Saturday, August 21

The Informant!

The Informant,
The Informant!

Theatrical release poster
Directed bySteven Soderbergh
Produced byGregory Jacobs
Jennifer Fox
Michael Jaffe
Howard Braunstein
Kurt Eichenwald
Written byScott Z. Burns
Kurt Eichenwald (novel)
Narrated byMatt Damon
StarringMatt Damon
Scott Bakula
Joel McHale
Melanie Lynskey
Music byMarvin Hamlisch
CinematographyStephen Soderbergh
Editing byStephen Mirrione
StudioParticipant Media
Groundswell Productions
Section Eight
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date(s)September 18, 2009
Running time108 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$22 million
Gross revenue$41,771,168
(Worldwide)
The Informant! is a 2009 American biographical thriller film directed by Steven Soderbergh. It depicts Mark Whitacre's involvement as a whistle blower in the lysine price-fixing conspiracy of the mid-1990s as described in the 2000 nonfiction book, The Informant by journalist Kurt Eichenwald. The script was written by Scott Z. Burns and the film stars Matt Damon, Scott Bakula, Joel McHale and Melanie Lynskey.


Plot summary

Mark Whitacre (Matt Damon), a rising star at Decatur, Illinois based Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) in the early 1990s, blows the whistle on the company’s price-fixing tactics, after his wife Ginger (Lynskey) forces him.
One night in early November 1992, Whitacre confesses to FBI agent Brian Shepard (Scott Bakula) that ADM executives — including Whitacre himself — had routinely met with competitors to fix the price of lysine, an additive used in the commercial livestock industry. Whitacre secretly gathers hundreds of hours of video and audio over several years to present to the FBI. He assists in gathering evidence by clandestinely taping the company’s activity in business meetings at various locations around the globe such as Tokyo, Paris, Mexico City, and Hong Kong, eventually collecting enough evidence of collaboration and conspiracy to warrant a raid.
Whitacre’s good deed dovetails with his own major infractions and struggle with bipolar disorder.The film focuses on Whitacre's meltdown resulting from the pressures of wearing a wire and organizing surveillance for the FBI for three years, instigated by Whitacre's reaction, in increasingly manic overlays, to various trivial magazine articles he reads. In a stunning turn of events immediately following the covert portion of the case, headlines around the world report that Whitacre had defrauded $9 million from his own company at the same period of time he was secretly working for the FBI and taping his co-workers, while simultaneously hoping to be elected as CEO following the arrest and conviction of the remaining upper management members. After being confronted with evidence of his fraud, Whitacre's claims in his defense begin to spiral out of control, including an accusation of assault and battery against Shepard. Because of this major infraction and Whitacre’s bizarre behavior, he was sentenced to a prison term three times longer than the white-collar criminals he helped to catch. Agent Herndon (McHale) visits Whitacre while in prison in order to support him for a presidential pardon.

Cast

Matt Damon as Archer Daniels Midland executive Mark Whitacre
Scott Bakula as FBI agent Brian Shepard
Joel McHale as FBI agent Robert Herndon
Melanie Lynskey as Ginger Whitacre
Thomas F. Wilson as Mark Cheviron
Tom Papa as Mick Andreas
Rick Overton as Terry Wilson
Allan Havey as FBI Supervisor Dean Paisley
Patton Oswalt as Ed Herbst
Scott Adsit as Sid Hulse
Eddie Jemison as Kirk Schmidt
Clancy Brown as Aubrey Daniel, ADM attorney
Tony Hale as James Epstein, Whitacre's attorney
Andrew Daly as Marty Allison, ADM vice-president
Frank Welker as Mr. Whitacre
Candy Clark as Mrs. Whitacre
Dick Smothers as Judge Harold Baker
Tom Smothers as Dwayne Andreas
Richard Steven Horvitz as Bob Zaiderman
Bob Zany as John Dowd, attorney
Paul F. Tompkins as FBI agent Anthony D’Angelo
Production

