Samstag, 14. November 2015

Biker Dad: Motorcycles make music to help send band to Macy's parade

Saturday motorcycles escorted the last few miles of that journey. The Rock and Ride fundraiser started at Munford High and ended it at the Shakerag.



Biker Dad: Motorcycles make music to help send band to Macy"s parade

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Police: San Francisco tour bus crashes, injuring 20 people



SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — What began as a serene tour through one of the nation’s most picturesque cities turned into a two-block ride of terror when an open-air tour bus careened wildly out of control in San Francisco’s Union Square, running down a bicyclist, striking two pedestrians and smashing into several moving cars before it plowed into scaffolding lining a construction site.


Twenty people were hurt, six critically, when the big blue bus with at least 30 people aboard raced through one of the city’s most popular tourist destinations Friday afternoon, leaving chaos and carnage in its wake.


“Everybody was asking what’s going on,” said Bay Area resident Hoda Emam, who rounded a corner leading into Union Square moments after the bus struck the scaffolding, bringing it down in a twisted heap of metal and other debris.


She saw paramedics sprinting toward the injured while emergency vehicles pulled up with their sirens blaring.


Police officers were on top of the wrecked double-decker bus apparently attending to the injured, she said, while another three or four people lay in the street being treated.


“There were still ambulances and fire trucks and paramedics with stretchers coming up,” she said.


Twelve people suffered minor injuries in the crash that happened just before 3 p.m., San Francisco Fire Chief Joanne Hayes-White said. The others suffered moderate injuries.


Firefighters had to extricate the two pedestrians, who ended up trapped under the bus, and a passenger trapped on the upper deck.


The driver was conscious and able to speak when firefighters pulled him from the wreckage, Hayes-White said. But she added it was too early to speculate about what caused the crash.


“The police department will investigate what those circumstances involved, whether it was mechanical failure, whether it was driver error. It’s way too early to tell right now,” she said Friday.


Calls and messages for the bus operator, City Sightseeing San Francisco, weren’t immediately returned.


The six critically injured were taken to San Francisco General Hospital, said hospital spokesman Brent Andrew. He identified them as three men and three women between the ages of 20 and 60.


Three other people were treated in the emergency room of St. Francis Hospital, said that hospital’s spokeswoman, Robin O’Connor. She declined to provide further information, citing privacy issues.


Union Square is one of the city’s most popular tourist destinations with several high-end stores, including Macy’s and Saks Fifth Avenue, as well as its Union Square Park and skating rink. The scaffolding was in front of what is going to be a new Apple store.


Several upscale hotels are also located near the square, which was crowded with shoppers and tourists on what had been a pleasant day until the bus came roaring through. Witnesses said it raced across two city blocks, hitting the bicyclist, the pedestrians and striking several moving cars before ramming into the scaffolding. Wrecked cars were scattered up and down the street.


The bus also knocked down several power lines used to propel the city’s fleet of electrical buses.


John Zimmer, who works at Union Square Park, said the vehicle never appeared to slow down until it struck the scaffolding.


He added that he and others tried to put up a perimeter to keep tourists and others away from the live electrical lines until authorities arrived.


Union Square was so crowded that he said it was initially difficult to separate some of the injured from the passers-by.


“I couldn’t tell who was a tourist and who was an accident person,” he said. “It took us awhile to figure out who was who.”


___


Associated Press Writers Scott Smith in Fresno, California, and John Rogers in Los Angeles contributed to this story.



© 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Police: San Francisco tour bus crashes, injuring 20 people

Freitag, 13. November 2015

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Riders breeze into Norfolk

PORT DOVER – 


An estimated 1,000 riders braved a November gale to attend this week’s Friday the 13th motorcycle event in Port Dover.


There was a time when few people were expected to attend Friday the 13th events outside the spring and summer months.


However, Friday the 13th enthusiasts are proving to be a remarkably resilient lot. In recent years — no matter the month and no matter the weather — at least a handful make a point of riding into town on motorcycles.


Many of Friday’s riders arrived in Norfolk as a cold front was passing through. By mid-afternoon, the temperature in Port Dover had fallen to 5°C. Anyone riding home Friday night had to contend with temperatures below freezing.


“It was a nice ride,” Ron Miller of Courtice said Friday afternoon. “There was a little bit of hail, some hard cross winds, and quite a bit of rain. But any weather is riding weather. As long as it’s on two wheels it doesn’t matter. We aren’t made of sugar.”


High winds are an issue for motorcycles. Driving behind a few on the Blue Line Road Friday, riders had to compensate for the strong wind by leaning to the side to a noticeable degree. To the untrained eye, they looked like they were defying gravity.


“It’s like driving around a corner, except you’re going straight,” said Trevor Harding of London.


Friday the 13th rallies during the nice weather are a guaranteed international event.


More than 10,000 motorcycles will converge on Port Dover during a busy rally, with the population of the town of 6,000 swelling to more than 100,000. The numbers force authorities to turn a 2.5-kilometre stretch of Main Street into a motorcycle-pedestrian mall.


A random sampling of visitors on Friday turned up some international content. Dave “Prowler” Maikowski was part of a group that rode in from Detroit. This was Maikowski’s fourth Friday the 13th event.


“We come for the roads of Canada,” he said. “They are very nice, very clean and well paved. We enjoy the camaraderie.”


Norfolk OPP were vigilant as ever but officers kept a low profile on Main Street. They mounted a large RIDE spot check at the intersection of Blue Line Road and Highway 6 Friday afternoon and patrolled county roads on the lookout for aggressive drivers who may not be keeping an eye out for motorcycles.


As of 3 p.m. Friday afternoon Const. Ed Sanchuk reported that the rally was uneventful.


“People keep coming to Port Dover,” he said. “Everyone is there for a good time. It’s nice to see.”


As usual, the Port Dover Kinsmen and the Port Dover Board of Trade collaborated on organizing the event. There was a small exhibition area in the Main Street parking lot Friday for out-of-town vendors. With lineups outside some of the downtown restaurants and watering holes, Fraser “Oogie” Pringle, past president of the Kinsmen, deemed the day “a success.”


“Success for a November Friday the 13th is everyone comes, everyone’s happy and everyone drives home safely,” he said.


Monte Sonnenberg


519-426-3528 ext. 529150


monte.sonnenberg@sunmedia.ca


twitter.com/montereformer 



Riders breeze into Norfolk

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Donnerstag, 12. November 2015

It's a man's world: AUT Rookie menswear steals the show


Jack Chen re-imagined the classic suit silhouette.
GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY


Jack Chen re-imagined the classic suit silhouette.




Each year, the best young fashion design students in the country get the opportunity to showcase their collections at AUT’s Rookie Fashion Show.


This time around, the boys stole the show with menswear proving stronger than ever.


“We’ve worked so hard, and such late hours,” says 20-year-old budding menswear designer Brendon Lee. “We’ve put a lot of money into this. It makes the degree feel like you’ve reached something. The collection is a story only you can tell.”




GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY GARTH BADGER/THIEVERY



Joseph Churches.




Joseph Churches.




Joseph Churches.




Thomas Morrison-Sussex and Marilyn Deare.




Thomas Morrison-Sussex and Marilyn Deare.




Thomas Morrison-Sussex and Marilyn Deare.




Jack Chen.




Jack Chen.




Jack Chen.




Brendon Lee.




Brendon Lee.




Brendon Lee’s collection explored the idea of faceless online hackers through contemporary menswear.





1  of  12




READ MORE:
These women prove menswear ain’t just for the guys
Gaultier delivers gender-bending menswear
Best & worst dressed: NZ Fashion Week


Lee took an unusual concept and re-imagined it through contemporary menswear with inky blue silhouettes, exploring the concept of “personalising” faceless online hackers and trolls. “The dream is to be designing clothes for the rest of my life. The Rookie show is great to give your work that stamp.”


“In a simple way, my [collection] is an exploration of subcultures. Hackers are the punks of today, wreaking havoc. I’ve been inspired by different art forms, by street artists like Banksy and designers like Vivienne Westwood, who actually dressed the punks,” he says.


The show features a hand-picked selection of the graduating fashion class, showcasing their hours of craftsmanship to the media, AUT staff, students, family and friends. The newly-restored St James Theatre played host to this year’s crop of fresh talent.


From Elizabethan-inspired tailoring to sustainable, eco-friendly materials, this line-up offered a distinct point of difference, one that saw the classic suit receiving a well-deserved edit.


“Within my collection, I’m trying to reintroduce a new shape into society,” says Wellington-born designer Jack Chen, whose Elizabethan-inspired suits lend a structural, tailored appeal to the classic and conventional slim fit suit, typically favoured by kiwi males.


“My collection is entirely menswear; it sees men in corsets. I looked into the history of it and am still looking into the history of Elizabethan fashion. I’m making a statement,” he said. “The tailoring was tricky. I admire designers like Zambesi and local menswear brand Crane Brothers. I love the idea of mixing the [formality] of two elements, formalising a long line T-shirt.”


For North Shore-based design duo Tom Morrison-Sussex and girlfriend Marilyn Deare, the sheer scale of the show was a great opportunity to showcase their collaborative efforts. The young couple, both 21, have created an entirely sustainable line, which features exclusive menswear and crossover pieces.


“The toughest thing was sourcing the fabric, here at home. Absolutely everything was out-sourced and completely sustainable,” said Morrison-Sussex. “You have no idea how things are going to drape, working off a 10 by 10 cemtimetre square sample to select your fabric. We wanted to create a line that didn’t look typically sustainable or eco-friendly. It was great having a support person with me. If I couldn’t do something, Marilyn would step in. We worked really well together.”



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The New Zealand Fashion industry, which certainly isn’t short on home-grown talent, looks to the AUT Rookie Fashion show as a booster for budding young designers. Wednesday night’s show saw hundreds of fashion folk, media and familiar faces in attendance.


The AUT Rookie show is the second largest fashion show in the country, quickly catching up to New Zealand Fashion Week. With today’s fashion rookies set to be at the helm of kiwi fashion tomorrow, the graduating class of 2015 proved we’ve still got talent in spades.


 – Stuff








It"s a man"s world: AUT Rookie menswear steals the show

Hero MotoCorp bike share falls to less than 50%

With motorcycle sales during April-October declining 2.57% on a year-on-year basis, market leader Hero MotoCorp has seen its market share come under pressure. The company, which consistently clocked above 50% market share month-on month since November 2014, has seen it coming under 50% to 48.89% this October.


In October 2014, its share had slid to 48.69% after which it had again started to rise, to touch a high of 55.41% in December 2014. In the current fiscal, it maintained market share in the rage of 53% during April-June, after which it started sliding to touch below 50% in October.


However, the trend shows that no major player is gaining at the cost of Hero. Its main competitors, Bajaj Auto and Honda Motorcycle and Scooter have also not seen consistent growth during the period. However, During July-October the two have gained a few percentage points but not consistently. Therefore, it remains to be seen whether in the next few months Hero regains its market share.


Hero MotoCorp’s motorcycle sales have witnessed a month on month decline in four of the seven months this fiscal, including October. In the first seven months, motorcycle sales saw a decline of 2.57% over the same period last year, while scooter sales saw a growth of 13.94%. In October this year, motorcycle sales saw double-digit growth for the first time since March, mainly driven by festive demand for the Navratras and inventory stocking for Diwali sales.


