Archive for » July 13th, 2012«

Jeep Grand Cherokee fails Swedish moose test, lessons for U.S. consumers

Earlier this week, the Swedish consumer magazine Teknikens Värld revealed that the Jeep Grand Cherokee nearly rolled over in their “moose test.” While the magazine and automaker debate the testing particulars, with the latter involved in some damage control public relations, our engineers explore what this means for U.S. consumers.

The European moose test is a double lane change maneuver that simulates an emergency situation, requiring a quick steer to avoid an obstacle and then turning back into the travel lane to avoid an oncoming vehicle. According to Teknikens Värld, in every run performed with the Grand Cherokee, the vehicle either went up onto two wheels or debeaded tires (separating the rubber from the wheels) thereby posing the risk of a tripped rollover.

Chrysler’s corporate press release states that the test is “invalid” because the vehicle was overloaded beyond its stated load capacity. A separate blog on a Chrysler website says it was overloaded by 110 pounds.

After the results were revealed, Chrysler engineers met with the magazine, providing three Grand Cherokees for a re-test. For subsequent tests, the Chrysler engineers witnessed that vehicle was properly loaded. While no other instances of two-wheel lift occurred, the magazine states that the tires were also debeaded in these runs. (Read: “Jeep Grand Cherokee’s moose test failure—truth and facts.”)

Consumer Reports tests the emergency handling of all vehicles in our own double lane change maneuver, which is similar in concept. Our test is less severe than the “moose test” with more distance between the entry cones and the gate cones, typically resulting in less steering input. Plus, we test the vehicle loaded with only a driver and a full fuel tank.

We have tested two 2011 Grand Cherokees, a Laredo with the V6 and a Limited with the V8. Both had 18-inch wheels and tires. During our initial tests, the Laredo V6 hopped and skipped sideways. While it did not debead tires or go up on two wheels, this behavior did impair driver confidence and affected the speed at which we could negotiate the course. The Limited V8 did not exhibit this behavior.

After that test, Chrysler recalibrated the stability control and issued a software update in January 2011. The software changes eliminated the problems we encountered and increased the speed and confidence through the course. This update was flashed into existing vehicles and incorporated into later-production Grand Cherokees.

Our experience with the Jeep, as well as the hundreds of other SUVs we’ve tested, shows that the way the vehicle is equipped can have a considerable effect on its performance in this test. Tire specifications, suspension calibrations, and weight balance all play a role here. The Grand Cherokee tested by Teknikens Värld was a top-level Overland 3.0 CRD V6 (diesel) model with 20-inch tires that comes with adjustable suspension. (The diesel is not currently sold in the U.S. market; engine selection will affect weight balance.)

Loading is a point of contention in this moose test since it was run with five occupants on board and sandbags in the cargo area. While Chrysler states that the Jeep was overloaded by 110 pounds—about 7-10 percent of the payload rating—Teknikens Värld states the vehicle was weighted appropriately according to the Swedish registration certificate. Individual vehicles can have different payload ratings because of variances in optional equipment, which may be different from weights listed in compliance paperwork. A Grand Cherokee Overland diesel is likely one of the heaviest configurations available, which will cut into available payload capacity. Regardless, it could be argued that overloading it by 110 pounds falls within the realm of foreseeable misuse by a consumer and such a variance should be accounted for in vehicle development.

So what should a consumer here in North America take away from this test?

  • As a class, SUVs are more top-heavy than cars and are more prone to rollovers. As good as modern stability control and chassis design often is, there is no way to change the laws of physics. But it is worrisome that other SUVs tested by the Swedish magazine, including the Volvo XC90 and Volkswagen Touareg, did not have any problems in this test.
  • Despite the war of the words that is ongoing, we wouldn’t be surprised if Jeep would change the electronic stability control (ESC) calibrations on the Grand Cherokee going forward to improve their performance in this test and possibly adjust the recommended weight limits. Teknikens Värld states that there was almost no engagement of the ESC in their tests. That’s a surprise, since the moose test has been around for over 40 years. You would expect passing that test to be part of vehicle development criteria, just as passing CR’s avoidance maneuver test is an engineering priority for many automakers.
  • The Jeep tested in Sweden differs in equipment from models that have been tested by CR and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in their dynamic stability testing.
  • While no vehicle should be operated while overloaded, staying within the limits is crucial for SUVs. Be especially cautious about loading heavy items on the roof.

