Daily Archives: April 13, 2021

Eric Berger, Elon Musk, and the Stars of SpaceX’s Origin Story – Via Satellite

Posted: April 13, 2021 at 6:34 am

Eric Berger, a soft-spoken Ars Technica journalist, meteorologist, and lover of all things space-related, has spent a lot of time with Elon Musk during the past few years. While watching the billionaire SpaceX founder closely as he sat in on board meetings and gathering with his family on flights to Texas, Berger discovered the formula behind the companys two-decade ascension to space industry dominance.

It starts with Musk an enthralling, passionate, laser-focused, relentless, moody, and sometimes difficult leader, with a unique gift for engineering. His greatest talent, according to Berger, may be his ability to locate and surround himself with the right people those who mix well with his personality and can keep up pace for long periods of time. The people who helped Musk send his first Falcon rockets into space come into clear focus in Bergers new book Liftoff, a widely-praised chronicle of SpaceXs establishment in the early 2000s.

In this episode of On Orbit, Berger brings us behind the scenes of writing Liftoff. He explains the influence that people like Tom Mueller and Gwynne Shotwell (who just become Via Satellites most recent two-time Executive of the Year winner) had on SpaceXs success, and who he enjoyed speaking with the most while conducting research. Berger also shares some insights that werent included in Liftoff, as well as thoughts on who might lead SpaceX after Musk.

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Elon Musk, are you an alien?: SpaceX CEOs reply leaves people in frenzy – The Indian Express

Posted: at 6:34 am

By: Trends Desk | Agra/new Delhi, New Delhi | Updated: April 8, 2021 10:54:43 am

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk is known for his love for dank memes and conversations involving outer space. However, its not just restricted to space explorations and astronomical researches, he left netizens in a frenzy as he accepted that he is an alien!

While it may have been another instance of him having some fun and goofing around on Twitter, his affirmative reply to Twitter user is now going viral. The tweet has even left people divided online with some jokingly furnishing proofs and commenting he launched SpaceX just to return to his home planet.

It all started when recently, the SpaceX CEO tweeted: The Earth is not flat, its a hollow globe & Donkey King lives there!

When one fan replied to the tweet asking if he was an alien, in a cryptic message, the entrepreneur just replied: Obv, meaning obviously, leaving all in an uproar, including the person who asked it.

However, this is not the first time he replied this way to such queries. Earlier in February, 2021, he responded to a tweet of follower saying: Im an alien.

The tweet came in reply when a fan wondered how Musk manages so many billion-dollar companies with such flair and ease. When the fan called upon him, the dark lord looking for answers, he admitted he is not from this planet.

People on social media were amused by his reply, and many reacted with memes and jokes.

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Elon Musk, are you an alien?: SpaceX CEOs reply leaves people in frenzy - The Indian Express

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Real estate entrepreneur aims to be first to reach space and the bottom of the ocean within a year – CNBC

Posted: at 6:34 am

Larry Connor

The Connor Group

Larry Connor, the leader of eponymous Ohio-based real estate firm The Connor Group, earlier this year signed on to fly to the International Space Station. But first, before beginning his astronaut training, Connor will dive to the bottom of the ocean.

Connor is partnering with deep sea specialist EYOS Expeditions to next week explore both the Challenger Deep and the Sirena Deep of the Mariana Trench in the DSV Limiting Factor submersible of Triton Submarines. Then, in January 2022, Connor will be the pilot for Axiom Space's 10-day AX-1 mission to the ISS, flying on SpaceX's Crew Dragon spacecraft.

"I've never had the time and never had the money, but I've always had a passion about exploration and about trying to do groundbreaking research," Connor told CNBC about his upcoming missions. "I'm not a scientist, but I believe that the private sector can do unbelievable things to help all people."

Connor said that EYOS Expeditions reached out to him shortly after the AX-1 mission was announced, asking him if he would help cover part of the costs of an upcoming mission and, in return, join the trip as a co-pilot and mission specialist.

"They've been doing groundbreaking research in the Mariana Trench over the last couple of years [and] they want to continue that, but it's very expensive," Connor said. "Frankly, I didn't know anything about deep sea exploration but the more I learned, the more I became convinced that these individuals were absolutely professional, and that it could be done and could be done safely, and that the research would in fact be valuable."

While Connor may not be a scientist, he considers himself "fortunate in that I've done a lot of unusual things" due to his passion for exploration.

The Connor Group operates in 15 U.S. cities, which the entrepreneur credits to "an immensely talented and experienced group" who will keep the firm running during his trips.

Deep ocean submarine DSV Limiting Factor is seen above the deck of the ship DSSV Pressure Drop.

Reeve Jolliffe/EYOS Expeditions

Next Monday he will travel to Guam, with the first dive to the Challenger Deep on either Wednesday or Thursday dropping down more than 35,000 feet to the extreme environment of the deep ocean floor.

A few days later Connor will dive again, to the Sirena Deep "where there's only ever been two humans there before," he said.

"Our challenge is going to be trying to map some of the bottom, and explore where nobody's ever been. We anticipate that being a long dive probably 13 to 15 hours in total," Connor said.

The submarine DSV Limiting Factor features a small cabin, about four and a half feet wide by four and a half feet tall, for its two passengers. "It's literally a titanium ball that you sit in," Connor said.

While visiting Triton Submarines' headquarters in Florida last week to check out a simulator and get some basic training, the real estate entrepreneur said that the "short answer is you really don't" train for this kind of deep sea mission.

Connor is aiming to be the first person to travel to both the deepest part of the ocean and outer space within 12 months.

He'd be just the third person in history to travel to both, as former NASA astronaut Kathy Sullivan became the first and the first woman when she dove to Challenger Deep in August 2020, with private astronaut Richard Garriott becoming the second on a dive earlier last month.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket about to launch the company's Crew Dragon spacecraft is seen before the Demo-2 mission with NASA astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley onboard.

NASA/Joel Kowsky

While the deep sea dive has come together in a matter of months for Connor, he's been researching flying to space for nearly seven years.

The AX-1 mission will be led by former NASA astronaut Michael Lpez-Alegra, as well as two mission specialists in former Israeli fighter pilot Eytan Stibbe and Canadian investor Mark Pathy.

"It will be the first private mission to the International Space Station and, in my opinion, we're going to do it right," Connor said. "We're going to do it to professional astronaut standards, we're going to do the training, because I think we have an opportunity but a real obligation to to get it right."

Connor said he and Lpez-Alegra will undergo two weeks of additional training, beyond the 15 weeks of training the full crew plans to begin in the fall of this year.

He said the crew visited the headquarters of Elon Musk's company once so far to be fitted for their spacesuits, describing the facility as "a beehive of activity" and saying he was "struck by the masses of really talented, committed people who, I got a sense for, were working crazy hours to make groundbreaking things happen."

He credited NASA for its experience in human spaceflight, as well as for turning to private companies to begin flying astronauts frequently and efficiently.

"In my experience, if you really want to propel things forward at a rapid rate, you've got to get the private sector involved, whether it's going to the bottom of the ocean or going to outer space," Connor said.

