discovery voyages of Christopher Columbus in the late 1400s and early 1500s that European nations began to explore the land in earnest and settle there permanently. See Colonialism.

During the 1500s and 1600s, the Spanish settled parts of the present-day Southwest and Florida. The first successful English settlement was at Jamestown, Virginia, also in 1607. Within the next two decades, several Dutch settlements, including New Amsterdam (the predecessor to New York City), were established in what are now the states of New York and New Jersey. In 1637, Sweden established a colony at Fort Christina (in what is now Delaware), but lost the settlement to the Dutch in 1655.

This was followed by extensive British settlement of the east coast. The British colonists remained relatively undisturbed by their home country until after the French and Indian War, when France ceded Canada and the Great Lakes region to Britain. Britain then imposed taxes on the 13 colonies to pay for the war. The colonists widely resented the taxes because they were denied representation in the British Parliament. Tensions between Britain and the colonists increased, and the thirteen colonies eventually rebelled against British rule.

Nationhood

In 1776, the 13 colonies Declared Independence from Great Britain and formed the United States, the world's first constitutional and democratic federal republic. The American Revolutionary War followed (1775 to 1783).

The original political structure was a confederation in 1777, ratified in 1781 as the Articles of Confederation. After long debate, this was supplanted in 1789 by the Constitution, which formed a more centralized federal government.

Civil War

From early colonial times, there was a shortage of labor, which encouraged unfree labor, particularly indentured servitude and slavery. By the mid-19th century, a major division over the issue of states' rights and the expansion of slavery came to a head.

The northern states had become opposed to slavery, while the southern states saw it as necessary for the continued success of southern agriculture and wanted it expanded to newer territories in the West. Several federal laws were passed in an attempt to settle the dispute, including the Missouri Compromise and the Compromise of 1850.

The dispute reached a crisis in 1861, when seven southern states seceded1 from the Union and formed the Confederate States of America, leading to the Civil War. Soon after the war began, four more southern states seceded.

During the war, Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, mandating the freedom of all slaves in states in rebellion, though full emancipation did not take place until after the end of the war in 1865, the dissolution of the Confederacy, and the Thirteenth Amendment took effect. The Civil War effectively ended the question of a state's right to secede, and is widely accepted as a major turning point after which the federal government became more powerful than state governments.

Expansion

American westward expansion is idealized in Emanuel Leutze's famous painting Westward the Course of Empire Takes its Way (1861). The title of the painting, from a 1726 poem by Bishop Berkeley, was a phrase often quoted in the era of Manifest Destiny, expressing a widely held belief that civilization had steadily moved westward throughout history. (more)
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American westward expansion is idealized in Emanuel Leutze's famous painting Westward the Course of Empire Takes its Way (1861). The title of the painting, from a 1726 poem by Bishop Berkeley, was a phrase often quoted in the era of Manifest Destiny, expressing a widely held belief that civilization had steadily moved westward throughout history. (more)

During the 19th century, many new states were added to the original 13 as the nation expanded across the continent. Manifest Destiny was a philosophy that encouraged westward expansion in the United States: as the population of the Eastern states grew and as a steady increase of immigrants entered the country, settlers moved steadily westward across North America.

In the process, the U.S. displaced most American Indian nations. This displacement of American Indians continues to be a matter of contention in the U.S., with many tribes attempting to assert their original claims to various lands. In some areas American Indian populations had been reduced by foreign diseases contracted through contact with European settlers, and US settlers acquired those emptied lands. In other instances American Indians were removed from their traditional lands by force. Though some would say the U.S. was not a colonial power until it acquired territories in the Spanish-American War, the dominion exercised over land in North America the United States claimed is essentially colonial.

During this period, the nation also became an industrial power and a center for innovation and technological development.

The 20th Century

The 20th century has sometimes been termed "the American Century" because of the nation's influence on the world. Its relative influence was especially great because Europe, which had been the center of greatest influence, was largely destroyed during the world wars.

The U.S. fought in World War I and World War II on the side of the Allies. Between the wars, the most significant event was the Great Depression (1929 to 1939), which was compounded by drought and dust. Like the rest of the developed world, the U.S. was pulled out of the great depression by its mobalization for World War II.

The war left much of the developed world was in ruins, but the Americas were largely spared. By 1950, more than half of the global economy (as measured in GNP) was located in the U.S.

During the Cold War, the US was a major player in the Korean War and Vietnam War, and, along with the Soviet Union, was considered one of the world's two "superpowers". This period coincided with a major economic expansion. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the US emerged as the world's leading economic and military power.

During the 1990s, the United States became more involved in police actions and peacekeeping, including actions in Kosovo, Haiti, Somalia and Liberia, and the first Persian Gulf War.

After attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, the United States and other allied nations declared themselves involved in what has come to be called the "War on Terrorism," which has included military action in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Government

The Constitution is the supreme law of the United States.
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The Constitution is the supreme law of the United States.
Main articles: Federal government of the United StatesPolitics of the United States & Law of the United States

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