Mr. Bernards, 34, of Edwards, Colo., was visiting the monolith on Friday night when, he said, four men arrived as if out of nowhere to dismantle the sculpture. Mr. Bernards had driven six hours for the chance to ogle the sculpture and to take dramatic photographs of it. Using upscale Lume Cube lights attached to a drone, he produced a series of glowy, moonlit pictures in which the monolith glistens against the red cliffs and the deep blue of the night sky.
Suddenly, around 8:40 p.m., he said, the men arrived, their voices echoing in the canyon. Working in twosomes, with an unmistakable sense of purpose, they gave the monolith hard shoves, and it started to tilt toward the ground. Then they pushed it in the opposite direction, trying to uproot it.
“Earthlings, It Seems, Not Aliens, Removed the Utah Monolith,” New York Times
Details on the disappearance of the Utah monolith
My undergraduates are working their way ...
Academia
According to the Internet Archive, this ...
Current_Events
Update, June 2020: See Vanessa Otero Ad ...
Culture
An asteroid is making the closest known ...
Current_Events
From Daisy Dunn's review of Puchner's Th...
Books
The other day, a Facebook friend posted ...
Business




