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Welcome to Hi International, a new monthly web magazine for youth about families, friends, careers, beliefs, sports, music, technology, education, relationships and, most of all, your future. Hi International is also a “webzine” about trends and ideas, all of which are happening in the United States right now and which are often paralleled wherever you are reading this. We will focus on the similar interests of the new generation with the hope of building bridges of greater understanding among our cultures. We want this site to be informative, useful, entertaining, and interactive for readers everywhere.

International Magazine 

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The American's Public Holiday

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 PUBLIC HOLIDAYS IN THE U.S. Holidays and Holy Days are days set aside for public, religious or secular (non-religious) observances. The term holy day refers only to the religious aspect of the celebration. Although most nations include holy days in their holiday calendar, in countries where religion is practiced privately only secular holidays are reserved for national celebrations.

Holiday is any day on which people lay aside their ordinary duties and cares. The word comes from the Anglo-Saxon halig daeg, or holy day. At first, holidays honored some sacred event or holy person.

The United States is a nation of many religious and ethnic groups. Many of these have feast days, holy days or special customs related to their religion or to their nation of origin.

People of the Jewish faith, i.e., observe all of their traditional holy days, with employers showing consideration by allowing them to take days off so they can observe their traditions. The same is true for Moslems.

In the US, Sunday is the only holiday recognized by common law. Congress has at different times set aside special holidays, such as the Day of Rejoicing after the end of the Civil War, or V-E and V-J days to celebrate the end of fighting in World War II.

But in strict sense there are no national holidays in the US. The President and Congress can legally designate holidays only to be observed in the District of Columbia and by federal government employees throughout the country. In practice, however, most states observe these federal (national) "legal or public" holidays.

Each of the 50 states has the authority to specify the holidays and their dates it will observe. The governor of the state proclaims the holiday for the state. Some holidays are specific only to an individual state. Cities and towns can decide not to celebrate a federal or state holiday at all, or to celebrate other "legal" holidays specific to their own region.

Ten holidays per year are proclaimed by the federal government:

New Year's Day Labor Day
Martin Luther King Day Columbus Day 
Washington's Birthday Veterans' Day
Memorial Day Thanksgiving Day
Independence Day Christmas Day

If a holiday falls on a Sunday or a Saturday, it is usually observed on the following Monday or on the preceding Friday.

Federal government offices, including the post offices, are always closed on all federal holidays. Banks, businesses and schools usually close on major federal holidays like Independence Day and Christmas Day but may not always be closed, i.e., on Presidents' Day or Veterans' Day.

Schools and organizations often observe days known as traditional holidays, although schools and businesses do not close then.



SPECIAL FEATURE
Women of Influence cover

American Women's Achievements Highlighted in New Web Publication

Women Play Key Role Shaping U.S. History


State's Hughes Says Women's Empowerment Critical to U.S. Agenda

Democracy requires women's full participation in society, she adds

The United States believes that women's empowerment is essential to strengthening democracy and advancing the development of countries around the globe, says Karen Hughes, U.S. under secretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs. She outlines how U.S.-supported programs are helping women around the world. (complete text)

Related Links:

National Women's History Month
Women Play Key Role Shaping U.S. History
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National Women's History Month, March 2006
  Info Package prepared by IRC Jakarta



Americans Celebrate Achievements of Martin Luther King Jr.

Civil rights giant fought for principles with universal applicability

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. displays his 1964 Nobel Peace Prize
Martin Luther King Jr. displays his 1964 Nobel Peace Prize medal. 
(© AP/WWP)

By Michael Jay Friedman
Washington File Staff Writer

Washington -- Americans on each third Monday of January honor the life and achievements of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., (1929–1968), the 1964 Nobel Peace laureate and the individual most associated with the triumphs of the African-American civil rights movement during the 1950s and 1960s. As political organizer, supremely skilled orator and advocate of nonviolent protest, King was pivotal in persuading his fellow Americans to end the legal segregation that prevailed throughout the South and parts of other regions, and in sparking support for the civil rights legislation that established the legal framework for racial equality in the United States. [ more ]

 



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