Thursday, May 8, 2014

Checking My Privilege: Character as the Basis of Privilege


feb9e01dbe785d17fe46e8cfd73f881e Originally published by the The Princeton Tory.


There is a phrase that floats around college campuses, Princeton being no exception, that threatens to strike down opinions without regard for their merits, but rather solely on the basis of the person that voiced them. “Check your privilege,” the saying goes, and I have been reprimanded by it several times this year. The phrase, handed down by my moral superiors, descends recklessly, like an Obama-sanctioned drone, and aims laser-like at my pinkish-peach complexion, my maleness, and the nerve I displayed in offering an opinion rooted in a personal Weltanschauung. “Check your privilege,” they tell me in a command that teeters between an imposition to actually explore how I got where I am, and a reminder that I ought to feel personally apologetic because white males seem to pull most of the strings in the world.


I do not accuse those who “check” me and my perspective of overt racism, although the phrase, which assumes that simply because I belong to a certain ethnic group I should be judged collectively with it, toes that line. But I do condemn them for diminishing everything I have personally accomplished, all the hard work I have done in my life, and for ascribing all the fruit I reap not to the seeds I sow but to some invisible patron saint of white maleness who places it out for me before I even arrive. Furthermore, I condemn them for casting the equal protection clause, indeed the very idea of a meritocracy, as a myth, and for declaring that we are all governed by invisible forces (some would call them “stigmas” or “societal norms”), that our nation runs on racist and sexist conspiracies. Forget “you didn’t build that;” check your privilege and realize that nothing you have accomplished is real.


But they can’t be telling me that everything I’ve done with my life can be credited to the racist patriarchy holding my hand throughout my years of education and eventually guiding me into Princeton. Even that is too extreme. So to find out what they are saying, I decided to take their advice. I actually went and checked the origins of my privileged existence, to empathize with those whose underdog stories I can’t possibly comprehend. I have unearthed some examples of the privilege with which my family was blessed, and now I think I better understand those who assure me that skin color allowed my family and I to flourish today.


Perhaps it’s the privilege my grandfather and his brother had to flee their home as teenagers when the Nazis invaded Poland, leaving their mother and five younger siblings behind, running and running until they reached a Displaced Persons camp in Siberia, where they would do years of hard labor in the bitter cold until World War II ended. Maybe it was the privilege my grandfather had of taking on the local Rabbi’s work in that DP camp, telling him that the spiritual leader shouldn’t do hard work, but should save his energy to pass Jewish tradition along to those who might survive. Perhaps it was the privilege my great-grandmother and those five great-aunts and uncles I never knew had of being shot into an open grave outside their hometown. Maybe that’s my privilege.


Or maybe it’s the privilege my grandmother had of spending weeks upon weeks on a death march through Polish forests in subzero temperatures, one of just a handful to survive, only to be put in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where she would have died but for the Allied forces who liberated her and helped her regain her health when her weight dwindled to barely 80 pounds.


Perhaps my privilege is that those two resilient individuals came to America with no money and no English, obtained citizenship, learned the language and met each other; that my grandfather started a humble wicker basket business with nothing but long hours, an idea, and an iron will—to paraphrase the man I never met: “I escaped Hitler. Some business troubles are going to ruin me?” Maybe my privilege is that they worked hard enough to raise four children, and to send them to Jewish day school and eventually City College.


Perhaps it was my privilege that my own father worked hard enough in City College to earn a spot at a top graduate school, got a good job, and for 25 years got up well before the crack of dawn, sacrificing precious time he wanted to spend with those he valued most—his wife and kids—to earn that living. I can say with certainty there was no legacy involved in any of his accomplishments. The wicker business just isn’t that influential. Now would you say that we’ve been really privileged? That our success has been gift-wrapped?


That’s the problem with calling someone out for the “privilege” which you assume has defined their narrative. You don’t know what their struggles have been, what they may have gone through to be where they are. Assuming they’ve benefitted from “power systems” or other conspiratorial imaginary institutions denies them credit for all they’ve done, things of which you may not even conceive. You don’t know whose father died defending your freedom. You don’t know whose mother escaped oppression. You don’t know who conquered their demons, or may still conquering them now.


The truth is, though, that I have been exceptionally privileged in my life, albeit not in the way any detractors would have it.


It has been my distinct privilege that my grandparents came to America. First, that there was a place at all that would take them from the ruins of Europe. And second, that such a place was one where they could legally enter, learn the language, and acclimate to a society that ultimately allowed them to flourish.


It was their privilege to come to a country that grants equal protection under the law to its citizens, that cares not about religion or race, but the content of your character.


It was my privilege that my grandfather was blessed with resolve and an entrepreneurial spirit, and that he was lucky enough to come to the place where he could realize the dream of giving his children a better life than he had.


But far more important for me than his attributes was the legacy he sought to pass along, which forms the basis of what detractors call my “privilege,” but which actually should be praised as one of altruism and self-sacrifice. Those who came before us suffered for the sake of giving us a better life. When we similarly sacrifice for our descendents by caring for the planet, it’s called “environmentalism,” and is applauded. But when we do it by passing along property and a set of values, it’s called “privilege.” (And when we do it by raising questions about our crippling national debt, we’re called Tea Party radicals.) Such sacrifice of any form shouldn’t be scorned, but admired.


