Menace of the Saucers from 1978
![[Image: Yl6XljF.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/Yl6XljF.jpg)
Behold...the almighty Orb.
![[Image: uMqxUMq.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/uMqxUMq.jpg)
In 2018 a rocket took off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California carrying an unusual cargo contained in a cube-sat, a miniature satellite about the same size as a brick and normally used for scientific experiments. Once the rocket reaches an altitude of 575km, the brick will be jettisoned, will unfold and a small canister of carbon dioxide will inflate a work of art inside. The piece is called “Orbital Reflector” and comes in the form of a Mylar balloon about the length of a football field, the height of a person and the shape of a diamond. Once fully inflated, it will orbit the planet every 92 minutes, and will be visible from Earth as a bright star streaking across the sky.
![[Image: 0FO0OuP.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/0FO0OuP.jpg)
Tommy McLain, a son of the Louisiana bayou whose distinctive tenor laid over a bouncy blend of rock, zydeco, country and R&B made him the king of swamp pop in the 1950s and ’60s, has died at 85. I had thought leprechaun's were immortal. I guess his music will live on.
![[Image: LMx3wBF.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/LMx3wBF.jpg)
RIP Joe Caroff... May be just me but been noticing a lot of peoples living past 100!
![[Image: LrSvOHH.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/LrSvOHH.jpg)
Joe Caroff, Designer of the James Bond 007 Logo, Dies at 103
MSNBC is changing its name to MS NOW (short for My Source for News Opinion and the World). MSNBC will have a new name as it seeks to carve out an identity that will have it competing for scoops and news with current corporate sibling NBC News following the spin-off of the bulk of NBC Universal’s cable assets into a new publicly traded company called Versant.
![[Image: nSnyi8T.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/nSnyi8T.jpg)
It looks like someone did the MSNBC rebranding using Microsoft Paint. No joke literally any AI could spit you out like 100 better logos in 5 minutes. Also, "MS Now" sounds like a medical diagnosis.
MSNBC Will Change Name to MS NOW After NBCUniversal Split
Marxist Socialist Now with Rachel MadCow!
July 15, 1996: And so it began...MSNBC launches its new 24 hour propaganda channel which was then a joint venture between NBC News and Microsoft.
Lost historic Pearl Harbor log book rediscovered by newlywed couple...
![[Image: I6po0bB.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/I6po0bB.jpg)
I'm sure he could of got high 6 figures at an auction.
![[Image: 34OX2a3.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/34OX2a3.jpg)
https://x.com/AutismCapital/status/1957496073049764180
All European leaders now sympathetic to Trump after being subjected to our demon spawn press. Meloni, LOL! Wonder if any called Trump "daddy".
![[Image: 2bDMkvS.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/2bDMkvS.jpg)
https://x.com/nypost/status/1957554727249399876
![[Image: Yl6XljF.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/Yl6XljF.jpg)
Behold...the almighty Orb.
![[Image: uMqxUMq.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/uMqxUMq.jpg)
In 2018 a rocket took off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California carrying an unusual cargo contained in a cube-sat, a miniature satellite about the same size as a brick and normally used for scientific experiments. Once the rocket reaches an altitude of 575km, the brick will be jettisoned, will unfold and a small canister of carbon dioxide will inflate a work of art inside. The piece is called “Orbital Reflector” and comes in the form of a Mylar balloon about the length of a football field, the height of a person and the shape of a diamond. Once fully inflated, it will orbit the planet every 92 minutes, and will be visible from Earth as a bright star streaking across the sky.
![[Image: 0FO0OuP.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/0FO0OuP.jpg)
Tommy McLain, a son of the Louisiana bayou whose distinctive tenor laid over a bouncy blend of rock, zydeco, country and R&B made him the king of swamp pop in the 1950s and ’60s, has died at 85. I had thought leprechaun's were immortal. I guess his music will live on.
![[Image: LMx3wBF.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/LMx3wBF.jpg)
Quote:Though he was a prolific songwriter, his biggest hit, released in 1966, was a cover: “Sweet Dreams,” a song written by Don Gibson that had been a hit for Patsy Cline in 1963.
Mr. McLain’s version climbed to No. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 — higher than Patsy Cline’s version had reached.