SpaceX's Crew Dragon Endeavour seen docked with the International Space Station on July 1, 2020.

NASA

Connor also recognized that, while AX-1 may be the first all-private trip to the ISS, it's still "very expensive."

"But hopefully in making what we believe is an investment upfront in 20, 30, 40 years, whether it's going to the bottom of the ocean or outer space, it is far more accessible to people, to go along with the value of the research," Connor said.

Asked for his advice to young entrepreneurs, he delivered a simple response.

"Aim high. Never set limits. Never put a ceiling on what you can do. The impossible is only impossible if you think it's impossible," Connor said.

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Real estate entrepreneur aims to be first to reach space and the bottom of the ocean within a year - CNBC

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Land transactions for the week of April 11, 2021 – Shelby County Reporter – Shelby County Reporter

Posted: at 6:33 am

The following deeds were transferred in Shelby County from March 8-17:

March 8

-AR Properties LLC to SDH Birmingham LLC, for $700,000, for Lots 301, 302, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 332, 333, 334, 335 and 336 in Springs Crossing Sector 3 Phase 1.

-Allison S. Hoar to Shani Lampley-Walker, for $324,000, for Lot 10-15 in Chelsea Park 10th Sector.

-Randall Derek Akers to Jordan R. Chamblee, for $200,000, for Lot 8 in Chase Plantation Fourth Sector.

-Drew E. Dixon to Sue Tait, for $189,900, for property in Section 29, Township 19, Range 1 East.

-Buy by Birmingham 401k to Andrew Boyd, for $290,000, for Lot 73 in Chaparral First Sector Phase 1 Amended Map.

-Southeastern Real Estate Investments LLC to Rachel Isabella Conrad, for $182,000, for Lot 29 in Canyon Park Townhomes.

-LaToya Carstarphen to Guy Wood, for $465,000, for Lot 316 in Creekwater Phase III Phase 2.

-SDH Birmingham LLC to Hunter Thomas Morris, for $200,890, for Lot 219 in Springs Crossing Sector 2.

-Larry Burns to Will Daniels, for $30,000, for Lot 5 in Neid Bearden Family Subdivision.

-Manuel Pagan to George L. Morrison, for $315,000, for Lot 22-48 in Riverbend at Old Cahaba Phase 3.

-Dagmara K. Frankowska to Peter J. Cason, for $360,000, for Lot 14 in Southpoint Sixth Sector Phase II.

-Lisa M. Adams to Brandt Gendreau Kittredge, for $355,000, for Lot 1009 in Abrores of Forest Parks.

-Susan Murrell to Hub Harrington, for $348,000, for Lot 223 in Riverchase Country Club Ninth Addition.

-Whitney Investments LLC to C&J Jones Investments LLC, for $576,270, for property in Section 24, Township 20 South, Range 3 West.

-Cody John Bass to Kenneth W. Riddle, for $305,000, for property in Section 35, Township 20 South, Range 1 West.

-Maria Ruiz to Christopher Billy Shane Green, for $191,000, for property in Section 11, Township 19 South, Range 2 East.

-Robert Butterworth to Vivian L. Oliver, for $230,000, for Lot 73 in Reserve at Timberline.

-Forestar Real USA Real Estate Group Inc. to D R Horton Inc. Birmingham, for $130,500, for Lots 1651 and 1652 in Chelsea Park 16th Sector.

-Elizabeth Giles Jordan to Jill Z. Hubbard, for 218,000, for Lot A in Riverwood Second Sector.

-Ray Franklin to Darby Owenby, for $54,000, for Lot 2 in Franklin Estates.

-James E. Kelly to James Benjamin Stallings, for $224,500, for Lot 20 in Chadwick Sector 2.

-Donald R. Gordon to Jennifer W. Wall, for $1,300,000, for Lot 718 in Greystone Legacy 7th Sector.

-Edmond Earle to Jamario R. Moon, for $750,000, for Lot 614 in Greystone Legacy 6th Sector.

-Thomas J. Porter to Justin Thomas Fox, for $525,000, for Lot 6 in Meadow Brook Fifth Sector Phase II Amended Map.

-Embassy Homes LLC to Bailey K. Powell, for $322,574, for Lot 7-225 in Chelsea Park 7th Sector Fourth Addition Grayson Place Neighborhood.

-Emily S. Harrell to Todd William Talbot, for $639,900, for Lot 104 in Greystone 1st Sector 1st Phase.

-Michael P. Long to Anderson Kay Whitcomb, for $301,000, for Lot 15 in Kerry Downs.

-Anderson K. Whitcomb to Daniel W. Bares, for $210,000, for Lot 311 in Cambrian Wood Condominium.

-Embridge Homes LLC to Jerry M. Johnston, for $406,600, for Lot 301 in Lake Wilborn Phase 3 Final Plat.

-Dominion South Oak LLC to Aubrey M. Garrison, for $375,000, for Lot 16 in South Oak Phase I.

-Lake Wilborn Partners LLC to Embridge Homes LLC, for $100,000, for Lot 610 in Lake Wilborn Phase 6A.

-Embridge Homes LLC to Laura Nail Mims, for $438,210, for Lot 608 in Lake Wilborn Phase 6A.

-Kyle Alexander Wilson to Wady Echavarria, for $130,000, for Lot 826 in Waterford Townhomes Sector 1 Phase 1.

-Haskell Edward Scott to Misty Kent Pappas, for $297,400, for Lot 136 in Cedar Grove at Sterling Gate Sector 2 Phase 3.

-Venture South LLC to Sean Murphy Miller, for $399,000, for property in Section 36, Township 18 South, Range 1 East.

-Tammy D. Barefield to Rebecca Molly Gay, for $12,680, for property in Section 20, Township 22 South, Range 2 West.

-James Clark to Luis A. Flores Guillen, for $189,900, for Lot 49 in Meadows Plat 2 Revised Map.

-Bobby Joe Franklin to Leslie Mundt, for $242,000, for Lot 33 in Chadwick Sector 4.

-Gregory S. Whitley to Dustin B. McFarland, for $265,000, for Lot 227 in Cedar Grove at Sterling Gate Sector 2 Phase 5.

-Craig Emory Hutchison to Amarr Garred Croskey, for $230,000, for Lot 22 in Park Forest Fourth Sector.

-Mariah Dee Johnston Mazingo to Timothy Cottingham, for $455,000, for Lot 301 in Creekwater Phase III.

-Michael McCraw to Ryan Charles, for $785,000, for Lot 76 in Greystone 5th Sector Phase I.

-Alicia Swain to Judy S. Kyser, for $180,000, for Lot 254 in Camden Cove Sector Eight.

-Linda Buckner to Brian Johnston, for $215,000, for Lot 70 in High Ridge Village Phase 4 Final Plat.

-Chad Aaron Collum to Thomas G. Littleton, for $247,500, for Lot 18 in Navajo Hills Ninth Sector.

-Victor L. Smith to Dennis W. Mazingo, for $360,000, for property in Section 16, Township 21 South, Range 3 West.

March 9

-Michael Joe Harris to Gary Hardy, for $187,200, for Lots 7 and 19A in Shire Valley Farms Resurvey of a Resurvey of Lots 6A and 7A.