My exploration did yield some results. I recognize that it was my parents’ privilege and now my own that there is such a thing as an American dream which is attainable even for a penniless Jewish immigrant.


I am privileged that values like faith and education were passed along to me. My grandparents played an active role in my parents’ education, and some of my earliest memories included learning the Hebrew alphabet with my Dad. It’s been made clear to me that education begins in the home, and the importance of parents’ involvement with their kids’ education—from mathematics to morality—cannot be overstated. It’s not a matter of white or black, male or female or any other division which we seek, but a matter of the values we pass along, the legacy we leave, that perpetuates “privilege.” And there’s nothing wrong with that.


Behind every success, large or small, there is a story, and it isn’t always told by sex or skin color. My appearance certainly doesn’t tell the whole story, and to assume that it does and that I should apologize for it is insulting. While I haven’t done everything for myself up to this point in my life, someone sacrificed themselves so that I can lead a better life. But that is a legacy I am proud of.


I have checked my privilege. And I apologize for nothing.


Tal Fortgang is a freshman from New Rochelle, NY. He plans to major in either History or Politics. He can be reached at talf@princeton.edu.


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Armed masked mob went to man's home and smashed up his mum's car in feud over a kiss



A masked mob stormed to a teenager’s home armed with weapons and smashed up his mother’s car in a feud over a kiss.


The gang got “tooled up” with bats, a machete, a hammer and a wheel brace and drove from Teesside to their target’s home in North Yorkshire.


The trouble all sprang from “ill feeling” after one of the men, Jake Rollinson, kissed the victim’s girlfriend, a court heard.


Six young men from the Stockton area stood in the dock today to be sentenced for the violent “flashpoint” of the dispute.


Prosecutor Graeme Gaston said: “They became part of an enterprise to go to (the victim’s) home and damage property and assault him.


“Clearly there was a feud going on,” he told Teesside Crown Court.


The teenager heard a knock on his door at about 1am on July 18, 2012.


He looked out and saw a man wearing a balaclava holding a claw hammer.


When told to go away, the visitor smashed a window on the victim’s mum’s Kia Sorento.


A second man in a hoodie, Adam Todd, hacked at the front door with a machete shouting: “I’m going to kill you. I’m going to murder you.”


Unable to get in, he smashed a toilet window.


Rollinson, wearing a scarf and carrying a wheel brace, and three other men with bats smashed more of the car windows.


They all ran off and got into two waiting cars, leaving £6,900 damage at the Appleton Wiske home.


The Crown said Todd was a “central figure” organising the attack.


Rollinson and getaway driver Warren Smith, both 20, Alex Ibbetson and George Norman, both 22, Todd, 21, and Tayla Sutcliffe, 19, all admitted a charge of violent disorder.


Rollinson, Todd and Ibbetson also pleaded guilty to criminal damage.


Ibbetson was already in prison serving a three-and-a-half-year prison sentence for dealing crack cocaine in Stockton.


Apart from him, the men had few or no previous convictions.


Defence barristers said it had been almost two years since the incident, the men had moved on, matured, behaved themselves and there had been no more trouble.


They stressed mitigating factors like peer pressure, remorse, shame, references, lack of criminal lifestyles and ability to pay compensation if they weren’t jailed.


Duncan McReddie, defending Todd, said the young apprentice was a communications “hub”, not an organiser.


Referring to ancient Rome, Troy and Romeo and Juliet, he said it was a case of young men losing their good judgment.


Uzma Khan, representing Norman, said he was a foolish naive follower of “young men with far too much testosterone”.


Adam Watkins, defending Smith, said they acted “almost like gangsters” and caused great distress but there was no injury or violence against people.


He said it was an “aberration” in the otherwise law-abiding life of a hard-working electrical engineering student at Middlesbrough College and Balfour Beatty apprentice.


Nigel Edwards, representing Sutcliffe who hopes to join the RAF, said he was “backup muscle” in a quest for “retribution”, and didn’t leave the car.


“It was a flashpoint over a bit of nonsense,” he said.


“It was bunch of young men acting like idiots. What they did was outrageous and disgusting. It was a momentary lapse.”


Robert Mochrie, for Ibbetson, said this was his first violent crime.


Rebecca Brown, for welder Rollinson, said there was some provocation.


She claimed the victim had turned up at Rollinson’s home, threatened him and approached him with a knife.


The Crown did not accept these allegations but the victim did not want to be involved with the court case.


Judge George Moorhouse accepted the claims, telling Rollinson: “It is quite clear that he made threats towards you.”


He told the men: “It was a revenge attack. It was pre-planned. You were armed.


“Your faces were disguised in some way or another. Fortunately nobody was injured.”


He jailed Ibbetson, of Blackbush Walk, Thornaby, for 18 months.


The other five all received custodial sentences suspended for two years with orders to carry out 200 hours’ unpaid work and pay £950 compensation each.