In 2002, after completing Ocean's Eleven, Soderbergh announced his intent to adapt the book The Informant by Kurt Eichenwald, a former journalist for The New York Times. Scott Z. Burns wrote the script based on the book.
Production began in May, 2008 in Decatur, Illinois. Filming was also done at the former Whitacre mansion in Moweaqua, Illinois, a small town about 25 miles from Decatur, and at Illini Country Club in Springfield, Illinois. Some exterior shots were done in Mesa, Arizona, in November 2008. The film was released on September 18, 2009. Damon gained 20-30 pounds for the role in order to look more like Whitacre.
For the film Soderbergh cast a number of stand up comedians in prominent and supporting roles, including Andrew Daly, Joel McHale, Allan Havey, Tom Papa, Patton Oswalt, Rick Overton, Paul F. Tompkins, the Smothers Brothers and Bob Zany.

Release

Critical reception
The film received generally favorable reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes reported that 77% of critics gave positive reviews based on 197 reviews with an average score of 6.8/10. Another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating from reviews from mainstream critics, reported a score of 66 out of 100 based on 35 reviews. Film critic Roger Ebert awarded the film 4 stars out of 4 claiming "The Informant! is fascinating in the way it reveals two levels of events, not always visible to each other or to the audience."While giving the film the grade of a B, Entertainment Weekly said that "Soderbergh has chosen to apply an attitude of arch whoopee, a greasy veneer of mirth over what is, no joke, a serious mess of malfeasance and mental instability," concluding, "Soderbergh ultimately made the choice to abandon interesting, dispassionate empathy for the more quick-fix payoff of amusement." Rolling Stone gave the film three-and-a-half out of four stars, and, in response to critics of the film's comic tone, Pete Travers said, "Laugh you will at The Informant!, but it's way too real to laugh off." People magazine also assigned the film three-and-a-half out of four stars, saying, "[Damon]'s a hoot, and so is the movie." Todd McCarthy of Variety also praised Damon's performance, calling his interpretation of Whitacre, "The wacky little brother of Erin Brockovich".

Box office
The film opened at #2 behind Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs with $10,545,000. [16] As of December 17, 2009 the film had grossed $33,316,821 domestically and $41,771,168 worldwide.
In the United Kingdom, the film opened at #10 with £179,612 from the opening weekend. It was the third highest new entry after A Serious Man and The Twilight Saga: New Moon.

Awards
The film has received nominations for multiple awards, such as a Satellite Award for Best Actor for Damon's performance as well as a nomination from the Detroit Film Critics Society.On December 15th, Matt Damon was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture-Musical or Comedy, but lost to Robert Downey, Jr. in Sherlock Holmes[

(source:wikipedia)

The Sting

The Sting is a 1973 American caper film set in September 1936 that involves a complicated plot by two professional grifters (Paul Newman and Robert Redford) to con a mob boss (Robert Shaw). The film was directed by George Roy Hill, who previously directed Newman and Redford in the western Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
Created by screenwriter David S. Ward, the story was inspired by real-life con games perpetrated by the brothers Fred and Charley Gondorff and documented by David Maurer in his book The Big Con: The Story of the Confidence Man.
The title phrase refers to the moment when a con artist finishes the "play" and takes the mark's money. (Today the expression is mostly used in the context of law enforcement sting operations.) If a con game is successful, the mark does not realize he has been "taken" (cheated), at least not until the con men are long gone. The film is divided into distinct sections with old-fashioned title cards with lettering and illustrations rendered in a style reminiscent of the Saturday Evening Post. The film is noted for its musical score—particularly its main melody, "The Entertainer", a piano rag by Scott Joplin, which was lightly adapted for the movie by Marvin Hamlisch. The film's success encouraged a surge of popularity and critical acclaim for Joplin's work.