By then swamp pop was in decline, pushed aside by the radio dominance of rock bands from Britain and the East and West Coasts.
But it found a following in Britain, where in 1974 the D.J. and label owner Charlie Gillett released “Another Saturday Night,” a compilation of swamp pop that included a track by Mr. McLain. Early punk musicians tuned in to Mr. McLain’s offbeat sound, as did Mr. Costello and Mr. Lowe.
“He had an amazing, one-of-a-kind, extraordinary X factor — whatever you call it — of a voice,” Mr. Adcock said in an interview. “It didn’t sound like ‘oh, that’s a white dude singing well,’ or ‘that’s soul music.’ It just sounded like that weird thing that I think only a few people have.”
Tommy McLain, the King of Swamp Pop, Dies at 85
RIP Joe Caroff... May be just me but been noticing a lot of peoples living past 100!
![[Image: LrSvOHH.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/LrSvOHH.jpg)
Joe Caroff, Designer of the James Bond 007 Logo, Dies at 103
MSNBC is changing its name to MS NOW (short for My Source for News Opinion and the World). MSNBC will have a new name as it seeks to carve out an identity that will have it competing for scoops and news with current corporate sibling NBC News following the spin-off of the bulk of NBC Universal’s cable assets into a new publicly traded company called Versant.
![[Image: nSnyi8T.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/nSnyi8T.jpg)
It looks like someone did the MSNBC rebranding using Microsoft Paint. No joke literally any AI could spit you out like 100 better logos in 5 minutes. Also, "MS Now" sounds like a medical diagnosis.
MSNBC Will Change Name to MS NOW After NBCUniversal Split
Marxist Socialist Now with Rachel MadCow!
July 15, 1996: And so it began...MSNBC launches its new 24 hour propaganda channel which was then a joint venture between NBC News and Microsoft.
Lost historic Pearl Harbor log book rediscovered by newlywed couple...
![[Image: I6po0bB.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/I6po0bB.jpg)
Quote:As Tracylyn Sharrit helped her fiancé unpack his books during his move last year, a large volume with stained pages caught her eye. It said “U.S Navy Yards and Naval Stations” and “Government Bindery” on its spine.
It was an account of the daily weather, tides and other conditions for several months in 1941 and ’42. It noted the arrival and departure of ships. At the top of each page it said “Log Book, U.S. Navy Yard Pearl Harbor.”
She flipped through it, and on Pages 282 and 283 there were entries for Dec. 6 and 7, 1941. Under “remarks,” someone had written in pen: “0755 Japanese aircraft and submarines attacked Pearl Harbor and other military and naval objectives ...”
“It’s a very big deal,” said David Stupar, the Archives special agent who retrieved the book from Sharrit and Bonds, of Hemet, California, in April. The book is in good condition and its spare notations provide snapshots of history as it was happening, he said.
“We have nothing, nor does the nation have anything similar to this,” Mitchell Yockelson, an investigative archivist at the agency, said as the book was unveiled at the Archives facility in College Park, Maryland.
A digitized copy is available on line. [Pearl Harbor Naval Base, March 1941-June 1942; 576 pages]
The book essentially verifies the story of Pearl Harbor, Yockelson said. “Whether or not it will change the interpretation, that’s up to the historians out there.”
In addition to the Dec. 7 attack, the log book also mentions the little-known second attack on Pearl Harbor on March 4, 1942 by two big Japanese seaplanes:
“0045 received report of unidentified planes approximately 50 miles away. 0050 assumed condition one. 1705 three shots and whistling projectiles heard. 1710 received report that two fragments of bombs hit astern of [USS] Ortolan ...”
But visibility was poor for the Japanese aviators that night and the attack did little damage.
Navy ships and bases kept log books, which were daily records, in brief, of events and observations. In this case, the log documents some of the ships that were at Pearl Harbor the day of the attack, Yockelson said.
The entry for Dec. 5, 1941, records the arrival in the harbor of the battleships USS Arizona and USS Oklahoma. Both were sunk in the attack two days later.
The entry for Dec. 6, 1941 lists the battleship USS Pennsylvania and the destroyers USS Cassin, USS Downes, and USS Shaw present in the yard, where they were undergoing repairs. The next day, all three were damaged — the destroyers heavily.
