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Showing posts from July, 2020

The Great Golf Ball Hunt

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If you follow me on Instagram , you're familiar with our nightly golf ball hunts and #greatgolfballhunt20 (or whatever the year may be). But in case you don't, or you're wondering how that all began, here's the story... We moved into a house in a "golf course community" a little over three years ago. I can't remember exactly when we found the first golf ball, but the first few times we walked to the neighborhood playground a block away, we found a stray golf ball each time. And we found a few that had made their way into our yard. And then we started seeing them in the "buffer zone" between our yard and the course. This evolved into a nightly walk around the section of the course behind our house. There are rules to golf ball hunting -- we only go out when no one is on the course, and we only walk in the area by the house and in a direction that ensures we'll see someone teeing off on the opposite hole and can get out of their way. So

Trucking's Trailblazers: Edward J. Buhner

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'Gentle Kentuckian' Pushed Trucking Safety To The Forefront Edward J. Buhner Served Key Role In Defense Transportation During World War II By Jennifer Botchie ATA Web Editor Edward J. Buhner Feb. 13, 1901-Dec. 24, 1980 ATA President, 1947-48 The American Trucking Associations took a new direction in recent years, guided by the decisions of the 1998 Wren Committee. But long before the Wren Committee, or even the Few Committee of the 1980s, there was the Buhner Committee, led by Edward J. Buhner, who later became ATA's second president. It was this committee that laid out the foundation for ATA's organizational structure. Buhner's work in what was originally called the "Committee on National and State Organization of the Trucking Industry," leaves him remembered as one of the key figures in making ATA

Trucking's Trailblazers: Ted V. Rodgers

'The Father Of Motor Truck Transportation' Ted V. Rodgers Unified A Fractured Industry, Giving Birth To Its Prosperity By Jennifer Botchie ATA Web Editor Ted V. Rodgers April 7, 1888 - Sept. 13, 1960 ATA President, 1933-47 A bronze plaque in the lobby of the American Trucking Associations headquarters in Alexandria, Va., honors Ted V. Rodgers, the associations' first president, calling him "the father of motor truck transportation." By all accounts, that description is not much of a stretch, as Rodgers has been frequently described as someone who almost single-handedly united what was a fragmented industry in the 1930s. Starting with his tenure as president of the Pennsylvania Motor Truck Association and continuing as ATA's leader, Rodgers was not afraid to travel extensively and use his persuasive powers to ally di

Nostalgia and resurrecting old writing

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Yesterday, my Facebook memories informed me that July 2020 marks 20 years since I started working at the American Trucking Associations . As I said there, it's hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that that job was almost half a lifetime ago. Twenty-five years since my high school graduation, or 20 years since my college graduation, don't seem quite so strange, but for some reason this does. Maybe because it was the first post-college job for which I had to leave my hometown and thus marked the real beginning of my "grown-up" life. I started as an assistant web editor with Transport Topics , the weekly newspaper. I had to write the A.M. and P.M. Executive Briefings for the web and e-newsletters, which basically meant I trolled through the news all day, looking for items of interest to the trucking industry. I had a My Yahoo page (!) set up to cull through trucking, transportation and other related headlines. It wasn't a bad gig, but I also had to sit at the