ATHENS - Efforts to build a soldiers' memorial are back on track after University officials agreed to tweak original plans. <br>
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University Council members voted for a new design after having to scrap plans last year when complaints surfaced from groups who thought the project wasn't inclusive enough. <br>
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Last week, the council agreed that the memorial would honor a broad range deceased intelligence officers, Peace Corps members and diplomats along with military personnel. International students who give their lives at home for democratic causes will also be honored. <br>
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Political science professor Loch Johnson said Monday he hopes war veterans and others will accept the revamped plan. <br>
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``There were some who thought it was anti-feminist, which I thought was wrong,'' Johnson said. ``We're honoring men and women. Some thought it was pro-war. It's remembering those who gave their lives for peace and freedom.'' <br>
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Memorial design and location have not been chosen but the council approved a concept that includes a black nameless wall, pools of water, benches and gravel pathways. <br>
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A ``book of remembrance'' for an estimated 1,000 to 1,200 names will be encased in glass and placed in a nearby building. <br>
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A new garden near the Student Learning Center is among the proposed locations. The memorial will paid for with private donations. <br>
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The council, the university's policy-making body, tinkered with the inscription before voting. The phrase, ``Their names liveth forevermore'' was deemed archaic and possibly ungrammatical by some. <br>
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The wording was changed to ``live forevermore.'' The word America was left out to include Confederate soldiers, along with foreign students who died serving ``democracy and their country."
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