-Bobby J. Harris to Charles L. Payne, for $211,800, for Lots 8 and 19B in Shire Valley Farms Final Plat.

-Travis Kidd to Matthew Thomas Kidd, for $376,090, for Lot 7-18 in Mt Laurel Phase 1A.

-RC Birmingham LLC to Camron Dearius Brown, for $184,110, for Lot 35 in Lakes at Hidden Forest Phase 4.

-Flemming Partners LLC to David Corliss, for $526,131, for Lot 4007 in Abingdon by the River Phase 1.

-Savanna Paige Marion to Kendra Janyce Robins, for $200,000, for Lot 102 in Savannah Pointe Sector 11 Phase IV.

-Robert Lynn Long to Jared B. Kelley, for $169,000, for property in Section 28, Township 19 South, Range 2 East.

-MJH 280 Properties LLC to Reynolds Family Properties and Investments LLC, for $500,000, for property in Section 2, Township 20 South, Range 2 East.

-Marie B. Jackson to John Daniel Quekemeyer, for $195,000, for property in Section 22, Township 20 South, Range 1 East.

-Edward Shawn Sheffield to James C. Windham, for $219,900, for Lot 120 in Stonebriar Phase I Resurvey.

-Gabrielle R. Byars to Patrick A. Wade, for $197,000, for Lots 12 and 13 in Highland Second Sector.

-Tab Bisignani IRA to Bradley Tadeo Orozco, for $23,500, for property in Section 12, Township 19 South, Range 2 West.

-Yanivis L. Chinchilla Pacheco to Christopher Mark Golden, for $275,000, for Lot 23 in Weatherly Glen Abbey Sector 12.

-Thomas M. Sigg to Thomas M. Sigg, for $77,500, for property in Section 32, Township 21 South, Range 1 West.

-D R Horton Inc. Birmingham to Pedro Henrique Dutra Ribeiro De Aguiar, for $243,695, for Lot 1566 in Chelsea Park 15th Sector.

-Jerry McElroy to Lesia Ann Isbell, for $230,000, for property in Section 24, Township 20 South, Range 3 West.

-Sammie Jo Allen to Marci Johns, for $350,000 for Lot 16 in Windy Oaks Phase 3.

-Deborah P. Jackson to Sarah Courtney Maloney, for $316,900, for Lot 269 in Creekside Phase 2 Final Record Plat.

-Wendell R. Coleman to Wendell R. Coleman, for $402,800, for Lot 229 in Woodlands Sector 2, 4 and 5 Res of Lots 228, 229, 230, 231, 232 and 233 Final Plat.

-Joseph Williams to Kinneth E. Crawford, for $185,000, for Lots 1 and 2 in Byers Map of Sterrett by W E Crume.

-Peter Brandon Jones to Maximo Dominguez, for $150,000, for Lot 33 in Wildwood Village Fourth Addition.

-Patti R. Smith to Uplift Capital Management LLC, for $264,900, for Lot 68 in Villas Belvedere.

-Gregory Holdings LLC to Melissa Daniel, for $279,900, for Lot 13 in Stoneridge Phase I.

-WBG Enterprises LLC to Larry Woodward, for $34,000, for Lot 10 in Maple Leaf Estates.

-Sharon L. Barnett to David C. Harris, for $239,900, for Lot 21 in Chanda Terrace Fourth Sector.

-Mary C. Anderson to VOB Enterprises LLC, for $386,790, for property in Section 30, Township 20 South, Range 2 West.

-Lucy Evans to Lawrence Robert Tabor, for $177,000, for Lot 40 in Ridgecrest Phase One Sector Two Final Plat.

-Mark Victory to Chad Aaron Collum, for $270,000, for Lot 354 in Silver Creek Sector III Phase II.

-Kevin Michael Belk to Community Property Investments Inc., for $205,000, for Lot 515 in Old Cahaba Park Sector Amended Map.

-Christina Jo Tucker to Dinh Thi Nguyen, for $226,000, for Lot 175 in Cottages at Chesser Phase II Amended.

-Jessica L. Edwards to Alan Gregory Smith, for $328,000, for Lot 62 in Greystone Village Phase 1 Amended Map.

-Calvine South LLC to JCM Holdings LLC, for $243,770, for Lot 18 in Two Eighty Village a Condominium.

-LGI Homes Alabama to Christy White, for $235,900, for Lot 109 in Lexington Parc Sector 3.

-Clayton Properties Group Inc. to Willie F. Byrd, for $342,900, for Lot 152 in Simms Landing Phase I Final Plat.

-Betty Christine Durrett Wood to Marilyn Vaughn, for $22,924, for property in Section 13, Township 24 North, Range 15 East.

-Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to Jason Cook, for $198,000, for Lot 74 in St. Charles Place Phase 2 Sector 6.

-Prominence Homes & Communities LLC to Michael Osterman, for $206,000, for Lot 101 in Shiloh Creek Phase II Sector I Final Plat.

-Brandon W. Bearden to Cliff Trumbly, for $16,000, for property in Section 22, Township 22, Range 1 East and property in Section 1, Township 24 North, Range 15 East.

-D R Horton Inc. Birmingham to Robert J. Lilley, for $259,950, for Lot 1583 in Chelsea Park 15th Sector.

-Jenney A. Smitherman to Kevin Belk, for $274,900, for Lot 409 in Savannah Pointe Sector V Phase I.

-John W. Wilson to Alyson Elizabeth Patterson, for $180,000, for Lot 17 in Amberley Woods 3rd Sector Phase I Resurvey of Lots 12 through 27 and Green Area.

-David Foster to Sanford D. Hatton, for $66,000, for Lot 305 in Tocoa Park Phase 3.

-Newcastle Development LLC to Newcastle Construction Inc., for $150,000, for Lots 215 and 238 in Camellia Ridge Phase 2.

-Brenda W. Bjurman to Marissa A. Hooven, for $180,000, for Lot 37 in Bermuda Lake Estates Second Sector Amended Map.

-James C. Windham to Leonard Caraballo, for $170,000, for Lot 38 in Meadows at Meriweather Phase 2 Final Plat.

March 10

-Raegan E. Hallman to Donald Wayne Griggs, for $228,000, for Lot 24 in Camden Cove West Sector 3 Phase 1.

-Richard N. Preston to Andes Melendez Angel, for $245,900, for Lot 2 in Chanda Terrace Fifth Sector.

-Tracy Ray Calamas to Haven Kids Hope, for $45,000, for property in Section 5, Township 18 South, Range 2 East.

-Dancy Sullivan to James W. Clark, for $315,000, for Lot 16 in Forest Ridge Final Plat.

-Donna H. Hermecz to Donna K. Long, for $155,000, for Lot 110 in Waterford Village Sector 2.

Continued here:

Land transactions for the week of April 11, 2021 - Shelby County Reporter - Shelby County Reporter

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Richmond’s Rage of the Woke – City Journal

Posted: at 6:33 am

Beautifully landscaped with ample medians and harmoniously lined with gracious houses in various historic styles, Richmond, Virginias block-paved Monument Avenue and its several statuary tributes to Confederate leaders were once recognized as a triumph of American urban design. The residential frontages served admirably as a variegated frame for the monuments, creating a superb urban tableau that it made no sense to eradicateespecially as the monuments lost ideological currency with the passage of time, as monuments often do.