We hope that Chrysler and Teknikens Värld get to the bottom of why the Grand Cherokee failed the moose test, because no modern vehicle should perform as shown in the magazine’s video.

Related:
Consumer Reports: Jeep Grand Cherokee road test
Update: Chrysler fixes 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee handling problem


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AUTO RACING: Bayne gets behind to his roots with outing to OPS

1:00 AM

AUTO RACING: Bayne gets behind to his roots with outing to OPS

By Bill Stewart bstewart@centralmaine.com
Staff Writer

Trevor Bayne understands what it takes to competition with a Sprint Cup large boys. He also understands that racing during a tip of NASCAR’s stage can be fun, though that it’s also a business.

TREVOR BAYNE

AP

TD BANK 250

When: Sunday, Jul 22
Where: Oxford Plains Speeday, Oxford

He acknowledges pressure, admits to a many ups and downs that plea immature drivers and copes with an capricious future, even with a Daytona 500 feat trustworthy to his resume.

“It can be stressful,” Bayne pronounced from his emporium in Concord, N.C. “Livelihoods are on a line during a tip level. It’s a job, a approach of life for a lot of people. It’s how people compensate a bills. But we still have to remember, we’re pushing competition cars for a living. We’re not saving a world. We’re racing. We forget that sometimes.”

Bayne gets all of this, and it’s since a boyish-looking 21-year-old will make his initial outing to Maine subsequent weekend for a 39th annual TD Bank 250 during Oxford Plains Speedway.

The youngest motorist to ever win a Daytona 500 pronounced he will transport north to assistance him transport behind in time.

“This competition will move me behind to my roots,” he said. “I’m so pumped. we don’t get to do too most brief lane things anymore. we have no genuine Late Model experience. we know it’s going to be a genuine training bend for me. But, for me, it’s going to be so most fun to competition when it’s not usually your job.

“It gets to a indicate where it can be stressful during a tip level. But if we run good or we run bad, we won’t have to live it by all week. I’ve never been to Maine before, though I’m unequivocally looking brazen to it.”

Bayne is a fortifying Daytona 500 champ and races a singular Sprint Cup and Nationwide schedule.

He’s a member of Roush Fenway Racing, though usually on a part-time basis.

Despite winning one of NASCAR’s premier races, Bayne is biding his time with Roush.

The classification formerly announced Ricky Stenhouse Jr. would fill a chair of Matt Kenseth, who is withdrawal Roush after 14 years.

Despite being upheld over, Bayne pronounced he could slip into Stenhouse’s float on a Nationwide debate subsequent season.

For now, Bayne is concentrating on finishing a year clever — he has one Nationwide and 8 Sprint Cup races left on his schedule.

“I wish we had a full-time ride, though we had to take a step back,” he said. “Next year, hopefully, we can go full time. It’s tough since we wish to race. I’m underneath agreement with Roush Fenway and we usually have to be patient. But as a immature driver, it can be tough to be studious sometimes. we usually adore to race. It’s all we wish to do.”

Bayne becomes a latest in a prolonged line of marquee NASCAR drivers who will competition a 250.

Since 2004, Kenseth, Kyle Busch, Kurt Busch, Ricky Craven, Denny Hamlin, Terry Labonte, Kevin Harvick, J.J. Yeley, and Brad Keselowski have raced a 250.

Kyle Busch won a competition final year while Harvick took a mottled dwindle in 2008.

“I’m going adult there to be competitive,” Bayne said. “I don’t wish to contend it’s all for fun. When we come in from a tip level, we don’t wish to give a (local) drivers any bragging rights.”

Bayne, a Knoxville, Tenn., native, will expostulate a Late Model owned by Kendall Roberts, of Barre, Vt.

Roberts prepared Keselowski’s automobile for a 2010 race.

Bayne pronounced he skeleton to arrive during Oxford on Jul 21, a day before a TD Bank 250, for a use session.

“I can’t wait,” pronounced Bayne, who, distinct Kyle Busch, won’t expostulate in a Pro All Stars Series North competition that night.

