Please visit our sponsors

Rolclub does not endorse ads. Please see our disclaimer.
Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 25
  1. #1
    Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    90
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    43
    Thanked 73 Times in 9 Posts

    Default Very Interesting News out of SC

    I just happened to pick up my newspaper today in South Carolina, "The Post and Courier" and in section "F" is a picture of a Retired Army Brig. Gen - Hugh Tant and a poster behind him of the Iraqi Dinar - He was responsible for helping Iraq transition from "Saddam" currency to nwe Iraqi notes as "head of Currency Exchange". This is the first time I have seen something like this in our local newspaper. I wish I could get the picture on here, behind him is a poster of a 5000 Iraqi dinar note. The story follows: See if someone can find the picture to post, I am not that savy, sorry

    friendly format sponsored by:
    The New Media Department of The Post and Courier

    SATURDAY, MAY 05, 2007 9:49 AM


    'Dancing General' triple steps through illustrious military career



    BY ROB YOUNG
    The Post and Courier


    His cell phone rings and Gnarls Barkley roars.

    "I remember when, I remember, I remember when I lost my mind."

    It's quite the ringtone for a retired brigadier general.

    An unlikely selection for shag music, too.

    But Hugh Tant and his wife love dancing to the song.

    Does that make him crazy?

    During his time at the Pentagon, Tant would shag through the hallways in full uniform, drawing stares, a few laughs and an apt sobriquet.

    "The Dancing General," his colleagues called him.

    He took his act across the globe, dancing in Iraq, doing the triple step in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

    "It just kind of lifts the spirits," he says.

    And to think, Tant once managed $44 billion, two-thirds of the Army's budget. He even helped provide the foundation for a new Iraqi economy as the U.S. director of the Iraqi Currency Exchange. Now, he chairs Mount Pleasant's War Memorial Study Committee, guiding the effort to build a $12 million waterfront park.
    But then, Tant, a senior vice president at Southeast Community Bank, has no room for half-truths or secrets. In all things, be yourself. And if the Dancing General fits, wear it.

    "It's like being pregnant," he says. "Either you are or you're not."

    'A blessing'

    Tant, a Mount Pleasant native, crisscrossed America and the globe during his military days, moving 19 times. Here's his most important stop: Fort Campbell, Ky., 1973.

    There, he spied a young Army nurse in white uniform, white stockings, her legs crossed, one foot dangling.

    "I felt like a largemouth bass," Tant jokes.

    It wasn't a storybook setting, merely a classroom instead. The course: vehicle accident prevention. Still, Tant was smitten.

    No ring, he noticed, but Christine Ritland was writing a letter. He craned his neck to spot the salutation: Dear Mom and Dad.

    Relief. No boyfriend. Though her parents had warned her about Army guys. Tant tried to talk to her each break. No luck.

    Then finally, the course done, he made a joke to friends. "We've just seen all these gruesome accidents," he told them. "I was thinking about selling my horse. I think I'll just sell my car instead."

    Guess who was listening?

    "Oh, do you have a horse?" Chris asked. Her family kept a horse on their farm in Iowa.

    Tant saw his opening. "I'd bet you'd like to go horseback riding, wouldn't you?"

    Eventually, they did. And eventually Tant sold the same horse. It fetched its owner enough money to buy a beautiful wedding ring for his bride.

    It's fair to say it turned out OK. He and Chris celebrated their 33rd wedding anniversary last month.

    "It was a blessing," Tant says. "I had prayed to meet a wonderful woman and God answers prayers."

    Delivery under fire

    In Chris, Tant found the perfect partner, someone supportive and accomplished in her own right. Chris retired from the Army as a lieutenant colonel, spending eight years in active service, 22 years in reserve.

    Together, they raised twin daughters, now grown. Elizabeth Tant Angerman graduated from West Point, Anna Tant from the University of Richmond with honors.

    The family moved to Mount Pleasant in the early '80s during Tant's stint as a Citadel instructor. Though soon Tant left for Fort Bragg, where he served with the 82nd Airborne division. They rented their home for 18 years, then returned in 2001 when Tant retired.

