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Local News

Tribe signs top pick Francisco Lindor

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

It came down to the final minutes before midnight’s deadline, but the Indians were able to sign their first-round draft pick Monday — Francisco Lindor, a 17-year-old shortstop out of Montverde Academy (Orlando, Fla.).

According to a number of reports, Lindor, whom the Indians chose with the eighth overall pick, received a $2.9 million signing bonus. It is the second-largest in club history behind Jeremy Guthrie’s $3 million bonus in 2002.

Lindor was ranked as the seventh-best player in the draft by Baseball America.

The Indians signed a number of their selections prior to the deadline, agreeing to terms with second-rounder Dillon Howard and 18th-rounder Shawn Armstrong, both right-handed pitchers.

Howard, the 67th overall pick out of Searcy High School (Ark.), reportedly received a $1.85 million signing bonus.

Cleveland was able to sign 29 of its 50 draft picks, including 17 of their top 19 selections.

Amherst artists recreate famous Iwo Jima photo

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

AMHERST — Two Amherst artists say the U.S. flag-raising on the Pacific island of Iwo Jima is an event that continues to be worthy of our attention and respect 66 years later.

Mike Sekletar, left, and Ryan Shannon, both of Amherst, work on the Park Avenue Mural Project, a re-creation of the flag-raising at Iwo Jima, on Monday. (CT photo by Steve Manheim.)

Mike Sekletar, left, and Ryan Shannon, both of Amherst, work on the Park Avenue Mural Project, a re-creation of the flag-raising at Iwo Jima, on Monday. (CT photo by Steve Manheim.)

“It’s the most reproduced photo in history,” Mike Sekletar said. “It’s such an iconic image and has different meanings to people, but we feel it speaks to freedom and victory.”

Sekletar and fellow Amherst artist Ryan Shannon began their 20-foot by 35-foot artwork a few days ago on the side of a Park Avenue brick building owned by attorney and Councilman Frank Janik, D-at large.

After repainting the side of the building in light gray, the artists roughed in an outline of the six men crouching, standing and raising the American flag over Mount Suribachi during the Battle of Iwo Jima. The two men are now starting to fill in the figures from the top down in grays, black and white.

“Adding color would just detract from it,” Sekletar said. “The shadows and grays to be found in black and white are just more meaningful.”

“It’s really hard to judge detail when you’re right up there next to it (the wall),” Shannon said. “It’s tough to keep everything in the proper perspective, especially hands. Hands are the hardest thing to paint.”

They figure they will spend a few weeks completing the mural, but they will need hours of time to accurately recreate the hands that were laid over each other on the flag.

“Capturing the shadows there will be really tough,” Shannon said.

Photographer Joe Rosenthal’s Feb. 23, 1945, photo came during the brutal five-week struggle between American and Japanese forces over the small island and its three airstrips. The flag was erected by five Marines and John Bradley, a Navy corpsman who was awarded the Navy Cross for earlier heroism when he tended to a wounded soldier under heavy enemy fire. Three of the men who took part in the famous flag-raising died, along with some 6,800 Americans and nearly 22,000 Japanese.

The idea for the mural first came to Sekletar a year ago. He got the approval of the city’s design review board and Janik, and then went to the city’s veterans organizations, which have readily supported the effort.

“It’s a tribute to all service people past and present, but we feel this era is especially meaningful to the community,” said Sekletar, whose father, John, was a machinist aboard the USS Saratoga aircraft carrier during the Vietnam War.

Officials from the Amherst American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars posts were not available for comment Monday.

Sekletar’s previous local work includes an 8-foot painting of Elvis Presley inside Ziggy’s Sports Bar & Grille farther down Park Avenue.

The painted flagpole will extend above the roofline of the two-story building with a real 14-foot aluminum flagpole and a 5-foot by 8-foot American flag that will be continuously illuminated by a spotlight and old-fashioned triple-globed street light in an adjacent parking lot.

A local Sherwin-Williams store donated paint and brushes to help the pair get started. The artists have a goal of raising $6,500, which they say would cover costs of paint and materials, as well as provide a small commission for themselves for the work.

“We’ve had a few private donations so far,” Sekletar said. “We’re basically getting started.”

A plastic tip jar is strategically attached by a rope to the scaffolding the two men work from.

A bank account also has been set up for the “Park Avenue Mural” at the Amherst FirstMerit branch on Cleveland Avenue for anyone who wants to make a donation, Sekletar said.

Anyone who contributes $500 or more will receive a framed 12-by-16 print of the mural. There also will be a plaque near the mural recognizing major donors.

Contact Steve Fogarty at 329-7146 or sfogarty@chroniclet.com.

LCCC welding program gets $2.9 million grant

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

ELYRIA — Steadily changing technology and greater specialization in the welding industry is fueling the need for an estimated 30,000 trained welding technicians each year, according to an industry report.

A $2.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation will help Lorain County Community College expand the National Center for Welding Education and Training.

A $2.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation will help Lorain County Community College expand the National Center for Welding Education and Training.

A $2.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation will help Lorain County Community College’s National Center for Welding Education and Training continue and expand its goals of educating thousands of welding technicians each year.

Known more commonly as Weld-Ed, the LCCC-based center began in 2007 with a $5 million, four-year National Science Foundation grant.

“This grant allows us to take the work we did from the first grant and expand and continue it over the next three years,” Duncan Estep, the center’s director, said Monday.

While the grant was announced Monday, LCCC officials first learned of it two weeks ago at a high-tech conference in San Francisco.

“Every year we are in competition with a large number of community colleges doing similar programs,” Estep said.

The grant will aid the college in its development of a national welding educators’ certificate program to expanded training for welding instructors in new technologies.

“The whole goal is to increase the numbers of welding technicians,” Estep said. “We’ve developed a core training program here and at 10 training regional center partners across the country.”

Future developments could include putting training programs and instruction online “to reach a broader audience,” Estep said.

Reaching a wider audience will help the Weld-Ed center to meet the escalating need for professional welders. The “National State of the Welding Industry Report,” which is published by Weld-Ed, projects a need for 238,000 new and replacement workers through 2019.

In the 2009-10 school year, Weld-Ed’s 80-plus community and technical college and university partners educated more than 4,000 welding technicians and graduated more than 1,700 students, nearly all of whom found immediate employment in welding-related positions in the automotive, shipbuilding, aerospace and mining industries, as well as the defense and energy sectors, according to the Weld-Ed center.

“Our partners tailor welding education for specific needs in different regions,” Estep said. “At the College of the Canyons in Los Angeles, there’s a big electronics base, and a big need for laser welding. Regional needs differ because they try to be suited to local industries.”

Contact Steve Fogarty at 329-7146 or sfogarty@chroniclet.com.

Indians: Tribe beats deadline to sign top two picks

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

It came down to the final minutes before midnight’s deadline, but the Indians were able to sign their first-round draft pick Monday — Francisco Lindor, a 17-year-old shortstop out of Montverde Academy (Orlando, Fla.).

According to a number of reports, Lindor, who the Indians chose with the eighth overall pick, received a $2.9 million signing bonus. It is the second-largest in club history behind Jeremy Guthrie’s $3 million bonus in 2002.

Lindor was ranked as the seventh-best player in the draft by Baseball America.

The Indians signed a number of their selections prior to the deadline, agreeing to terms with second-rounder Dillon Howard and 18th-rounder Shawn Armstrong, both right-handed pitchers.

Howard, the 67th overall pick out of Searcy High School (Ark.), reportedly received a $1.85 million signing bonus.

Cleveland was able to sign 29 of its 50 draft picks, including 17 of their top 19 selections.