Bill Stewart — 621-5640

bstewart@centralmaine.com

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American sizzles at Classic

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Mongol Rally: Let a impassioned journey begin–again

But why?

Why would we wish to expostulate from Britain to Mongolia in a little automobile by a sometimes-hostile turf of 18 countries where you’re roughly guaranteed to confront some arrange of trouble? Especially when that difficulty could embody death, utterly presumably your own?

And why, if you’ve attempted it once and scarcely got killed, would we wish to do it again?

To inspire reading, of course.

We don’t meant reading of this blog, nonetheless that’s good too. We meant reading for children who might not have entrance to books.

That’s since Leon Logothetis and Steven Priovolos have teamed adult again for a Mongol Rally, a highway outing that starts Saturday outward of London during and ends in Ulan Bator, Mongolia. For each mile a dual expostulate (and manners of a convene contend a automobile can’t have some-more than a 1.2 liter-engine), they will present a book to an impecunious child by FirstBook. Ten thousand miles, 10,000 books.

Logothetis and Priovolos started a convene final year, as readers of this blog might recall. Things went OK a initial week (if we omit visa problems and a stomach dissapoint that laid a ever-energetic Logothetis prosaic on his back) though on a eighth day, they were T-boned in Romania by a motorist in a 4X4 who was violating all sorts of trade laws. Their car, a Nissan Micra, was totaled. Somehow, they were not.

After carrying to dump out of a 10,000-mile rally, Logothetis pronounced he was undone and depressed. But then, he said, he and Priovolos resolved that a journey might have been cut brief since there was no component of giving and compassion, a hallmark of some of their prior adventures.

The two, for instance, final open finished a debate of what they called a Kindness Cab, in that they gathering a black British cab cab opposite country, interlude to give rides to people who indispensable them (a maestro on his approach to a sanatorium for cancer treatment, a bad family who assimilated a dual for a outing to an ice cream store, finish with solidified greats for all). The Kindness Cab was lovable though a automatic mess. In a end, it didn’t matter. They lifted $11,500 that they donated to internal schools and to a St. Joseph Center in Venice.

With a book donations, Logothetis thinks his Mongol Rally kismet is in sync. You’ll have a possibility to see in a entrance days as he blogs his approach opposite a third of a Earth’s surface.

Watch this space.



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Tour de France 2012

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Willys2 Concept Vehicle at Sydney Motor Show

Continually reinforcing its brand values, the Jeep name is to be further enhanced with the showing of a stunning concept vehicle at the Sydney Motor Show next month. First seen at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit earlier this year, the new Jeep Willys2 concept builds on the spirit of the award winning 2001 Willys concept vehicle which has a strong “Hummer” flavour to it. Last year’s Jeep Willys concept won the Gold Award in the 2001 Industrial Design Excellence Competition in the USA. According to Chrysler, the Willys2 was developed “to exist in harmony with nature while being ready to venture into the rugged bush” and it “embodies the Jeep brand’s core values of authenticity, freedom and legendary capability.”

Incorporating cutting-edge plastic technology and a lightweight aluminium frame, Willys2 features ultra-modern interpretations of trademark Jeep design cues including the seven-slot grille and trapezoidal wheel arches. Shown by the Chrysler Group in prior concept vehicles, injection-moulded plastic bodies save up to 50 percent in manufacturing costs and weight and are nearly 100 percent recyclable.

While its battle-proven World War II ancestor, the Willys MB, was made of sheet metal, this concept was built in carbon fibre to simulate the weight savings that could be achieved with injection-moulded plastics.

The removable hard top comes equipped with a roof rack featuring a full-size spare tyre holder and an integrated luggage carrier, as well as bindings for multiple kinds of outdoor gear. Three auxiliary search and rescue lamps emphasise the “go-anywhere, do-anything” attitude that is core to the Jeep brand.

The Jeep Willys2 weighs approximately 1350 kg, is powered by a 1.6-litre, in-line four-cylinder engine that has been supercharged to deliver 120 kW and 210 Nm of torque. Its four-speed automatic transmission is coupled with a shift-on-the-fly transfer case with full-time four-wheel drive and low-range modes. Estimated performance figures include a sprint to 96 km/h in about 10 seconds and a top speed of nearly 140 km/h.

