Tunisia arrests 23 in ‘terror cell’ over museum attack

Carthage Room, Bardo Museum in Tunis, Tunisia. Photo taken in 2005 by Bernard Gagnon, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, 2.5 Generic, 2.0 Generic and 1.0 Generic license.

TUNIS, Tunisia (AFP) – Tunisia said Thursday that it has arrested 23 suspects in connection with last week’s jihadist massacre at the country’s national museum.

“Twenty-three suspects including a woman have been arrested as part of a terrorist cell” involved in the attack, Interior Minister Najem Gharsalli told journalists.

Those arrested were all Tunisians, and they accounted for “80 percent of this cell,” he said.

Another Tunisian, two Moroccans and an Algerian suspected of being members of the cell were on the run.

The Tunisian fugitive, Maher Ben Mouldi Kaidi, is alleged to have provided the automatic weapons to the two gunmen who killed 21 people — including 20 foreign tourists — at the Bardo museum in Tunis on March 18.

The head of the cell was among those arrested and identified as Mohamed Emine Guebli.

But the minister said the operation was organized by an Algerian jihadist named Lokmane Abou Sakhr, one of the leaders of the Al-Qaeda-linked Okba Ibn Nafaa Brigade, the main Tunisian armed group active along the border with Algeria.

Officials called into question the claim of responsibility for the attack from Al-Qaeda’s jihadist rival, the Islamic State group.

“Islamic State praised this attack for propaganda and publicity. But on the ground it was Okba Ibn Nafaa which belongs to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb that organized and committed this crime,” interior ministry spokesman Mohamed Ali Aroui told AFP.

AQIM has not responded since IS claimed responsibility for the attack, which would be its first in Tunisia.
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Action Comics #1 sells for a ‘super’ $658K in online auction

A CGC-certified 5.0 copy of Action Comics #1, featuring the first appearance of Superman, sold for $658,000 at New York-based online comic book auction house ComicConnect.com on Tuesday, March 24, 2015. Image courtesy of ComicConnect.com.

NEW YORK – A CGC-certified 5.0 copy of Action Comics #1, the first appearance of Superman, sold for $658,000 at New York-based online comic book auction house ComicConnect.com on Tuesday, March 24, 2015. There were 73 bids on the offering.

The consignor had purchased the copy in 2010 for $436,000.

The company ascribed at least some of the increase in price realized to their highly publicized 2014 online purchase of the CGC 9.0 white-pages copy of Action Comics #1 from Pristine Comics.

“Our purchase of the $3.2 million Action Comics #1 CGC 9.0 was a four-color tsunami in the vintage comic book industry,” said Rob Reynolds, the company’s Director of Consignments.

He said they believe that their record purchase affected not just copies of Action Comics #1, but also the market for other early Action Comics issues and even other titles as well.

“Our expectations were truly blown away with the $658,000 hammer price,” Reynolds said. “And the consignor was thrilled with the return on his investment after his 2010 purchase at $436,000. Also, this is actually the ‘Superman Saves the Day’ book that generated headlines around the world when the initial sale saved a family from foreclosure during some of the worst of the recession.”

Additional sales in the auction thus far include Action Comics #2 CGC 9.4 C $92,111, Action Comics #13 CGC 8.0 $102,001, Archie Comics #1 CGC 6.5 $61,000, Batman #1 CBCS 3.0 $41,166, Avengers #1 CGC 8.5 Signature Series $21,500, Amazing Fantasy #15 CGC 6.0 $27,000, and Captain America Comics #1 CBCS 4.5 R $22,200.

The auction concludes Friday night, March 27, 2015 with Session Five.

Contact: support@comicconnect.com or call 888-779-7377 for additional information. Visit them online at www.comicconnect.com. .

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Special thanks to our friends at Scoop (Gemstone Publishing) for sharing this copyrighted article with us. Visit them online at scoop.diamondgalleries.com. .

A CGC-certified 5.0 copy of Action Comics #1, featuring the first appearance of Superman, sold for $658,000 at New York-based online comic book auction house ComicConnect.com on Tuesday, March 24, 2015. Image courtesy of ComicConnect.com.
A CGC-certified 5.0 copy of Action Comics #1, featuring the first appearance of Superman, sold for $658,000 at New York-based online comic book auction house ComicConnect.com on Tuesday, March 24, 2015. Image courtesy of ComicConnect.com.

Pa. collector’s bar pays homage to Rolling Rock beer

Lighted Rolling Rock beer sign. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com and Richard Opfer Auctioneering

Lighted Rolling Rock beer sign. Image courtesy of LiveAuctioneers.com and Richard Opfer Auctioneering

LLOYDSVILLE, Pa. (AP) – From the street, the home in Lloydsville looks like any other ranch-style house in the Unity village. Even from the outside, there are only a few signs of the treasure trove of Rolling Rock memorabilia preserved within a converted garage.

Until Jim Mickinak, 70, unlocks the door to the “After Hours” bar to reveal the collection he and wife, Lorraine, have curated for the past 20 years, it’s hard to imagine what another collector termed the “No. 1 collection” of Rolling Rock memorabilia.

After he flips on two panels of switches to bring dozens of neon signs, display lights and fountains to life, it’s easy to believe.Continue reading

Nakashima chairs starring at B. Langston auction March 29

One of the six Nakashima conoid walnut chairs. B. Langston’s LLC image

JAX, Fla. – An exquisite set of George Nakashima chairs heads a list of more than 200 lots of fine antiques to be sold by Auctions by B. Langston’s LLC in Jacksonville, Florida on Sunday, March 29, beginning at 1 p.m. Eastern time.

LiveAuctioneers.com will provide absentee and Internet live bidding.

The set of six Nakashima conoid walnut chairs comes with provenance provided by the family, including personal correspondence between them and the maker.

Fine antiques including a Tiffany & Co. shelf clock, a collection of silver overlay art glass, a nice piece of Galle, bronzes and more.

For additional information on any item in the sale, call B. Langston’s at 904-642-1003 or email info@blangston.com.

 

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Continental Hobby House welcomes spring with Mar. 29 toy auction

'Lithographed tin airplane hangar with high-wing monoplane, German. Continental Hobby House image

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. – When it comes to toys, the expert team at Continental Hobby House is hard to beat. Since 1964, they’ve been bringing to the marketplace the top brands and rarest examples of all types of antique and vintage collectibles from Europe, Japan and the United States. On Sunday, March 29th, Continental Hobby House will auction a fabulous collection of toys, with absentee and Internet live bidding available through LiveAuctioneers. Start time is 2 p.m. Eastern / 1 p.m. Central / 11 a.m. Pacific Time.

There’s a huge selection of toy cars, from manufacturers like Schuco, Bandai, Alps and Nomura; as well as race cars by Daiya, Yonezawa, Tri-Ang Minic, etc. Toy planes from Cragstan, Yoshiya, Rosko and many others will line up alongside toy boats by Schuco, Arnold, Fleetline, Sutcliffe, etc.

Look for wind-up figures that include Tom Tom Jungle Boy, Little Monkey Artist, Happy the Violinist, etc., HO trains by Narklin, Roco, and Fleischmann); and games from the Edwardian and Victorian eras – many of them quite rare.

Also in the sale are playsets, including Captain Power and Hot Wheels; Star Wars toys, cap guns, automata and even paintings. The list is endless, and the online catalog deserves a thorough search.
For questions about any item in the sale, call 920-693-3371.

View the fully illustrated catalog and sign up to bid absentee or live via the Internet at www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

 

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Hudson Valley Auctioneers to offer contents of upscale NY estates, Mar. 30

Image courtesy of Hudson Valley Auctioneers.

BEACON, N.Y. – Hudson Valley Auctioneers will conduct a multi-estate auction of 500 fresh-to-the-market estate lots on Monday, March 30, starting at 6 p.m. Eastern Time. Absentee and Internet live bidding will be available through LiveAuctioneers.

The sale includes a complete Bedford. New York estate along with partial contents from several other estates in Dutchess and Westchester Counties. The Bedford estate had been owned by a German lapidary who collected Oriental carpets, paintings and other interesting objects. One of his relatives was an architect, artist and furniture designer in Germany, and the auction will offer several exceptional inlaid chests, cabinets, carvings, book covers, plaques and other items by this master craftsman, Hans Reul.

Approximately 30 estate rugs will begin the sale, followed by several groups of paintings, including works by Morgan Colt, Augusto Diani, Frederick Waugh and others. A collection of Chinese porcelains, scrolls and bronzes, Japanese Satsuma, paintings and other Asian lots will follow by several blocks of silver. Leading the silver offerings is a rare Southern sterling tea set signed ‘H’ for Adolph Himmel and stamped Hyde and Goodrich New Orleans. A very large and heavy English sterling reticulated basket by Edward Barnard and Sons, some Judaica, a few Russian pieces, several flatware sets, including an exceptionally large and fine hand hammered 800 set, a Royal Danish Acorn set and other silver lots, will be sold.

A selection of signed art glass including small cabinet pieces by Durand, Galle, Tiffany as well as a Tiffany linenfold bronze floor lamp, several signed 19th and 20th-century bronzes and a collection of antique gilt picture frames will follow a lot of ten Len Prince and other original photographic prints. Traditional Kittinger mahogany, French Provincial and other Continental furniture will find competition from an interesting offering of midcentury pieces by such noted makers and designers as Vladimir Kagan, George Tanier, Willy Rizzo for Pierre Cardin, T.H Robsjons-Gibbons for Widdicomb, G. Nakashima and others.

A fine polychrome Northwest Coast totem with some age, several carved stone Canadian figures and two exceptionally long scrimmed walrus tusks will be offered and followed by an excellent collection of antique hand-colored maps. Mixed in will be lots of fine china, signed crystal, a large collection of 15-cent comic books, a rare 19th-century cast-iron Senatorial desk with eagles, lamps and lighting; and much more.

This large and interesting sale of about 400 lots is 95% unreserved auction.

For additional information on any item in the auction, call Neil Vaughn at 914-489-2399 or Theo DeHaas at 845-480-2381.

View the fully illustrated catalog and sign up to bid absentee or live via the Internet at www.LiveAuctioneers.com.

 

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Maker of Louisville Slugger bats selling brand to Wilson

Louisville Slugger store bat rack, 1939. Image courtesy LiveAuctioneers.com archive and Morphy Auctions

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Over a century of family ownership of Louisville Slugger bats is going … going … nearly gone.

The company that makes the iconic bats gripped by generations of ballplayers – from Babe Ruth to David Wright – announced a deal Monday to sell its Louisville Slugger brand to rival Wilson Sporting Goods Co. for $70 million.

For 131 years, the family behind Hillerich & Bradsby Co. has supplied bats for games from the sandlots to the big leagues.

H&B CEO John A. Hillerich IV said keeping the bat business in family hands had been a dinnertime topic for years. But as the competition’s lineup grew in recent years, the family became willing to listen to offers to acquire the brand.

“It’s always been the family’s desire to keep the brand independent and family owned,” Hillerich told reporters. “It’s worked extremely well for 131 years.

“But we’ve seen things change and we had to make a very tough decision. We’d rather the brand go on and have somebody else own it than potentially put it in jeopardy by keeping it in the family.”

Hillerich is the great-grandson of John A. “Bud” Hillerich, who churned out the first Louisville Slugger bat in 1884 for a renowned baseball player in his day, Pete Browning.

Under terms of the agreement, H&B will continue to manufacture Louisville Slugger wood bats at its factory in downtown Louisville, Kentucky.

“The guys down on the floor today are going to be the guys making the bats tomorrow and a year from now and a decade from now,” Hillerich said.

But sale of the brand will cost 52 H&B workers their jobs, out of a total workforce numbering about 270, Hillerich said. The remaining employees will work either for H&B or Wilson.

Louisville Slugger will remain an independent brand once the deal is completed, said Mike Dowse, president of Wilson Sporting Goods. That means the Louisville Slugger bats will still carry the brand’s recognizable oval logo.

Wilson’s deal to acquire the global brand, sales and innovation rights of Louisville Slugger still requires approval by H&B shareholders.

Wilson Sporting Goods is a division of Finnish sports equipment maker Amer Sports Corp. The Helsinki-based company said it expects the deal to be completed in the second quarter.

Former players who now manage major league clubs sounded nostalgic about the age-old brand on Monday.

“I still remember my first Louisville Slugger bat as a kid,” Hall of Fame player and current Minnesota Twins manager Paul Molitor said. “All I knew was that Harmon Killebrew used one, and that was good enough for me. Part of the excitement of signing your first pro contract was getting a bat deal with Louisville Slugger.”

Former All-Star player Matt Williams, who now manages the Washington Nationals, said Louisville Slugger bats were popular among players of his generation.

“There’s so many bats today to choose from that I, for one, would go crazy trying to choose a bat or a company,” he said. “I was a Louisville guy. Used them for a long time.”

About half of all current major league players swing Louisville Slugger bats, according to H&B. The company said it has churned out more than 100 million bats in its history, including aluminum and composite bats.

The sale includes the brand’s aluminum and composite bats, as well as Louisville Slugger lines of fielding and batting gloves, protective gear and equipment bags.

Louisville Slugger’s wood bats are formed mostly out of northern white ash or maple, but a small percentage is made out of birch. The timber comes from forests in New York and Pennsylvania.

H&B will maintain ownership and continue to operate the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory and Gift Shop, a popular tourist destination. Towering outside the museum and factory is a 120-foot-tall steel bat that looms as a landmark in downtown Louisville.

H&B’s Bionic Gloves division and Powerbilt golf brand are not part of the deal, it said.

Dowse said expanding Wilson’s baseball and softball business globally is a key part of its business strategy.

Wilson sees strong growth potential for Louisville Slugger, he said. He noted sales for DeMarini bats have quadrupled since Wilson acquired the brand about 15 years ago.

“We see that same strategy and formula working extremely well for us at the Louisville brand,” he said.

Wilson currently manufactures and sells gloves, bats, uniforms, apparel, protective gear, accessories and player development equipment and training tools through its Wilson, DeMarini and ATEC brands. Like its DeMarini brand, Wilson will market and sell Louisville Slugger as a stand-alone brand.

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AP Baseball Writer Ben Walker, AP freelance writer Carl Kotala and AP Writer Matti Huuhtanen contributed to this report.

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

AP-WF-03-23-15 2151GMT

 

 

 

 

Minnesota museum gets Washington crossing Delaware painting

'Washington Crossing the Delaware' is an 1851 oil-on-canvas painting by the German American artist Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze (1816-1868). It commemorates Gen. George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River on the night of Dec. 25–26, 1776, during the American Revolutionary War. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

WINONA, Minn. (AP) – One of two surviving versions of the painting Washington Crossing the Delaware has a new home at the Minnesota Marine Art Museum in Winona.

The famed 1851 painting depicting George Washington was recently acquired by the museum’s founders from a private collector, who had loaned it to the White House for the past 35 years. Another larger version is owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

The Winona Daily News reports the painting was unveiled at a private event Sunday, and that it was set to go on display when the museum about 120 miles southeast of Minneapolis opened Tuesday.

“It looks just terrific,” museum co-founder Mary Burrichter told the Star Tribune. “We had people crying in the audience last night when we unveiled it. People were gasping and didn’t know what to say.”

The painting now in Winona measures more than 3 feet tall and nearly 6 feet wide, smaller than the one in New York that’s roughly 12-by-21 feet. The works show Washington standing in a rowboat as it traverses the icy Delaware River, in a surprise attack during the American Revolution.

German-born artist Emanuel Leutze, who grew up in the U.S., painted the works in part to move Germans to rebel against their rulers. A third version of the painting was destroyed by British bombs at a German museum in 1942.

Burrichter and New York-based art dealer John Driscoll, who arranged the purchase, declined to tell the Star Tribune what the Washington painting cost.

The Minnesota Marine Art Museum was founded by Burrichter and her husband Bob Kierlin, who founded Winona-based company Fastenal, valued at $15 billion. The museum with water-themed works opened in 2006 and has about 1,400 paintings, including ones by Claude Monet, Vincent Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso and Georgia O’Keeffe.

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

AP-WF-03-24-15 1353GMT

Mississippi celebrating trio of women artists

Eudora Welty portrait at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) – Three major artists in the literary and visual arts – author and photographer Eudora Welty, poet, novelist and scholar Margaret Walker and artist Marie Hull – are in the spotlight this year, with major events and exhibitions to propel fresh perspectives and new eyes on their works and legacies.Welty (1909-2001) and Walker (1915-1998) were close in age, while Hull (1890-1980) was just barely a generation older. Jackson native Welty spent her life here, while Alabama-born Walker moved here in 1949 to join Jackson State’s faculty (by then using her married name, Alexander). Marie Atkinson, born in Summit, came to Jackson for Belhaven College and made her home here, marrying Jackson architect Emmett Hull.

This year will see the yearlong Margaret Walker Centennial anchored at Jackson State University, the 12-week Welty Biennial starting in April at the Mississippi Museum of Art and nearby venues, and “Bright Fields: The Mastery of Marie Hull,” Sept. 26 to Jan. 3 at the art museum.

A new book, Meanwhile There Are Letters: The Correspondence of Eudora Welty and Ross Macdonald, by Welty scholar Suzanne Marrs is due out in July.

Belhaven University has named a Marie Hull Society for the Arts after its famed alumna – a cultural project to support fine arts programs, including a retrospective exhibition of Hull’s art – with different works – in summer 2016, and accompanying catalog/book.

“This Is My Century: 2015 Margaret Walker Centennial” marks what would have been Walker’s 100th birthday. Walker used Alexander as a professor of English at Jackson State for 30 years, but used her maiden name for her poetry, novel and essays.

“We’re trying to lift her into the national consciousness,” said Robert Luckett, director of the Margaret Walker Center. “In Mississippi’s great literary tradition, she seems to be the one who’s always kind of left out when we talk about Faulkner and Tennessee Williams and Eudora Welty and Richard Wright and all these other great writers, past and present.”

Centennial events continue with the Oxford Conference for the Book in late March, a Creative Arts Festival with a keynote by poet Nikky Finney and dedication of a Toni Morrison Bench by the Road, the “Mississippi Jubilee: From Slavery to Freedom” symposium, plus a photography exhibition by Doris Derby, all in April. It culminates in July with a Jubilee Picnic and a world-class gala with a new musical work by New York composer and pianist Randy Klein, For My People, as its centerpiece – Walker’s poetry put to music for piano, a vocalist and a chorale.

Walker was 16 when her first poem, I Want to Write, was published in the NAACP’s magazine The Crisis.

“From that point on, she found herself immersed in the 20th century black arts movement,” Luckett said. “She knew everybody,” from her close relationship with mentor Richard Wright at the Southside Writers Group in Chicago (after graduation from Northwestern University) to her roommate at the University of Iowa, artist Elizabeth Catlett.

Her master’s thesis in the famed University of Iowa’s Writers’ Workshop was her celebrated poem For My People. Fame found her when, in 1942, it won the major national Yale Series of Younger Poets prize, awarded to a black woman for the first time. She was 27.

She met Firnist Alexander while teaching in North Carolina, married and by 1949, the family moved to Jackson for her job in Jackson State’s English department. Those choices, as well as time and place, factor into her lack of greater acclaim, Luckett said.

While at Jackson State, Walker returned to Iowa to finish her doctorate and her dissertation was her greatest novel, Jubilee, published in 1966.

Works by Welty and Hull put an artist’s eye on Mississippi’s racial divide.

Medgar Evers’ assassination fueled the only work Welty wrote in anger, Where Is the Voice Coming From? a powerful piece written from the assassin’s perspective to reveal the nature of the murderer that appeared in The New Yorker in 1963.

It also marks the first literary intersection of Welty and Walker, whose later poem Micah in honor of Evers was among her poems equating civil rights leaders and martyrs with biblical prophets in Prophets for a New Day, said writer and scholar Carolyn J. Brown, author of biographies on Welty and Walker.

Hull’s 1936 painting of an African-American man who’d been born into slavery is direct, honest and titled An American Citizen and subtitled with his full name, Portrait of John Wesley Washington At Age 94. Bruce Levingston, curator of the Mississippi Museum of Art’s Hull exhibition this fall, said, “In a quiet, profound way, she was making a statement … restoring dignity to a man who deserved it all along.”

The Welty Biennial, starting April 10, is a fine arts festival that stretches across multiple disciplines as it celebrates Welty as a visionary American – author, photographer, witness and reporter of Mississippi to the world. Its theme of “Classical Mississippi” pegs the classical Greek heritage, from the architecture around her hometown to the constellations in the sky that fired her imagination.

Events involve Davis Planetarium, New Stage Theatre, the Mississippi Symphony Orchestra and Millsaps College, and the Mississippi Museum of Art. Eudora Welty House and schoolchildren citywide are on the calendar, as well as Oscar winner Olympia Dukakis in an adaptation of Welty’s short story Asphodel.

Brown found many similarities between Welty’s and Walker’s lives and careers in her research.

Both were born into families with a high priority on education, were early readers and won early recognition for their writings.

“Both credit moving away from the South for helping them develop as writers,” Brown said.

Walker’s race made it harder for her to get published, and money was a key motivator that drove her to positions that had the best salary.

“She didn’t have financial security until the Jackson State job,” Brown said.

Welty had connections, too, with Hull, who lived nearby in the Belhaven neighborhood.

“The story goes that Marie Hull helped Eudora and her mother design the walkway that leads up to the Welty House,” said Mary Alice Welty White, the author’s niece.

As a young girl, Welty took painting lessons from Hull.

Hull’s husband, prominent architect Emmett Hull, was supportive. They stood up, particularly during the WPA, for opportunities for Mississippi artists. After he died in 1957, her creativity exploded in the 1960s, a “fantastic final burst … in which she painted some of her greatest paintings, including the beautiful Bright Fields and Pink Lady and Ruins, “an abstract painting in Levingston’s collection thought to be influenced by the Ruins of Windsor and Welty’s photograph of it.

In researching Hull, Levingston was struck by “her absolutely indomitable determination to become an independent, working artist.”

“This was not a hobby for her. This was not just a career, but this was a way of life. It was the way she looked at things. She remains one of the greatest artists this state has ever produced; one of the country’s most important voices in regionalist painting,” he said.

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Information from: The Clarion-Ledger, http://www.clarionledger.com

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

AP-WF-03-24-15 1257GMT

Looted El Greco portrait returned to heirs of rightful owner

El Greco's 'Portrait of a Gentleman.' Image courtesy of the Commission for Looted Art in Europe

LONDON (AP) – An El Greco painting looted by the Nazis has been returned to the heirs of its rightful owner.

The Commission for Looted Art in Europe and Art Recovery International said Tuesday the Portrait of a Gentleman has been given back to the heirs of collector Julius Priester.

Priester was a prominent industrialist who fled Vienna in March 1938 when Nazi Germany annexed Austria.

The painting was seized by the Gestapo in 1944.

Priester tried unsuccessfully to locate the painting after the war, and the search by his family and heirs continued after his death.

Investigators said the painting was put up for sale in New York last year, prompting a successful claim by the Commission for Looted Art in Europe.

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

AP-WF-03-24-15 1212GMT