But after the mayhem triggered by George Floyds fatal arrest in Minneapolis in May 2020, the 14 blocks of the avenue comprising a National Historic Landmark District present a sorry spectacle. Bare pedestals, with the vandals graffiti not entirely washed away, stand on the avenues median. Statues of General Thomas Stonewall Jackson, the cavalry commander J. E. B. Stuart, Confederate president Jefferson Davis, and the world-renowned oceanographer Matthew Fontaine Maury, who played an inconspicuous role in the Confederate war effort, are gonevictims of fanaticism fueled by Twitter slogans drawing, in turn, on national-guilt and systemic-racism narratives in which Americans have been increasingly indoctrinated.

The magnificent bronze equestrian statue of Robert E. Lee still stands at the center of a turfed circle 200 feet wide that is Monument Avenues principal node and was the point of departure for its creation at the end of the nineteenth century. But the monuments majestically rusticated, 40-foot-tall granite pedestal has been hideously defaced by Black Lives Matter agitators spray-painting. The circle, previously enclosed within a ring of heavily graffitied jersey barriers, and, since January, within an additional ring of chain-link fencing eight feet tall, degenerated into an anarchists playground last year. The New York Times Style Magazine has perversely hailed the monuments nihilistic transformation as the most influential work of protest art since World War II.

Located in the Confederacys capital, Monument Avenue was the Souths most important venue for commemoration of the Lost Cause. The quality of its statuary was of a distinctly higher order than the many undistinguished, often cheaply mass-produced Silent Sentinel statues of lone Confederate soldiers, standing at parade rest in front of many a courthouse porticonot to mention Stone Mountain, Georgias huge, kitschy relief of Lee, Jackson, and Davis on horseback.

While Americans overwhelmingly deplore the vandalization or destruction of statues of Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, Frederick Douglass and other abolition advocates, as well as figures of Christ and the Virgin Mary, Confederate monuments have a far more precarious hold on public affections. In recent yearsand particularly during Donald Trumps presidencythey have become increasingly controversial in the South itself. Since the BLM protests erupted, dozens of these monuments have been banished from courthouse squares, parks, and other public spaces, from the Carolinas to Texasin small towns as well as big cities.

In Virginia, which has seen the most dramatic outburst of defacement and officially sanctioned removal of monuments of any state, opinion has been split on the fate of the Confederate landmarks. A September 2020 Associated Press poll found 46 percent of Virginians in favor of removal and 42 percent opposed, with a margin of error of 4 percent. While the South leans red on the whole, Virginia is blue. And despite years of mass-media vilification of all things Confederate, and Virginia Republicans generally treating the monuments issue like kryptonite, the state has seen nothing like a solid consensus supporting removal. That hasnt prevented politicians like Virginia governor Ralph Northam and Richmond mayor Levar Stoney from getting with the iconoclastic program. The legality of their efforts is dubious in Richmonds case. But while the damage will almost certainly not be reversed where most of the citys Confederate statues are concerned, Northams June 2020 order for the removal of the Lee equestrian is another matter.

For the record, I have Confederates in my attic, including a great uncle on my fathers side who served as a private in Lees Army of Northern Virginia and was killed at 18 and, on my mothers, a great-great grandfather who directed the strategically vital Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond before, during, and after the Civil War. For my money, two quotations from Wilfred McClays fine history of the United States, Land of Hope, serve as a useful point of departure when pondering the fate of Confederate monuments.

The first is Gettysburg hero Joshua Chamberlains recollection of the scene in April 1865 when Lees men surrendered their weapons and banners: Before us in proud humiliation stood the embodiment of manhood: men whom neither toils and sufferings, nor the fact of death, nor disaster, nor hopelessness could bend from their resolve; standing before us now, thin, worn, and famished, but erect, and with eyes looking into ours, waking memories that bound us together as no other bond; was not such manhood to be welcomed back into a Union so tested and assured?

A vintage photo of Monument Avenues Jefferson Davis memorial, erected in 1907 (Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, HABS)

The second quote is from another Yankee, an old soldier asked why he had taken up arms against the British at Concord decades before: Young man, what we meant going for those red-coats was this: we always had governed ourselves, and we always meant to. They didnt mean we should.

Some Confederate monumentssuch as those to Lee, Jackson, and Stuart on Monument Avenuerepresent acts of homage rendered to revered commanders, plain and simple. But those two quotations encapsulate the message that Southerners, especially Southern women grouped in the United Daughters of the Confederacy, wished to convey in many of the hundreds of Confederate memorials that they erected in the public square, mostly between 1890 and 1920: that the Souths Lost Cause, no less than the American Revolution, was a valiant struggle for independence waged against an invading army.

We know that there is more to the story. We know that one Southern state after another, in proclaiming its secession from the Union, cited the threat to slavery posed by Lincolns election to the presidency as justification. If slavery is mentioned on a single Confederate pedestal, it would be news to me. What we do often encounter are belabored exercises in Lost Cause apologetics, as with Monument Avenues bombastic 1907 encomium to Jefferson Davisover whose statue, with the right arm histrionically extended in oratorical appeal, loomed a deified Vindicatrix crowning a column 60 feet tall. On the Davis statues now-naked pedestal one can still read tributes such as this:

As citizen, soldier, statesman, he enhanced the glory and enlarged the fame of the United States. When his allegiance to that government was terminated by his sovereign state, as president of the Confederate States he exalted his country before the nations.

Maybe not. In any event, the ornate semicircular columnar screen that framed the statues of Davis and his vindicating goddess is still in place, terminating in piers once crowned by bronze urns brimming with banners and perched on martial implements. Theyre gone. So are the piers bronze plaques, inscribed with lengthy tributes to the Confederate army and navy. It would be hard to find a monument that more ostentatiously reflected a region so long trained to believing what it wanted to believe or better embodied the old Southern penchant for the grandiose rhetorical gesture, as observed by W. J. Cash in his brilliant 1941 cultural study, The Mind of the South. It is a sign of the times that the Davis monument has been dismantledhis statue having been toppled by a mob on June 10 as police stood by, while the deity was removed weeks later by a construction crew retained by Stoney. Erected by the Daughters, the now-dismembered monument spoke volumes about Lost Cause panegyric and propaganda. And in aesthetic terms, it enriched the avenues physiognomy.

The Souths segregationist Jim Crow regime crumbled over half a century ago, and the first African-American mayor of Richmond (whose population is half black) assumed office in 1977. In the intervening decades, Monument Avenue has retained its function as a celebratory venue not just for Richmond but also for the surrounding regiona place for charity walks and marathons, Saturday morning jogging groups, bike races, moonlight bike rides, and an Easter festival with people promenading past porch parties and street vendors, on their way to the celebrated bonnet contest at the Lee Monument, where women young and old (and even some males of the species) have appeared in more or less hilarious headdress, sometimes accompanied by more or less hilariously attired canines. The statuary has served as an impressive backdrop for citizens of all races and threatened nobody.