Rollinson, of Maria Drive, Stockton; Todd, of Fullerton Way, Stockton; and Norman, of Bowood Close, Ingleby Barwick, were given 18-month sentences.


Smith, of Meridian Way, Stockton; Sutcliffe, of Maria Drive, Stockton, were each given 12 months.


Smith was given a tagged three-month curfew from 9pm to 6.30am, Rollinson and Norman six months’ supervision.


A seventh man - Ryan Paul Loughran, 22, of Hawthorn Avenue, Thornaby - was one of the getaway drivers. He admitted violent disorder and criminal damage.


An armoured personnel carrier driver for the RAF, he is on a tour of duty in Afghanistan and will be sentenced in November.



Local Teesside football round-up: Whinney Banks' unbeaten record ended by Fishburn Park in last game


JACK HATFIELD SPORTS TEESSIDE LEAGUE


IN the final league match of the season, Fishburn Park finished their campaign on a high with a 4-3 victory over previously unbeaten league champions Whinney Banks YCC.


Fishburn, who won the Raine Trophy, took the lead through James Organ-Simpson after nine minutes.


Danny Lockwood equalised in the 20th minute, and Lee Mahon gave the champions and Lou Moore Trophy winners a 2-1 lead four minutes later.


But Richard Lane hit a screamer five minutes before half-time to make at 2-2 at the interval.


Whinney Banks, who had a player sent off just before half time, fell behind when Mark Waterfield and then Dominic Wilson gave Fishburn a 4-2 lead but Danny Lockwood scored his 44th goal of the season to make it 4-3 with five minutes remaining.


Whinney Banks could have preserved their unbeaten record when they were awarded a penalty, but Mahon, who could have ended with Lockwood as joint top first division goal scorer, missed from the spot.


Then Whinney Banks had a second player sent off.


Division One: Fishburn Park 4 (J Organ-Simpson, R Lane, M Waterfield, D Wilson) Whinney Banks YCC 3 (D Lockwood 2, L Mahon).



  • WHO’S got the Stead Cup?


Efforts are being made to track down silverware which South Bank and District League clubs competed for in the 1950s.


Brian Bage who played in the competition for the solid silver tropy, said: “I played for Redcar Boys Club.


“We would like to track it down and resurrect the competition.”


Anyone with any information can contact the Gazette Sports Desk on 01642 224345.


STOCKTON SUNDAY LEAGUE


THE Royal have won the Division One title.


Thornaby Jolly Farmers and The Royal both went into their final fixtures with a chance of finishing top.


Jolly Farmers, leading the table on goal difference before kick-off, were away to fourth-placed Layfield Arms while The Royal visited third-placed Stockton West End.


Layfield edged out Thornaby Jolly Farmers by the odd goal in nine with a Arron Brookbanks (3) and Richard Robinson (2) netting for the winners. Gareth Poole also scored a hat-trick for Thornaby.


The Royal were deserved 4-1 winners with Paul Cleary (2), Daniel Lincoln and Marlon Baleci netting.


Stockton West End and Layfield Arms meet this weekend and third spot is up for grabs.


Layfield need to win to leapfrog current third place occupants West End, who only need a draw to stay put.


In Division Two, Market Tavern completed their first season with a comprehensive 9-2 win against fellow first season team Thornaby Roundel. Bradley Murray (2), Gary Bowe (2), Alan Wild, Martin Kilburn, James Brodie-Myers, Peter Barnes and Paul Barker scored.


Thornaby Sports and Leisure completed their season and a well-deserved 4-4 draw against Hartburn but still finished bottom of the league.


STANDINGS


Division One: 1st The Royal (played) 22 (points) 55, 2nd Thornaby Jolly Farmers 22/52, 3rd Stockton West End 21/44, 4th Layfield Arms 21/42, 5th Port Clarence 22/30, 6th Grangefield Park 22/29, 7th Billingham The Merlin 22/28, 8th Billingham Cowpen Club 22/26, 9th Thornaby Oddfellows 22/26, 10th Billingham Low Grange 22/22, 11th Billingham The Kings22/14, 12th Malleable 22/9.


REDCAR SUNDAY LEAGUE


Eston Ship Inn won the AEC Trophy beating Redcar Rugby Club 3-0 in the final.


Rugby Club were dealt a blow with 20 minutes gone when Paul Curry had to limp off with a hamstring injury.


Harland opened the scoring five minutes later, driving into the penalty area before firing across and beyond the keeper.


Just before the hour mark Ship Inn increased their lead when, following a quick break down the right, Dean Jones drove towards the penalty area and his shot was deflected into the net off a defender trying to clear off his own goal line.


Bradley Wright beat the offside trap and

ran clear to clip the ball over the keeper and seal the game for Eston Ship Inn.


In Division One, the tussle for the runners-up spot continues.


Grangetown thumped the Clarendon Hotel 9-1 with Mickey Lee scoring six.


Ross Smith had a good game playing wide on the left and tormented the Clarendon defence.


Lee Dooley (2) and Jamie Lincoln also scored for Grangetown, who trail second-placed Redcar Rugby Club by a point with a game in hand.