    He had just moved back to the area when a plane crashed into the Pentagon on Sept. 11, killing 33 people in his former sector.

    "That was depressing to me," he says. "And then I saw our soldiers deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq - those were my former units."

    Tant still felt bound by duty. So he leapt when Paul Bremer, then the U.S. administrator of Iraq, asked him to lead the effort to switch the Iraqi currency in 2004.

    Consider the challenge. Tant needed to dispose of 13,000 tons of paper currency and import more than 2,300 tons from abroad.

    "Everybody said we wouldn't be able to do it," Tant recalls.

    Instead, Tant and 700 others he directed finished the job in a few months.

    "It normally takes two to three years to bring on a new currency in peace," he says. "My guys did it (in) six months."

    They did so under hostility. His men dealt with frequent ambushes, especially in Samarra. Just two weeks before Saddam Hussein's capture, insurgents attacked again. This time, Tant had asked for extra assistance, 10 tanks, four infantry fighting vehicles, an Apache helicopter and an Air Force A-10 Warthog. A 45-minute battle ensued, and in the end, at least 46 insurgents lay dead. Tant's men still succeeded, transferring their load, two large shipments. He and his team also had a new motto: Delivery under fire.

    Still shagging

    After all these years, he's still shagging. Tant and his wife took second place in the Mount Pleasant Blessing of the Fleet's shag contest last weekend. The past five years, they've finished first three times and second twice.

    Tant, 57, has always enjoyed competition. In the military, he challenged new officers or soldiers to push-up contests. He was beaten only once as a Citadel instructor by cadet Norm Engard.

    "I beat him two hands, then we went to one hand," Tant says. "I think we were around the 30th rep on the left arm when he got me."

    He still works out at home, a routine from his days as a former state light heavyweight weight-lifting champion.

    "See, grab here," Tant says, flexing his bicep.

    Just don't get too close. He keeps a few kicks in his arsenal. Tant learned the moves in Seoul, Korea, studying for his black belt in tae kwon do.

    In his work and avocations, Tant's allegiance and dedication endure. "In all things, tell the truth," he says.

    He's lived by those words.



    About Hugh

    BORN: Roper Hospital, Charleston, June 1949.

    OCCUPATION: Retired Army brigadier general; presently senior vice president, Southcoast Community Bank.

    FAMILY: Christine (wife of 33 years); twin daughters, Anna Malinda Tant and Elizabeth Frances (Tant) Angerman; son-in-law Jeffrey Charles Angerman; and 1-year-old granddaughter, Ashley Elizabeth.

    TOP THREE THINGS I'D LIKE TO ACCOMPLISH: Learn more languages and improve upon my German and Spanish, travel the United States and abroad, and trace my family's genealogy.



    Hugh Tant

    WHEN I'M NOT ENGAGED IN WORK: I go shagging with my beautiful wife, walk our two Labs, visit our beautiful granddaughter and her parents in Frisco, Texas, work out with weights and exercise with the elliptical machine about six days per week, and go to church and Sunday school at St. John's Lutheran Church and attend various organizations such as the Exchange Club of Charleston, Washington Light Infantry and German Friendly Society.

    FAVORITE BOOK: 'Beach Music' by Pat Conroy

    FAVORITE LOCAL RESTAURANT: Morgan Creek Grill

    I'M ANNOYED BY: Disrespect for human dignity.

    IF I HAD TO DO IT ALL OVER AGAIN: I would have met my wife, Christine Ritland Tant, earlier and married her two years sooner.

    MOST EMBARRASSING MOMENT: When making my first military jump (which was also my first time on a plane), I was a second lieutenant and was in charge of leading new paratroopers out the jump door. I heard the engines roar of the C-130 Hercules aircraft and felt movement. After about 20 minutes, I nervously asked the jumpmaster who was a combat-seasoned sergeant, 'How long will it be until they open the jump doors?' The sergeant elbowed his fellow jumpmaster sergeant and asked me to repeat my question. After I repeated my question, the sergeants laughed like crazy and said, 'Relax, Lieutenant, we haven't taken off yet! We are just taxing the runway!'

