Baron 52 was the call sign of a United States Air Force EC-47 carrying eight crew members that was shot down over Laos during the predawn hours of 5 February 1973, a week after the Paris Peace Accords officially ended the US's involvement in the Vietnam War. The remains of four crewmen were recovered from the crash site, but those of the remaining four have never been found. Although the US government considers them to have been killed in action and as late as 1996 listed them as "accounted for", family members and POW/MIA advocates believe the four survived the crash and were taken captive and possibly sent to the USSR. The intelligence gatherers and their equipment would have been highly valued by the Soviets who maintained a presence both in Laos and North Vietnam. The incident has been featured on several nationwide news programs and a 1991 episode of the US television series Unsolved Mysteries. More recent research by the National Alliance of Families for the Return of America’s Servicemen presented to Congress has prompted a status review of the incident scheduled to take place in 2016.
Baron is a title of honour, often hereditary, and ranks as one of the lower titles in the various nobiliary systems of Europe. The female equivalent is Baroness.
The word baron comes from the Old French baron, from a Late Latin baro "man; servant, soldier, mercenary" (so used in Salic Law; Alemannic Law has barus in the same sense). The scholar Isidore of Seville in the 7th century thought the word was from Greek βαρύς "heavy" (because of the "heavy work" done by mercenaries), but the word is presumably of Old Frankish origin, cognate with Old English beorn meaning "warrior, nobleman". Cornutus in the first century already reports a word barones which he took to be of Gaulish origin. He glosses it as meaning servos militum and explains it as meaning "stupid", by reference to classical Latin bārō "simpleton, dunce"; because of this early reference, the word has also been suggested to derive from an otherwise unknown Celtic *bar, but the Oxford English Dictionary takes this to be "a figment".
Baron is a title of nobility.
Baron, The Baron or Barons may also refer to:
Do you wanna be a poet and write?
Do you wanna be an actor, up in lights?
Do you wanna be a soldier, an' fight for love?
Do you wanna travel, the world?
Do you wanna be a diver for pearls?
Or climb a mountain and touch the clouds above?
Be anyone you want to be
(Ooh)
Bring to life your fantasies
But I want something in return
(Ooh)
I want you to burn
Burn for me baby
Like a candle in my night
(Like a candle)
Ohh burn, burn for me, burn for me
Are you gonna be a gambler and deal?
Are you gonna be a doctor and heal
Or go to Heaven and touch God's face?
Are you gonna be a dreamer who sleeps?
(Ooh)
Are you gonna be a sinner who weeps
Or an angel, under grace?
I'll lay down on your bed of coals
(Lay down)
Offer up my heart and soul
But in return
(Return)
I want you to burn
Burn for me baby
Like a candle in my night
(I want you to burn)
Ohh burn, burn for me burn for me, yea
(Ohh ohh ohh ohh)
I want you to burn baby, ohh ohh ohh
(Ohh ohh ohh ohh)
Laugh for me
Cry for me
Pray for me
Lie for me
Live for me
Die for me
I want you to burn
Burn for me baby
Like a candle in my night
(Like a candle)
Ohh burn, burn for me, burn for me, yea
Ahh yea
I want you to burn
I want you to burn for me baby
(Like a candle)
(I want you to burn)
Ohh yea, burn for me