In their previous game, Clarendon dished out similar punishment to Lakes Social Club, winning 10-1 with goals from Sam Young (3), Aaron Jones (2), Lee Williamson (2), Andrew Souter (2) and Lee Fulcher.


In the second division, second-placed The Livery increased the pressure on leaders Black Swan, beating The Stockton by the odd goal in three.


With both teams having one more game to play, the title is still up for grabs.


Black Swan know a victory will seal top

spot while any other result will open the way for The Livery to leapfrog them.


STANDINGS


Division One: 1st Ennis Square Social Club (played) 19 (points) 47; 2nd Redcar Rugby Club 19/36; 3rd Grangetown 18/35; 4th Eston Ship Inn 18/20; 5th Clarendon Hotel 20/20; 6th Lakes Social Club 18/-3.


Second Division: 1st Black Swan 17/45; 2nd The Livery 17/43; 3rd The Stockton 17/35; 4th Cleveland Hotel 18/34; 5th Real Roseberry 17/29; 6th Mermaid 18/21; 7th Lobster 18/12; 8th Middlesbrough Homeless 18/13; 9th The YL 18/7, 10th The Winning Post 18/5.


UPVC SUPPLIERS ESKVALE & CLEVELAND LEAGUE


THREE of the league’s domestic prizes were decided as Staithes Athletic were confirmed as champions, while Stokesley Sports Club picked up the D and G Trophies League Challenge Cup and Boosbeck United won the Eileen Hodgson Bowl final.


Staithes won the title after Lingdale failed to beat Hollybush and they cemented their place at the top with a midweek win over Great Ayton and completed their league programme with a comfortable victory over neighbours Hinderwell to go 11 points clear.


That cushion could be cut to eight points if Lingdale win their final game against Boosbeck.


Lingdale have pretty much wrapped up the runners-up spot unless they lose their final game by a consirderable margin after demolishing Loftus Athletic 6-0 at home.


They raced into a 3-0 lead with Gavin Croll scoring twice before Jordan Kirk fired home through a crowded area.


Joe Ferguson made it four just before with a penalty

then Jamie Camfield scored with a left-foot rocket and Ferguson added his second penalty.


Stokesley beat Hollybush United by the odd goal in five to win a very entertaining cup final at Whitby


Stokesley made a flying start when Josh Bowmaker scored inside the first minute after the Hollybush keeper scuffed a poor clearance.


They missed further chances a but scored a second when Dane Breckon hooked the ball over his shoulder and beyond the keeper.


Stokesley wasted more opportunities and were punished when Luke Weed beat a couple of defenders and rifled home.


Matty Dundon equalised on the stroke of half time but Stokesley scored what turned out to be the winner four minutes after the break when a Mark Shimwell shot found the far corner.


Boosbeck went one better than last year’s runner-up spot in the Bowl as they battered Brotton Railway Arms 3-0 at Guisborough in the final.


Chances flowed in the first half but Boosbeck had to wait until two minutes before the end of it to open the scoring as Liam Raw stole in to slide the ball home.


Within three minutes of the restart Boosbeck extended their lead as a Callum Holliday shot was blocked and Jake Thompson fired in the rebound.


And they knocked in their third goal on the hour when Holliday beat the offside trap and got on the end of a through ball before firing past the keeper.


Brotton kept plugging away but were unable to make any headway against a well-organised Boosbeck defence.


STANDINGS :


Staithes Athletic Pld 20 Pts 49; Lingdale United Pld 19 Pts 38; Loftus Athletic Pld 20 Pts 38; Stokesley Sports Club Pld 20 Pts 37; Boosbeck United Pld 19 Pts 32; Hollybush United Pld 20 Pts 31; Lealholm Pld 20 Pts 30; Great Ayton United Pld 20 Pts 18; Brotton Railway Arms Pld 20 Pts 14; Hinderwell Pld 20Pts 10; Goldsborough United Pld 20 Pts 8.


JACK HATFIELD SPORTS OVER-35s LEAGUE


Coronation beat ASW 5-0 on a hard, bumpy pitch.


Corra had chances from conceutive corners but Steelies defended well in a goalless first half.


They kept up the pressure and were awarded a penalty by referee Steve Leonard, from which Glynn Swinnerton scored.


Steelies were put under more pressure and they then made three defensive errors which allowed substitute Rothwell to plunder a hat-trick.


Swinnerton scored again to complete a fine win.


Thornaby demolished Grangetown BC 9-3, West Hartlepool beat Redcar Athletic 5-2, and Dormans beat Stockton 3-0.


In Division Two Billingham Veterans recorded their first win in the league since joining last year, with a 4-2 success over Cleveland Seniors in entertaining game played in a good spirit.


Billingham’s goals came from Ian Peckett, Peter Kulcsar, Paul Elsley, and Ian Gill.


Nunthorpe took on Thornaby Vets and in a close game. Thornaby came away with a close 1-0 win, Michael Caddick scoring the all important goal.


In another close game George and Dragon shared the points with West End BC in a hard fought 1-1 draw. Paul Round scored for the Dragon with Paul Rae replying for West End.


