Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Privatized Social Security: The Chilean Model


00168 The stock market reached a record high last week, closing over 17,000 for the first time. Good news, of course. As President John F. Kennedy famously said, “A rising tide lifts all boats.” But it sure helps if you own a boat.


In this case, the “boat” would be the dynamic American stock market.


But investors in the stock market disproportionately come from the top 1 percent, and they hold about 35 percent of all stocks and mutual funds. The next-richest 9 percent control about 45 percent. The remaining 90 percent have less than 20 percent. While nearly half of Americans have either direct or indirect investments in the stock market, half of Americans do not. And even for those who do, their home equity is still, by far, their largest investment.


President Obama wants to focus his remaining years in office on fighting “income inequality.” To do so, he has proposed things like “promise zones” where federal grants and tax incentives is supposed to spark development. He has promoted silly income-transferring schemes like “cash for clunkers” and “cash for caulkers,” and HAMP to help homeowners fight off foreclosure.


But there is something we could do immediately to help to increase the net worth of the bottom 99 percent — allow private accounts for Social Security.


Chile recently celebrated its 33rd year of private retirement accounts. Its then-secretary of labor and Chilean pension system, Jose Pinera, went on television day after day to explain to cabdrivers, housewives and construction workers the benefits of allowing private savings accounts.


Pinera successfully persuaded 93 percent of Chilean workers to invest their “social security” contributions in one of several types of managed portfolios. Those who feared the “risk” of the stock market could continue as they did before. While U.S. workers pay 12.4 percent of their wages into Social Security, Chileans put 10 percent (or up to 20 percent) of their earnings into a private fund, earning compound interest. On retirement, workers can choose a life annuity or make programmed withdrawals. Heirs inherit what’s left.


The result? Chilean workers averaged a near double-digit annual return on their money — 9.23 percent above inflation — over the first 30 years. In the U.S., Social Security nets a theoretical 1 to 2 percent return — less for newer workers. Not only do they allow private accounts for “social security” in Chile, but also in Australia and the United Kingdom.


Columnist John Tierney, writing in The New York Times in 2005, calculated what his retirement benefits would be if he’d paid into the Chilean system instead of Social Security.


He found he’d have three options: “(1) Retire in 10 years, at age 62, with an annual pension of $55,000. That would be more than triple the $18,000 I can expect from Social Security at that age. (2) Retire at age 65 with an annual pension of $70,000. That would be almost triple the $25,000 pension promised by Social Security starting a year later, at age 66. (3) Retire at age 65 with an annual pension of $53,000 and a one-time cash payment of $223,000.”


Social Security is an especially bad deal for blacks.


CATO Institute’s Michael Tanner writes: “The longer you live, the more money you get from Social Security. But African Americans have shorter life spans than whites. As a result, a black man or woman earning exactly the same lifetime wages, and paying exactly the same lifetime Social Security taxes as his or her white counterpart, will likely receive a far lower rate of return. A study by the nonpartisan RAND Corporation found that the rate of return for African-Americans was approximately one percent lower than that for whites. The result was a net lifetime transfer of wealth from blacks to whites averaging nearly $10,000 per person.”


Worse, the Supreme Court ruled long ago that one does not have a proprietary interest in his Social Security contributions. In other words, when the recipient dies, the “contribution” goes “poof.” With private accounts, the money can be bequeathed to a family member or to a charity.


So why not private Social Security accounts?


The late vice presidential candidate, Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, D-N.Y., opposed private accounts for Social Security. She said if one lacked the “knowledge and the wherewithal to manage your own private funds … you’re gonna be out of luck.” Out of luck?


Legendary investor Warren Buffett quotes his mentor, Benjamin Graham, who said: “In the short run the stock market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine.” For the long term, prices reflect actual value, and investors who prudently and patiently “invest” in the stock market will have a much greater net worth and therefore realize the resources to enhance their comfort in their retirement years.


Democrats think Americans too stupid, too irresponsible and too impatient to manage their own Social Security contributions. Chileans can. Australians do. Many European and Latin American citizens do. But Americans, at least the bottom 99 percent, well, they’re just too stupid to join the party.


