EPSTEIN’S LAST LEGACY: FROZEN MANHOOD
Jeffrey Epstein may be gone, but his backup plans, like so much modern bureaucracy, remain on ice. Newly released Justice Department records say he had been storing sperm with California Cryobank for years and signed a 2016 contract spelling out that, if he died, control of the samples would go to his estate or another legal representative instead of the sperm bank, because even in matters of biology, nothing says dignity like paperwork. The arrangement sat quietly out of public view until the files surfaced this year, and now nobody seems sure whether the samples still exist or where they went, which is about the most on-brand fate imaginable for an infamous man whose legacy is apparently part scandal, part filing cabinet. CooperCompanies says it holds no Epstein samples and won’t elaborate; the estate won’t comment; and legal experts are left to ponder Virgin Islands law as if the real mystery were not the man but the chain of custody. Bioethicists, meanwhile, get the noble task of asking whether fertility clinics should accept genetic material from convicted sex offenders, which is one of those questions that sounds
Atkins got his first guitar by making a trade with his brother, and it was arguably the best deal he ever made. Although he struggled with shyness and suffered from severe asthma—he had to sleep sitting up and often fell asleep still holding his guitar—he became an accomplished guitarist and went on to release several hit records, develop a signature line of guitars, and help create country music's "Nashville sound." What did "Mr. Guitar," as he came to be known, trade to get that first guitar?
West Virginia Day is a state holiday in
Excluding water, tea is the most widely consumed drink on the planet, drunk either hot or cold by half the world's population. The vast majority of tea sold in the West is black tea, made from fermented leaves of the Camellia sinensis plant. Generally stronger in flavor and more caffeinated than the green and oolong varieties, black tea retains its flavor for several years and has long been an article of trade, serving as a form of currency into the 19th century in what countries?
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