Motorcycle sales have become a worrying factor for Hero MotoCorp as almost half of its sales in the segment come from the rural market. Moreover, while the demand for motorcycles has been low across urban and rural markets, rural markets have been more impacted.


motorcycle


Speaking to analysts after the second quarter financial results, Ashok Bhasin, head of sales and marketing, said that in the first half of the financial year, both urban and rural markets for motorcycles got impacted. “I would say in rural the decline would have been slightly higher maybe more like 8-10% and in urban areas it would have been a lower number of 2-3%, so both have got impacted. Rural of course have got impacted more, so indicated by many other indicators from rural demand,” he said. A recent Icra report on the Indian two-wheeler industry estimates the industry to grow by a meagre 2-4% in volume in the entire 2015-16.


In order to climb back to its dominant position in the overall two-wheeler market, Hero MotoCorp has brought in two new indigenously developed scooters, as the scooter demand has been strong in recent years. The scooter segment, which is dominated by Honda Motorcycle and Scooters with a market share of over 50%, has grown in double digits for over a year, barring a few months.




First Published on November 13, 2015 12:15 am


Hero MotoCorp bike share falls to less than 50%

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Mittwoch, 11. November 2015

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BMW looks to small motorcycles to push annual sales to 200000 target


BMW looks to small motorcycles to push annual sales to 200,000 target


by David Furlonger, 2015-11-11 16:06:19.0




MOTORCYCLE manufacturer BMW is hoping that its introduction of a new range of small motorcycles will help propel the company towards its target of 200,000 annual sales by 2020. That is a 50% increase on this year’s expected sales of just more than 130,000.


Alexander Baraka, GM of BMW Motorrad (the official name of BMW motorcycles) in SA, said on Wednesday he expects the new range to attract a fresh generation of young customers in SA.


In the past, BMW has not built motorcycle engines smaller than 500cc. However, on Tuesday, worldwide Motorrad president Stephan Schaller announced in Munich the launch of a new 300cc roadster designed with emerging markets in mind.


Although the motorcycles will be sold in all markets where BMW operates, Mr Schaller said Brazil and China were particularly important targets.


If the 300cc single-cylinder roadster, the G310R, is a success, BMW Motorrad would not rule out even smaller engines in future, he said. Until now, BMW has built its reputation as a manufacturer of big, premium motorcycles.


The G310R roadster is due to arrive in SA in the second quarter of 2016, followed by a new off-road bike, the R nine T Scrambler, in the third quarter. Mr Baraka said the roadster was especially key, as it would bring the BMW brand within reach of more customers.


In an interview, Mr Schaller said SA was BMW’s most important African motorcycle market by some distance. This year the company expects to sell just more than 3,000 units here. The G310R would build on that.


However, he did not have immediate high expectations of the rest of Africa. While he hoped for some growth, “most customers there are looking for motorcycles in the sub-€1,000 range and that is not for us. As disposable income grows in Africa, more people will be able to afford us but that’s not widely the case at the moment.”


He said BMW could not achieve its 200,000 sales goal without moving down in size.


“We are very successful in the premium segment of motorcycles over 500cc. That segment has a global market volume of about 860,000 units right now.


“That will change only marginally in the years to come. So it does not offer the growth potential we are looking for. The logical consequence is that we will have to tap into new markets with new products. The segment of smaller engine capacities of between 125cc and 500cc offers the ideal prerequisites for our plans.


“According to market research findings, this market will grow significantly by 2020. So it is the ideal environment to attract new customers.”





Florian Renndorfer, general manager of BMW Motorrad Asia Pacific, Middle East, China and SA (left) with Alex Baraka, GM of BMW Motorrad SA. Picture: BMW SA





MOTORCYCLE manufacturer BMW is hoping that its introduction of a new range of small motorcycles will help propel the company towards its target of 200,000 annual sales by 2020. That is a 50% increase on this year’s expected sales of just more than 130,000.


Alexander Baraka, GM of BMW Motorrad (the official name of BMW motorcycles) in SA, said on Wednesday he expects the new range to attract a fresh generation of young customers in SA.


In the past, BMW has not built motorcycle engines smaller than 500cc. However, on Tuesday, worldwide Motorrad president Stephan Schaller announced in Munich the launch of a new 300cc roadster designed with emerging markets in mind.


Although the motorcycles will be sold in all markets where BMW operates, Mr Schaller said Brazil and China were particularly important targets.


If the 300cc single-cylinder roadster, the G310R, is a success, BMW Motorrad would not rule out even smaller engines in future, he said. Until now, BMW has built its reputation as a manufacturer of big, premium motorcycles.


The G310R roadster is due to arrive in SA in the second quarter of 2016, followed by a new off-road bike, the R nine T Scrambler, in the third quarter. Mr Baraka said the roadster was especially key, as it would bring the BMW brand within reach of more customers.


In an interview, Mr Schaller said SA was BMW’s most important African motorcycle market by some distance. This year the company expects to sell just more than 3,000 units here. The G310R would build on that.


However, he did not have immediate high expectations of the rest of Africa. While he hoped for some growth, “most customers there are looking for motorcycles in the sub-€1,000 range and that is not for us. As disposable income grows in Africa, more people will be able to afford us but that’s not widely the case at the moment.”


He said BMW could not achieve its 200,000 sales goal without moving down in size.


“We are very successful in the premium segment of motorcycles over 500cc. That segment has a global market volume of about 860,000 units right now.


“That will change only marginally in the years to come. So it does not offer the growth potential we are looking for. The logical consequence is that we will have to tap into new markets with new products. The segment of smaller engine capacities of between 125cc and 500cc offers the ideal prerequisites for our plans.