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Radical Buddhists want Pope Francis to apologize


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COLOMBO: A Buddhist group accused of instigating recent attacks on Muslims in Sri Lanka says Pope Francis must apologize to Buddhists for atrocities allegedly committed by Christian colonial rulers of the South Asian island nation when he visits next year.

“We are waiting till the Pope comes to see what he is going to say about the crimes here,” Rev. Galagoda Atte Gnanasara, a leader of Bodu Bala Sena, or Buddhist Power Force group, told a meeting with foreign correspondents.

“The Portuguese, Dutch and the British are all the same to us,” he said referring to the countries that had established colonies in Sri Lanka one after another from 1505 to 1948. Roman Catholicism was established in Sri Lanka by the Portuguese, while the Dutch and the British established their own Christian denominations.

“Previous Popes had made public apologies to certain countries because they destroyed, they killed. We had a similar situation, most of the Buddhist temples were destroyed by them (they) killed Buddhist monks. We would like to see that public apology from him,” said Gnanasara, whose comments were made Monday but embargoed until Tuesday.

There was no immediate comment from the Catholic church. The monks leading Bodu Bala Sena have amassed a significant following in recent years, drawing thousands of followers. At rallies they have encouraged violence against minorities and called on Sri Lankans to preserve the purity of the Buddhist majority.

Human rights groups say those calls have been the reason for recent attacks on Muslims in southwestern Sri Lanka, which have resulted in several deaths and the looting and torching of businesses owned by Muslims. Though Muslims are their main target, they often accuse Christian sects of converting Buddhists through financial inducements. The Pope is expected to visit the Philippines and Sri Lanka in January



UN team on Kashmir asked to leave premises in India


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NEW DELHI: India has asked a United Nations military observer group on Kashmir to vacate a government-provided bungalow in New Delhi, in a toughening stance against a mission that Indians have long opposed.

New Delhi considers the whole of Kashmir as an integral part of the country and has bristled against external involvement in the region including the UN Military Observers Group on India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) that was set up in 1949 after their first war. The Indian Foreign Ministry said on Tuesday the government had asked UNMOGIP to hand over the Delhi premises from where it was running a liaison office for more than four decades for free as part of efforts to rationalize the mission’s presence in India.

The small UN mission has its main offices in the Kashmir capital Srinagar on the Indian side and in the Pakistani capital Islamabad as part of a UN Security Council resolution to supervise the cease-fire in the divided region. New Delhi has argued that the UN had little role to play after India and Pakistan signed the Simla Pact in 1972 under which the two countries agreed to resolve all disputes including Kashmir bilaterally. Pakistan, however, has frequently called for third-party involvement to settle the dispute in Kashmir.

“We have said that as far as we are concerned the UNMOGIP has outlived its relevance. This is a consistent stance that we have articulated on several occasions,” Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin told reporters after the Indian Express reported the notice given to the U.N. group to leave the Delhi premises.



Brotton teenager secures place at University after battling a food disorder


A courageous student once told by doctors to give up her studies in order to battle an eating disorder has bagged a place at university.


Shannon Garland, from Brotton, fought back from near organ failure and has since graduated from Cleveland College of Art and Design.


The 18-year-old is now looking forward to starting a three-year Costume Interpretation with Design degree at the college’s university campus in Hartlepool.


“I can’t thank everyone enough at CCAD for what they have done for me,” said Shannon, who had her intricate design work shortlisted for the principal’s award at the end of year show.


“I’d only been on the course for 12 weeks before I was in hospital for nine months so I had to do half of my first year’s work from my hospital bed.”


Although Shannon was allowed home once a week to work on practical assignments, doctors advised her to drop out of college and concentrate on her health.


“I know they were only thinking about me but my course gave me something to focus on and work towards - and a reason to get healthy,” Shannon said.


“I can’t remember what triggered off my problems with food. It was all part of stressing about exams at school, not eating properly and exercising too much. My body just couldn’t take it.