Monuments dont exist to tell the whole story, or even the real story. That task belongs to historians. Monuments have always enshrined particular aspects of experience and elevated them to a symbolic, ideal, or mythic realman essentially artistic taskand for this reason, monuments can retain an aesthetic or cultural value that endures even after their mythic power has faded. They also retain historical value, as physical testaments to the loyalties, memories, convictions, or illusions of those who erected them. And, of course, as testaments to valor and fortitude that, in the case of Lee, Jackson, and Stuart, for example, are anything but mythical.

The devotees of politically correct iconoclasm would have us believe that Confederate monuments have no significance or value independent of the Jim Crow regime, which began taking root in the late 1870s, and that to defend their preservation is to defend white supremacy. That may apply to a coterie of far-right misfits. But on the whole the indictment is bunk. Monument Avenue was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1997 for reasons having everything to do with culture and history and nothing to do with advocacy of white supremacy.

And yet, in Richmond itself, no effective opposition to the lawless destruction committed by Black Lives Matter, antifa and kindred groups, or the authorities capitulation to them, emerged last year. Business leaders kept silent even as numerous retail outlets and other private properties were attacked by vandals and arsonists. The day the Davis statue was hauled down, the publisher of the Richmond Times Dispatch, always a key figure in the citys business community, issued a privilege-checking pronouncement that said nothing about the acute civil disorder and the authorities failure to enforce the law. We believe Black Lives Matter, he assured readers. At the RTD, we have work to do. Our team is not diverse enough, but we are committed to changing that. . . . As a 60-something white male raised in a suburban setting, I am acutely aware how experiences must change to foster awareness. Its as if these people hoped the mobs destructiveness would hasten a progressive rebranding of the River City. Meantime, some scholars and preservationists underwent conversion experiences inspiring fulsome approval of the monuments removal. Others remained silent. I dont want my house firebombed, said one. In short, the mobs chantWhose streets? Our streets!was no idle boast.

All told, a dozen statues or landmarks with Confederate associations were among those that came down in Richmond last June and July. A lofty Corinthian column on Libby Hill, principal landmark of the beautiful old Church Hill neighborhood in the citys east end, is now bereft of its silent sentinel (1894), shown with his rifle and bayonet perched on a tree stump at his side. Across town, in a small plaza not far from Monument Avenue, the mob yanked a much finer work, a bronze statue of an artilleryman, off the pedestal of the Richmond Howitzers monument (1892). Somewhat reminiscent of the ancient Greek Doryphoros, or Spear-Bearer, the artilleryman was shown in uniform rather than nude, and clasping a tamper instead of a spear. Monument Avenues figurative but modernistic Maury monument (1929)removed, like the Libby Hill sentinel, on Stoneys ordersshowed the seated scientist in mufti, with a swirlingly allegorical, multi-figured portrayal of storms and floods girding the base of the large globe above him.

As for Lee, he is mounted on a horse fortunately larger than Traveler, the rather diminutive equine he rode in real life. He holds his hat at his side and looks into the distance. The French sculptor Antonin Merci modeled the statue making use of a death mask provided by Lees family. Like the Jackson (1919) and Stuart (1907) monuments, the Lee equestrian, inaugurated in 1890 before a crowd estimated at from 100,000 to 150,000 spectators, is devoid of Lost Cause apologetics. The inscription on its once-splendid pedestal consists of exactly one word: Lee. The statue has some paint on it but shows no sign of serious damage. Because the monument was deeded to the state along with the circle, this is the one Monument Avenue landmark Stoney could not remove. The year it was completed, Virginias governor, acting with the state legislatures authorization, signed a deed that included the states guarantee that she will hold [the Lee] statue and pedestal and circle of ground perpetually sacred to the monumental purpose to which they have been devoted and that she will faithfully guard it and affectionately protect it. Litigation over the Lee statue has now reached the Supreme Court of Virginia, which is unlikely to rule against Northam even though the way the state legislature went about approving his removal order is legally questionable. But because bedrock principles governing contracts are involved, the monuments fate could wind up in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court.

The removal of Confederate statues began to attract more support after a young racist psychopath, Dylan Roof, slaughtered nine African-American parishioners in a Charleston, S.C. church in 2015. The massacre was a major factor in New Orleanss removal of its three principal Confederate monuments. But the future of Richmonds only began to be seriously questioned after the violent confrontation between neo-Nazis and Klansmen and a far larger number of counter-protestors, including a significant antifa contingent, in the liberal college town of Charlottesville in August 2017. The white supremacists were rallying in defense of Charlottesvilles equestrian statue of Lee, which the city council had voted to remove. A 32-year-old woman was fatally struck when one of them drove his Dodge Challenger into a crowd of counter-protesters.

In the aftermath of the Charlottesville riot, then-Governor Terry McAuliffe acted to prevent a similar confrontation at the Lee monument in Richmond by signing an ordinancewhich remains in effect, and which Northam, Stoney, and the police mainly honored in the breach during the BLM proteststhat aside from limiting public gatherings at Lee Circle to 500 people, prohibited weapons or anything that could be used as a weapon, along with food, beverages, and any sort of encampment. The ordinance also prohibited climbing on the monument and imposed a dawn-to-dusk curfew at the site.

In 2018, a blue-ribbon commission assigned by Stoney to review the status of Monument Avenues Confederate landmarks proposed removal of the Jefferson Davis monument and leaving the others in place with new signage providing historical context, plus a range of cultural and educational initiatives. The wisest, if not the wokest, course might have been to leave the avenue alone and offer exhibits including different perspectives on its commemorative art in the fine English Renaissance mansion, designed by John Russell Pope, adjacent to the Davis monument site. The mansion is now home to the Branch Museum of Architecture and Design. In any event, and despite Stoneys vehement denunciations of them, Richmonds Confederate monuments seemed safe.

But not for long. Early in 2019, Northams medical school yearbook page from 35 years before with a photo showing one man in blackface and another in Klan garb turned up. Then his VMI yearbook page emerged, giving one of his two nicknames as Coonman, a racial slur. There were many calls for the governors resignation in the ensuing uproar. Northam weathered the storm, but he sought to repair the political damage by focusing on a racial-justice agenda. With a view to facilitating removal of Confederate monuments, he signed legislative amendments last year empowering cities to remove, relocate, contextualize, or coverbut not alter or destroywar memorials. Thirty days public notice was required to permit citizens to submit their views at an open meeting.

Then came George Floyds death in police custody. It was the moment BLM and its allies had been waiting for. They certainly werent interested in observing the niceties of the new monuments legislation, not to speak of the McAuliffe ordinance concerning the Lee Monument. Nor, as it turned out, were Northam and Stoney.