“According to market research findings, this market will grow significantly by 2020. So it is the ideal environment to attract new customers.”





BMW looks to small motorcycles to push annual sales to 200000 target

Mirror, Mirror: Kit & Ace's latest store wants the full-contact client


According to Kit & Ace founders Shannon and J.J. Wilson, I’m the poster woman for the full-contact lifestyle.


I’m up about 6:30ish for a run or to take a class at Focus Barre. Then it’s off to work for eight to 10 hours. Evenings are filled with work-related soirees that involve cocktails and photo shoots in front of step-and-repeats more likely to make their way to social media before I make my way home, which sometimes is after 9 p.m.


So I need clothes that both complement my curves and feel like pajamas. That is why the new Kit & Ace boutique, nestled within blocks of bars on Frankford Avenue in fashion-starved Fishtown, touches my stylish soul.




Mirror, Mirror: Kit & Ace"s latest store wants the full-contact client

How Will The Trans-Pacific Partnership Affect The Auto Industry


Summary



The U.S. charges 2.5% on auto imports and 25% on trucks.


The TPP would lower this for Japan.


The TPP would also affect Chinese and German autos.




The Trans-Pacific Partnership is a trade agreement amongst twelve countries. This is the second article that I have written on this subject. If this partnership reduces tariffs on the member countries and increases exports for certain industries, do this mean these same industries will be affected in Europe and China?


This link will take you to the previous article that I wrote. It will list the member countries and basics of the TPP. The TPP must be passed by Congress and signed into law by the President.


Currently, the U.S. imposes a 2.5% tariff on Japanese cars and 25% on trucks. This is why so many Japanese trucks are manufactured in the U.S. In 2012, Japanese companies sold 5.3 million autos in the U.S., which accounted for 40% of the industry. Under the TPP, the tariff would eventually be reduced to zero. The big three auto manufacturers are against this, as well as the United Auto Workers, as one might guess. This would be a boon for Toyota (NYSE:TM), Honda (NYSE:HMC), and Nissan (OTCPK:NSANY, OTCPK:NSANF).


The challenge for GM (NYSE:GM), Ford (NYSE:F), and Chrysler (NYSE:FCAU) is that American cars make up a small part of the Japanese auto markets. But would the entry into other member TPP countries offset this?


Only 45% of an automobile must be manufactured in a member county under the TPP. Australia has a separate trade agreement that is going into effect with Japan and Korea. It will save about $250 to $1,000 on most cars. This could be a plus for Kia (OTC:KIMTF), Mazda (OTCPK:MZDAY, OTCPK:MZDAD), and Hyundai (OTC:HYMLF, OTC:HYMTF, OTC:HYMPY, OTC:HYMPF). There is a 5% tariff on autos imported into Australia. I assume this is the same for the U.S. and this would be lowered or eliminated under TPP. Thus, this could make American autos less expensive in Australia.


The 2.5% tariff on cars and 25% on trucks is the same across the board on all autos imported into the U.S. unless there is a trade agreement in place. There is an agreement in place that only charges a 2% tariff on autos imported from the EU. Unfortunately, the EU charges a 10% on American auto imports.


It seems appears that if the TPP is passed, it would make German autos a little more expensive when compared to their Japanese counterparts. This would slightly affect Volkswagen (OTCQX:VLKAY, OTCQX:VLKAF, OTCQX:VLKPY), BMW (OTCPK:BAMXY, OTCPK:BAMXF), Audi (OTCPK:AUDVF), and Mercedes (OTCPK:DDAIF, OTCPK:DDAIY). As one might imagine, the EU is hoping to implement a similar trade agreement with the U.S.


So if China is left out of this trade deal, how would affect their auto industry? It seems that their cars would cost a little more than autos in made in the TPP. This could affect China Automotive Systems (NASDAQ:CAAS), China Auto Logistics (NASDAQ:CALI), Geely (OTCPK:GELYF, OTCPK:GELYY), BYD (OTCPK:BYDDF, OTCPK:BYDDY), Great Wall Motor (OTCPK:GWLLF, OTCPK:GWLLY), Dongfeng Motor (OTCPK:DNFGF, OTCPK:DNFGY), and Guangzhou Motor (OTC:GNZUF, OTC:GNZUY).


According to this article in the Wall Street Journal, China gives about $700 million worth of subsidies to its auto industry every year. As one can see, this puts their industry to an advantage over ours. It also is probably part of the impetus to pass the TPP. Freeze China out.


This is the second article in a series on the TPP and how it affects stocks. I am not a trade expert and every country has its own tariffs and agreements with other countries. It will be interesting to see if this gets passed and how it affects the economy.



How Will The Trans-Pacific Partnership Affect The Auto Industry

MURRIETA: Inland man charged in health-care fraud case

A Murrieta man and his son accused of participating in a statewide bribery scheme targeting workers’ compensation insurers were indicted Tuesday on federal fraud charges.


Ruben Martinez, 59, of Murrieta, and his son Alexander, 37, of Calexico, are accused of hiding money that was used to buy patient referrals, according to a U.S. Department of Justice news release.


“This criminal network bought and sold patients like cattle,” District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis said in the news release.


Legal documents give the following account of how the alleged scheme worked:


Los Angeles radiologist Ronald Grusd, who runs 13 California Imaging Network Medical Group clinics, including one in Rialto and another in Victorville, was arrested on suspicion of paying a chiropractor to refer him patients.


The bribes, according to the news release, were funneled through Grusd’s shell corporation, Willows Consulting.


To further hide the kickbacks, checks were issued to the Martinezes through their front companies, Line of Sight Inc., of Calexico, and Desert Blue Moon, of Las Vegas, the news release said. The duo would take their “cut” of the money and then give it to the chiropractor.