“But through it all I knew that I wanted to be at CCAD, I wanted to study art and that nothing was going to stop me.”


With reassurance from tutors and a letter to the exam board explaining her situation, the college fought hard to help Shannon achieve her grades.


“My tutors were incredibly supportive throughout my illness,” said Shannon. “And not just with me but my family too, nothing was too much trouble for them.”


Course leader Caroline Forknall, said: “Shannon is an incredible student. She is naturally talented and worked so hard in her second year to make up for lost time.


“I think focusing on the course really helped with her recovery and I’m so pleased for her that she has secured the place that she wanted so much at Hartlepool.”



Marton artist Adam Clarke finds his muse in the history of East Cleveland



A Teesside born artist found the muse for his final year exhibition at the Royal College of Art (RCA) in the history of East Cleveland.


Adam Clarke, 28, graduated with an MA in Fine Art (Printmaking) from the RCA, London, last week.


As part of his final year master’s degree show at the RCA, Adam has turned his hand to recreating 1930s Teesside furniture, re-imagining a traditional folk dance and painstakingly drawing photo-realistic scenes of East Cleveland.


The Middlesbrough-born artist has based his work on a project that took place in 1930s East Cleveland called Boosbeck Industries.


Boosbeck Industries was formed in May, 1934, when Major Jim and Ruth Pennyman, started a series of schemes to boost the East Cleveland’s economy after unemployment soared to 91%.


The modernist designs of Boosbeck Industries furniture became iconic but sadly, the company was a commercial failure and few original examples exist today.


Adam, from Marton, Middlesbrough, said: “The designs were cutting edge at the time because of the influence of a German artist called Wilf Franks.


“Franks was from the Bauhaus school in Dessau, Germany, and his input meant that the Boosbeck designs were influenced by Bauhaus school.”


The Bauhaus, or the International Style as it was often called, avoided ornamentation and focussed instead on the function of an object.


As part of his final year master’s degree show at the RCA, Adam faithfully recreated one of the original Boosbeck designs, changing only the surface finish to show how far ahead of its time Boosbeck Industries were.


He said: “I have recreated some pieces using the same methods the craftsmen would have used back in the 1930s.


“I had to recreate the furniture from an image in a brochure. The funny thing is when you give it a gloss finish, you’ve basically got Ikea furniture.”


Adam also teamed up with dance students from Teesside University to re-imagine a traditional folk dance.


He said: “I worked with six dancers and a choreographer to recreate the no longer practised North Skelton Sword Dance.


“The original folk dance only exists now in documentation and so we created a semi-fictional contemporary version.”


A video of the dance was projected into the hollow of Adam’s recreation of Boosbeck furniture.


“It can take days to finish one drawing, my art is about work in many ways. Putting time and effort into my work is important to me,”


Adam’s work has been selected to exhibit at the prestigious Screaming Hornets show, at the Tintype gallery, London, September 5-27, 2014.



Terry Bywater though to basketball world quarter-finals with GB


Teesside hoops talisman Terry Bywater is through to the quarter-finals of the World Wheelchair Basketball Championships with Great Britain.


The 31-year-old scored 12 points as GB surged into the last eight in Incheon, South Korea, with a convincing 65-47 win against Japan.


Bywater has been consistently in double figures throughout the side’s unbeaten campaign in the Far East.


The Redcar star and his team-mates were set to find out today who they will be playing in the last eight following their final group game against Spain in the early hours of this morning.


Bywater played from the outset against Japan and helped GB build up a 41-26 half-time lead, and an insurmountable 26-point cushion in the fourth quarter.


GB head coach Haj Bhania said: “It was a good performance, even though we struggled at the start.


“Our starters got us going early on, but we’ve played Japan so many times in the run up to the tournament.


“We thought they would cause us problems and they changed things.


“They came back and took the lead but we put our press on and they did the job. Defensively we were fantastic.


“Harry Brown was brilliant in the starting line-up and Gaz Choudhry came on and knocked down four from four early on that changed the game and the whole pressing unit just stifled the Japanese offense.


“That made a difference for us and then we were able to rotate the players.


“We want to try and get minutes for all players, but you can never relax against Japan.


“They never give up, so even being in control at half-time we knew we couldn’t let up I thought the whole team did a brilliant job.”


Choudhry top-scored with 21 points, and Ian Sagar joined Bywater - a mainstay in the British team for several years - in scoring 12 points.



Teessider Steve Raybould wins world kickboxing title in Billingham


Steve Raybould became Cleveland Kickboxing Gym’s first world champion with a barnstorming IKF cadet featherweight win.


The 17-year-old followed his corner’s instructions to the letter to score a five-round points victory against Canadian Drake Ludac at a sold-out Low Grange Social Club in Billingham.


Ludac came out aggressively and clocked Raybould with some heavy right hands.


But the Teessider kept calm and grew into the contest, using in and out movement and occasional hard flurries to collect a clear victory.


“It was a great performance, because Ludac really came to fight,” said Cleveland Gym coach Ron Gray.


“He got Steve on the ropes and with some good right handers.


“But when he found some space and read his timing he took over. He deserves it for all of the hard work he has put in.”


Cleveland Gym’s Amy Cookson lost her Northern Area female title fight in a rematch with NEKA’s Charlotte McPotts, but laid it all on the line.


The two shared a draw when they first fought, but the return saw McPotts win a split decision at the end of another five to and fro rounds.


Cleveland Gym’s Francis Conlan also lost a close decision to Jay Huntley from TKO in Kent in an IKF English atomweight title fight, but impressed with his infighting and flashy spinning side kicks.


Among the other fights, Cleveland’s Rob Watson piled on the third round pressure to stop Titan’s Jon Heselwood, and raw power beat technique as Spartan, Sunderland’s Mick Bell finished Cleveland Gym’s Mike Hartley in the second round.


Scorpio’s Luke Cara produced a high work-rate to outpoint Bradley Wray (TKO) and James Roxburgh shrugged off a busted nose to press forward and beat Liam Million in the only K-1 rules contest while Jack Lawton used a well-balanced kicking game to defeat Anthony Prior.


AFTER being beset by a stream of injury-enforced pull-outs which cost Middlesbrough cruiserweight Simon Vallily a place on the bill, Sunday’s Summer Rumble 4 pro boxing show at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland now goes ahead with seven bouts.


Heavy-handed Jonson McClumpha is boxing Doncaster-based former MMA fighter Jason Ball for the vacant International Masters middleweight belt over 10 scheduled rounds in the main event.


Sunderland’s former Prizefighter Welterweights winner Glenn Foot makes his comeback from a potentially career-threatening arm injury against Brighton veteran Kevin McCauley.


And Lee Mould now faces John Watson in a six- round Wear-Tyne derby after his Northern Area light-welterweight title clash was scrapped when scheduled opponent Gary Fox tore a hamstring.


Other scheduled matches include the debuts of Sunderland-based Thomas Essomba, who represented Cameroon in the Olympics twice as an amateur and Hartlepool welterweight Dan Cope.


Cope knuckles up against Catterick’s Andy Collins, who is also making his professional debut.



View: Gazette readers come to the rescue of unwanted cats after appeal


Volunteers at an animal rescue centre have praised Gazette readers for coming to the rescue of kittens and adult cats in need of new homes.


Cats Protection Teesside were inundated with cats over the last few weeks but an appeal published a week ago has already seen the numbers of yet-to-be-fostered felines almost halved.


The first kittens to be taken home were 10-week-old brother and sister Duke and Smudge.


New owner Rosanna Turton, from Ingleby Barwick, couldn’t wait to introduce the pair to her family and said they were “doing great”.


The 44-year-old Stockton Council overpayment recovery officer, said: “Rescue cats have always been a part of my life.


"We had two cats until recently when we sadly lost one. It was then we decided that Prince who is three, needed some company so when I seen the appeal I thought it was the perfect time.


“They have both settled in really well.”



The Stockton-based rescue centre runs a foster home system where the cats are looked after by volunteers until a new home is found.


Patricia Eddon, a fundraiser at Cats Protection Teesside, said: “We’ve had a fantastic response since the appeal in the Gazette, we are completely overjoyed.


“We still have kittens who are ready to be rehomed, and we are also fostering three pregnant cats so there will be many more to come.”


The cats can be viewed online and if somebody is interested, they are invited to visit the cat.


"A visit to the prospective new home is also made before the cat is allowed to be fostered. If suitable, the animal is then delivered to its new home by one of the volunteers.


All of the cats have been vaccinated, neutered and chipped. Therefore upon re-homing there is a payable adoption fee. Adult cats cost £50 and kittens cost £60.


To find out more click HERE or call 01642 589090.



Anthony Vickers: Robbie Mustoe was far more than just a water carrier for Boro's stars


You can’t imagine too many star-struck kids queuing to get the name “Mustoe” on the back of their Boro shirt.


And, to be fair, for most of his Boro career the engine room grafter faced stiff competition in the club shop sales chart.


In a dramatic decade for the club, Mustoe spent almost every summer having to face up to the challenge of household names and superstars signed to take his place in midfield.


Each time he gradually saw them off with shows of understated excellence that made him a crucial – if often over-shadowed – squad member.



He saw the arrival of a string of new faces, each with bigger price-tags, reputations and expectations. And he always battled his way back from the bench into the first team place.


Craig Hignett and Bryan Robson took his place at Ayresome, only for tenacious Mustoe to work his way back in.


At the Riverside he went head to-head with the Nick Barmby, Emerson, Andy Townsend, Paul Gascoigne, Paul Ince and Christian Karembeu.


But while he would never claim to match their match-winning magic or pedigree, he always clawed back with relentless workrate and consistency.


And it wasn’t just team-mates Mustoe had to get past. Managers needed to be won over and convinced too. First Lennie Lawrence, then Robson, then Steve McClaren had planned to replace him, before being persuaded by performances that he had a key role to play.


Mustoe had arrived for what then looked a steep £375,000 as a youngster from Oxford under Colin Todd. A dozen years and more than 450 games later that looked like a bargain buy.


On his arrival, he was out-shone by the established heroes of the Rioch team and the early impact of fellow new signing John Hendrie.


A low-key off-the-field manner and cool temperament on the pitch meant it was hard to make an instant impact and carve out an image among the fans. He was a slow burner. Soon he earned applause, if not adulation, for steady shows and won kudos for the odd iconic moment – two goals to knock Newcastle out of the League Cup did a power of good.


He beavered away and won fans over. By the time of his exit people may still not have been buying the shirt in droves but he was universally respected.


Mustoe was more than just a midfield water-carrier with good engines, closing down and snapping into tackles – although he did that job with commendable enthusiasm.


He was actually a very good player. As well as being an effective holding man he was also equally adept surging forward to support the attack.


He had a good first touch, great vision and excellent distribution and, in the Riverside years especially, he combined well with the thoroughbreds in an effective passing side.


Alongside Jamie Pollock he proved a solid foundation for the Midget Gems pairing of Hignett and Barmby in the early Premier League days.


Then later he worked well in a similar set-up alongside Paul Ince to provide the ammunition for Alen Boksic.


In between he was a dependable, rock-solid presence in the middle that helped hold the unbalanced team together during the erratic Foreign Legion relegation season.


He was a regular in the teams that battled to three Wembley finals in just over a year. He played in both League and FA Cup finals in the heartbreak season of 1997 and was again in action for a second League Cup outing the following term.


After more than a decade of service and a well deserved testimonial against Dortmund Robbie left.


A season followed at Charlton and a stint at Sheffield Wednesday then he started coaching “soccer” in Boston, Massachusetts, before taking up a job as a pundit on US television covering the Champions League for the expat audience.


Initially met with a collective cry of “Who?” from the audience and establishment he has grown to become a respected commentator, nudging aside bigger names with his consistently high levels of research and accessible and well-informed analysis. Which is a fitting echo of his playing career.



Boro confirm friendlies in Marbella against Spanish and Portuguese opposition


Boro have confirmed the identity of the three teams they will play during their week-long stay in Spain next week .


The players and coaching staff fly out to the Marbella Football Center on Monday and will play their first friendly of the summer on Wednesday against Lucena (ko 6pm), a Spanish Segunda B (third division) club.


They then play another club from the same division, Real Balompedica Linense, on Saturday (11am).



Boro's final game will be on Monday, July 21 (11am), when Aitor Karanka's men will take on Lisbon-based Atletico Clube de Portugal, who were relegated from the Portuguese second division last season.


More on Boro's trip to Marbella:


Inside the Marbella Football Center: A closer look at Boro's base


Boro planning trip to Marbella for warm-weather training


The Only Way is Boro: Five TOWIE tips for pre-season



Arsonist who set fire to his partner's home after row jailed for more than five-and-a-half years


A vengeful partner who set his ex-girlfriend’s home ablaze after she burned his clothes was jailed for more than five-and-a-half years today.


Lee Jason Close’s partner put his clothes in a holdall, set fire to them in an alleyway and asked him to leave her home, Teesside Crown Court heard today.


Close, 44, reacted by taking a petrol can and setting fires in four rooms at her home on Charlotte Street, Redcar on the afternoon of April 21.


She’d left after he sent her texts and an answerphone message telling her to “get out as he was going to burn her out”, said prosecutor Sue Jacobs.



Her cat was inside and suffered burns to its tail, back legs and ears.


Close, of The Parklands, Redcar, admitted arson being reckless as to whether life was endangered.


He was under a suspended prison sentence at the time for assaulting the same woman and animal cruelty.


He spat at her, threw her dog down the stairs and threw her rabbit and guinea pig over the fence, leaving the guinea pig dead, last August.


Andrew Foster, defending, said Close was likeable and pleasant when he wasn’t drunk.


He said Close acted out of character, apologised, showed remorse and regret and wanted to better himself in the community.


Police at Charlotte Street in Redcar after a fire Police at Charlotte Street in Redcar after a fire


He added that Close didn’t appreciate the danger he’d caused setting fire to the terraced house, didn’t realise the cat was there and left the property still habitable.


Judge Simon Bourne-Arton QC, the Recorder of Middlesbrough, told Close: “This was a premeditated act of revenge. It was planned.


“You were endeavouring to damage her by destroying her home.”


He said he didn’t accept “for one moment” that Close didn’t understand the fire might spread.


He rejected Close’s claim that he didn’t plan to harm his ex-partner as “quite manifestly nonsense”.


He jailed Close for five years and four months for the arson, plus 14 weeks from the suspended sentence he breached.



Man who beat his wife with phone has jail term increased - for launching a pointless appeal


A man who was jailed for battering his wife with a telephone handset had his sentence effectively increased today in punishment for launching a pointless appeal.


Three Court of Appeal judges said 49-year-old Malcolm Crow's bid to clear his name was "wholly without merit" and his grounds of appeal "fatuous".


The court heard Crow was caged for three-and-a-half years at Teesside Crown Court in March 2012 after he was found guilty of assault by beating and making a threat to kill.


As well as battering his wife with the phone handset, Crow, of Irwin Avenue, Saltburn, had pulled a knife and threatened her life.


His defence, rejected by the jury, was that she had pulled the knife on him and the only injury she suffered was caused when he tried to disarm her.


In his appeal grounds, described in court as "lengthy and impenetrable", Crow made a string of criticisms of his lawyers.


He also claimed the trial judge had wrongly withdrawn an issue of fact from the jury's consideration and said new evidence cast doubt on his wife's truthfulness.


But appeal judge Mr Justice William Davis, sitting in London today with Lady Justice Rafferty and Judge Deborah Taylor, dismissed the complaints as unarguable.


And in punishment for bringing the case to court, he ordered that a month which Crow has already served should not count towards his sentence - effectively increasing the term.


The judge said that Crow had been warned when his first appeal application was rejected that his sentence could be effectively extended.