Willys2′s chiselled design lends substance and visual weight, suggesting a low centre of gravity with a long wheelbase (2413 mm) and wide track (1496 mm front, 1509 mm rear). The vehicle features a custom independent short-and-long-arm front and multi-link solid rear axle suspension with coil springs at all four wheels.

The spacious interior blends colours of aqua and silver. Translucent plastics allow for a new approach to Jeep design while remaining true to the brand’s legendary versatility. Adding further to the utilitarian approach, you can even use a water hose to clean out the interior of the vehicle.

  • Willys2 Concept Vehicle at Sydney Motor Show
  • Willys2 Concept Vehicle at Sydney Motor Show
  • Willys2 Concept Vehicle at Sydney Motor Show
  • Willys2 Concept Vehicle at Sydney Motor Show
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Tips for roving with kids

At mile 100, we strech your wit’s finish and spin to face a demons in a backseat. “Bobby, quit poking your brother!” The disciplinary daze army we to impact on a stop and jolts watchful your slumbering toddler. She breaks into sobs. And so do you. It’s moments like these when we wish a superhero nanny could swoop in to save we from highway outing hell. Until super nanny arrives, here are some ways to keep your kids happy in a car.

1. Lose a record limits. At home we might howl to spin off a TV or put down a Nintendo DS, though when traveling, give your kids (and yourself) a break. Don’t feel like we are a bad primogenitor for vouchsafing your kids spend their transport time staring during a shade – it is mostly a best approach to keep them assigned and happy. And it doesn’t all have to be foolish entertainment. Educational handheld games and downloadable audio books are some-more egghead options. Here’s a tip: Make a run to a library before your outing and collect out some DVDs, CDs or audio books. It’s giveaway and your kids will be vehement by something new.

2. Go old-fashioned. There’s a reason a permit image diversion is still around 50 years later. For no-frills family fun, try aged standbys like 20 Questions, Counting Cows, Geography or Travel Bingo. Another source of out-of-date fun is a classical house diversion like Sorry, Clue or checkers, that all come in transport sizes. You might be astounded by how most your kids will adore these elementary amusements so don’t be fearful to dump a DVDs and start a rousing diversion of we Spy.

3. Get creative. For a artistically prone child, a sketchpad alone could be adequate to occupy them for hours. Let their creativity power free. Or rivet their artsy side by seeking them to constraint a flitting landscape or pull their possess chronicle of a family home, finish with their favorite (and much-missed) pet in a front yard. Pack qualification reserve like paper, string, or aluminum foil so kids can emanate crafts, play cat’s cradle, or mold a foil sculpture. And remember, a elementary coloring book – maybe featuring their favorite Disney impression – frequency disappoints.

4. Appoint a co-pilot. Give your kids a map or directions to your end and ask them to assistance we navigate a trip. Put them in assign of alerting we of arriving exits or identifying points of interest. This is a good approach to keep comparison children wild and learn them a profitable ability of regulating a map to transport from indicate A to indicate B.

5. Surprise them. Purchase some new toys to exhibit while on a road. These warn amusements do not need to mangle a bank. The elementary act of using to a dollar store for a integrate of new playthings can go a prolonged way.

6. Pack snacks. No matter what toys we have in tow, your child will not tarry a outing on an dull stomach. Fueling them with their favorite snacks will keep them intent in whatever activities we brought. Do not rest on qualification food or rest stop snacks. Picky kids will spin their noses during a unknown fare, not to discuss a preference will mostly be junk food. Bring healthy options from home like PBJ, granola bars and fruit.

7. Schedule stops. Stopping frequently is essential to highway outing survival. Not usually are stops required for diaper changes and break runs, though also for preventing en track meltdowns. Giving kids a possibility to run around and bake some appetite can be a disproportion between a pacific automobile float and a highway outing from hell.

8. Buy an activity kit. Activity kits are a elementary resolution to backseat boredom. Rather than cramming a bag full of games, notebooks, crayons, and qualification supplies, simply buy a pack that has it all. Activity kits come with pages of coloring, mazes, puzzles and automobile games – adequate to keep your small one calm for hours. TravelKiddy and Klutz are a best places to find fun activity kits that will make your subsequent family outing pain-free.