In a second indictment, two men are accused of bribing a San Diego chiropractor to refer patients who were injured on the job to their company.


In the third indictment, a chiropractor is accused of accepting bribes for referring patients to the seller of medical equipment.


To report suspected health care fraud, call the FBI at 1-800-225-5324 or the California Department of Insurance’s toll-free fraud hotline, 1-800-927-4357.


Staff writer Courtney Perkes contributed to this report.



MURRIETA: Inland man charged in health-care fraud case

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Montag, 9. November 2015

Poignant memoirs commemorate one man's harrowing First World War experience

In his 70s, Sam Sutcliffe spent four years recording his harrowing First World War experiences in graphic detail. Tony Henderson reports on how his son has now shared those memories.


The First World War uprooted many thousands of men from their so-called ordinary lives and plunged them into experiences which would have been beyond their imagination.


One such individual was army signaller Sam Sutcliffe, who had left his job as an office boy to join up under-age at 16.


In his seventies, with encouragement from his wife and son, Sam spent four years recording his life story, including his war years, on tape, and on typewritten and handwritten pages.


Sam’s journalist son Phil, prompted by the forthcoming centenary of the war, then spent three years editing his father’s photographic memory writings.


In the very first line from Sam’s pen, he refers to himself as “nobody of any importance.”


When Phil began creating a book based on Sam’s efforts, the line leapt from the page as the title.


As Phil says, in one sense the phrase rings true. In what became an industrialised war of attrition, thousands of lives were fed into the machine almost as so many numbers.


But what Sam, between the ages of 16 and 20, endured and survived at Gallipoli, the Western Front and then as a prisoner of war, rendered him as anything but a man of no importance.


Sam Sutcliffe with son Phil Sam Sutcliffe with son Phil


Describing the time he spent working on his father’s writings, Phil says: “It was my connection with my father, a rock of a man, of my appreciation of him.


“There was a humility about him reflected in that first line he wrote. But I wanted to share his extraordinary ordinariness with others.”


On Tuesday, Phil will do just that with public readings from the new book, Nobody of Any Importance: A Foot Soldier’s Memoir of World War I, at 7pm at the Literary and Philosophical Society in Newcastle.


All proceeds of the £10, 682-page book, after printing costs, will go to the Red Cross, whose nurses helped Sam as he reached the end of his trek from his PoW camp In Germany at war’s end to reach the Allied lines.


Royalties from the e-book version on Amazon will also be donated to the charity. Copies of the print book from the Lit and Phil event and philsutcliffe47@gmail.com


Phil will be joined by his friend, retired Newcastle University professor of English literature Kesley Thornton, who will provide readings from another army signaller, the poet and musician Ivor Gurney, who had parallel experiences to Sam.


Gurney was gassed in France and after spending time in hospital in Edinburgh, was sent on a signalling course to Seaton Delaval in Northumberland. He continued to receive treatment at the Royal Victoria Infirmary in Newcastle and spent time at a convalescent home based in Brancepeth Castle in County Durham. He died in 1937.


Phil, who lives in London, has a special affection for Newcastle, having spent ten years of his journalistic career in the city.


He says: “My father had a prodigious memory for detail. During the war he was often very prudent, saving bits of food and determined to get through it all.


“But has also did mad things and, reading about them, I thought ‘that’s my dad doing that.’”


Sam begins his story with his childhood, in a family fallen on hard times, who knew poverty.


Then, having joined the army at 16, Sam faced the struggle of trying to blend into a group of older, much stronger men.


Their war begins with the sea journey by old steamer to Gallipoli, with the soldiers crammed into claustrophobic holds and afflicted by abject sea sickness.


Landing at Gallipoli and experiencing being under fire for the first time, Sam notes the physical manifestation of fear.


“A tightening of the gut and clamping together of the jaws, accompanied by an inner alarm which then and many times afterwards seemed to produce an acid-like smell on hands and other parts of the body,” he wrote.


With the troops trapped on a coastal strip between the sea and the Turks on higher ground, Gallipoli was chaotic with food, medical and other supplies anything but guaranteed for the soldiers crouched in their trenches and shallow holes.


“Most days there were only two items of food – hard biscuits and jam. At first, the weather stayed hot – millions of dirty, fat flies and any food, or even hot tea, exposed however briefly instantly turned black with swarms of these filth carriers.


“Dysentery plagued the Army and many men existed in a weakened, dazed condition with only moderate chances of survival because they had no opportunity to replace the large loss of body fluid caused by the disease.”


Sam is scathing about the inadequacy of the medical officer.


“I developed a very painful toothache and his advice to me – believe me this is true – ‘perhaps the artillery can help you by attaching a string from your bad tooth to a shell. When the gun is fired, your tooth will be pulled out.’”


Sam Sutcliffe with son Phil Sam Sutcliffe with son Phil


The trenches were home to five-inch long centipedes which would be found curled up in the men’s blankets.


A bite saw Sam’s hand and forearm swell to twice their normal size.


“I knew the poison was spreading rapidly and could be fatal. The medical officer told me: ‘You have a poisonous bite but I can’t do anything about it’.


“I walked away, the pain reducing me to moans and tears. I wandered off. To be shot would have been a relief.”


Sam stumbled upon an American doctor who used a knife to cut into the palm of his hand the upwards between the fingers and on to the back of the hand so that the poison could be squeezed out.


Winter came. “Rising water forced men to quit their trenches and, chilled and wet, stand exposed to biting cold wind and sleet.


“Their officer told them to form circles and bend forwards with arms around each other’s shoulders, then covered each circular group with rubberised ground sheets. Thus they stood all night.”


