Mr Musk and his company have grand designs that the rocket system will one day take humans to Mars.
"I played Mike's guitar... just one of those once in a lifetime moments," is how he described it.Donna said they kept the plectrum, adding: "It's on display on our wall."
"The Alarm fans are like a family," Marcus said."Mike was a rock star but didn't ever act aloof. He always recognised us and talked to us."Mandy, 57, and Darren Mander, 59, travelled with their daughter Charlotte from Birmingham to pay tribute to the musician.
They have been fans of The Alarm since the 1980s but in the past few years became friends with Mike, Jules and their family after visiting the Red, a music cafe in Dyserth, Denbighshire."What he did was unique," said Darren.
"And he'd been through so much... we thought he would come through this."
Mandy said: "I keep expecting him to drive past in his jeep with Ziggy (the dog) with his head out of the window."Prof Wolfers said while Trump "chickens out from the very worst mistakes" - citing his original 'Liberation Day' levies and the threat of 50% tariffs on the EU - he doesn't backflip on everything.
The president wants to keep 10% reciprocal tariffs on most countries and 25% tariffs on cars, steel and aluminium."Yes, he backs off the madness, but even the stuff he left in meant that we had the highest tariff rate yesterday than we'd had since 1934," Prof Wolfers said.
All signs point to this being a fight that the Republican president won't give up easily."You can assume that even if we lose, we will do it another way," Trump's trade advisor Peter Navarro said after Thursday's appeals court ruling.