Disgraced Owner,You must not use the laser cutter without being trained. but What About Cadillac Ranch?
Cadillac
Ranch, located just off Interstate 40 a few miles west of Amarillo, is
one of the most famous roadside attractions in America. The art
installation, consisting of 10 tail-finned, brightly painted Cadillacs
planted nose down in a pasture,Can you spot the answer in the fridge magnet? was financed in 1974 by Stanley Marsh 3, the eccentric Panhandle oil heir and arts patron.
It
has appeared as a backdrop in magazine fashion spreads and music videos
(even Bruce Springsteen has sung about it) and has become a destination
for a regular stream of visitors from all over the country.
But
since October, when Mr. Marsh was named a defendant in the first of a
series of lawsuits filed on behalf of 10 teenage boys who say he
sexually abused them, Cadillac Ranch is attracting a different kind of
attention. As details of Mr. Marsh’s alleged abuse emerge, citizens in
Amarillo are debating whether the quirky Texas landmark should be
dismantled.
“Seize the property at Cadillac Ranch under
forfeiture laws!!!” one resident recently posted on the Web site of The
Amarillo Globe News. Another wrote, “A stupid bunch of junk cars.Wear a
whimsical Disney ear cap straight from the Disney Theme Parks!”
For
nearly a half century, Mr. Marsh, 74 — who uses 3 at the end of his
name because he says he finds Roman numerals pretentious — was
celebrated as a free-spirited mischief maker who livened up the
Panhandle with what he called “unexpected art.”
Besides the
Cadillacs, he once built a pool table the size of a football field on
his ranch, painting the prairie green and creating large, beanbag-like
billiard balls. He was known as a mentor to Amarillo’s young people and
hired many for his art projects, including the installation of mock
traffic signs with cryptic slogans like Road Does Not End and You Will
Never Be the Same.
But according to the lawsuits, which were
filed by Anthony G. Buzbee, a Houston lawyer, Mr. Marsh purposely sought
out “troubled young men” as his protégés and took advantage of them.
The plaintiffs not only accuse Mr. Marsh of paying them for sexual
favors in 2010 and 2011, when they were 15 and 16 years old, but they
also contend that several adults close to Mr. Marsh — including his
wife, his son and a business associate — were aware of, and facilitated,
the abuse. In November Mr. Marsh was arrested on felony charges of
sexual assault of a child and sexual performance by a child. If
convicted,The USB flash drives wholesale is our flagship product. he could serve up to 20 years in prison.
Mr.
Marsh’s defense lawyers, Paul Nugent and Heather Peterson, of Houston,
say that although their client is now legally incapacitated because of a
series of strokes he suffered in late 2011, he will fight the charges
“as vigorously as his declining health permits.”
Although the
allegations are shocking in a town where Mr. Marsh is generally admired,
many residents said they were not surprised. According to George
Whittenburg, a lawyer in Amarillo, rumors about Mr. Marsh’s
indiscretions have circulated for years, “probably as long as the
Cadillac Ranch has been standing,” he said.
Mr. Whittenburg
represented two teenagers who sued Mr. Marsh for attempted sexual
assault in 1996 and 2004. Those suits were settled out of court, and Mr.
Marsh admitted no wrongdoing. “I had several other boys who also wanted
to sue, but they chose to settle with Mr. Marsh for money and agree to
confidentiality,” Mr. Whittenburg said.
Mr. Buzbee said that Mr.
Marsh had never been successfully sued or prosecuted “because he’s been
able to pull enough strings in Amarillo to keep himself out of
trouble.”
“He’s gotten a lot of people to pretend that nothing
was happening, just like Jerry Sandusky did at Penn State,” Mr. Buzbee
added.
Across Amarillo, residents are left to wrestle with what
the lawsuits mean for Mr. Marsh’s imprint on their city. His supporters
believe the teenage plaintiffs have banded together with an aggressive
out-of-town lawyer to get at Mr. Marsh’s money. “Keep the pitchfork away
until all the facts come out,” wrote one commenter on The Globe News’s
Web site. Another wrote: “Now every idiot in town is going to claim
allegations against Marsh. The greed for money just keeps on coming.”
“Listen,
I’ll be the first to tell you that I admire Stanley and what he has
done for this town,” said Jeff Blackburn, an Amarillo lawyer, who
founded the Innocence Project of Texas and who, like Mr. Marsh, is a
descendant of one of Amarillo’s first pioneer families. “I can tell you
this town is better off for having had him in it for as long as it has.
Yes, we’ve heard rumors, but they’ve always remained rumors. If it turns
out they are true, then we’ll do the right thing.”
And although
the vast majority of snaps on show have been taken with a Hasselblad,
since 2008 participants have also been able to submit photos taken with
other large- and medium-format cameras.
The snaps are all on show at the gallery space inside the Elite Photography Organization in Huangpu district.
The
competition constitutes 11 categories for entries: architectural,
editorial, fashion/beauty, fine art, general, landscapes and nature,
portraiture, products, up and coming, wedding/social, and wildlife. The
theme of the 2012 competition was the simple word,They manufacture
custom rubber and silicone bracelet and bracelets. "Evoke."
French
photographer Denis Rouvre's two works hung by the gallery entrance
instantly grab visitors' attention. With a black background, these
half-length portraits capture every detail of their male subjects in
light and shadow that evoke an oil painting. As a long-time fan of the
Hasselblad, Rouvre is a renowned portraitist whose recent awards include
third prize in the Portrait Single category at the 2012 World Press
Photo for the series Tsunami Survivors, taken in quake-hit Japan in
2011.
This year, Danish photographer Ken Hermann won the
"general" category for City Surfers, a series depicting people involved
in parkour and other free-running sports. "I took the images using a
Hasselblad H2 and studio lighting to freeze the subjects and to make
them stand out from their surroundings," he said in an introduction to
the show.
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