After Gallipoli, Sam found himself on the Western Front and on the Somme on July 1, 1916, for the first day of catastrophic losses of that battle.


“The wounded who could not walk or crawl from No Man’s Land were, in many instances, left there for hours following the failed attack because of the mentally and physically exhausted condition of their comrades who had survived.


“I saw a Scot who just sat and shook, his head nodded, his arms flailed feebly, his legs sort of throbbed. His eyes obviously saw nothing.


“One of our usually most happy and physically strong men was crying non-stop while violently protesting about something.”


Sam’s father had written to the War Minister Lloyd George that his son was under the age for active service and he was sent back to England for several months, travelling to a site near a colliery in Cramlington in Northumberland for a musketry course.


A the end of 1917, it was back to France where, manning a Lewis gun in his trench, he fought a duel with a machine-gunning red-painted German aircraft from Baron von Richtofen’s squadron.


Then Sam faced the great German Offensive of 1918. In a separate section titled ‘Murder,’ he writes of killing two men.


“Intensive training had achieved its purposes. I became a rifle-firing automaton.


“One target is a man running across my line of fire. The soldier fell, a comrade ran to help him. I squeezed the trigger. As he, too, fell the utter automatic callousness of my action registered somewhere in my brain and nagged then and forever after about their being any plausible excuse for such murderous conduct.”


Phil says: “It as the realisation that those being shot were people.”


Later that day Sam was helpless as the German ranks advanced. His fate rested on whether the first enemy soldier to encounter him used his rifle, his bayonet, or neither.


In fact, the young German soldier who filled that role smiled, veered to one side and continued forward.


Sam was taken prisoner and faced months of hard labour and a near-starvation diet.


In the confusion of the Armistice, Sam, weakened by lack of food and dysentery, began the trek back from the PoW camp near the Black Forest, to Allied lines.


Reaching safety, his first proper meal was too much for his body to take, and he was hospitalised in a serious condition.


Recovering, he walked into a French street and gazed at a bar of chocolate in a shop window.


“I became aware of small woman in black. She went inside, emerged and smilingly handed me the chocolate and another small package.


“The sweet kindness which prompted her to give me things for which she felt I longed, affected me almost to the point of tears.


“We parted and I thought to look inside the second package. It contained writing paper and envelopes – ‘Ecrivez a votre famille.’”


After the war Sam eventually opened a small shop and married in December 1939. He was 49 when Phil was born.


Sam’s brother Ted had died in 1922, aged 25, from the delayed effects of being gassed in France.


Sam never went abroad again. “I think he had had enough excitement,” says Phil.


Sam died in 1987, aged 88.



Poignant memoirs commemorate one man"s harrowing First World War experience

Self-Made Man: Human Evolution From Eden to Extinction?

We know prehistoric humans shaped tools and made fire. But evolutionary biologist Jonathan Kingdon thinks that our ancestors shaped us and that the human face, our racial differences, and our problematic relationship with nature are all self-made. Advance Praise for Jonathan Kingdon’s Self-Made Man “One of the most original and illuminating of books on human evolution. It gives an extraordinary feel for what it must have been like.” —Professor Alison Jolly Princeton University “A marvelously researched and documented book, beautifully expressed and put together—a major achievement.” —Elspeth Huxley “Every page provokes a new thought.” —The Economist “Self-Made Man is the work of a man of an enlarged curiosity. It is a deeply personal, challenging, and important book.” —New Scientist “Kingdon has written a stimulating and absorbing contribution to the debate about human evolution, broad in range and rich in detail.” —New Statesman & Society


Click Here For More Information



Self-Made Man: Human Evolution From Eden to Extinction?

What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions


From the creator of the wildly popular webcomic xkcd, hilarious and informative answers to important questions you probably never thought to ask.


Millions of people visit xkcd.com each week to read Randall Munroe’s iconic webcomic. His stick-figure drawings about science, technology, language, and love have a large and passionate following.


Fans of xkcd ask Munroe a lot of strange questions. What if you tried to hit a baseball pitched at 90 percent the speed of light? How fast can you hit a speed bump while driving and live? If there was a robot apocalypse, how long would humanity last?


In pursuit of answers, Munroe runs computer simulations, pores over stacks of declassified military research memos, solves differential equations, and consults with nuclear reactor operators. His responses are masterpieces of clarity and hilarity, complemented by signature xkcd comics. They often predict the complete annihilation of humankind, or at least a really big explosion.


The book features new and never-before-answered questions, along with updated and expanded versions of the most popular answers from the xkcd website. What If? will be required reading for xkcd fans and anyone who loves to ponder the hypothetical.


An Amazon Best Book of the Month, September 2014: What if everyone on earth aimed a laser pointer at the moon at the same time? What if you could drain all the water from the oceans? What if all the lightning in the world struck the same place? What if there were a book that considered weird, sometimes ridiculous questions, and it was so compelling that you found yourself skimming its pages to find out what would happen if you threw a baseball at light speed? With What If, Randall Munroe has written such a book. As he does in his extraordinarily popular xkcd webcomic, Munroe applies reason and research to hypothetical conundrums ranging from the philosophical to the scientific (often absurd, but never pseudo) that probably seemed awesome in your elementary school days—but were never sufficiently answered. It’s the rare combination of edifying and fun. —Jon Foro


Click Here For More Information



What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions

Norton Motorcycles – a great UK manufacturing recovery story

Legendary British motorcycle manufacturer Norton looked destined for the scrapheap until bike-loving entrepreneur Stuart Garner bought the business in 2008. Now, the marque’s putting UK production back on the map – and on the big screen too


Stuart Garner has a rock ’n’ roll air about him. He wears leather biker jackets, jeans and scuffed boots which scream “I am not a ‘suit’!” He looks, in fact, like a man to the motorcycle industry born.


Garner, 46, may look as though he wears the mantle of CEO of Norton Motorcycles lightly, but many hoops were jumped through to reach the point in his life where he could live and work in the very epicentre of the biking world.


Today, he lives in Donington Hall, Leicestershire, a stone’s throw from Donington Park racing circuit – pretty much ‘above the shop’. Norton’s 45,000 sq ft factory is in the grounds of the hall and is the hub from which 1,000 bikes a year are now manufactured.


Garner bought the estate in March 2013 when the need for expansion – and a perfect location to display ‘The World’s Best Roadholder’ – became apparent.


Norton Motorcycles


Petrol in the blood


Garner grew up in south Derbyshire, not far from Norton’s new premises, and admits to an early love of bikes.


“One of my first memories is of doing a wheelie on a C70 Honda moped with my granny on the back. We went through the garden gate, knocked it off its hinges!” he grins.


“My uncle was a race mechanic and when I was 16 or 17 I did a couple of motorbike projects with him, little go-faster projects, which got me into the spannering and maintenance of the bike and I guess that’s lived with me.”


Garner left school at 16 with no qualifications – and no particular aspirations to work in the motor industry – and began work as a gamekeeper; “much to my parents’ horror,” he says now.


After getting the sack for lateness, he found a job in a firework factory and realised he needed money to fund the lifestyle he wanted to pursue. 


“I had a job but I couldn’t afford a decent car, to go on holidays with my mates or even buy a drink.” It was this experience which seemed to light the spark: “I set up my own little firework business [Fireworks International] and, with a few hundred pounds I’d saved up, invested in stockmarket shares.”


Garner taught himself about stocks and shares by obsessively reading the Financial Times and during the late 1990s and early Noughties, alongside the firework business, ran his own futures and options trading desk. It was experience that was to prove invaluable over the years as he launched other businesses.


“Learning about the stockmarket gave me very good lessons in risk-reward and how to mitigate risk in investments.


“Equally, I spent 20 years dealing with China for my firework business, learning how to trade. Some of those skills have taught me how to look at how we go about generally forming and running a business.”


By the time Garner was 19, Fireworks International was valued at £1m and is still a leading force in the UK’s pyrotechnics industry.


Over the next 10 years he made headway owning businesses in mobile phones, baby sleepwear and baby buggies and by 2007 had become the owner of Spondon Engineering, makers of bike frames and parts.


As Garner has explained in previous press interviews, it was while building a prototype ‘rotary racer’ for the National Motorcycle Museum that the Spondon team hit a problem: they didn’t have the rights to use the Norton name.


Garner argued that permission had to be granted, so contact was made with the owner of Norton – by this time American investment banker Ollie Curme – and the go-ahead was given.


By this point, Norton had fallen hard from its position as ‘King of the Road’ and the company was in a bad way.


“During the Nineties, Norton had three or four global owners but between 2002 and 2006 Ollie Curme had done a great job of consolidating the ownership under one (American) umbrella,” says Garner. “Still, it wasn’t enough to save the company and by 2008 it was on its knees.”


Norton Motorcycles


Historic marque


Norton Motorcycles was started by James Landsdowne Norton in Birmingham in 1898, with the first bikes making it onto the roads in 1902.


The engineering magic behind the bikes propelled Norton to stardom – over the years the manufacturer has won 94 times at the Isle of Man TT races.


Norton had become synonymous with Great British workmanship: vintage styling combined with modern engineering.


Until the 1960s, Norton bikes ruled the racetracks as well as the private collectors’ market. The brand was riding high, with the Commando model selling 500,000 units in 10 years.


A decade later, though, the advancing Japanese motorcycle industry beat Norton into submission and the last Commando was made in 1976.


By the late Noughties when recession hit, Curme and engineer Kenny Dreer had spent a rumoured $12m (£7.9m) on the project – including development of new prototype bikes.


The passion and love for the Norton brand was still there all over the world but the Japanese ‘Big Four’ – Honda, Suzuki, Kawasaki and Yamaha – ruled the roost. It looked like the end of the road for Norton.


“One day in early 2008, I got a phone call from the US asking if I would like to buy the Norton brand,” says Garner. It was a call that was to change the course of Garner’s life. On paper, buying Norton seemed a crazy proposition and he admits:


“Yes, I had that simplistic gut feeling that it would work, my heart was saying ‘go for it, what an amazing brand, why would you not do it?’ But there was no guarantee of making a profit, there was no guarantee of selling the motorbikes. My only underlying belief was that Norton belonged in the UK, and once you brought the brand back into the UK it would take off and get traction.


“But you need to qualify that with your head in the cold light of day – saying, ‘OK, you’ve got a gut feeling, amazing, but let’s just risk-assess this process and make sure we’re not going to lose the ranch’.


“It’s very difficult to quantify the risks of these investments, it’s akin to buying a stately home for a quid, but there’s moss coming out the gutters and the roof’s fallen in, so it’s going to be £20m to put it right.”


Buying Norton took just four days, from first call to completion, and included the bike parts, four prototype bikes and the intellectual property rights.


While Garner is coy about the price he paid for it, he will say: “It was in the singles of millions of dollars and it was partly funded by me, partly by a bit of debt.”


Within a year, Garner’s team, led by head of design and executive director Simon Skinner, had redrawn the plans they’d inherited from Dreer and redesigned a prototype which went on sale – to great acclaim – in 2009.


“That first couple of years was unbelievably hard,” says Garner. “We couldn’t borrow money off the back of the business plan because the business wasn’t solid enough, so it was very much flying by the seat of our pants. We spent that first two or three years living on wit and cunning.”


Norton Motorcycles


Funding growth


It made for a stressful time, with the fear never far away that the business might not make it. Finally, by 2011, Santander agreed to lend £650,000 to Garner under the Export Enterprise Finance Guarantee scheme.


This enabled Norton to reach the stage it is at today, producing 1,000 bikes a year and doubling the workforce to 60 by 2012 (it’s now 150). In 2013, the company moved into Donington Hall and Garner’s grand vision for the company sped forward another stage.


The big boost, though, came in July when George Osborne, the chancellor, announced £4m of government funding to support 600 new jobs for Norton and its business partners. How did Garner pull off such a feat?


“It started off when I tweeted George Osborne, who’d announced he’d invested £10m in Ford to make a cleaner Ford transit engine.


“I said, ‘What about us?’ and a week later his private secretary called me and said, ‘We’d like to have a conversation: we’ve had a look at your business because you’ve sent a tweet. What’s going off at Norton?’


“To cut a long story short, I knew that George Osborne could write the biggest cheque of anybody I know. I asked him for £7.5m to rebirth the British motorcycle industry supply chain, the academy and manufacturing.


“After following things up, he connected me with an organisation called Advanced Manufacturing Supply Chain Initiative (AMSCI) and within three months the grant was agreed. But it took another year to go through due diligence; the bureaucracy was unbelievable.”


The £4m was supplemented with another £2.65m from Santander. So, in a shifting landscape which has seen the traditional lending models change beyond all recognition, what are Garner’s tips for finding investment?


“My message to businesses looking for funding is that the money is out there, but I wouldn’t use the traditional bank route. Go and knock on the door of the British Business Bank and ask them to give you a list of the institutions they fund, with the special interest you’re looking to finance. Don’t go and look for a bank that’s a one-stop-shop, look for individual funders.”


It’s been a time of remarkable growth for Norton and in the last three years the business has more than doubled its workforce.


Now, with the AMSCI funding, Garner is thrilled to be able to address the skills gap in engineering that faces the UK.


“We’re recruiting 50 apprentices a year from all over the country. In the next two to three years we will have an amazing workforce.


“The first 20 or so are in our main business now and the energy that they bring is great. We didn’t realise how infectious this energy would be – it affects everyone else. The older members of the team see a lad of 18 snapping at their heels and it gives them extra motivation too.”


It’s clear on a visit to Norton that Garner’s a hands-on boss who also likes to stay close to his customers. “I think my staff would say: ‘He’s in the business for all the right reasons, he lives and breathes it, and works very hard but he’s a bit of a b*****d and awkward to work with!’” he laughs.


“We’ve re-staffed the core of our business three times in six years but it’s very settled now. I’ve discovered that what happens when you get a good team is
they self-police and then you don’t have to be worried about it.”


Garner’s closeness to his customers is legendary and throughout the summer Norton hosts a regular ‘bike night’ at the hall where bikers go for a beer and a chat and, he believes, help him keep his ear firmly to the ground.


“It keeps us connected and whenever we do our shows, you’ll find me with a little polishing rag cleaning the bikes at the front of the stand, chatting to customers.”


Garner is reluctant to disclose turnover, “but we’re selling 1,000 bikes a year with a retail price of £10-15k”, he says. Currently 80 per cent of sales are for export. “The foreigners like us more than the British! They love the fact that with Norton they can buy a British, hand-built bike.”


Norton Motorcycles


A bike for Bond


The flourishing of Great British brands continues elsewhere in the motor industry, with Jaguar Land Rover flying high – and making appearances in that other great British institution, the James Bond franchise.


Garner is coy about Norton’s product placement but the secret is now out that a Norton Dominator SS is being brought to international attention in the new Bond movie, Spectre (keep your eyes peeled in the early scene where Bond reports to Q – both the bike and Garner can be spied in the background).


“You don’t get much more British than Bond,” he grins. “We get offered product placement all the time but out of 10 films, we’re probably only interested in one – it has to be right.


“Ultimately, us Brits, we all love a little bit of flag-waving, and we all have kind of a rose-tinted view of the past… some of these big iconic granddad brands come back and everybody’s like ‘Yay! Britain’s coming back!’”


Garner is gutsily expanding the brand. The Norton website now hosts a range of boots, racewear, scarves, mugs – even handbags. It’s a million miles away from that day in 2008 when the deal was sealed to buy Norton back from the Americans.


And for Garner, it’s just the beginning. In 2009, the new model Commando 961 SE was launched to the public, with Motorcycle News describing it as “a mouth-watering return of a legendary name, an instant classic, beautifully specced and never likely to depreciate.”


Six years on, the Norton legend continues apace.


@norton_ceo


Norton Motorcycles


Long and winding road – the Norton story


1898 James Lansdowne Norton founds Norton. The first bike hits the road in 1902.


1924 Norton wins the Isle of Man Senior TT race


1937–1945 Manufactures almost 100,000 side-valve motorcycles


1961 Launch of the Commando 


1976 After the march of the ‘Big Four’ Japanese motorcycle companies, the last Commando is produced


1980 The right to the Norton brand name is split among several companies in different countries. Relaunched in Lichfield, Staffordshire, in 1988.


1992 Steve Hislop, riding an Abus Norton, wins the Isle of Man Senior TT – later voted the “greatest TT race ever”


2000s Rights to Norton are brought under a single umbrella by a US investment banker but attempts to revive the business fail. Stuart Garner buys the company in 2008.


2013 Garner moves Norton to larger premises at Donington


2015 Government investment bolsters the long-term future of Norton, creating apprenticeships for young engineers. The Dominator SS appears on global movie screens in Spectre.


To watch a video of the history of Norton Motorcycles, click here



Norton Motorcycles – a great UK manufacturing recovery story