Many of Monument Avenues well-heeled denizens were at first sympathetic to the demonstrators. And though BLM and its allies hardly mobilized the mass protests some have claimed, demonstrations did initially attract thousands of peaceful participants, black and white alike. After that, the city confronted agitators usually numbering in the low hundreds who were mostly white and often violent. Over the course of two weeks in June, they toppled five statues (including the Davis) without a single instance of police intervention. Christopher Columbus was pulled down from his pedestal in Byrd Park, spray painted, set on fire, and dragged into a nearby lake. The agitators blocked streets and vandalized private property. Even during the first weekend of protests, May 29 to 31, Richmond firefighters responded to nearly 50 fires attributed to BLM agitators. The Daughters headquarters, prominently situated in the citys museum district, was set on fire, causing $1.5 million in structural damage.

A vintage photo of the 1907 J. E. B. Stuart monument (Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, HABS)

Unruly demonstrations subsequently took place at Richmond police headquarters, at Stoneys downtown apartment building, at the home of the city council member whose district includes Lee Circle, at the home of the state attorney for Richmond, at the downtown office of a law firm that obtained an injunction against the Lee monuments removal, and at the city courthouse. According to her attorney, members of the Monument Avenue household of 96-year-old Helen Marie Taylor, a plaintiff in lawsuits against Northam and Stoney and the city council arising from their monument removal campaign, were roughed up and her house was vandalized.

From the outset, protesters occupied Lee Circle, unofficially renamed in honor of Marcus-David Peters, an unarmed black teacher fatally shot in 2018 by a Richmond police officer on I-95 while in a violently deranged state. (A state attorney who is now Virginias attorney general determined that the shooting was justified.) Despite sporadic police efforts to enforce the McAuliffe ordinance, the circle became a campground. A carnival atmosphere prevailed on June and July nights when thirtysomething video artists Dustin Klein and Alex Criqui projected images of the Black Power clenched-fist icon, Floyd, Breonna Taylorthe 26-year-old Louisville ER technician killed in an early-morning police raidand distinguished African-American historical figures on the Lee Monument, along with quotations and slogans.

Within weeks of Floyds death, however, there were armed protesters, including white men in body armor, at the circle. Aside from hearing gunshots, the Times-Dispatch reported in August, people in the Lee Monuments vicinity had witnessed assaults, caught visitors defecating and urinating on their property, and struggled to sleep through the noise. The noise was mainly attributable to drum-beating and truck-born double-decker loudspeakers at the circle, firecrackers, and police planes circling overhead on an almost nightly basis.

The Lee monument is located a mere couple of miles from the Governors Mansion, and Northam is responsible for the states abject failure to protect it in accordance with the 1890 deed as well as the McAuliffe ordinance. The chain-link fence that went up in January was about eight months late. And it should have been reinforced, from the disturbances outset, by a detachment of state or city police charged with keeping order at the site.

Instead of restoring order, Northam and Stoney elected to placate the mob, with Stoney relying on his declaration of a state of emergency to carry out his statuary cleansing campaign. (Northams emergency order for Richmond included an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew that protesters ignored, along with his Covid-19-motivated restrictions on public gatherings.) In June, a BLM member had his head cut open when protestors toppled a statue adorning an elaborate Confederate monument in Portsmouth, Virginia, as police looked on. Resorting to a pretext swiftly adopted by numerous public authorities throughout the South, Stoney cited failing to remove the [Confederate] statues now as a severe, immediate and growing threat to public safety when a construction crew removed Monument Avenues Stonewall Jackson equestrian from its pedestal on July 1. He called the statues removal a temporary emergency measure while making it clear he regarded their banishment as permanent, declaring I think the healing can now begin in the city of Richmond. By July 9, the crew had removed five other statues linked to the Confederacy.

The problemas the interim city attorney, Haskell Brown III, had warned Stoneywas that the state of emergency did not authorize the Confederate monuments removal. Stoneys action has been contested in circuit court and in the state Supreme Court; in no case has it been sanctioned. The Supreme Court hasruled that an anonymous plaintiffbrought suit too late. A Richmond circuit judge, on the other hand, called Stoneys action wrongful in a February hearing but ruled that putting the statues back up would be a futile act because the city would presumably just take them down again, this time in a legal manner.

Stoney also agreed, again on his own authority, to a $1.8 million contract with a Norfolk businessman and political donor who arranged for out-of-state crews to do the removal work. (Virginia contractors allegedly werent interested.) That contract, uncovered by veteran Virginia journalist James A. Bacon, is now under investigation by a state prosecutor.

The white-majority city council voted unanimously to approve a Confederate monument-removal ordinance on August 3, after publishing notice of the meeting early in July. But by the time the council voted, the statues had already been in storage at the citys wastewater treatment plant for weeks. The ordinance was drafted as if Stoney hadnt already presented the council with a fait accompli. This is banana republic stuff. And on this past April Fools Day, the Supreme Court issued a ruling in a Charlottesville case declaring that the amended monuments law applies only to works erected after 1997, meaning that the law doesnt mean what Northam, the legislature, and the general public thought it meant.

Those statues stood high for over 100 years and it was for a reason, Stoney declared on July 1, and it was to intimidate and to show black and brown people in this city who was in charge. Leaving aside the Orwellian switcheroo of making the statues the culprits instead of the vandals, Stoney was regurgitating a familiar leftist talking point, and it is false. Those statues represent tributes to valor as well as attempts to salvage redemption from the misery, privation, death, and defeat brought on by a four-year siege of the Confederate capital. Their creation was less a matter of Jim Crows advent than of the passing of the generation that fought bravely and suffered acutely. Two cannons on Monument Avenue that Stoney removed marked the inner and outer defensive perimeters, respectively, on the citys western flank.

The only Confederate monument still standing on the streets of Richmond is the dignified 1891 statue of A. P. Hill, an able Stonewall Jackson subordinate killed in the final days of the war, on a traffic circle on the citys north side. This monument has stronger legal protection because Hill and his wife are buried underneath. But it will not be there much longer. The city is only now getting around to studying its options for the disposition of Confederate statues that Stoney removed or the mob pulled down. The more than 20 would-be recipients range from the Shenandoah Valley Battlefield Foundation to a pair of conceptualist artists who want to have the Stonewall equestrian cut into fragments in a New Jersey foundry for sale to help Richmond public schools close racial gaps.

Stoney went on to win re-election last November, but his demagogy certainly didnt win the agitators support. More than 300 of them were charged as a result of the chronic disorders that lasted for months. Though the raucous gatherings had recently ceased, there were still garden plots and basketball hoops on Lee Circle when I visited early last fall. The pavement around the monument featured Fuck Stoney and other graffiti crudely insulting Mayor Baloney. Fuck Ralph Northam was also inscribed in large letters, along with variations on the fuck the police theme. Even now the graffiti is visible despite being whitewashed, while boarded-up shopfronts repeatedly catch a drivers attention on the citys main commercial thoroughfare, Broad Street. Traffic was light when I made a late-March weekday visit and few people were on the streets, despite the pleasant weather. Aside from the Covid pandemics ongoing impact, a pervasive sense of insecurity, of public order all too susceptible to further disruption, appears to grip the River City.

And all the agitation has done absolutely nothing to improve life for Richmonds most vulnerable African-Americanswho, if anything, were adversely affected by the diversion of police to the BLM protests. Shootings surged over the summer in the citys black neighborhoods, and children as young as three figured among the victims. Yet this violence didnt provoke any demonstrations. Do black lives only matter when theyre cut short by cops?