Young referee Graham Lewis came away with high marks for his performance.


Yarm had a fine win over Stokesley romping home 5-1.



Dream Home: £895,000 Guisborough home full of charm and acre of own gardens


Westmead in Guisborough is filled to the rafters with original features from art nouveau style stained glass windows to fireplaces




From the stunning hallway to the lush gardens, spacious rooms to charming features, it is easy to see why the owners of this week’s Dream Home love their property.


For Westmead in Guisborough is a real eye catcher both inside and out.


Filled to the rafters with original features from art nouveau style stained glass windows to fireplaces, a galleried landing to a range, it also boasts an acre of its own gardens and grounds to luxuriate in and a place in local history that adds to its charm.


The Stokesley Road home was built in the 1920s for local industrialist JT Blackett - of the Blackett Hutton foundry which once stood in the town.



It has only changed hands a few times down the years and has been home to its current owners since 1985.


Its charm and character were what they loved about it and they’ve strived to retain all of the original features inside their home.


“If you saw the house you would realise what we liked about it,” smiles the owner.


“The hallway is quite spectacular. It is a big house, the rooms are very big and there are lots of original features including an art nouveau stained glass window on the landing which is really quite beautiful.


“There are fireplaces in most rooms and they are all original. We worked around the original features by and large.”


When it comes to naming a favourite room, the honours are spread. The garden is a real delight and the owners have spent a lot of time and effort outdoors to turn it into a space where they enjoy spending their time. They also love the drawing room and dining room inside their home too.


“Outside there are several seating areas that catch the sun at any time of the day, we do enjoy the garden very much,” explains the owner.


A long sweeping driveway leads up to the detached property. The entrance door sets the scene with its art nouveau style leaded light glass and the elegant entrance hall has a mahogany staircase leading to a galleried landing. There’s an original fireplace in here with a tiled inset.


The 19ft by 17ft drawing room comes next with features including a large bay window at the front and a feature fireplace and there’s a family room with French doors opening to the garden and a dining room with another bay window.


An inner lobby leads to a sitting room and the kitchen. Fitted with a range of creamy white units, this room has a central island, a built in fridge, freezer, washing machine and dishwasher as well as a built in oven.


Upstairs, the landing has a feature window all of its own with original art nouveau leaded light glass.


The 17ft by 18ft master bedroom has bay and side windows and a fireplace. Bedrooms two, three, four and five follow and there are two bathrooms, one with an inset bath with granite surround and shower cubicle.


Outside, Westmead has a double garage with electric door and there are four outbuildings in the grounds.


The gardens have seating areas which the owners have designed to catch the sun throughout the day. Lawns, planting areas, shrubs and trees are complemented by a pond and a water feature just perfect for enjoying a spot of the great outdoors.


With plans to downsize, however, the owners have taken the decision to put their home on to the market.


Westmead is for sale for £895,000. For more information, contact the Guisborough office of estate agent Reeds Rains on 01287 636474.


More Dream Homes


Delightful spaces inside and out at £825,000 five bedroom Stokesley house


Stylish £595,000 Folly with feel for family living in Hutton Rudby


Charm in abundance at quirky barn conversion in village of Potto


Games room, gym and sauna at five-bedroom £649,995 Wynyard house


All about the views at £649,950 five-bedroom Kirklevington house


£600k five-bed Nunthorpe property was once a school



Shale gas mission lands key US link for NOF Energy


A fact-finding mission to find out more about US shale gas has gained NOF Energy a new member




A fact-finding mission to find out more about US shale gas has gained NOF Energy a new member.


Nearly two-thirds of the business development organisation’s 450 strong membership has expressed an interest in shale gas.


NOF Energy, which operates in the oil, gas, nuclear and offshore renewables sectors, led a delegation that visited Government departments, shale gas operators and supply chain companies in Oklahoma and Louisiana.


NOF Energy works closely with global partners to ease members’ access into overseas markets and encourage international trade - now, it’s welcomed Greater Oklahoma City Chamber to its members list.


George Rafferty, NOF Energy Chief Executive, said: “We are very pleased to welcome Greater Oklahoma City Chamber as a new member and look forward to working with the organisation as our latest global partner.


“This partnership is a further example of NOF Energy’s proactive approach to developing international business relationships. With the UK Government indicating support for the development of a shale gas industry in this country, it is important that we furnish those in the supply chain with the understanding needed to meet the requirements of operators.


“We are convinced that our members will benefit from this relationship with Greater Oklahoma City Chamber through an exchange of information and knowledge that will help firms take advantage of the work that will be generated by onshore gas extraction.”


Roy H. Williams President and CEO of the Greater Oklahoma City Chamber, said: “This partnership with NOF Energy will help forge a close connection between the supply chain in the UK and those involved in the energy industry, and in particular the shale gas industry, within our state.”


Mr Rafferty added: “There are a lot of companies operating in the energy sector that have the skills, products and services that are transferable into the shale gas market.


“More than 60 percent of members who responded to our annual survey expressed an interest in shale gas, so it is imperative NOF Energy harnesses expertise and knowledge to help prepare our membership for the opportunities that will arise from this emerging source of energy.