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'Safari Boy' Mark Hook sent on three-month holiday to steer him away from crime clocks up 113th offence

  • Taxpayer-funded jaunt to Africa in 1993 was supposed to stop offending
  • Within a year he was back in court over 34 offences
  • Branded ‘perpetual villain’ by judge after a series of appearances since
  • Jailed for 18 months for mugging pensioner but he’ll be free within days
  • Crook claims to be descendant of Henry Hook, hero soldier of the Zulu Wars

By
Keith Gladdis

04:53 EST, 12 July 2012

|

20:05 EST, 12 July 2012

When teenage tearaway Mark Hook was treated to a three-month ‘character building’ trip to Africa it was supposed to deter him from a life of crime.

But just weeks after his £7,000 tour of Egypt, Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Zambia ‘Safari Boy’ Hook was arrested for drink driving and carrying a knife.

Now, almost 20 years and 113 offences later, Hook has been branded a ‘perpetual villain’ by a judge tired of constantly seeing him in the dock.

Mark Hook

'Safari Boy': Lifelong crook Mark Hook has been jailed for his 111th offence - despite an attempt to change his ways with a taxpayer-funded holiday to Africa

Laughing: Hook in 1993, left, after going on the African safari and right, now aged 35 in his latest police mugshot. He may look back on his life and wish he had taken the opportunity to change his ways

Hook, 35, was in jail last night
after being sentenced at Gloucester Crown Court for his latest crimes –
mugging an elderly shopper and handling credit cards stolen from another
woman.

He was sentenced to
18 months in prison by Judge Jamie Tabor QC but because he has been in
custody on remand for nine months he will be free again within days.

In
his 32nd court appearance, Judge Tabor told career criminal Hook: ‘We
have been looking at each other across this court for many years.

‘There
have been many protestations from you that you are going to become an
honest citizen and behave yourself. So far you haven’t.’

He added: ‘You have an appalling record.’

Hook’s
88-day junket to Africa caused nationwide condemnation in 1993 and was
even criticised by the then prime minister John Major.

Junket: Hook, back row second from left, poses with a group in Egypt at the Temple of Karnak while enjoying the £7,000 safari to try and stop his offending in 1993

Expelled from school at 14, Hook had been sent to Bryn Melyn in North Wales, a therapy centre for unruly teenagers.

The
trip was supposed to take him out of the environment where he had been a
young offender and show him places where people were worse off than
him.

Hook claims he is a
direct ancestor of soldier Henry Hook who won the Victoria Cross
fighting Zulus at Rorke’s Drift in Natal, South Africa in 1879.

But the only thing the teenager brought back from his tour of Africa was a determination to continue his life of crime.

In
January 1994, just months after the trip, Hook appeared at Gloucester
Crown Court for 34 offences including burglary and taking a car without
consent and he was given a year’s supervision order.

That year he was back in court twice for burglary offences, handling stolen goods and driving while disqualified.

By the time he was an adult, Hook had blossomed into a lifelong criminal with a heroin and crack cocaine habit to feed.

Over the last 18 years he has served prison sentences for aggravated burglary, theft and wounding.
In
his most recent court appearance, Judge Tabor said Hook’s crimes were
exactly the same as when he was last jailed – for two years – in 2009
for mugging a frail 80-year-old man in the street.

He said: ‘Your latest offences were planned and you acted in concert with another person. You are a perpetual villain.’

Undated file photo of 'Safari Boy' Mark Hook

Smirking: Hook in 1994 having been to court for dozens more offences after the taxpayer-funded

Hook’s innocent smile as a child, left, gave little indication of the terror he would inflict on his victims over the years. Right, he laughs in in 1994 having been to court for dozens more offences after the taxpayer-funded trip

Hook
pleaded guilty to stealing a bag from an elderly shopper in an alleyway
near an Asda store in Gloucester in September last year. He also
admitted handling credit cards stolen on the same afternoon from another
elderly woman.

A second man, Jason Marshall, 23, was involved in the offences and has already been jailed for 18 months.

Marshall
had been arrested soon after the offence and the court heard how Hook
had called Crimestoppers claiming he had witnessed the robbery and tried
to stop the assailant.