Late in 2019, African-American artist Kehinde Wileys knock-off of the J. E. B. Stuart equestrian was installed at a prominent site on the grounds of Richmonds Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. The pedestal is inscribed Rumors of War. Instead of the dashing cavalry commander, a young black man in contemporary attire, with a clutch of dreadlocks pointing picturesquely upward, is mounted. The pose of the man and his horse are identical to the Stuart, save that Wileys figure clasps the back of his saddle rather than a sword.

Rumors of War might be dismissed as grist for the postmodern mill, or even a publicity stunt. Yet its installation elicited a thoughtful comment from a Virginia Museum curatorwhen it looked like Richmonds Confederate statues might survive the clamor for their removal. It takes a different vision to say, Leave them up, the curator told the Washington Post. Lets see how we can appropriate, reverberate, echo. Its an eloquent call and response.

Thats the kind of nuanced, quintessentially liberal opinionwhether expressed by curators, historians, preservationists, or the prominent Richmonders who helped foot the $2 million bill for the Wiley sculptures acquisition and installationthat got canceled amid the chaos triggered by Floyds death. The monumental call to which Wiley responded, of course, got canceled, too.

Catesby Leigh writes about public art and architecture and lives in Washington, D.C.

Top Photo: The bronze equestrian statue (1890) of Robert E. Lee covered in graffiti, September 2020 (Detail;photo courtesy of author)

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Harvey Weinstein secretly indicted on rape charges by grand jury in Los Angeles – Q13 FOX (Seattle)

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Harvey Weinstein secretly indicted on rape charges by grand jury in Los Angeles

Harvey Weinstein was secretly indicted on rape charges by a grand jury in Los Angeles a couple weeks ago, Fox News has learned.

LOS ANGELES - Harvey Weinstein was secretly indicted on rape charges by a grand jury in Los Angeles a couple weeks ago, Fox News has learned. The move by LA District Attorney George Gascn should facilitate the extradition of the Hollywood producer from New York so that he can be tried.

The indictment is virtually identical to the criminal complaint, which had been filed in January 2020 by former DA Jackie Lacey. The disgraced movie mogul, who is already serving a 23-year sentence in New York for rape and sexual assault, faces 11 counts in California, including rape and sexual battery involving five incidents that allegedly took place between 2004 and 2013. If convicted, he faces up to 140 years behind bars.

Movie producer Harvey Weinstein (R) enters New York City Criminal Court on February 24, 2020 in New York City. Jury deliberations in the high-profile trial are believed to be nearing a close, with a verdict on Weinstein's numerous rape and sexual mis

The indictment, which is still under seal, and arrest warrant for Weinstein are expected to be publicly revealed Monday afternoon at his extradition hearing in Erie County, New York. The producer is serving his time at the maximum-security Wende Correctional Facility near Buffalo. The LA case has been delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but the DAs office does not want to wait any longer.

According to legal experts, by getting an indictment, LA prosecutors can streamline the proceedings and are able to go straight to trial, rather than doing it under a criminal complaint that would then require a preliminary hearing. "This process will eliminate the need for a preliminary hearing which is kind of a minitrial like we saw in the OJ case: there was the trial before the trial," criminal defense attorney Troy Slaten explained, adding that in the LA County, the use of grand jury is limited to very few cases. With this move and under the law that allows the borrowed custody, the California state can get custody of the New Yorks inmate and must commence trial within 120 days.

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The Los Angeles DAs office has not responded to Fox News' inquiries on the secret indictment so far. Weinsteins attorney in the LA case and an attorney for two of the five accusers, Gloria Allred, have both declined to comment.

"These are stale, unsubstantiated, uncorroborated, uncredible allegations that arose during the hysteria of the #MeToo movement and we're confident that Mr. Weinstein will be acquitted because there's no credible evidence against him. He's innocent," defense lawyer Mark Werksman stated regarding the charges.

On Monday, his attorneys are expected to ask for a delay of the extradition, citing his "poor" health conditions, which would put him at higher risk under the current pandemic. But the chances of a postponement are slim as their next shot would be with Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is currently battling sexual harassment allegations. Weinstein could be extradited to LA within 30 days of tomorrows hearing.

Allred is hopeful that his transfer will be finally done so that he can also have his day in court in the West Coast. "It appears to me that Mr. Weinstein does not wish to be removed to Los Angeles to face charges, but justice delayed is justice denied," she added.

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A longtime women's rights attorney, Allred represents Mimi Haleyi, one of the women whose sex assault accusations Weinstein was found guilty of in New York. In the LA case, Allred is defending one unnamed woman and Lauren Young, who has come forward publicly as she was a witness in the New York criminal trial over a year ago. Young, a model and actress, testified then that Weinstein sexually assaulted her in a Beverly Hills hotel in February 2013 after being trapped inside a bathroom with him. He allegedly groped her while masturbating before she was able to flee.

LA prosecutors allege that Weinstein raped an Italian model at another Beverly Hills hotel on Feb. 18, 2013, just a day before the attack against Young. The alleged assaults of the other three women all took place at Beverly Hills hotels.

Regardless of how the California case ends, the former producer would still have to return to New York to serve the rest of his 23-year sentence, which is currently on appeal.

Get updates on this story from FOX News.

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One on One: A link between a North Carolinian and the Suez Canal back-up? – The Coastland Times – The Coastland Times

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By D.G. Martin

Who is responsible for last months jam up in the Suez Canal?

Could it be a North Carolinian?

The damages to the quarter-mile long container ship Ever Given, which ran aground in the canal, are just the beginning. Egypt lost millions in toll revenue from hundreds of ships backed up. Somebody has to pay for the earth moving equipment and tugboats that dislodged the Ever Given from the canals banks where it was stuck for six days. Then there are damages that will accrue to owners of the cargo items for late delivery charges and for the spoilage to time sensitive agricultural products.

Could all this have been caused by a North Carolinian?

Yes, it is easy to argue that Malcom McLean, the son of a sharecropper tobacco farmer in Robeson County shares responsibly.

McLean (1913-2001) is known as the Father of Containerization because he developed the modern intermodal shipping container that revolutionized freight transportation.

Prior to the 1950s most shipping cargos were loaded by longshoremen in a time consuming and costly operation.

McLean began the revolution that led to using strong truck trailer sized containers to load ocean ships.

How dirt farmer McLean came up with the idea and built businesses around it is a great American story of entrepreneurism and determined work.

Malcom, not Malcolm, spelled his name without the extra l.

Though born in Maxton, he finished high school in Winston Salem in 1935. His family did not have enough money to send him to college. They used the little money they could scrape up to buy a used truck. It was the beginning of McLean Trucking Co., which started operations in Red Springs.

In 1937 McLean drove a truck load of cotton to a port in Hoboken, N. J., where, as he remembered,I had to wait most of the day to deliver the bales, sitting there in my truck, watching stevedores load other cargo. It struck me that I was looking at a lot of wasted time and money. I watched them take each crate off the truck and slip it into a sling, which would then lift the crate into the hold of the ship.