“Each new Global Partner that joins NOF Energy’s network adds a vital extra depth and dimension to the services, awareness and information that we are able to offer.”


NOF Energy offers business development support, advice and guidance for supply chain companies in the energy sector.


It also provides access to business opportunities, project updates and makes introductions between its members and prospective clients and partners.



Transatlantic partnership boosts 3D work for Darlington-based Mintronics


Mintronics has partnered up with 3D Systems, the American inventors of 3D printing




A pioneering North-east information and technology services business is leading the way in 3D technology after launching a revolutionary, high-tech system in the region.


The Darlington-based firm, Mintronics has partnered up with 3D Systems, the American inventors of 3D printing, and launched a ground-breaking computer aided design (CAD) system for the automotive, engineering and medical sectors.


The CAD system includes the 3D Geomagic Capture Scanner and Geomagic Design X software, created to transform physical objects into a digital model, known as reverse engineering, ready for 3D printing.


Reverse engineering is set to benefit all types of manufacturing as it massively increases quality of standards as well as improving speed to market and reducing costs. It is now being sold through Mintronics which has a customer base of 1, 400.


John Minto, Managing Director of Mintronics explains: “The accuracy of our new system means that, for example, a car manufacturer can precisely replicate a car bumper without making any common mistakes, which can occur when doing manually. The capture scanner would examine the bumper and duplicate the exact measurements which would then be digitally transferred into a blueprint, through the software, making it reliable for production.”


Amongst other things, this system can also be used to replicate body parts exactly, a process that will have a dramatic impact on the medical world and patients’ lives.


The system usually costs £90,000, but the transatlantic partnership means that the innovative products are readily available in the North-east from £15,000, making it extremely accessible for SMEs.


John said: “The software is brand new for this market and will revolutionise many sectors. It’s exciting to be introducing it to the North-east.


“3D printing is nothing without the software to make it happen and our new system is the driving force behind it.”


“We’ve already had interest from leading British aerospace companies, the largest medical device company in the world, architectural companies, automotive firms and lots more.”


Gareth Glazzard, Sales Manager of 3D Systems said: “Our core goal is to democratise our technology. The concept is that designers and engineers of the future will have access to more than just design software, but also scanning, rapid prototyping and reverse and engineering technology.


“The Capture Scanner combined with a variety of software options enables companies that historically could not afford such technology to now do so.”


He added: “We are already seeing rapidly growing interest in this and other products Mintronics sell. I expect them to have a very busy and successful year!”



Four people found dead with 'fireworks wrapped around their heads' after blaze at Florida mansion owned by former pro-tennis player James Blake


Police said that fireworks were found throughout the house which was destroyed completely in the blaze




Four people have been found dead at the Florida mansion of former professional tennis player James Blake after a fire which investigators believe was started intentionally.


No suspects have been identified, but fireworks were found throughout the house, said Debbie Carter, a spokeswoman for the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Department. She said the home was "destroyed."


Meredith Censullo, a TV reporter at the scene said on Twitter that sources had told her that the victims had "heavy duty fireworks wrapped around their heads".


Neighbours reported hearing a loud explosion and firefighters were called to the 5,800 sq ft home at around 6am yesterday morning.


Officials said they found the bodies of two people immediately after arriving at the gated community and the other two were discovered as firefighters battled their way through the building.


The home was rented out to a family of four by Blake, 34, who was at home with his family in Connecticut when the fire broke out.


Blake bought the house nine years ago for nearly £1million, according to the Guardian.


Ms Carter said: "Due to the magnitude of the structural damage caused by the fire, this investigation will be a slow, meticulous process.


"Detectives have not been in the residence and will not enter until such time Hillsborough County Fire Department has deemed the residence structurally safe.


It is undetermined when that will be."


Blake retired from professional tennis last August and was at one point the world number 4.


He now runs the James Blake Foundation which helps with cancer research after he lost his father, Thomas, to stomach cancer 10 years ago.



Pictures: Circus Starr perform in Stewart Park with funds donated to Butterwick Hospice


Teesside businesses bought tickets for the show, which were donated to more than 40 children’s organisations across the area





Children from a host of charities, support groups and special schools enjoyed a sprinkling of circus magic last night.


Circus Starr is a touring circus show and charitable organisation, that supports disadvantaged and disabled children in their communities.


Teesside businesses bought tickets which were donated to more than 40 children’s organisations across the area.


The show, which features sensational trapeze artists, clowns, jugglers and acrobats, put on two shows last night in Stewart Park, in Middlesbrough.


Surplus funds raised by the show are donated to a local charity - and this year, the nominated charity partner is the Butterwick House Children’s Hospice.


Circus Starr director Neville Wilson said: “The children we invite to our shows face many challenges.


“Some have physical disabilities or learning difficulties, others have life limiting illnesses or are living in refuges.


“For all of them, life is a struggle and few ever have the chance to experience a live show such as ours.


“We simply could not do this without the support we receive from Middlesbrough businesses, from the big corporations to the sole traders.


“Every donation we receive makes a difference to these children’s lives.”


Jackie Firth, publicity and marketing manager for Butterwick Hospice, said: “I would like to take this opportunity to thank Circus Starr for their continued support in raising much needed funds and awareness of the services that Butterwick House freely provides to children and their families from all over the North-east.


“It means a great deal to us, and will help us to carry on providing the love and care we give to the children.”


The 1,000 tickets for the shows were sold out for months after local businesses bought tickets.


Circus Starr welcomes any donation, big or small. £20 buys a ticket. Any business wishing to make a donation can call Circus Starr on 01260 288690.



Barclays to cut 7,000 jobs from its investment banking division


Announcement brings total job losses across group to 14,000 this year




Barclays is to cut 7,000 jobs from its investment banking division by 2016 as part of a strategy review.


The bank has already announced job losses across the group of 12,000 for this year, but this has been increased to 14,000 as a result of the investment bank changes announced today. It brings the total cuts by 2016 to 19,000.


It comes two days after Barclays announced that first quarter earnings from the division fell by half, meaning profits at the group slid by 5%.


About a third of the investment bank job cuts announced today - more than 2,000 - will be in the UK.


The strategy review, described by chief executive Antony Jenkins as a “bold simplification” of Barclays, will also see it hive off its European retail banking business into a so-called “bad bank”, comprising £115 billion of “non-core” assets.


This will include all its customer branches in Portugal, Spain, Italy and France as well as a chunk of its investment banking operation including fixed income, currencies and commodities (FICC), plus emerging markets products.


Barclays largely attributed its first quarter profit fall to its FICC unit.


The non-core unit groups together businesses which do not fit the bank’s “strategic objectives” or profitability criteria under the review and the bank will “look to exit or run down these assets over time”, it said.


Mr Jenkins said: “This is a bold simplification of Barclays. We will be a focused international bank, operating only in areas where we have capability, scale and competitive advantage.


“In the future, Barclays will be leaner, stronger, much better balanced and well-positioned to deliver lower volatility, higher returns and growth.”


The changes will dramatically shrink the importance of the investment bank, which currently accounts for more than half of Barclays' size, to no more than 30% by 2016.


This division employed around 26,200 staff - around 10,000 in the UK - at the end of last year, but this had already shrunk to about 24,000 over the start of 2014.


Barclays did not give a breakdown of where the axe would fall when it announced 12,000 job cuts earlier this year.


But with more than 2,000 gone from the investment bank this year already and 7,000 more announced today, the investment bank looks likely to have shrunk by 10,000 or more - from its size at the end of last year - by 2016.


Highly paid staff at the division have been at the centre of controversy at Barclays, which last month received a bloody nose from shareholders as it hiked the staff bonus pool by 10% to £2.38 billion last year despite profits falling by a third.


The Institute of Directors has complained that this was nearly three times the £859 million paid out in dividends to shareholders.


Shares rose by as much as 4% on today’s announcement.


Dominic Hook, Unite national officer, said: ``These have been extraordinarily turbulent times for ordinary Barclays workers who have worked hard to keep the bank on track against a backdrop of continued uncertainty and redundancies.


“The bank needs to recognise their tireless work to put customers first while jobs have been lost and give reassurances over their futures.”



Police in double arson probe after fires at Gresham house and Newtown garage


Both fires - which are not being linked - caused severe damage to the properties and an investigation is now under way





Investigations have been launched into two blazes, which could be as a result of arson.


Cleveland Fire Brigade were called to two separate fires, which they believe could have both been caused deliberately, on Tuesday night.


Crews first tackled a fire in an empty house in Middlesbrough before fighting a blaze in a Stockton garage.


Both caused severe damage and investigation is now under way.


Cleveland Police have also confirmed that they have received reports of both incidents and that they are not being linked.


Crews from Middlesbrough and Marine stations were called to the first blaze at an empty terraced house on Enfield Street, Gresham, just before 9pm.


Alongside damage to the house, neighbouring homes also suffered smoke damage.


A man living next door to the property, who did not want to be named, said he was “lucky to be alive” after being alerted to the blaze by a neighbour.


He said: “I was fast asleep when I heard someone banging on the front door.


“You wouldn’t believe the amount of smoke in my house, I could barely see anything. I’m very lucky.”


Colin Gilchrist, watch manager at Middlesbrough fire station, said: “There was severe damage to the ground floor as a result of the fire.


“People from neighbouring properties were also evacuated as a precaution.


“They were allowed back in their homes once the fire was under control.”


He added: “There were signs of forced entry to the rear of the property and there is now an investigation.


“We forced entry at the front of the home.”


The electricity board also attended to make the electrics safe.


In the second blaze, a crew from Stockton fire station were called at 1.15am to reports of a fire in a garage of a house on Bedford Street, Newtown.


The garage and its contents were destroyed.


“I am devastated,” said the homeowner, who did not want to be named.


“We have just done the house up and got it how we wanted it.”


The garage lies at the rear of the property and can be accessed via a rear alleyway.


“We used to have problems with bin fires at the back but when gates were put up it got better.”


“I am absolutely devastated,” he added.


“I had all my fishing stuff in there and various tools.