"This was an appeal that, from the outset, had no merit," said the judge.


"He has continued to send to the court grounds of appeal which, if anything, are even more unmeritorious than the other ones.


"We direct that 28 days he has spent in custody shall not count towards his sentence."


Read more stories from around Teesside's courts



Time is running out to enter Northern Golf Masters event at Rockliffe Hall


A limited number of places are available for the Northern Golf Masters (NGM), which is being held at Rockliffe Hall, in Hurworth, on Sunday, July 27.


The closing date for entries is this Friday so time is of the essence.


As the County Durham resort prepares to welcome some of the world’s biggest golf stars for the European Tour English Senior Open in August, amateur golfers are being given the chance to play the same course and be crowned the best in the North as the NGM returns for the third year running.


Category one golfers from across the North-east, North Yorkshire and Cumbria can take part in the tournament and represent their club.


Now in its third year, the competition has been oversubscribed for the last two years and is proving even more popular this year as golfers can take to the same course as the golfing greats who played at last year’s English Senior Open.


Rockliffe Hall’s course will even be set the same as this major tournament to give golfers a real flavour of what it’s like to play in a top competition on a world class course.


The scratch tournament is for category one golfers and adopts the format of a professional tour event. Prizes are awarded for first, second and third place and upwards of 100 golfers expected to enter. Places are limited and registration is £30 per person which includes a NGM gift pack with concessionary rates for practice rounds available for anyone confirmed as participating.


Last year’s winner was former EuroPro Tour golfer Daniel Shevill, who won a dramatic four-man play-off.


Entries can be made at by visiting http://ift.tt/1kbKwiJ .



Bulldozers move in as demolition of Teesside's iconic Redcar Bowl gets under way


After decades of hosting entertainment events for hundreds of thousands of people, an iconic Teesside venue is biting the dust.


Demolition work is now under way at the Redcar Bowl - formerly the Coatham Bowl - which, since the late 1960s, has played host to some of the biggest names in music, including Deep Purple, Chris Rea and Whitesnake, featuring Redcar’s own David Coverdale .


But with the site now surplus to the borough council’s requirements after the opening of the Redcar and Cleveland Leisure and Community Heart, the end is nigh.



The site, which is occupied by the Bowl and the Redcar Leisure Centre, is in the process of being bought by a developer, with plans for a multi-use leisure development expected to follow.


That development is likely to include a multiplex cinema, prompting a campaign to safeguard the future of the seafront Regent Cinema building.


Councillor Norman Pickthall, Redcar and Cleveland Council’s Cabinet member for corporate resources, confirmed: “The council has accepted an offer for the site and is in the process of finalising the terms and conditions with the developer.”


It’s the final chapter in a chequered history for the Bowl, which as far back as 1970 went into receivership when the owners couldn’t afford to keep it going.


But it survived and evolved to host events ranging from conferences and dances to pop concerts and even major darts competitions.


The demolition work is expected to take several weeks.



New Middlesbrough park is starting to take shape


A new park in Middlesbrough is starting to take shape.


Work started on the Grove Hill park in the spring and is due to be completed by the end of the year.


The Erimus Housing-run project includes landscaping and tree planting as well as new seating, bins and lighting to be installed.


As yet, the park does not have a name. It is expected to be chosen via a competition later in the year.


Geoff Prior, head of asset management for the Thirteen Group, which includes Erimus Housing, said: “We have been working closely with Groundwork to identify areas of redundant land that can be put to use within local communities and the land known locally as Jellystone is one of those areas.


“In partnership with Middlesbrough College, this area is being transformed into a community allotment as well as a training base for its inaugural horticulture students. Wok is well underway and we look forward to its completion in the coming weeks.”



Councillor Charlie Rooney, Middlesbrough Council’s executive member for regeneration, said: “The commitment by all those involved in the regeneration of Grove Hill is really starting to produce results which will stand the area in good stead for the future.


“Alongside new homes, the new park and other improvements will ensure a sustainable future for this important part of Middlesbrough, and the evidence of the progress made so far is already clearly visible.