Prosecutor
Andrew Wilkins said: ‘He was aware the robber had been arrested and he
was worried he might be implicated because his fingerprints might be
found on the stolen property.’

Judge Tabor was unimpressed by Hook’s actions saying: ‘It was a pre-emptive strike by him to try to explain his fingerprints.’

Hook denied any involvement in the offences but was arrested and charged.

Safari: Giraffes walk across a plain in the kind of scene that Hook was treated to when he was a teenager. Unfortunately having the kind of holiday that most people dream of did little to temper his offending

Undeterred
by his arrest, Hook went into Debenham’s in Gloucester two weeks later
with credit cards taken from both women and tried to use them.

Dermot Clarke, defending, said: ‘He knows you well, your honour, and he doesn’t want to shilly-shally with you.

‘He
is 35 and he has got a four-year-old daughter. He has not seen her
since he was remanded in custody because her mother will not take her to
prison.

Illustrious ancestor: Hook claims he is a direct descendant of soldier Henry Hook who won the Victoria Cross fighting Zulus at Rorke¿s Drift in Natal, South Africa in 1879

Illustrious ancestor: Hook claims he is a direct descendant of soldier Henry Hook who won the Victoria Cross fighting Zulus at Rorke¿s Drift in Natal, South Africa in 1879

‘You may have heard it before but I have no doubt of his sincerity when he says he never wants to be here again.’

Judge Tabor responded: ‘I don’t want him here again.’

Mr
Clarke said that while on remand Hook had been treated for his drug
addiction and had become the jail’s race relations representative.

But the judge said the only factor in Hook’s favour was that he had pleaded guilty.

He sentenced him to 18 months for theft and six months for handling stolen goods. The sentences will run concurrently.

Hook’s
mother, Rita Dolan, has blamed her son’s continued life of crime on the
fact that social services lavished money on him instead of punishing
him.

She has said previously: ‘They spoilt him rotten and did not prepare him for real life.’

But Hook has been adept at manipulating the system.

In 2001 he admitted sending a forged doctor’s note to court so he could spend Christmas at home.

Then
in 2009 he pledged to work with the Prince’s Trust on a scheme where
experienced burglars helped householders to improve their home security.

And guess what happened to Canal Boy and friends

Mark Hook was one of a host of young offenders pampered by the justice system in the 1990s in a misguided attempt to put them on the straight and narrow.

In previous years, the delinquents would have been locked up in borstals or sent to approved schools.

Burglar: Clinton Bowen, also known as Canal Boy, grew up to be a drug addict who targeted the elderly

Burglar: Clinton Bowen, also known as Canal Boy, grew up to be a drug addict who targeted the elderly

But in the mid-1990s they had become ‘disadvantaged young persons’ who were given all the help the taxpayer could afford.

Clinton Bowen was treated to a three-month £12,000 barge holiday in 1997 in an effort to deter him from crime.

The 15-year-old became known as ‘Canal Boy’. He grew up to be a drug addict who specialised in raiding the homes of the elderly.

In 2001 he was jailed for three years for stealing from a 91-year-old great-grandmother and in 2009 he got five years for carrying out 22 burglaries while on parole.

His brother Casey earned the name ‘Pocket Money Boy’ when he was paid £60 a week after 37 arrests between 1992 and 1994.

After paying out £1,560, social services stopped the money because his offending increased.

Jason Cooper was branded ‘World Tour Boy’ after going on holidays costing the taxpayer £50,000 to ‘instil feelings of self-worth by broadening his horizons’.

But Cooper, now 39, progressed to a life in and out of jail for crimes including conspiracy to rob a post office, burglary, fraud and car crime.

He even tried to sue social services claiming he had not been taught basic life skills such as how to  claim benefits.

Here’s what other readers have said. Why not add your thoughts,
or debate this issue live on our message boards.

The comments below have not been moderated.

32 court appearances !!!, and only the Lord knows how many crimes !!!.
I thought people were only rewarded for the Good they do !!!.
£7000 for that Safari, that could have been spent on a Scout Troop or the likes for all the good work they do.

Unfortunately, do gooders don’t learn and still haven’t. There may not be a lot of free holidays around now but judges and magistrates are at the peak of incompetence and let most people off or the most you can get is a short stay in HMP Butlins and won’t even be there long enough to get to know the spiders..

