среда, 14 марта 2012 г.

ASML bounces back to Q2 profit on strong sales

ASML Holding NV, a key supplier to computer chip makers, said Wednesday it bounced back to profit in the second quarter from a loss in the same period last year thanks to a sharp rebound in demand.

The company, which supplies tools to Intel and Samsung, said it made a net profit of (EURO)239 million ($300 million), compared to a loss of (EURO)104 million in the same period last year. Revenues rose to (EURO)1.07 billion from (EURO)277 million in last year's second quarter.

ASML said in a statement it expects full-year sales in 2010 to be 10-15 percent higher than its 2007 record of (EURO)3.8 billion as chip makers make up for under-investment amid the …

JESUS' SUN

JESUS' SUN BEN RATLIFF THE WISDOM OF SUN RA: SUN RA'S POLEMICAL BROADSHEETS AND STREETCORNER LEAFLETS COMPILED AND INTRODUCED BY JOHN CORBETT CHICAGO: WHITEWALLS. DISTRIBUTED BY UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS. 144 PAGES. $20.

Most artists want their work to be understood. In retrospect, it seems that the jazz bandleader Sun Ra, born Herman Blount, wanted not so much to be understood as to be needed. He seemed to have a Messiah complex, perhaps from being a smart young man in a miserable place and time: Birmingham, Alabama, in the 1620s and early '30s. He didn't think much of other human beings, and he eventually wrote himself into a fantasy of being teleported to Earth by Saturnians. …

Meryl Streep film delayed after campus shooting to debut in US

A Meryl Streep movie about a graduate student who turns violent on a U.S. campus that was delayed following the deadly Virginia Tech shootings will finally be released, its distributor said Friday, just hours after another American student went on a campus rampage that left five dead.

"Dark Matter," which also stars Liu Ye, one of China's rising stars, will debut in New York City on April 11 and be released in other American cities after that, Gary Rubin, president of First Independent Pictures, told The Associated Press in a phone interview Friday.

Rubin said the film, directed by Chinese-born director Chen Shizheng, had been scheduled for …

New bedfellows

CNN, Sky or the BBC could be about to jump into bed with HTV -sort of.

For the last eight months HTV has been trying to find a tenant for30,000 square feet of vacant office space at their …

DVD REVIEW

THE HOAX

This is the kind of movie that flops at the box office. Did it even make it to the theater? Maybe, but I don't know for sure, which proves my point.

And yet this true story, starring Richard Gere, is actually a fantastic watch. Gere plays Clifford Irving, a man who. In 1972, nearly pulled the con of the century by releasing a fake autobiography of Howard Hughes. Yes, the same eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes who was portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio in 2004's The Aviator. The name may have faded from the headlines since his 3 death in 1976, but in his day, Hughes was a very big deal (think DiCaprio times 10, but with details of his life shrouded in mystery).

The story is that Irving's newest book had just been dumped by mega-publisher McGraw-Hill, so he invented the idea that Hughes called him pitching a tell-all biography. Forged documents, bold lies and near-million-dollar checks made Clifford Irving a household name in the early 1970s. And Gere captures his essence perfectly, or so comparisons from 60 Minutes segments (DVD special features) would lead one to believe. Alfred Molina (Spider-Man 2) provides quality support as Irving's writing partner.

Swedish director Lasse Hallstrom (An Unfinished Life, Chocolat, The Cider House Rules) continues his recent string of fantastic English-language films with this latest effort. If his name is attached to a title nowadays, it'll probably be a very well-made movie.

The Hoax is an easy watch and falls beautifully into the category of true stories that are far stranger than fiction.

THE INVISIBLE

"From the producers of The Sixth Sense," the DVD case reads. But if it's The Sixth Sense you want, go rent that instead. The Invisible is a wash of the "Is that person dead or what?" type of film, crossed with teens-getting-killed films like I Know What You Did Last Summer. And the result is a bore.

Nick Powell (Justin Chatwin, War of the Worlds) is a brooding high school senior with a bright future. Though he's well liked, someone leaks misinformation about him to a school bully whose thugs beat Nick to death. Or do they? Trapped in some sort of limbo, Nick has to find a way to tell someone that his mostly lifeless body is hidden in the woods, and if left alone, he will actually die.