“Everything is completely destroyed.”



Morning news headlines: Review after punch sentence upheld, 1.4m families hit by 'problem' debt


REVIEW AFTER PUNCH SENTENCE UPHELD


A review of the way criminals who kill with a single punch are sentenced has been ordered by Justice Secretary Chris Grayling.


Mr Grayling stepped in after the Court of Appeal ruled a four-year sentence for manslaughter given to a man who hit an Asperger’s sufferer in an unprovoked attack was not unduly lenient.


Andrew Young, 40, died after being punched once by Lewis Gill in Bournemouth on November 6 last year.


1.4M FAMILIES HIT BY ’PROBLEM’ DEBT


More than a million families are struggling with “problem” debt with nearly three million extra households containing dependent children on the brink of sliding into financial difficulties, according to a report.


Many families are in an “extremely precarious” financial position, leading them to take out loans to pay for necessities, the Children’s Society and StepChange debt charity said.


The stress of keeping up with repayments leads to rows, emotional distress to children and cutbacks on essentials, the charities said.


BOYS’ CLUB SET FOR BANKSY WINDFALL


A youth club that was facing closure is celebrating a potential multimillion-pound windfall after mysterious street artist Banksy said it could have a painting he created nearby.


Dennis Stinchcombe, who has worked at Bristol’s Broad Plain Boys’ Club for the past 39 years, said Banksy’s Mobile Lovers painting could pump more than £2 million into its coffers.


The “elated” 58-year-old said: “Banksy has become the saviour of this club that I have volunteered at for years. I think the man deserves a medal, if somehow he could come out of his secrecy.


BANK TO ANNOUNCE INTEREST RATES


Bank of England rate-setters will today announce their latest decision amid growing pressure for action to cool a rising housing market.


Policymakers are regarded as certain to leave the cost of borrowing on hold for now and have said they would rather use other tools to cool any property bubble before hiking rates.


But signs of an accelerating recovery have added to speculation that they might have to rise earlier than expected to cool inflationary pressures.


MET POLICE TO WEAR VIDEO CAMERAS


Landmark changes to operational policing will be trialled from today in an attempt to boost transparency and accelerate convictions.


Officers with the Metropolitan Police will be begin wearing tiny cameras on their uniform, designed to capture evidence at scenes of crime and help support prosecution cases.


The trial, thought to be the largest in the world, will see 500 cameras distributed to 10 London boroughs. Firearms officers will also be testing the cameras in their training environment with a view to wearing them if the pilot is successful.


MUSEUM RECEIVES £5M DONATION


The Natural History Museum is receiving a £5 million donation - the largest from an individual in its 133-year history.


The unprecedented sum of money is being given to the museum, which attracted 5.3 million visitors last year, by asset management firm founder and chief executive Sir Michael Hintze and his wife Lady Hintze.


The donation will be used to maintain collections and for scientific research behind the scenes at the London museum, which became the third most popular UK visitor attraction last year.


HOUSE PRICES ’TO CONTINUE UPWARD’


House sales have risen to their strongest levels in six years as expectations that property prices are set to lift higher broaden out across the country, surveyors have reported.


But there are also signs that the pace of strong house price growth seen in London could cool in the second half of the year, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors’ (Rics) housing market report for April found.


Some 23 homes were sold per surveyor on average in the three months to April, the highest figure seen since February 2008.


SHALE INDUSTRY ’AN URGENT PRIORITY’


Developing the UK’s shale resources should be “an urgent national priority” to deliver energy security and jobs and help cut emissions, a committee of peers has said.


The Lords Economic Affairs Committee backed the Government’s decision to go “all out for shale” but said it needed to do far more to sell the benefits of fracking to the public.


Ministers also needed to do more to drive forward exploratory drilling and appraisal of shale resources to see how much could be developed economically, a report by the Lords said.


DEAD TEACHER TWEET MAN SENTENCED


A man who posted an offensive message on Twitter about tragic teacher Ann Maguire will learn his punishment today.


Robert Riley, of Dan Y Coed, Cwmavon, Port Talbot, South Wales, appeared in court in Leeds earlier this week, where he admitted one count of sending a message of a grossly offensive, abusive or malicious character.


The 42-year-old will reappear at Swansea Magistrates’ Court for sentencing.


MADELEINE OFFICERS ’IN PORTUGAL’


Detectives from Scotland Yard are understood to have arrived in Portugal to help with the excavation of a number of sites as part of the investigation into the disappearance of Madeleine McCann.


Specialist officers are expected to examine several sites in Praia da Luz after permission to dig was granted by Portuguese authorities.


Madeleine went missing from the area while on a family holiday on May 3, 2007, when she was three.


BRITONS ’EXPECT LESS FROM CHILDREN’


UK parents are less likely to push their children to succeed at school than those in east Asian nations, an education expert has said.


Sir Michael Barber said some British parents tend to assume that a child’s academic success is down to whether they are born “bright” and do not expect effort to be rewarded with good grades.


His comments came as education firm Pearson published a new Learning Curve Index, which ranks 39 countries on their educational performance.



Live: Breaking news, traffic and travel across Teesside


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