Perhaps he just needs another holiday, the Bahamas would be nice after all this wet weather.

Was Bob Mugabe his mentor in Zimbabwe?

this type of person needs horse whipping.

Do you think after this that the halfwit Marxists embedded in the educational system will change their ways? Really?

“I bet one of his “workers” had to go with him.” – Chris, Devon, 6:17 ///////////////// You’ve won the bet, Chris. I remember well these holidays for young offenders, accompanied by their case workers. The liberal brigade in full flow. An outrageous experiment at taxpayer expense. The details are hazy now but I recall that one tearaway committed offences while actually on one of these “character building” jaunts.

We need a boot camp system

Corporal punishment at an early would have been both cheaper and more effective.

Some of these people just need putting down – and yes I do mean six feet under.

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Jeep takes centre stage in Val d’Aosta

Official Juventus sponsor Jeep, first displayed on the new team shirts at yesterday’s unveiling from Juventus Stadium, has also made its presence felt in Val d’Aosta for the start of the Bianconeri’s pre-season build-up.

To demonstrate the Jeep’s impressive capabilities, two stands have been assembled at the Juventus Summer Village, the traditional pre-season meeting point for Bianconeri fans. These have been designed to represent the territories where Jeeps can best express their personalities: the city and challenging off-road terrain.

The Jeep Urban stand represents the city and boasts a modern, hi-tech aluminium, Plexiglas and wooden structure that houses the exhibition area, along with two glass table-football games on which fans can compete in exciting fixtures.

In contrast, the Jeep Beach Stand, located in the heart of the Aosta Valley, recreates a sandy beach, and provides the venue for exciting beach soccer tournaments.

Visitors can also enjoy on and off- road test drives on board the flagship Jeep Grand Cherokee, the iconic Jeep Wrangler and the Urban compact SUV Jeep Compass. In the area adjacent to the village, Jeep has created a special off-road track that shows off the vehicle’s extraordinary off-road capabilities. The second part of the test drive covers the mountain routes in Chatillon, giving drivers the opportunity to experience the Jeep’s on-road performance at first hand.

The Bianconeri’s pre-season in Chatillon also provides the occasion for a preview of the brand new S Limited Grand Cherokee, due to be launched in Italy and Europe in September.

In addition, all those who travel to the Summer Village in a Jeep will be handed – upon displaying their car keys – direct access to the beach soccer tournament and Juventus training sessions.

All Jeep activities in Val d’Aosta can be followed on www.jeep-people.com and via the brand’s various social networking profiles:  www.facebook.com/JeepOlllllllOpeople, www.youtube.com/JeepOlllllllOPeople, www.flickr.com/jeep-people, https://twitter.com/#!/Jeep_People and http://pinterest.com/jeeppeople/.


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Recruiting highway trips develop over time

Leon Rice listened a bump as he gathering down a California highway with conduct manager Mark Few on one of his initial recruiting trips as a Gonzaga assistant.

At that time, a mid-major powerhouse lacked a resources to fly around a nation to director talent. So coaches borrowed a sedan from a Bulldogs upholder for highway trips.

[+] EnlargeFew/Rice

When Rice and Few satisfied a fender had depressed off their loaner automobile on Interstate 405 — it was a automobile from a booster’s California dealership — they motionless to collect it.

But they weren’t certain how to ensue once they’d grabbed it from a road.

“Neither of us knew what to do with it,” pronounced Rice, now conduct manager during Boise State. “We went from L.A. to Vegas to Phoenix in a automobile with no bumper.”

This week, many of a country’s premier coaches will transport a AAU circuit on private jets as a initial analysis duration of a summer starts Wednesday. Others will fly commercial. When they land, they’ll bound into let cars and dart to several blue-chip AAU tournaments via a country. Many will keep an eye on their programs from distant with a assistance of tablets and smartphones.

“You’re never divided from it all since of email and dungeon phones,” Long Beach State manager Dan Monson said.

The same folks who’ve taken advantage of new resources and record also remember a struggles they encountered when they strike a highway for a initial time as immature coaches — a duration that didn’t engage texting and tweeting.