    BIGGEST DISAPPOINTMENTS: The fact that we didn't take out Osama bin Laden years ago when we had a chance. The fact that we didn't strike Saddam and his brutal regime before he killed more than 500,000 of his own people and constantly violated U.N. sanctions for 10 years. When our nation sends its Armed Forces into harm's way, any dissension among our elected officials only empowers and encourages the enemy to step up their operations, causing more harm to our troops and delaying victory.

    PEOPLE WHO HAVE INFLUENCED MY LIFE: My parents. I can still hear their encouraging words and saying that I can be whatever I want to be through persistence, hard work, integrity and right thought.

    PART OF HISTORY IN WHICH I WOULD HAVE LIKED TO have PARTICIPATEd: World War II. When our country was attacked, our citizens set aside their differences and united with a single purpose: victory. Every able-bodied person did everything he could to serve either in uniform or as a civilian, contributing positively to ensure success on the battlefield.

    SOMETHING MOST PEOPLE DON'T KNOW ABOUT ME: My nickname is Toogie Bear, given to me by my wife.

    STRONGEST CHILDHOOD MEMORY: Hearing my father pray when he didn't know I was listening.

    Hugh has now moved back to Mt. Pleasant, SC and I am sure he will have plenty of dinar. Something has got to break soon, now this thing as come home to the local news. I never heard anyone else in SC, especially 20 minutes away from me that knew of the dinar, much less was involved in it all.

  2. Sponsored Links
  3. #2
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    5,906
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    3,000
    Thanked 5,808 Times in 483 Posts

    Thumbs up Some one will figure out how to get it here.

    Quote Originally Posted by smcquiller1 View Post
    I just happened to pick up my newspaper today in South Carolina, "The Post and Courier" and in section "F" is a picture of a Retired Army Brig. Gen - Hugh Tant and a poster behind him of the Iraqi Dinar - He was responsible for helping Iraq transition from "Saddam" currency to nwe Iraqi notes as "head of Currency Exchange". This is the first time I have seen something like this in our local newspaper. I wish I could get the picture on here, behind him is a poster of a 5000 Iraqi dinar note. The story follows: See if someone can find the picture to post, I am not that savy, sorry
    Thanks for Sharing the News .

  4. #3
    Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    90
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    43
    Thanked 73 Times in 9 Posts

    Default

    Thanks, I was soooo excited when my husband pointed this out to me. It is a big article on the front page of secton F. We were checking for the movie schedule and he just came across it. God meant for us to see this for some reason. I am stok ed.

  5. #4
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    5,906
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    3,000
    Thanked 5,808 Times in 483 Posts

    Cool What is Section "F"?

    Quote Originally Posted by smcquiller1 View Post
    Thanks, I was soooo excited when my husband pointed this out to me. It is a big article on the front page of secton F. We were checking for the movie schedule and he just came across it. God meant for us to see this for some reason. I am stok ed.

    The Post and Courier, Charleston SC | Charleston.net

  6. #5
    Investor
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Posts
    341
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    25
    Thanked 2 Times in 2 Posts

    Default

    Very interesting timing, especially with all of his many accomplishments of past, to have his photo taken in front of a picture of the IQD.

  7. #6
    Senior Member bluedangle's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Pacific Northwest
    Posts
    139
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    45
    Thanked 52 Times in 11 Posts

    Default

    It is an old photo, go to Google images and type in "hugh tant",
    you will be able to see pictures

  8. #7
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    5,906
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    3,000
    Thanked 5,808 Times in 483 Posts

    Thumbs up Hugh Tant....