On Dec. 8, as stricken ships still burned in the harbor, the log reported at 7:35 a.m. that the damaged battleship USS Utah “appears to be drifting out in the channel, recommend tug be sent to secure it along side quay.”
At 9:30 p.m.: “Tower reports fire at ammunition depot.”
At 10:15 p.m.: “Fire at Hickam field secured.”
The pages for Dec. 6 and 7 have brown stains, apparently from a liquid. Could it have been coffee spilled by some frantic officer?
“That’s another question that we’ve been wondering” about, Yockelson said. “We like to think that maybe ... somebody was so agitated at what went on that he spilled his thermos.”
The book, which is more than 80 years old, was saved from destruction by Bonds’s late mother, Oretta Kanady, Bonds said in a recent telephone interview.
During the 1970s she was a civilian employee at the old Norton Air Force Base in San Bernardino, California, and one day noticed the book in a trash bin, Bonds, 65, said. It looked interesting and she asked if she could have it.
“They said, ‘Yeah, go ahead,’” he said. “She brought it home to me. I was like 15 or so. I’ve had it ever since.” He said he doesn’t recall thinking much of it.
“In the last few years, I’ve moved here, moved there, it’s just been in a box,” he said. “I hadn’t really looked at it.”
In 2000, his mother died. Archives officials said they don’t know how the book might have gotten from a Navy base at Pearl Harbor to the trash at an air base in California.
“Were there other log books in the same trash?” Stupar, the special agent, said. “We just don’t know.”
Last fall, Bonds moved into Sharrit’s two-bedroom home in an over-55 community in Hemet, about 85 miles east of Los Angeles.
Bonds said he drives a forklift at a local Amazon facility. After Sharrit, 57, pointed out the historical importance of the book, the couple decided it might be valuable and decided to sell it.
Sharrit contacted the office of Whitmore Rare Books, in Pasadena, California.
“They reached out to me,” Dan Whitmore, the company’s founder, said in a telephone interview. He said he deals mainly in literary first editions, and books on philosophy, science and economics.
“But when someone reaches out and says, ‘Hey we’ve got the station log book during the attacks of Pearl Harbor,’ your ears perk up,” he said. “That’s a significant cultural object.”
Its potential value was unclear, he said.
“I don’t know exactly what a retail price point would be for it,” he said. “It could be a six-figure object.”
“It doesn’t have a lot of color, in the actual object itself,” he said. “It’s fairly dry. ... At the same time it’s the station log book so it kind of has the weight of authority. ... It’s the one. I don’t think there is another one.”
Even though it was said to have been in the trash, it looked like it might still be government property. It was a gray area. “We reached out to the National Archives,” Whitmore said.
“We didn’t want to buy a problem or buy a headache and we certainly didn’t want to pass on a headache to potential customers,” he said. “We wanted to make sure that the National Archives didn’t have a claim on it.”
Whitmore put the Archives in touch with Sharrit and Bonds, and Archives officials told them that even though Kanady had rescued it from the trash and Bonds had saved it, the log was still a piece of historic government property.
“We’re grateful to them for what they did,” Yockelson, the investigative archivist, said. Had Kanady not found it, “we can assume that it would have ended up destroyed.”
But it belonged in the Archives. Stupar flew to California to retrieve it, carrying two gray National Archives T-shirts with words from the Constitution for the couple as souvenirs.
Bonds said he was not that happy about it. “I’d like to have gotten some compensation for it,” he said. If not for his mother, “it would have been gone and nobody would have ever seen it again.”
He said arrangements were being made for the couple to get a tour of the San Diego Navy base.
“All I got was a T-shirt so far,” he said. [Lesson learned!]
Lost historic Pearl Harbor log book is recovered by National Archives
I'm sure he could of got high 6 figures at an auction.
![[Image: 34OX2a3.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/34OX2a3.jpg)
https://x.com/AutismCapital/status/1957496073049764180
All European leaders now sympathetic to Trump after being subjected to our demon spawn press. Meloni, LOL! Wonder if any called Trump "daddy".
![[Image: 2bDMkvS.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/2bDMkvS.jpg)
https://x.com/nypost/status/1957554727249399876
![[Image: CHkkbZc.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/CHkkbZc.jpg)
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell