пятница, 29 июля 2011 г.

British American Tobacco Says World Coming Out Of Recession

British American Tobacco PLC (BATS.LN) Wednesday said the world is coming out of recession, as the second-biggest tobacco group by revenue recorded a rise in profit and sales driven by robust demand in emerging markets, and the rate of volume decline slowed.

BAT, which competes with U.S.-based global market leader Philip Morris International Inc. (PM) and U.K. peer Imperial Tobacco Group PLC (IMT.LN), is focused on building its position in developing economies such as Eastern Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia to offset a weaker performance in developed markets like Western Europe where smokers are struggling with tough economic conditions.

Consumers in mature markets are cutting back on spending in the light of government austerity measures, and switching to low-cost brands. The company has clawed back margin erosion caused by weak volumes and excise tax hikes through raising prices.

The London, England-based maker of Dunhill, Kent, Pall Mall and Lucky Strike said first-half cigarette volumes fell 1% to 344 billion, compared with a 3% drop in the same period a year ago and a 2.4% fall in the first quarter.

Explaining the deceleration, Michael Prideaux, director of corporate and regulatory affairs, said, "On an industry basis, the world is gradually coming out of recession. On a company basis, it is the ability to grow market share."

Prideaux added the share gains are well-spread, including Germany, Russia and Argentina. "We are doing pretty well all round. We look at our top 40 markets and we grew share in 26 of them."

The company improved its position in Spain, where falling demand due to economic woes led to a price war, even though it only has a small market share in the country.

Effects of chewing wild tobacco during pregnancy

tobacco plants

A University of Queensland PhD scholar is examining the health effects of chewing wild tobacco plants by Central Australian Aboriginal women during pregnancy.

According to Angela Ratsch, over 30 percent of Aboriginal women who give birth at Alice Springs Hospital regularly chew wild tobacco or 'pituri', which is found growing across regional and rural areas of Australia.

The chewing of Australian wild tobacco plants by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations is common in the central regions of Australia, where it is chewed in order to extract the nicotine content.

It is also a common practice amongst developing nations and indigenous populations throughout the world, with more women chewing tobacco than smoking it.

In Canada, approximately 58 percent of Inuit women chew during pregnancy, while in Cambodia, midwives recommend the use of chewing tobacco for pregnant women to reduce symptoms of morning sickness.

Ms Ratsch said little research had been done on the effects of chewing wild tobacco during pregnancy.

“Cigarette smoking has been clearly linked as an independent factor to low birth weight and premature birth, but it is unknown whether the outcome of chewing ‘pituri' is also a contributing factor,” she said.

“Babies born to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers who smoke are more than 250 grams lighter than those born to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander mothers who do not smoke.”

Statistics show that the Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander maternal mortality ratio is almost three times higher than for Australian non-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women.

Similarly, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander infant mortality rates are two to three times higher than for non-Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander infants, with the highest rate in the Northern Territory (15.6 per 1000 live births).

Ms Ratsch's research looks at the chemical properties of chewing tobacco in pregnant women and their unborn babies.

It builds on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledge of native plants and practices to determine whether a relationship exists between the chewing of pituri during pregnancy and poor maternal and neonatal health outcomes.

The research is being undertaken by UQ pharmacy and midwifery researchers, and midwives in collaboration with Aboriginal health workers and Aboriginal liaison officers in Central Australia and key Aboriginal Women's Organisations; Ngaanyatjarra Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Women's Council and Alukura Central Australian Aboriginal Congress.

R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Provides 3,000 Pieces of Art to Arts Council

The Arts Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County will be the beneficiary of about 3,000 pieces of artwork from the corporate collection of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. The artwork is valued at approximately $700,000.

"After more than 100 years of purchasing art to enhance the work environment of our employees, we have far more art than we can display," said Mark Peters, chief financial officer of R.J. Reynolds. "We were faced with the decision of whether to continue to store pieces indefinitely, or get them back into the community where they can be enjoyed by others. The arts transform our community, and we're delighted to play a role in that transformation."

The Reynolds American Foundation, Reynolds American Inc., its operating companies and employees have a long history of support for the arts in Winston-Salem and Forsyth County. Year after year, the corporation and its employees have made substantial contributions to annual Arts Council campaigns, donating millions of dollars and thousands of volunteer hours. The Milton Rhodes Center for the Arts, which opened last September in downtown Winston-Salem, has a large community events space named "Reynolds Place" in recognition of that support.

Many of the works being provided to the council by R.J. Reynolds are by local and North Carolina artists. They include oils, watercolors, sculpture, pottery, ceramics and textiles.

The Arts Council plans to sell most of the pieces of art to community members, individual collectors, museums or other organizations. The proceeds of the sales will be used to fund Arts Council programs and funded groups.

"This is significant and very meaningful for several reasons," said Milton Rhodes, president and CEO of the Arts Council. "Fundraising is extremely difficult in this economic environment, so the generosity of R.J. Reynolds will benefit ultimately a host of local arts organizations and individual artists who receive grants from The Arts Council.

"Also, many of the works are by local artists who are of interest to people in the community," Rhodes said. "Rather than being in storage, they will be in hands of those who appreciate and enjoy them."

The Arts Council is looking toward an event at the Rhodes Center in February 2012, when art will be displayed and sold. "Because of the large number of pieces, the logistics of all this are daunting," said Rhodes. "We want to be as fair and transparent as possible, and we'd like to offer pieces at affordable prices for the community, while maximizing the value of this opportunity and its benefit to the arts community we serve."

The Arts Council of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County was established in 1949 and was the first locally established arts council in the United States. The Arts Council enriches the quality of life for people in Winston-Salem and neighboring communities by raising funds for the arts, advocating for the arts, sponsoring events in conjunction with other arts organizations, providing educational opportunities, strengthening cultural resources, developing social capital, and aiding economic development. In 2010, The Arts Council awarded more than $1.825 million in grants to 42 arts and cultural organizations and 19 individual artists.

50-acre marijuana farm near Sanger raided

marijuana farm

Fresno County sheriff's deputies and federal agents raided a giant marijuana plantation near Sanger early Thursday morning, seizing thousands of plants and taking about 50 people into custody.
The pot-growing operation on California Avenue east of McCall Avenue was elaborate, with observation towers and living quarters for workers, plants in various states of growth lined in neatly cultivated rows, and a six-foot cyclone fence topped with barbed wire and covered in plastic sheeting to prevent passers-by from looking inside.
But the pot farm had not escaped the notice of residents or law officers. During the early-morning raid, a passing driver stopped to tell Sanger Police Chief Tom Klose that the farm had been there a long time; the chief reassured him that it was not a secret to police, either.
Sheriff's deputies assisted in November 2010 when agents with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration raided the field, Lt. Rick Ko said. "It had to do with smuggling out of state," Ko said. But he said he could provide no further details because the federal investigation is still ongoing.
All the marijuana plants were pulled off the property last year, but sheriff's officials were not surprised to see a new crop this year, Ko said. "It's a huge problem in Fresno County and in the whole state of California," he said.
Deputies worked 12 hours in 90-plus degree heat Thursday to rip out marijuana plants. Five were treated for heat-related illness and one was hospitalized but is recovering, Ko said. "We'll finish Friday," he said.
Besides sheriff's deputies, DEA agents and U.S. marshals took part in the raid, which began at sunrise as officers surrounded the field and ordered the workers to surrender. Mims said there was no resistance from those who were taken into custody. They were being interviewed to determine what charges they might face.
Just who was in charge of the operation is unclear. Fresno County tax assessor's records list Goon Pattanumotana of Fresno as the owner of the 54-acre parcel, but Pattanumotana said he has leased out the property to several farmers and has no direct oversight of what is grown there.
"I've kind of lost track of what's going on," he said.
Ko said property owners should be responsible for knowing if something illegal is happening on their property. But Sonia De La Rosa, spokeswoman for the Fresno County District Attorney's Office, said responsibility can depend on whether a property owner knew about and took part in illegal activities.
Records show Pattanumotana bought the parcel in 2005 for $1,900,000. It was assessed in 2010 at a value of $2,011,516.
Pattanumotana, a real estate broker and adjunct instructor of economics at Willow International Center, said he bought the land as an investment and rents out parcels to Asian farmers who grow vegetables. He said he made a profit on property that he sold before the real estate crash and invested in the Sanger land for tax purposes. Pattanumotana said he wants to hold onto the parcel until the market comes back. In the meantime, he leases out the land in order to pay about $22,000 a year in property tax. The problem, he said, is that some of his lessees have turned around and leased land to others.

понедельник, 25 июля 2011 г.

Smoke and taxes revisted in N.Y.

tax-free smokes

Add this promising news to the list of what’s different in New York. The days of Indian-owned companies selling tax-free cigarettes on non-Indian land are over.

For that, thank the eagerness of the Cuomo administration to finally collect the tax dollars that a state still on precarious fiscal footing sorely needs.

Over the past month, state and federal agents raided off-reservation tobacco shops and stopped vehicles carrying cigarettes that would be sold at them without collecting state sales taxes. The cigarettes and cigars that were seized are worth some $1.2 million in tax revenue. The Cuomo administration now expects to collect some $27 million in such taxes over the next six months.

That partly settles, then, what’s been a frustrating standoff for years. Yes, people can still go on to Indian reservations and buy tax-free smokes. Yes, that costs the state money. Yet the Cuomo administration can make the very compelling argument that its vigorous tax-collection efforts don’t violate Indian sovereignty.

What is a reassurance to New Yorkers exasperated by years of seeing the state’s finances suffer because of a thriving, illegal cigarette sales operation also serves as an warning to those who make money that way.

“This is the first time we’ve seen enforcement of this nature,” says Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy, who sends clear signals about further enforcement of the tax laws.

How far New York has come. Fourteen years ago, attempts to collect sales taxes erupted in such violent protests that the Pataki administration abandoned them. All the while, negotiations between the state and Indian tribes were futile.

Now, though, the Supreme Court has ruled that states can imposes taxes on tobacco sales to non-Indians. The only caveat is that such taxes can’t fall directly on tribal governments.

Indian tribes are mounting what might well be yet another losing legal argument. They’re making a distinction between cigarettes manufactured by the tribes themselves and those made by the big multinational tobacco companies.

The Oneida Nation, for example, is wise enough not to try to stop tax collections from non-Indian cigarette manufacturers and sellers. Yet it says federal law bans taxation of cigarettes made and sold on a reservation.

The state, meanwhile, is willing to negotiate further on the first point. As for the second, Mr. Duffy reiterates that there are no plans to try to collect taxes on sovereign land.

The state is on secure middle ground here. It’s time to reap all that overdue money.

Porsche Design Shisha shows German influence on hookah smoking

Design Shisha

Are you an auto-enthusiast that loves some hookah aka Shisha? Well, Porsche has something special for you. Porsche Design is well know for their iconic style inspired by the supercar brand and this time around they are introducing a brand new Shisha.
The Porsche Design Shisha is a part of the company’s Porsche Design World Collection and will be available at Porsche Design stores from the end of July. It will also go on sale at the world famous Harrods department store in London, Knightsbridge.
“The extraordinary Porsche Design Shisha combines high-quality materials such as aluminium, stainless steel and glass with the timeless and unique design approach of the luxury brand,” Porsche said in a statement. “Puristic and stylish at the same time. The Porsche Design Shisha is made in Germany and stands at a height of 55 centimetres. It only shows a discreet branding on the aluminium top of the Shisha and comes with a long flexible tube made out of TecFlex material, which is also used for the classic Porsche Design TecFlex writing tools.”
Porsche Design World Collection also offers a number of other exclusively designed products including chopsticks, a tea and soup set as well as a few fashion items such as a jacket, polo shirt and a silk scarf.

Marijuana Conviction Means No Gun Ownership?

Ohio Rev. Code § 2923.13 bans gun possession by (among others) anyone who “has been convicted of any offense involving the illegal possession ... in any drug of abuse.” (Ohio Rev. Code § 2923.14 allows the person to petition for relief from this disability after the person’s prison, probation, and parole is up, but any such relief is discretionary with the court, and turns on the judge’s opinion about whether the person “appears likely to continue to” lead “a law-abiding life.”) Paul Stone had been convicted in 2006 of possession of marijuana, “a minor misdemeanor” under § 2925.11. How minor, in the state’s view? It can’t lead to any jail time; the only possible penalty is a fine of up to $150, plus possibly community service of no more than 30 hours. It isn’t even treated as “a criminal record” for purposes of employment or licensing questions about the person’s criminal record. But then in 2010, he was indicted for felony gun possession under &sec; 2923.13, based on the minor misdemeanor.

The trial court dismissed the indictment, holding that § 2923.13 didn’t cover gun possession following minor misdemeanor convictions. But State v. Stone (Ohio Ct. App., decided yesterday) just reversed the dismissal of the indictment, and held that Stone could indeed be prosecuted. The court concluded that the text of &sec; 2923.13 indeed covered even minor misdemeanor convictions. And then it held that Stone lost his Second Amendment rights, because of this minor misdemeanor conviction. Here is the entirety of its Second Amendment analysis:

Appellee [i.e., Stone] also urges this court to affirm the trial court’s dismissal based upon the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution, which, pursuant to District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), 554 U.S. 570, protects an individual’s right to possess a firearm. In advancing this argument, appellee acknowledges that this right is not unconditional and points out that Heller identified various forms of reasonable restrictions a state may place upon a citizen’s ability to have a firearm. Appellee submits, however, the limited list of such restrictions does not include, nor is there obvious historical precedent for, legislation that has the effect of completely abrogating a citizen’s right to bear arms as it pertains to a misdemeanant with no criminal record.

Although appellee sets forth strong policy considerations, which might militate in favor of a legislative shift in this area of criminal law, a careful review of the statutory provisions at play in this case demonstrates that the trial court erred in dismissing the underlying indictment. Our analysis and resolution of the issue is controlled by this court’s recent holding in Gex, supra.

In Gex, this court determined that a defendant’s conviction for having a weapon while under disability was supported by sufficient evidence even though the disability was occasioned by minor misdemeanor marijuana possession.... Applying Gex to the case at bar, it is undisputed that appellee was previously convicted of minor misdemeanor marijuana possession in violation of R.C. 2925.11, a drug abuse offense. Appellee’s previous conviction, therefore, constitutes a disability prohibiting him from acquiring, having, carrying, or using a firearm or dangerous ordnance. Because there is nothing in the record indicating appellee was relieved from the disability via the mechanism set forth under R.C. 2923.14, he could be charged, as a matter of law, with having a weapon under a disability. We therefore hold the state’s position is well-taken ....

As a postscript, we again emphasize that appellee’s arguments would be better directed at the General Assembly than the judiciary. Although he claims otherwise, accepting appellee’s position would essentially eliminate the plain language of R.C. 2925.01(G)(1) as it relates to the disability statute — an outcome we must obviously avoid in construing statutes. Read plainly, even though R.C. 2925.11(D) does not create a criminal record, minor misdemeanor possession is still a conviction which is premised upon a statutorily-designated drug abuse offense; to wit, marijuana possession. Both appellee and the trial court are correct that the legislature has demonstrated an intent to lessen the impact of such convictions. Still, until the General Assembly specifically excludes an R.C. 2925.11 minor misdemeanor marijuana possession conviction from the purview of R.C. 2923.13(A)(3) or R.C. 2925.01(G)(1), it will remain a “drug abuse offense” and consequently a “disability” for purposes of R.C. 2923.13(A)(3).

But nothing in the Stone court’s analysis actually dealt with Stone’s argument that § 2923.13 violates the Second Amendment in this sort of case, and Gex, the precedent that the court relied on, didn’t even discuss the Second Amendment. So while Stone specifically made a constitutional argument to the court, the court seems to have rejected the argument simply on the grounds that Stone’s conduct is covered by the statute — without at all considering the possibility that the statute in this case violates the Constitution. (The court doesn’t say that Stone’s argument is somehow unpreserved because he didn’t raise the Second Amendment question below, so I take it that either Stone did make the argument, or that in Ohio courts the prevailing party below may defend the judgment below on any ground reasonably raised by the record.)

So it seems that the court is concluding that the Second Amendment doesn’t protect people who have even a minor misdemeanor marijuana possession conviction — not a felony, not a violent misdemeanor, not even a misdemeanor that could yield any time at all in jail, and not anything that involves a finding that the defendant is an illegal drug user right now — without at all explaining why this should indeed be so. Strikes me as pretty hard to defend; or am I missing something here?

вторник, 19 июля 2011 г.

Teen admits to one, denies second theft of synthetic marijuana

A 17-year-old boy who has denied stealing synthetic marijuana by slipping down the chimney of Chops Leather Shop admitted to a separate breaking and entering offense Monday.

The teenager, of Newark, pleaded admit to one count of breaking and entering, the equivalent of a fifth-degree felony, for stealing 167 packets of synthetic marijuana -- called K2, posh or spice -- and alcohol from the Stop Mart, 413 Mount Vernon Road, on June 19.

The teen threw a rock at a window of the Stop Mart then kicked it until he and a 13-year-old friend could enter, he told Licking County Juvenile Court Judge Robert Hoover.

Newark police responded to an alarm at Stop Mart and found the boys near the creek along Buckingham Street. The younger boy ran away, but the 17-year-old stayed to speak with the officer, according to police reports.

On June 14 or June 15, the 17-year-old is suspected of breaking into Chops Leather Shop, 201 W. Main St., to steal synthetic marijuana and other items. He entered the building through the chimney then let two others in, Hoover said.

He was charged with one count of breaking and entering, the equivalent of a fifth-degree felony. He pleaded deny to that offense Friday.

The other two children have not been charged, Licking County Assistant Prosecutor Lia Meehan said.

Synthetic marijuana can cause seizures, hallucinations, nausea and elevated blood pressure, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration, which temporarily banned several chemicals used to produce the substance.

On Friday, Ohio Gov. John Kasich signed a bill that will ban the sale and possession of synthetic marijuana. It goes into effect 90 days after Friday.

The 17-year-old boy was living in an abandoned building on Mound Court without the permission of the owner when the offenses occurred. He did not want to live with his mother in Newark and was kicked out of his grandparents' house in Coshocton County.

He has a warrant from Muskingum County, where he was found delinquent of gross sexual imposition in a separate case.

The teenager was sent to juvenile detention to await disposition for the Stop Mart break-in, Hoover said.

Three await trial in Green Bay in marijuana-growing case

marijuana-growing

All but three defendants have pleaded guilty in a federal case against 12 men accused of clear-cutting public forestland to grow marijuana.

Two more defendants pleaded guilty late last week, which means only three defendants are awaiting scheduled jury trials in U.S. District Court in Green Bay.

Raul Juvenal Avila-Rodriguez and Jesus DelaTorre-Avila entered pleas last week. They are scheduled for sentencing Oct. 19. DelaTorre-Avila had been scheduled for trial that was to begin Monday.

Also scheduled for sentencing Oct. 19 are Gustavo Barragon-Mendoza, Armando Adame-Alvarado and Jose Luis Sandoval-Mendoza.

Javier Navarro-Zaragoza is scheduled for sentencing Sept. 7, Jorge Omar Perez-Hipolito for Sept. 12, Salvador Montez-Canchola for Sept. 20 and Uriel Perez-Alijandres for Sept. 26.

Genaro Avila-Rodriguez and Adalbarto Valencia are scheduled for jury trial Sept. 12.

Bernabe Nunez-Guzman, the only suspect from Green Bay and the man regarded by authorities as the organizer of the pot-growing operation, is scheduled for trial Nov. 7.

The criminal complaints do not spell out the roles of the other defendants in the operation.

Only Nunez-Guzman and Valencia were legally in the United States, lawyers in the case have said.

Authorities say the suspects lived in the forest while growing the marijuana, although nine of them were arrested at a home that Nunez-Guzman owned on the western edge of the Oneida Indian Reservation, just east of Seymour, where they dried and prepared the harvested marijuana plants, authorities say.

At all of the sites, the pot growers had hacked down mature trees about 3 feet from the ground.

Marijuana that was planted amid the stumps has been harvested or hauled away by law enforcement agents.

Authorities learned of the grow operations when a hiker came upon one of them in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest.

Authorities put the site under surveillance and learned of the other sites as well as the house the suspects were using near Seymour and a storage garage near Bonduel. Investigators seized weapons, thousands of dollars and hundreds of pounds of dried or drying marijuana.

Confidential informants identified Nunez-Guzman, the former owner of a Green Bay flooring company, as the boss of the operation, according to the criminal complaint. Informants also identified defendant Raul Avila-Rodriguez as the supervisor for the marijuana-drying operations within the Seymour home, which was owned by Nunez-Guzman, the complaint says.

Smoking taking a huge toll on the Irish economy, says Minister

population smokes

Smoking is costing the Irish economy €365m a year, says Minister of State for Health Róisín Shortall, according to the Irish Times.

Currently, 29 percent of the Irish population smokes, and if that number does not go down, it will cost health services more than €23 billion over the next decade.

“That would pay the entire cost of running our health services for almost two years,” the Minister told the Dáil.

Ms Shortall was introducing the Public Health (Tobacco) (Amendment) Bill, legislation to allow graphic pictorial and text warnings on cigarette packets to illustrate the health consequences of smoking.
Smoking was the “greatest single cause of preventable illness and premature death in Ireland”, killing more than 5,700 people a year, she said.

The bill would make it obligatory for cigarette and tobacco packets to carry one of 14 images illustrating the health consequences of smoking.

The Minister stressed full color-picture based health warnings on tobacco products.

“Pictorial health warnings on tobacco products make them less attractive and target smokers by providing them with information on tobacco-related health risks," she said.

International research indicates that “smokers are more likely to remember a health consequence of smoking, when smoking, if they have seen a picture."

понедельник, 11 июля 2011 г.

Marijuana plants discovered during NY house fire

Marijuana plants

Firefighters discovered dozens of marijuana plants while battling a blaze at a Yonkers house.

Firefighters responding to the fire at 2:40 a.m. Sunday found four bedrooms filled with the plants.

Yonkers Assistant Fire Chief George Kielb told the Journal News "it was basically a pot-growing house."

Kielb said the house looked like a normal home from the outside but all the windows were covered with plywood.

No one was at home when firefighters responded to the fire, which burned through part of the roof.

Kielb said the marijuana was found under heating lamps in a hydroponic system connected to electrical lines that had been diverted around the home's meter box.

The investigation into the fire and marijuana is continuing.

Union Township may act on marijuana laws this week

marijuana laws

Union Township could give final approval this week to a pair of laws to regulate and license businesses related to Michigan's medical marijuana law.

The township board already has given a preliminary OK to a proposed amendment to the township's zoning law and a new law that would require medical marijuana dispensaries and growing operations to get licenses from the township.

But at least one township resident is worried that by establishing a licensing regime, the township is giving approval to activities that violate federal law.

"Federal law puts marijuana as a Schedule 1 medication," said pharmacist Jim Horton, himself a former township planning commissioner. "In a nutshell, Schedule 1 medications are classified as having no legitimate medical purpose."

He said pharmacists cannot have it in their pharmacies without breaking the law.

"By passing this ordinance, you're allowing businesses to violate federal law," Horton told board members. Currently, federal drug enforcement authorities are not enforcing the law as it applies to the medical use of marijuana.

"If the current federal administration undergoes any changes," Horton said, "you're left with a nightmare of businesses being raided, businesses being shut down."

He also warned that it's conceivable that federal sanctions could be brought against municipalities that appear to encourage production or use of marijuana.

In 2009, the Justice Department told prosecutors they should not focus investigative resources on patients and caregivers complying with state medical marijuana laws. A recent memo to federal prosecutors from U.S. Deputy Attorney General James Cole says that view has not changed.

"There has, however, been an increase in the scope of commercial cultivation, sale, distribution and use of marijuana for purported medical purposes," says the new memo by Cole.

Bristol Tobacco Factory offers subsidised places for summer school

The Tobacco Factory has recently announced that an increased number of subsidised places for this year’s summer school will be available due to the generosity of the Denman Charitable Trust.

The theme of this year’s summer school is Swan Lake Unplugged, an opportunity for young people to explore the incredible story of Swan Lake without the fear of tutus or tights.

The school will be led by Tid from Fairground, the experts in theatrical storytelling, and Kwesi Johnson from Kompany Malakhi, the masters of physical theatre and dance. During the course of the week the participants will delve deeply into the story of good versus evil and love versus violence; finding out about the story of Odette - following a curse cast by the evil sorcerer Von Rothbart she is a swan swimming on a lake of tears by day and a beautiful princess by night; she meets Prince Siegfried, who falls in love with her, and for a while it looks as if the curse may be lifted.

During the week skills will be developed in physical theatre and dance, with the best work captured on film to show family and friends. Participants will be encouraged to be creative, take risks and work together to explore new ways of telling the classic story. The summer school provides a unique opportunity for young people to be creative in a safe and supportive environment with the support and guidance of real pros.

The summer school will run at the Tobacco Factory’s Brewery Theatre from 15 until 19 August, from 10AM until 5PM each day; it is suitable for young people over the age of 13 years. The cost of the summer school is £150, with a number of subsidised places available.

понедельник, 4 июля 2011 г.

Electronic Cigarette Injector

e-cigarette injector

Forget skyrocketing gas prices, as an estimated 45.9 million U.S. smokers are dealing with other cost inflation issues. With the cost of cigarettes on the rise, many smokers have turned to a one time investment in a cigarette rolling machine, as well as discounted bulk buying of filtered cigarette tubes and tobacco. In fact, All Fun Gifts lists its Powermatic 2 as one of the hot items among its 5,000 plus SKUs. According to Jayson Magura, owner of All Fun Gifts, “The Powermatic 2 is an electric cigarette injector device. It is better than a rolling machine, providing your customers with an improved cigarette buying alternative, peace of mind, and choice.”
Roll Cigarettes Without the Hassle

For a suggested retail price of $100, smokers can purchase the ability to inject their cigarette tubes without the hassle of rolling. Once the smoker has chosen the preferred filters and tobacco, a perfect cigarette is made in seconds, with all the ingredients known and no added chemicals. This electric cigarette injector has controlled tobacco intake, and comes with a removable tobacco tray. For those independent retailers servicing smokers looking for such an alternative, you can purchase the Powermatic 2 for $69 wholesale, or $65 wholesale per unit with an order of a dozen.

Established in 1999 and originally named Appalachian Creations, All Fun Gifts has transformed from a smoking line focused wholesaler, to a one stop shop alternative wholesaler. Through both its website and catalog, offering 264 pages of products, smoke shops and gift shops looking for alternative gifts will find a wide range of products, from the extensive smoking line to clothing, games, jewelry, hacky sacks, and much more. Magura adds, “Much like the Powermatic 2’s quantity discount, the company offers quantity pricing for many of its products, as well as monthly specials such as free shipping and sometimes 10 percent off the entire minimum order of $100.”

Court lifts order against NY Indian cigarette tax

cigarette business

New York's decades-old quest to tax the millions of cartons of cigarettes sold by Indian tribes to non-Native customers was revived on Tuesday after an appeals court lifted an order blocking collection of the $4.35-per-pack tax.

The Appellate Division of state Supreme Court in Rochester vacated a temporary restraining order that's been in place since June 10 and denied a request by the Seneca Indian Nation, New York's largest tribal tobacco retailer, for a preliminary injunction while it challenges Tax Department regulations.

State officials did not indicate when collections might begin.

“The administration will move aggressively to collect the taxes,” a statement from Gov. Andrew Cuomo's office said.

The state anticipated collecting $500,000 a day in new tax revenue beginning Sept. 1, 2010, but has been stalled by legal challenges from at least five Indian nations. The Seneca case before the court was the latest stumbling block.

Seneca Nation President Robert Odawi Porter said Tuesday the nation would ask the state's highest court, the Court of Appeals, to review the decision.

“In our treaties with the United States, we gave up most of our land to retain the `free use and enjoyment' to conduct business in our remaining territories free from the state's taxes,” Porter said in a statement. “New York will never collect a cent of revenue from tobacco sales occurring in our territories, and revenue projections so indicating are foolishness.”

Owners of non-Native American convenience stores, who've watched the reservation cigarette business flourish as New York has increased its cigarette tax to the highest in the country, urged the state to act immediately. Free of taxes, Native smoke shops charge about half the $10 off-reservation price for name-brand cigarettes and even less for brands manufactured on reservations.

The state has talked about taxing cigarette sales to the general public since 1988 but instead has largely followed a policy known as forbearance. Attempts to collect the tax in the 1990s resulted in sometimes violent protests and fires on Seneca territories and a reluctance by state officials since then to push the issue. Then last June, lawmakers, faced with a $9.2 billion budget deficit, voted to move forward with collections.

“Today's appellate court ruling adds yet another judicial decision affirming that the state can collect these taxes, close this loophole and finally provide our retailers with the fairness they have been seeking for decades,” said Jim Calvin, president of the New York Association of Convenience Stores.

Cigarette wholesalers would be required to pay the sales taxes up front and then pass along the levy to the tribal retailers they supply. Some wholesalers have already indicated they would stop supplying reservation stores if the tax is enforced.

Porter said the nation, which has about 172 retail operations, would rely on tribally manufactured cigarettes to sustain its tobacco economy, a sentiment echoed by the Oneida Nation of central New York.

“Today marks the beginning of a new era in the nation's tobacco trade and exercise of our sovereignty,” Porter said.

“While the state may be able to embargo through taxation premium brands from entering our territory, it cannot tax the brands made in our territory or any of the Six Nations,” Porter said. “We will never stop fighting the state's predatory actions.”