Coaches carried pursuit cards behind then, not dungeon phones. And fewer restrictions meant longer stretches on a road.

“I don’t know what a stats were on a partner coaches who stayed married. It was hard, we know, for a lot of guys we knew,” Wisconsin’s Bo Ryan said. “Now it’s some-more manageable.”

Most of their recruiting lessons were gleaned from hearing and error.

As a immature partner during Valparaiso, Scott Drew was so concerned to find new players during a Kentucky AAU contest that he forgot to book a room in advance. Once he arrived, he couldn’t find any pretty labelled hotels within a 45-minute expostulate of a event. And he didn’t have a bill to stay during a five-star mark with vacancy.

“So we had to nap in a automobile and do a showering during a lorry stop a subsequent morning,” Drew recalled. “I felt like we was indoctrinated into coaching that day.”

I don’t know what a stats were on a partner coaches who stayed married. It was hard, we know, for a lot of guys we knew.


– Wisconsin manager Bo Ryan

But during slightest he stayed dry.

Frank Haith once “graduated” to a satellite phone — finish with a container and antennas — on cross-country highway trips as a immature partner coach. To make calls, he had to put a antennas on tip of his automobile and bond it to a phone.

“If it was stormy and cold — your window [had to stay] open — we got wet,” pronounced Haith, now a conduct manager during Missouri. “It was in a suitcase. … You usually got that on highway trips.”

They were all ambitious, fervent to infer they belonged with a maestro coaches who busy a circuit. The prolonged highway trips that lacked a conveniences they suffer today, however, were value a con and essential for their career paths.

Shaka Smart’s coaching career began during California University of Pennsylvania, a Division II school. During his initial highway outing to a vital AAU contest in Philadelphia, he speckled a lanky child with potential.

“The child was about 6-6, maybe 6-7, unequivocally skinny. He didn’t seem like he had a whole lot of descent game,” Smart said. “I suspicion he was a male that maybe could play for us. … He unequivocally indispensable to get stronger.”

Smart tracked a immature contestant all day and afterwards he called his AAU manager and voiced his interest. The manager told Smart that he’d send a summary though combined that he approaching his student to attend a high-major Division we program.

“Needless to say, [former Syracuse star] Hakim Warrick motionless opposite going to California University of Pennsylvania,” Smart pronounced about a Big East standout who helped a Orange win a inhabitant pretension in 2003 and was a first-round collect in a 2005 NBA draft.

[+] EnlargeCraig Robinson

Craig Robinson spent some-more than a decade in a corporate universe before he assimilated Northwestern’s staff. He arrived early on a day he attended his initial vital AAU eventuality for a program. But once he entered a building, he satisfied he was alone.

When he finally found a tournament’s operator, he asked him for a desired packets that enclose information about a AAU coaches and players participating in a event. Sure, a male told him. But it would cost him $350. Cash.

“I roughly soppy my pants. And he wouldn’t take a credit card,” Robinson said. “I was like, ‘Oh my god. Who carries around all that money anymore?’ Of course, all a coaches who’d been doing this knew this.”

Recruiting has undergone thespian changes over a years.

The budgets are bigger, so it’s easier for coaches to acquire gentle accommodations on a road. And they’re strapped with minute information about any actor on a building when they attend events now. But that creates it some-more formidable to find a gem.

“A lot of times, what recruiting has incited into now isn’t about discovering, it’s about creation certain everybody knows you’re there,” Ryan said.

Plus, a intercourse has shifted, some maestro coaches said.

“All a assistants knew any other. We were all friends,” Monson said. “After a games, we’d go out and have a splash together. It’s not that approach anymore. If someone listened that we were sleeping on a building recruiting or couldn’t means to have your possess hotel, they would only kill we recruiting with that information.”

During one Jul recruiting period, Rice pronounced he survived on $150 for a whole month. He held rides. He slept on coaches’ floors.

He’d only mislaid his pursuit as a connoisseur partner during Oregon, though he wanted to stay on a recruiting route to correlate with a coaches who could assistance him find another prospect.

Rice pronounced he doesn’t bewail one thing about a grind.

“Those were good times,” he said. “It was a struggle, though it was a lot of fun. We all enjoyed it.”


Myron Medcalf


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