    Quote Originally Posted by bluedangle View Post
    It is an old photo, go to Google images and type in "hugh tant",
    you will be able to see pictures
    *****************************
    Attached Images Attached Images  

  9. #8
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Wild Wonderful West Virginia
    Posts
    992
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    236
    Thanked 1,040 Times in 98 Posts

    Default

    So weird...I was researching on google and in between I jump back here to see any updates. After I read the post about Hugh Tant I went back to my google page I was on and this was staring at me.....

    Hugh Tant III Hosts Ask the White HouseAt that time, he was presented some of the new Iraqi Dinar by the Governor ... over-appreciation of the currency since there are not enough swiss dinar to ...
    www.whitehouse.gov/ask/20031120.html - 35k - Cached - Similar pages


    Welcome to "Ask the White House" -- an online interactive forum where you can submit questions to Administration Officials and friends of the White House. Visit the "Ask the White House" archives to read other discussions with White House officials.

    Hugh Tant III
    Biography
    Hugh Tant III
    It is terrific to be with you. I would like to thank you for the opportunity to address your questions this evening. I am talking to you from the ICE (Iraqi Currency Exchange) project room in one of Saddam's palaces. We like to call it the ICE box. Around the walls are various colorful pictures of the old currency (featuring Saddam) and the new currency (without Saddam). In addition to the currency posters around the room, there are various maps and charts that help us map the delivery of the Iraqi currency throughout the country.

    Cont...

    Hugh Tant III Hosts Ask the White House

    Cue eerie music...

    Cheers!
    DayDream
    1.61 USD Yazzman Rate

  10. #9
    Senior Investor
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Posts
    5,906
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    3,000
    Thanked 5,808 Times in 483 Posts

    Cool Check out the Pics this Search Brings Up....

    Hugh Tant Pics - Yahoo! Search Results

    Theres a link for SGS there too. lol

  11. #10
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Posts
    187
    Feedback Score
    0
    Thanks
    60
    Thanked 25 Times in 8 Posts

    Default Interesting. . .

    Walter, from Brooklyn, NY writes:
    Does the currency exchange include both paper and coin? Hugh Tant III
    The new Iraqi Dinar consists of six denominations all of which are paper currency. There are no coins presently used in Iraq. This does not mean that there is no future for coins in Iraq. That will be decided by the Central Bank of Iraq.


    Tramar, from Southampton writes:
    When you are the Director of the Iraqi Currency Exchange what is the duty? Do you connect from Iraq to the White House to tell the plans are or do the iraqis keep it confidential?
    Hugh Tant III
    The duties is to be responsible for the everything the Iraqi exchange team does or -- I report to Ambassador Bremer.
    There are 700 people that perform the tasks of the Iraqi Currency Team. There about 70 expats from the world, New , South Africa, Britain, Australia and the U.S.
    This team loads up the currency and convoys and we perform about 8 convoys a day. We are taking new money to the banks or collecting old money from the bank.
    We also have our own aircraft that helps us carry tons of old or new dinar to remote locations which are placed in centers -- the convoy teams take them out to further remote locations throughout Iraq.
    We report back daily as to what has been accomplished. Of course, we have plans for the following days work that needs to be accomplished. WE keep track of all of the banks and what they have converted and what their needs are.
    Building ta communcations network has been a huge challenge. Wee've had to provide telephones, generators for electricity, ultraviolet lights so they could check for counterfeit currency,
    I'm also responsible for this team -- the security force. They have to have a place to live, eat, showers, etc. All of these things are my responsibility to ensure there are adequate facilities.
    We have a huge information program. WE had to get the word out to the Iraqi people. They put information in the newspapers daily way before the exchange program began. Brochures, pamphlets, flyers ==- make sure we get the word out about the exchange program and it is working extremely well.
    We've already accomplished 67 percent of the exchange in only five weeks. We answer to the central bank of Iraq. The money belongs to the Iraqi people -- we have only done a means for them to convert the currency in the country.

    Printer-Friendly Version Email This Page

    We know they printed 14 denoms, he does not mention all of them. They have a big support team with convoys and planes. And the Irazuis were informed in advance of what was going to happen.
    What's anhyone's elses take on this?

  12. Sponsored Links
Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Share |