He put that thought about wasted time aside for almost 20 years while he built McLean Trucking, then headquartered in Winston Salem, into the largest trucking fleet in the South.

But he saw the possibility of a container sized to fit on a truck bed or railcar, or stacked on a ship. He saw how to eliminate the wasted time he had experienced in Hoboken. He developed and patented a standard steel reinforced container that fit on a truck bed and was stackable on ships. He founded a new company, SeaLand, to exploit the opportunity.

As McLeans first container ship left Newark harbor in 1956, someone asked Freddy Fields, a top official of the International Longshoremens Association, What do you think of that new ship? Fields replied, Id like to sink that sonofabitch. Fields knew that McLeans way of transferring freight would put longshoremen out of work.

The world found out that the new way of loading and transferring freight openeddoors for increased world trade and for more and more container ships, larger and larger ones, carrying more and more containers like those stacked to the sky on the Ever Given.

Malcom McLeans revolution in containerized shipping brought us cheaper products from other parts of the world. It gave us the opportunity to produce and sell our goods internationally without having to pay exorbitant shipping and handling costs.

And it made possible the gigantic Ever Given loaded with 18,300 containers that plowed into the Suez banks.

Give McLean the credit he is due for revolutionizing world trade. And then you can hold him partly accountable for the jam up of the monster container ship in the Suez.

D.G. Martin hosts North Carolina Bookwatch, Sundays at 3:30 p.m. and Tuesdays at 5 p.m. on PBS North Carolina (formerly UNC-TV). The program also airs on the North Carolina Channel Tuesdays at 8 p.m. and other times.

FOR MORE COLUMNS AND LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, CHECK OUT OUR OPINION SECTION HERE.

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Global Weatherstrip Seal Market Trends, Growth Demand, Opportunities & Forecast to 2026 | Cooper Standard, Toyoda Gosei, Hutchinson, Henniges,…

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Madison takes second in 17 team Rigby Invite | Sports | rexburgstandardjournal.com – Rexburg Standard Journal

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The wind dominated the Saturday finals at the Rigby Invite as Madison took second behind Highland in the girls meet and, in the boys, meet, Madison fell to Rigby 63-101. With winds gusting up to 60 miles per hour, some of the runners were almost blown over as they ran into the head wind near the finish line.

One of the most exciting races of the day was in the boys 300 hurdles. Madisons Deven Benitez was leading by half a step with 100 meters to go over teammate Ammon Mishke and Hillcrests Noah Whitaker. Mishke edged ahead of Whitaker and Benitez as they cleared the last hurdle winning the race in a personal record, 42.15, as all three broke the 43 second mark.

Madisons only other individual winner was Cameron Porter as he won the 110 hurdles in 15.66 and almost won a second race in the 100 meters, but was out-leaned by Skylines Conner Maloney in a .02 second win.

Other Bobcats placing in the top three places were Eli Backstein was second in the high jump, clearing 6-4; Keagan Martin in the triple jump with a PR of 40-11 and the 4 X 400 team of Carter Miskin, Hinckley Manner, Mishke and Logan Thomas taking third with a time of 3:38.9.

The top five teams in the boys were Rigby (101), Madison (63), Skyline (61), Pocatello (44) and Shelley (43).

The Madison girl throwers dominated the discus with A. J. Dawson winning the event with a 102-09 toss followed by Halle Pope taking second and Karlee Mouser taking sixth. Other placers for the Bobcats in the top three were Savannah Lee, second in the 100 hurdles (16.49); Whitney Wasden, second in the 300 hurdles (49.81) and Mariah Webb, third in the high jump (5-00).

The top five schools were Highland (96.5), Madison (56), Skyline (51), Preston (48) and Pocatello (48).

In the Freshman Meet the Madison girls had two individual winners with Jessica Hales winning the 100 hurdles (18.21) and Salish Carusona winning the long jump (14-01.25). Taylor Stucki took second in the 400 (1:05.74) and third in the 100 meters (13.64). The Bobcat freshman boys had Jacob Fisher take second in the 1600 with and PR of 5:16.09 and the 4 X 100 relay, made up of Austin Cottrell, Jett Summers, Maxwell seal and Carter Thomas, took second with a time of 50.26.

Madisons next scheduled competition is at Thunder Stadium for the Bonneville Invite on Friday.

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Banks, ATM booths face cash withdrawal pressure ahead of lockdown – Dhaka Tribune

Posted: at 6:32 am

People stand in long queues inside a branch of Sonali Bank in Dhaka's Motijheel to settle their various transactions, including cash withdrawal, on Tuesday ahead of the strict lockdown set to be enforced from April 14 to April 21 Mehedi Hasan/Dhaka Tribune

All banks will remain closed during the lockdown from Wednesday until April 21

Bank branches and ATM booths in Dhaka have been packed with clients withdrawing money ahead of the strict lockdown, the government is set to enforce from Wednesday until April 21, aiming to choke the spread of Covid-19 infections.

The lenders faced huge cash withdrawal pressure since Tuesday morning as a large number of clients gathered at the bank branches following the announcement of closure of all the scheduled banks from Wednesday.

"Now we are facing a huge rush at almost all of our branches and ATM booths," said an official of Sonali Bank.

Mahbubur Rahman, Trust Bank's Sena Kallyan Bhaban branch manager, said that they are facing huge pressure from clients. Most of them are withdrawing cash ahead of the strict lockdown.

While visiting different bank branches in the capital, it was found that the officials were facing difficulties in handling a good number of clients waiting in long queues in front of the cash counters.

Also Read -Banks to remain closed amid strict lockdown

At places, people were seen standing in queues on the streets outside the bank branches and ATM booths amid sweltering heat.

Struggling for maintaining social distancing in lines, people said they are withdrawing money to meet their urgent needs and in fear of uncertainty.

People stand in long queues inside a branch of Sonali Bank in Dhaka's Motijheel on Tuesday ahead of the strict lockdown set to be enforced from Wednesday | Mehedi Hasan/Dhaka TribuneJahangir Alam, a client of Trust Bank, presumed that the strict lockdown might be extended further and the cash needed to be withdrawn for that purpose.

Rabiul Islam, a client of Bank Asia, said it is a kind of suffering that the banks would remain closed amid the lockdown.

For Tuesday, the banks will remain open till 3pm as the central bank extended the transaction hour by two hours.

Contacted, Brac Bank Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Selim RF Hussain said all of the bank branches faced huge cash withdrawal pressure as people were so panicked owing to the announcement of lockdown.

Also Read -Tuesday's banking hour extended till 3pm

However, the Covid-19 pandemic has boosted the digital banking activities as the increasing number of clients do not want to visit the branches now, he added.

On Monday, the Bangladesh Bank issued a notice saying all the scheduled banks would remain closed amid the strict lockdown.

It said bank branches, sub-branches, and its ATM booths located in the sea, land and airports, as well as customs areas should be opened at all times by consulting with the local administration and customs authorities.

It also asked the lenders to keep adequate cash and internet services at their ATM booths to ensure uninterrupted service to their clients.

Meanwhile, the daily withdrawal limit from ATM booths has been extended to Tk1 lakh during the strict lockdown period.

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