Everything's dark in this movie, from the weather to Powell's mopey faces to the all-black wardrobe of villainess Annie Newton (Margarita Levieva, TV's Vanished), but at times, it feels forced and a bit ridiculous. Perhaps school bullies really do cut their schoolmates' thumbs open when they don't get paid for providing stolen cell phones, but I've never seen it. Director David S. Goyer (Blade: Trinity) collects gorgeous shots amid his dimly lit sets, but his stars overact and deliver hokey tines. The movie doesn't really commit to any angle-e.g. suspense, horror drama or some hybrid thereof-which makes it feel like a failure on most levels. The previews are better than the film itself, so don't waste the money to rent it.

These videos courtesy of Hollywood Video, 590 Broadway Ave., 208-342-6117.

Federal panel considers Wesley Snipes' appeal

A federal appeals panel is considering whether the arrest of actor Wesley Snipes' former financial adviser could pave the way for a new trial on tax evasion charges.

Snipes was convicted and sentenced to three years in prison in 2008, but his attorneys asked the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta to allow a new request to dismiss the movie star's conviction or grant him a new trial.

The motion centers on the arrest of Kenneth Starr, the one-time financial adviser to Snipes and other celebrities.

He was a key witness in Snipes' 2008 trial but was charged in May with securities fraud worth $59 million.

вторник, 13 марта 2012 г.

Weaker economy takes toll on manufacturing

A weaker economy is starting to batter local industries. Since January, more than 4,000 jobs have been eliminated in manufacturing throughout south central Pennsylvania.

For the first time in five years, Lancaster County has seen a 1.1 percent decline in manufacturing jobs, with the largest loss of jobs 600 - coming from the combined closing of Heritage Custom Kitchens and Rutt Custom Cabinetry in Leola, according to Michele Heister, industry and business analyst for the state Department of Labor and Industry's Center for Workforce Information and Analysis.

Jobs in the apparel industry and primary metals also have been hit hard, with up to 300 positions eliminated, Heister said.

Lancaster has suffered less than the rest of the state. Statewide, there was a 2.6 percent decline in manufacturing jobs for the first six months of the year.

Since June of 2000, the Harrisburg area has lost 2,500 jobs, while York County has reduced its manufacturing work force by 800 employees, according to Wayne Schopf, analyst for the Center for Workforce Information and Analysis.

The closing of two plants in Cumberland County - Appleton Paper and the Quaker Oats Co. - accounted for the loss of 1,600 jobs. About 900 additional jobs were eliminated with the closing of a Tyco International Ltd. plant in Harrisburg. The closing of a Tyco plant in Shrewsbury also contributed to the loss of jobs in the durable goods industries of York County.

Both Heister and Schopf refrain from making any projections, but the two agree the downturn reflects current economic conditions that have led to lagging sales.

"We have definitely curtailed our operations," said Carl Cook, human resource director for Sodico, also known as Southern Die Casters, in Shrewsbury. The producer of aluminum and zinc die-castings has national customers such as Black and Decker. It began laying off employees in March. Its current workforce of 170 compares with 285 at this time last year.

There are several reasons for the cutbacks, according to Jim Panyard, director of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association, Harrisburg. He estimated the state has lost more than 30,000 manufacturing jobs.

The figures create concern for Panyard, who noted that, on average, no more than 10,000 jobs per year were eliminated during the previous 10 years. But, for the fourth-straight quarter, the state's manufacturing industries have experienced a slump.

Panyard said Pennsylvania is losing jobs to other states that offer more attractive economic conditions such as the socalled "right-towork" states, where employees cannot he forced to join unions to keep a job. About 25 states honor the regulation, he said.

Panyard also attributed the loss of manufacturing jobs to the business tax structure. With a Corporate Net Income tax rate of 9.99 percent, Pennsylvania ranks third-highest in the nation and stands above the national average of 7 percent.

Pennsylvania also is one of 18 states that taxes corporate worth in addition to corporate income, according to a PMA report released in June.

Another reason Pennsylvania is losing manufacturing jobs is the aging population. Many jobs held by older workers were never replaced when the workers retired. Pennsylvania has the second-oldest population in the country, next to Florida.

Some local manufacturers say they have not been affected by the weak economy.

"We're doing better than normal," said Troy Hull, vice president of Applied Electronics Inc., York, and a sister company, York Electro Mechanical Corp.

Combined business for both companies is up by 25 percent, Hull said. The company plans to hire two more workers. It now employs nine full-time workers. Hull attributed the growth to York Electro, which has doubled its sales in the past year, primarily through defense contracts.