Plot

The Players (0 min)
Johnny Hooker (Redford), a small-time con man (a "grifter") from Depression-era Joliet, Illinois, along with accomplices Luther Coleman (Robert Earl Jones) and Joe Erie (Jack Kehoe) manage to swipe $11,000 in cash from an unsuspecting victim (a "mark"). Luther announces his retirement from crime and advises Hooker to seek out an old friend, Henry Gondorff, in Chicago, who can teach him the art of the 'big con'.
Unfortunately the mark was a numbers racket courier for crime boss Doyle Lonnegan (Robert Shaw). Corrupt Joliet police Lieutenant William Snyder (Charles Durning) confronts Hooker, demanding a cut and revealing Lonnegan's involvement. Hooker pays Snyder in counterfeit bills. Lonnegan's men murder Luther and Hooker flees to Chicago.
The Set-Up (24th min)
Gondorff (Paul Newman), down on his luck is initially reluctant to take on the dangerous Lonnegan. Eventually Henry decides to resurrect an elaborate and supposedly obsolete scam known as "the wire." A large number of con artists are recrutied to simulate a betting parlor.
The Hook (40th min)
Gondorff arranges to have Lonnegan's wallet stolen aboard a train, and poses as boorish Chicago bookie "Shaw." He buys his way into Lonnegan's private high-stakes poker game on the train with the latter's own money. He taunts, goads and out-cheats Lonengan, winning $15,000. Hooker, posing as "Kelly" -- adisgruntled employee of Shaw -- is sent to collect the winnings, which Lonnegan was unable to pay without his wallet.
The Tale (65th min)
"Kelly" pretends to seek the overthrow of his boss, Shaw, convincing Lonnegan that he has a partner in the Chicago Western Union office, and that he can use this connection to win large sums of money in Shaw's off-track betting (OTB) establishment by past-posting.
The Wire (83rd min)
Johnny must continually avoid Snyder, who has followed him to Chicago. Snyder is thwarted when he is summoned by undercover FBI agents. Snyder is ordered to assist the FBI in their attempts to arrest Gondorff by bringing Hooker in -- this for the purpose of coercing him into betraying Gondorff.
The Shut-Out (93rd min)
The title of this act comes from "shutting out" Lonnegan from the betting window when he intends to place a bet much bigger than the phony wire set-up can cover, so the window is closed as the race begins, just as Lonnegan is stepping up to bet. His intended horse does "win", however, further convincing him of the effectiveness of the method.
In a subordinate action, Hooker begins a romance with a local waitress named Loretta. Unbeknownst to Hooker, Lonnegan has grown frustrated with his men's inability to find and kill Hooker, so he arranges for a professional killer, "Salino," to finish the job. (Not having previously met Hooker, Lonnegan is unaware that Hooker and "Kelly" are the same person). A mysterious figure with black leather gloves is soon seen following and observing Hooker.
The Sting (112th min)
After Hooker spends the night with Loretta, he wakes up alone and begins walking to work. He sees Loretta coming toward him. The black-gloved man appears behind him, aiming a gun in his direction. The bullet hits Loretta in the forehead and kills her instantly. It turns out that the hired killer was "Loretta Salino". The gloved man had been hired by Gondorff to protect Hooker.
Lonnegan brings a half-million dollars to bet on the horse to win. When he informs Kid Twist of this, the latter displays shock and tells Lonnegan he was supposed to bet on the horse to "place", as it's going to finish second. Lonnegan panicks, but is unable to retract his bet. Suddenly the FBI and Snyder burst in and order everyone to freeze. Polk confronts Gondorff and tells Hooker he is free to go. Gondorff, reacting to the betrayal, shoots Hooker; Polk then shoots Gondorff and orders Snyder to get Lonnegan out of there. With Lonnegan and Snyder safely away, Hooker and GOndorff rise amid cheers anbd laughter. Hooker and Gondorff then proceed nonchalantly to walk out of the alley way, as the rest of the players and members of the Sting strip the room of its contents before Snyder and/or Lonnegan and his men can come back to retrieve the money.

Cast

Paul Newman as Henry "Shaw" Gondorff
Robert Redford as Johnny "Kelly" Hooker
Robert Shaw as Doyle Lonnegan
Charles Durning as Lt. William Snyder
Ray Walston as J.J. Singleton
Eileen Brennan as Billie
Harold Gould as Kid Twist
John Heffernan as Eddie Niles
Dana Elcar as FBI Agent Polk, aka "Hickey"
James Sloyan as Mottola
Larry D. Mann as Mr. Clemens
Sally Kirkland as Crystal ("Hooker's hooker")
Jack Kehoe as Joe Erie
Robert Earl Jones as Luther Coleman (credited as Robertearl Jones)
Dimitra Arliss as Loretta Salino
Joe Tornatore as Black-gloved gunman
Charles Dierkop as Floyd, Lonnegan's Bodyguard
Lee Paul as Lonnegan's bodyguard
Leonard Barr as Leonard (burlesque comic)
Jack Collins as Duke Boudreau
Production


This article is in a list format that may be better presented using prose. You can help by converting this article to prose, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (November 2008)
Harold Gould's character, "Kid Twist," shared that nickname with (though apparently not the profession of) at least two different mob hit men, Max Zwerbach and Abe Reles.
In 1974 The Big Con author David Maurer filed a $10 million dollar lawsuit claiming at least part of the film's story had been taken from his book. The matter was resolved out of court in 1976.
The movie was filmed on the backlot of Universal Studios.
Robert Weverka later wrote a novelization of The Sting.
The diner in which Hooker meets Lonnegan is the same diner interior used in the 1985 movie Back to the Future, in which Marty McFly first meets his father and calls Doc Brown, and re-used as the interior for the Cafe 80s in the sequel, Back to the Future Part II.
Doyle Lonnegan's limp in the film, used to great effect by actor Robert Shaw, was in fact completely authentic as Shaw had slipped on a wet handball court at the Beverly Hills Hotel just a week before filming began and had split all the ligaments in his knee. He had to wear a leg brace during production which was kept hidden under the wide 1930s style trousers he wore. This incident was revealed by Julia Philips in her 1991 autobiography You'll Never Eat Lunch in This Town Again. She said that Shaw saved The Sting since no other actor would accept the part and that Paul Newman hand delivered the script to Shaw in London in order to ensure his participation. He no doubt paid the price for the extremely high salary his agent John Gaines held the producers up for since he was not nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award, the general feeling being, as Philips states in her book, that he should not have demanded that his name follow those of Newman and Redford before the film's opening title.
Rob Cohen, later a director of 1990s action films like The Fast and the Furious, years later told of how he found the script in the slush pile when he was working as a reader for Mike Medavoy, a future studio head then an agent. He wrote in his coverage that it was "the great American screenplay and ... will make an award-winning, major-cast, major-director film." Medavoy said that he would try to sell it on that recommendation and promised to fire Cohen if he couldn't. Universal bought it that afternoon, and Cohen still has the coverage framed on the wall of his office.
Reception

The film was a box office smash in 1973, taking in more than US$160 million. The film won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director. In 2005, The Sting was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Awards

Wins
The film won seven Academy Awards and received three other nominations. Julia Phillips became the first female producer to win Best Picture at the 46th Academy Awards.
Academy Award for Best Picture
Academy Award for Directing - (George Roy Hill)
Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay - (David S. Ward)
Academy Award for Best Art Direction - (Henry Bumstead and James W. Payne)
Academy Award for Best Costume Design - (Edith Head)
Academy Award for Film Editing - (William H. Reynolds)
Academy Award for Best Music, Scoring Original Song Score and/or Adaptation - (Marvin Hamlisch)
Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures - (George Roy Hill)

Nominations
Academy Award for Best Actor - (Robert Redford)
Academy Award for Best Cinematography - (Robert Surtees)
Academy Award for Sound - (Ronald Pierce & Robert R. Bertrand)
Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay - Motion Picture - (David S. Ward)
WGA Award for Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen - (David S. Ward)

Music

The soundtrack album, which was executive produced by Gil Rodin, contained the following selections, most of which are Scott Joplin ragtime pieces. Ragtime had just experienced a revival due to several recordings by Joshua Rifkin on Nonesuch Records starting in 1970. There are some variances from the actual film soundtrack, as noted. Joplin's ragtime music was no longer popular during the 1930s, although its use in The Sting evokes a definitive 1930s gangster movie, The Public Enemy, which also featured Scott Joplin theme music. The two Jazz Age style tunes written by Hamlisch are chronologically much closer to the film's time period than are the Joplin rags:
"Solace" (Joplin) - orchestral version
"The Entertainer" (Joplin) - orchestral version
"The Easy Winners" (Joplin)
"Hooker's Hooker" (Hamlisch)
"Luther" - same basic tune as "Solace", re-arranged by Hamlisch as a dirge
"Pine Apple Rag" / "Gladiolus Rag" medley (Joplin)
"The Entertainer" (Joplin) - piano version
"The Glove" (Hamlisch) - a Jazz Age style number; only a short segment was used in the film
"Little Girl" (Madeline Hyde, Francis Henry) - not in the final cut of the film
"Pine Apple Rag" (Joplin)
"Merry-Go-Round Music" medley (traditional) - "Listen to the Mocking Bird" was the only portion of this track that was actually used in the film, along with the second segment of "King Cotton", a Sousa march, which was not on the album
"Solace" (Joplin) - piano version
"The Entertainer" / "The Ragtime Dance" medley (Joplin)
The album sequence differs from the film sequence, a standard practice with vinyl LPs, often for aesthetic reasons. Some additional content differences:
Selected snippets of Joplin's works, some appearing on the album and some not, provided linking music over the title cards that were used to introduce major scenes. (The final card, "The Sting", introducing the film's dramatic conclusion, had no music at all.)
Some of the tunes in the film are different takes than those on the album.
A Joplin tune used in the film but not appearing in the soundtrack album was "Cascades". The middle (fast) portion of it was played when Hooker was running away from Snyder along the 'L' train platform.
The credits end with "Stoptime Rag" (Joplin), which does not appear on the film soundtrack album but instead appears on Hamlisch's 1974 album The Entertainer.

Chart positions
Year Chart Position
1974 Billboard 200 1
Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart
Preceded by
Chicago VII by Chicago Billboard 200 number-one album
May 4 - June 7, 1974 Succeeded by
Sundown by Gordon Lightfoot
Preceded by
Tubular Bells by Mike Oldfield Australian Kent Music Report number-one album
June 17 - July 28, 1974
August 5 - August 11, 1974 Succeeded by
Caribou by Elton John

Sequel

A less-successful sequel with different players, The Sting II, appeared in 1983. In the same year a prequel was also planned, exploring the earlier career of Henry Gondorff. Famous confidence man Soapy Smith was scripted to be Gondorff's mentor. When the sequel failed, the prequel was scrapped.

Home media

A deluxe DVD, The Sting: Special Edition (part of the Universal Legacy Series) was released in September 2005, including a "making of" featurette and interviews with the cast and crew.

Cultural references

The BBC series Hustle frequently makes reference to The Sting, the first episode "The Con is On" having one character shot and a fake policeman, and series 1 episode 6 "The Last Gamble" features a con similar to the plot, with a horse-racing scam as the central plot.
A 1975 episode of The Bob Newhart Show, "Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time," parodies The Sting.
Episode 10 from season 6 of King of the Hill (titled "The Substitute Spanish Prisoner") has Peggy Hill staging a fake off-track betting scheme to recoup the money she spent on a fake PhD, with the antagonist bailing before the last bet leaving with the infamous nose swipe.
Australian cricket player Rod Marsh watched the film 33 times while touring Pakistan in 1982.
The ABC series "MacGyver" aired the episode "Twice Stung" during the second season, the title referring to two stings played on one character during the episode. Dana Elcar, who here played the fake agent Polk, was Peter Thornton in the series.


(source:wikipedia)

Harold Dow

Harold Dow,
Harold Dow (September 28, 1947 - August 21, 2010) was an American television news correspondent, journalist, and investigative reporter with CBS News.

Journalist credentials

Dow was born in Hackensack, New Jersey. He attended the University of Nebraska at Omaha.") Dow had been a correspondent for the CBS TV investigative news series 48 Hours since 1990, after having served as a contributor to the broadcast since its premiere on January 1988. He had been a contributing correspondent for 48 Hours on Crack Street, the critically acclaimed 1986 documentary that led to the single-topic weekly news magazine. Dow conducted the first network interview for 48 Hours with O. J. Simpson following the murders of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman. Dow graduated from the University of Nebraska at Omaha.
Prior to his work with 48 Hours, Dow was a correspondent for the CBS News magazine Street Stories (1992–93), and had reported for the CBS Evening News and CBS News Sunday Morning since the early 1970's.
Other accomplishments

Before joining CBS News, Dow had been an anchor and reporter at Theta Cable TV in Santa Monica, California. He was also a freelance reporter for KCOP-TV in Los Angeles, a news anchor for WPAT Radio in Paterson, N.J., and a reporter, co-anchor, and talk-show host for KETV-TV in Omaha, Nebraska.
Dow joined CBS News in 1972, first as a broadcast associate, then as a correspondent with their Los Angeles Bureau while with KCOP-TV. Dow reported on the return of POWs from Vietnam and the kidnapping of Patricia Hearst, with whom he had an exclusive interview in December 1976.

(source:wikipedia)

Charlestone Gazett

Charlestone Gazett,
The Charlestone Gazett is a five-day morning newspaper in Charleston, West Virginia. It is published Monday through Friday mornings. On Saturday and Sunday mornings the combined Charleston Gazette-Mail is published, which is, more or less, similar to the Gazette.
The Gazette was established in 1873. At the time, it was a weekly newspaper known as the Kanawha Chronicle. It had a couple of other owners and names—The Kanawha Gazette and the Daily Gazette—before its name was officially changed to The Charleston Gazette in 1907.
The Chilton family acquired formal interest in the paper in 1912. William E. Chilton, a U.S. senator, was publisher of The Gazette, as were his son, William E. Chilton II, and grandson, W. E. "Ned" Chilton III, Yale graduate and classmate/protegé of conservative columnist William F. Buckley, Jr.. The paper carried Buckley's column, which was 180 degrees politically different from all other material in the paper, until Buckley's death.
In 1918 a fire destroyed the Gazette building at 909 Virginia St. The newspaper was moved to 227 Hale St., where it remained for 42 years.
Under a consolidation agreement, which eventually became a Joint Operating Agreement with the afternoon Charleston Daily Mail, the newspaper merged its production and distribution with that newspaper from 1961-2004. The two newspapers had different ownership and writing staffs, but jointly owned the production and distribution company, Charleston Newspapers Inc.
A year later, following the death of Robert L. Smith, W.E. "Ned" Chilton III was named publisher of the Gazette. He served in that position until his death in 1987.
During that time he earned a well-deserved reputation as a "firebrand liberal." Ned Chilton used to say that the job of a newspaper was to "comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable." However, in 1972, the newspaper lost some of its blue-collar workers who went on strike in an attempt to prevent the coming of electronic printing.
Former West Virginia Governor Arch A. Moore, Jr., a staunch Republican who both won and lost an election to John D. "Jay" Rockefeller IV, derisively renamed The Charleston Gazette "The Morning Sick Call". This was in reference to the Gazettes reporting of constiantly negative articles about life in the state. (Moore was later convicted by the Republican United States Attorney of income tax evasion, perjury, election fraud and taking more than $500,000 from a coal operator for state favors.
Ned Chilton's widow, Elizabeth Early "Betty" Chilton, is now president o(sourcef the Daily Gazette Co. and publisher of The Charleston Gazette. It is still a family-owned newspaper, one of the few independents still operating. The paper's editor, prize-winning journalist James A. Haught, has been with the paper for more than 50 years.
The paper has won numerous awards and received significant national recognition for a newspaper of its size. Recent efforts that have received such recognition include a series of stories that resulted in the resignation and criminal conviction of the state House of Delegates education chairman, a series on the environmental effects of mountaintop removal coal mining, a series on the state's "failed" attempts to deal with its residents suffering from mental illness, and a series on the deaths nationwide from the widespread use of methadone.
In May 2007, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the owners of Daily Gazette Company for its purchase of the Daily Mail's financial interests, alleging that the Daily Mail had been operated in an uncompetitive manner. The newspaper settled without trial and agreed to various oversight issues.

(source:wikipedia)

Friday, August 20

France expels Gypsies



PARIS — About 100 Gypsies, or Roma, were put on a charter flight headed to their native Romania on Friday, the second day in a row that France has expelled Roma in a much criticized government crackdown.
Associated Press Television News saw at least 100 Gypsy men, women and children arrive by bus at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport Friday. After checking in at the charter flight terminal, they were transported by bus to the waiting plane.
The flight's final destination was reportedly Timisoara, a city in western Romania.
President Nicolas Sarkozy announced the crackdown on Roma in late July as part of a larger "war" on delinquency. It is increasingly criticized as discriminatory because it singles out a particular community — even though France proudly boasts of its long-standing policy of being officially colorblind, that is, not differentiating between ethnic groups.
"We're moving toward an official racism," Socialist lawmaker Arnaud Montebourg charged on French TV.
Daniel Vasile, of the Partida Romilor, a party in Romania representing the Roma, has called the expulsions a "black stain on .... the history of France, but also of Romania" where Roma, a minority there, too, are particularly vulnerable.
France can repatriate Roma, even though they hail from EU-member states Romania and Bulgaria, if they are unable to prove they can support themselves.
French authorities have said the majority return on a voluntary basis, given small sums of money — euro300 ($386) for each adult and euro100 for children — to help them re-establish themselves at home.
However, it is an open secret that many quickly make their way back to France after pocketing the cash.
Since Sarkozy's July 28 announcement of a crackdown, police have dismantled dozens of illegally installed Gypsy camps, checked the situations of each inhabitant and prepared to whisk them to their Romanian homeland.
Nearly 100 Gypsies were sent to Romania on two flights Thursday,Two flights left for Romania on Thursday. Similar flights were expected later this month and into September.

Precious metal

Precious metal,
A precious metal is a rare, naturally occurring metallic chemical element of high economic value, which is not radioactive (excluding natural polonium, radium, actinium and protactinium). Chemically, the precious metals are less reactive than most elements, have high lustre, are softer or more ductile, and have higher melting points than other metals. Historically, precious metals were important as currency, but are now regarded mainly as investment and industrial commodities. Gold, silver, platinum, and palladium each have an ISO 4217 currency code.
The best-known precious metals are the coinage metals gold and silver. While both have industrial uses, they are better known for their uses in art, jewellery and coinage. Other precious metals include the platinum group metals: ruthenium, rhodium, palladium, osmium, iridium, and platinum, of which platinum is the most widely traded.
The demand for precious metals is driven not only by their practical use, but also by their role as investments and a store of value. Historically, precious metals have commanded much higher prices than common industrial metals. In December 2009, gold reached a price of over $1200.00/troy ounce and silver was about $15.00/troy ounce, compared to copper at $0.11/troy ounce and nickel at $0.36/troy ounce.

Bullion

A 500 gram silver bullion bar produced by Johnson Matthey


American Platinum Eagle bullion coin
A metal is deemed to be precious if it is rare. The discovery of new sources of ore or improvements in mining or refining processes may cause the value of a precious metal to diminish. The status of a "precious" metal can also be determined by high demand or market value. Precious metals in bulk form are known as bullion, and are traded on commodity markets. Bullion metals may be cast into ingots, or minted into coins. The defining attribute of bullion is that it is valued by its mass and purity rather than by a face value as money.
Many nations mint bullion coins. Although nominally issued as legal tender, these coins' face value as currency is far below that of their value as bullion. For instance, Canada mints a gold bullion coin (the Gold Maple Leaf) at a face value of $50 containing one troy ounce (31.1035 g) of gold—as of July 2009, this coin is worth about $1,075 CAD as bullion.Bullion coins' minting by national governments gives them some numismatic value in addition to their bullion value, as well as certifying their purity.


Silver 1000oz bar
The level of purity varies from issue to issue. 99.9% purity is common. The purest mass-produced bullion coins are in the Canadian Gold Maple Leaf series, which go up to 99.999% purity. Note that a 100% pure bullion is not possible, as absolute purity in extracted and refined metals can only be asymptotically approached. Many bullion coins contain a stated quantity (such as one troy ounce) of the marginally-impure alloy. In contrast, the Krugerrand is one of many historic and modern bullion coins of 22 Kt Crown gold, with a stated content (usually one troy ounce) of "fine gold"[clarification needed (define)], with the other component(s) of the alloy making the coin heavier than one ounce in total. Still more bullion coins (for example: British Sovereign) state neither the purity nor the fine-gold weight on the coin, but are recognized and consistent in their composition,[citation needed] and many historically stated a denomination in currency (example: American Double Eagle).
One of the largest bullion coins in the world is the 10,000 dollar Australian Gold Nugget coin minted in Australia which consists of a full kilogram of 99.9% pure gold. There have been a small number of larger bullion coins, but they are impractical to handle and not produced in mass quantities. China has produced coins in very limited quantities (less than 20 pieces minted) that exceed 260 troy ounces (8 kg) of gold.[citation needed] Austria has minted a coin containing 31 kg of gold (the Vienna Philharmonic Coin minted in 2004 with a face value of 100,000 euro). As a stunt to publicise the 99.999% pure one-ounce Canadian Gold Maple Leaf series, in 2007 the Royal Canadian Mint made a 100 kg 99.999% gold coin, with a face value of $1 million, and now manufactures them to order, but at a substantial premium over the market value of the gold.
Gold and silver are often seen as hedges against both inflation and economic downturn. Silver coins have become popular with collectors due to their relative affordability, and unlike most gold and platinum issues which are valued based upon the markets, silver issues are more often valued as collectables, far higher than their actual bullion value.

Aluminium

A precious metal that became common is aluminium. Although aluminium is one of the most commonly occurring elements on Earth, it was at one time found to be exceedingly difficult to extract from its various ores. This made the little available pure aluminium, which had been refined at great expense, more valuable than gold. Bars of aluminium were exhibited alongside the French crown jewels at the Exposition Universelle of 1855, and Napoleon III's most important guests were given aluminium cutlery, while those less worthy dined with mere silver. Additionally, the pyramidal top to the Washington Monument is made of 100 ounces of pure aluminium. At the time of the monument's construction, aluminium was as expensive as silver. Over time, however, the price of the metal has dropped; the invention of the Hall-Héroult process in 1886 caused the high price of aluminium to permanently collapse.

Bismuth and tellurium

Bismuth and tellurium are the only two metals which have abundances less than 10-8 by mass part (g/g) in the Earth's crust, but which are currently not of high economic value.


Rough world market prices

Valuable metal prices containing all precious metals names in bold
metal↓mass abundance↓price 2009-04-10↓price 2009-07-22↓price 2010-01-07↓
Platinum5 ppb$42681/kg$37650/kg$49995/kg
Rhodium1 ppb$39680/kg$46200/kg$88415/kg
Gold4 ppb$31100/kg$30590/kg$36370/kg
Iridium1 ppb$14100/kg$12960/kg$13117/kg
Osmium1.5 ppb$13400/kg$12200/kg$12217/kg
Palladium15 ppb$8430/kg$8140/kg$13632/kg
Rhenium0.7 ppb$7400/kg$7000/kg$6250/kg
Ruthenium1 ppb$2290/kg$2730/kg$5562/kg
Germanium1500 ppb$1050/kg$1038/kg
Beryllium2800 ppb$850/kg
Silver75 ppb$437/kg$439/kg$588/kg
Gallium19000 ppb$425/kg$413/kg
Indium250 ppb$325/kg$520/kg
Tellurium1 ppb$158.70/kg
Mercury85 ppb$18.90/kg$15.95/kg
Bismuth8.5 ppb$15.40/kg$18.19/kg



(source:wikipedia)