- Call Me Crazy: Confessions of a Black Friday Shopper
- US Firms Hit by Payroll Taxes at Exactly the Wrong Time
- Citi Mortgage Reveals Something the US Treasury Won't
- Fed Sanguine About US Recovery, Worried on Jobs
- Amended Berkshire Filing Reveals No 'Secret' Holdings
- In Time for Holidays: More Gloom and Doom on Economy
- Market Pros Reveal Top Black Friday Trades
- Holiday Guide to This Season's Smartphones
- Turkey Day 101: How Well Do You Know Your Bird?
- Citi Mortgage Reveals What Treasury Won't
- S&P to Hit 1,200 by Year-End: Chief Investor
- Amended Berkshire Hathaway Filing Indicates No Secret Stock Stakes at End of Q3
- Facebook's Biggest-Ever Holiday Shopping Season
- Facebook's New Dual Class Structure - Slow Steps to an IPO
- 5 Big Bank Stocks Investors Should Consider: Strategists
- Gambling Drunk, Texting to Live And America's On Sale - Your Emails
- Nov. 24: Unusual Volume Leaders
- NBA D-League On The Rise
- Feds blame low oxygen for Ala. coal mine death
- World Bank gives Mexico nearly $2 billion in loans
- FBI raids Ind., Ohio offices of financial firms
- Blue Coat posts profit as sales rise slightly
- Halliburton: Pemex reductions to hurt 4Q profit
- Washington Post to close remaining US bureaus
- Specifics of Smith proposal to revamp Mich. taxes
- 4 NBC affiliates ban PETA's Thanksgiving Day ad
- McCormick boosts quarterly dividend to 26 cents
Ancestry.com opens up US military collection
PROVO, Utah - Genealogy Web site Ancestry.com is opening up its entire U.S. military collection in honor of Veterans Day.
The Provo-based company says anyone can search the collection for free through Friday.
The company also says it has added more than 600 Navy cruise books to its online collection of military records for the holiday.
The books are like yearbooks and include the names and photos of those who served on ships. Ancestry.com says one book — a 1946 edition for the U.S.S. Pennsylvania — includes a photo of TV legend Johnny Carson.
The collection of books spans cruises following World War II from 1950-88.
The Navy Department Library has about 3,500 cruise books on file that Ancestry.com plans to digitize and add to its collection.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
- Remember when auto shows were major events where new models could generate buzz?
- CNBC’s Mike Huckman visits a cutting-edge plant to see how the flu vaccine of the future is being made.
- People who bottle up their anger at work are up to five times more likely to suffer a heart attack, a study found.
- Playboy will outsource its publishing operations in a bid to become profitable again.
- A new McDonald's in Manhattan is the nation's first to sport a sleek, chic interior imported from stores in London and Paris.
- For nearly three decades, these on-call experts have been dishing advice on how to – and not to – cook turkey.