“Later in the year we will be getting local schools involved with planting and green learning, which will give them a real stake in the future of the park and the area as a whole.


“The park will be an attractive leisure space for the whole community to enjoy.”



Thief threatened shop worker with needle - then blamed it on a lack of benefits cash or support for his drug habit


A prolific thief who threatened to stab a shop worker with a needle is finally behind bars.


The courts gave chance after chance to light-fingered Paul Michael Griffiths - and he carried on stealing regardless.


At Teesside Crown Court yesterday he tried to blame the benefits system for not giving him money to support him - and his drugs habit - when he came out of prison.


He was given a one-year prison sentence suspended for 18 months in May last year for a burglary on Gough Close in Gresham, Middlesbrough.


The 35-year-old breached the order but did not go to prison.


Instead the suspension was extended to two years.


He kept on committing crime and was given bail during his exploits, the court heard.


Griffiths tried to steal a handbag from a car on New Year’s Eve, stole chocolate from a Sainsbury’s shop on January 3 and food from Marks and Spencer on January 10.


He threatened to stab a member of staff with a needle - though he didn’t actually have one - when caught stealing coffee from Tesco on Acklam Road, in Acklam, Middlesbrough on January 19.


Griffiths stole gammon joints and razor blades from the Co-op in Linthorpe Village on January 20 and 21.


He was remanded in custody, but regained his freedom when a judge gave him another opportunity to make good at Teesside Crown Court in May.


His sentence was deferred for six months on condition that he kept out of trouble and started a drug rehabilitation programme.


Griffiths was back stealing again less than three weeks later.


He was detained and arrested in a struggle after he pinched 10 joints of meat from the same Co-op on May 25.


He was bailed again and was caught stealing chocolate, bacon and coffee from a B&M store on May 31 and June 1 - to be released on bail once more.


Finally he was nabbed lifting coffee from the Acklam Road Tesco again on June 8, said prosecutor David Crook.


Griffiths, of Park Road North, central Middlesbrough, admitted threatening behaviour, attempted theft and nine thefts.


Uzma Khan, defending, said Griffiths apologised to the court.


She said: “He has found himself in and out of custody over the last six months.


“He’s never been subject to any benefits claims and he’s committed the offences in order to feed himself and his habit.”


She said the arthritic thief “self-medicated” and took drugs to relieve chronic back pain, and now sought drug treatment.


The judge, Recorder Sophie Drake, told Griffiths he’d been given a large number of chances to help himself and come off drugs.


She said: “You just threw those opportunities back in the court’s face.


“You really have given the court with no option whatsoever.


“You have absolutely no intention of complying with any orders.”


Griffiths was jailed for 16 months.



Murders of the Sixties: Killer looked unmoved as he was sentenced to life


A jury took little over an hour to find an unemployed Middlesbrough man guilty of murder.


It was February 1968 when 33-year-old Brenda Gibson was found dead.


She was killed at the home she shared with her 15-year-old son in Union Street. She had been strangled.


A murder investigation was launched and police soon found a suspect - Frank Thomas Hatton, also 33.


He was unemployed and lived in Theodore Street in Middlesbrough. He was arrested and charged with murder and after denying the offence, went on trial at Leeds Assizes in March 1969.


Mrs Gibson was described by her relatives as “the pretty one” in the family.


She had spent five years in South Africa and had been married twice. At the time of her death she was separated from her second husband.


Her neighbour told the Gazette at the time of the murder that Mrs Gibson had gone through two major heart operations.


Hatton had told police - and then later a courtroom that Mrs Gibson’s death was an accident.


He denied he had ever intended to kill her saying she had asked him to strangle her because she had a heart complaint.


He said he had pulled a tie round her neck not to kill but to snap her out of her deep depression.


But a jury did not agree. They took just 65 minutes to find Hatton guilty of murder.


Sitting in court to hear the guilty verdict was Mrs Gibson’s husband.


Hatton appeared unmoved as he was sentenced to life in prison and briskly left the courtroom flanked by two prison officers.