Local superintendent may change face of educational
Transcription
Local superintendent may change face of educational
WEEKLY 3,00 zloty (with 7% VAT) Published by: Jargon Media Sp. z o.o. Index Number: 236683 ISSN: 1898-4762 NO. 32 WWW.KRAKOWPOST.COM DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 Local superintendent may change face of educational system Poles seek equal retirement age Ombudsman Jan Kochanowski has sued the Constitutional Tribunal over regulations governing the retirement age of women and men 4 Arrest warrant on tycoon Krauze lifted The arrest warrant for business tycoon Ryszard Krauze has unexpectedly been lifted. One of Poland’s richest citizens can now come back to Poland 6 Arriva PPC opens private railway The British-Polish company Arriva PCC has recently begun operating the first privately owned railway in the country 8 Polnord to build in St. Petersburg Polnord, a subsidiary of Prokom, is set to commence a massive construction in St. Petersburg 9 Skyscraper to tower over Poland Poland’s Palace of Culture and Science is set to be overshadowed in four years’ time 10 Jerzy Lackowski, a former Malopolska Province school superintendent who now heads the Teachers College at Krakow’s Jagiellonian University, has become a consultant to an old friend, Minister of Education Katarzyna Hall. Together, the two plan to create a voucher system under which students could go to the school of their choice. Iwona Bojarczuk STAFF JOURNALIST Jerzy Lackowski, a former Malopolska Province school superintendent who now heads the Teachers College at Krakow’s Jagiellonian University, has become a consultant to an old friend, Minister of Education Katarzyna Hall. Together, the two may change the face of Polish education. Their plans include creating a voucher system under which students could go to the school of their choice. They say bringing a free-market system to education would make schools better because they would have to compete for students. Lackowski and Hall have been calling for school reform for years. In addition to vouchers, they want a system that shifts control of schools from teachers and administrators to parents. They also want a system in place that allows the government to revoke the licenses of incompetent superintendents and teachers. Teachers have too much power today, they feel. Teachers union rules require equal pay for equal length of service – which means that poorer teachers get the same money as much better ones. The rules almost make it difficult to fire a teacher with four years or more of experience. Lackowski believes there is an urgent need in Poland for a student school-choice system like the ones in the U.S., New Zealand and Sweden. School choice can come through vouchers, by giving schools additional tax money for each student they attract, and by granting autonomy to schools in choosing the curriculum and profile of teaching. A voucher would be equal to the cost the government pays for one student’s education. Each student going to a school would have a voucher, so the more students, the more money the school would have. “Of course before introducing educational vouchers we will need to analyze the cost of educating individual students and compare it with the amount of government revenue assigned for education,” Lackowski said. One drawback of a voucher system would be that unless special arrangements were made for village schools, they would suffer under New low cost route Krakow-Paris The low-cost French-Dutch airline Transavia has recently begun flying daily between Krakow and Paris 12 house of entertainment the best entertainment in Krakow piano bar live-music sessions bring card – get prize HOTEL NOVOTEL, ul. Armii Krajowej 11 Tel.: +48 (0) 12 636-0807 the reform. That’s because voucher-system success is based on large enrollments, which bring in a lot of money, and village-school enrollments are small. In fact, if a school budget were linked entirely to the number of students, village-school vouchers would be unable to cover the schools’ costs, Lackowski said. Former Deputy Minister of Education Slawomir Klosowski expressed doubts about vouchers in a report to then-Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski. “We are afraid that the educational voucher” will bring “racial segregation at schools,” Klosowski said. He said he also worried that “parents, especially in rural areas, will have to drive their children several kilometers” to get to the schools the children want to attend. See SCHOOL on Page 13 2 P O L A N D The Krakow Post R E G I O N A L N E W S Ex-Soviet states seek energy ties with Japan: official The GUAM regional bloc of four former Soviet states late last week called for closer ties with Japan over both energy-saving technology and pipeline construction in the Caspian Sea. Representatives of the group – Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine – visited Japan, a major energy importer, for talks with Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura. “Japan is the world leader in energy-saving technologies,” Andriy Veselovskyi, deputy foreign minister of Ukraine, told a news conference with other GUAM delegate members. “We are interested to have this technology. This is beneficial both for us and for you because Japan expands their technologies to other countries,” he said. The group at the same time called on Tokyo to take part in construction of additional pipelines in the energy-rich region in an effort to diversify energy supplies. “Diversifying routes of energy would be beneficial for the region and for the world market,” Veselovskyi said. Japan, the world’s second largest economy, has virtually no natural energy resources of its own. The European-oriented GUAM was formed in 1997 as an alternative to the Commonwealth of Independent States, a Kremlin-dominated grouping of ex-Soviet countries. (AFP) U.S. broadcaster denounces jailing of Azeri correspondent A U.S.-funded broadcaster denounced the jailing of its Azeri correspondent late last week for slander by the same local court that had cleared him of the charge two days earlier. Prague-based Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty called in a statement for the immediate release of 42-year-old correspondent Ilgar Nasibov. Nasibov turned up at the court in the western city of Nakhchivan expecting to be given his dismissal charges after being cleared of the slander charges brought by local police two days earlier. “Instead, without the presence of legal counsel, the judge reinstated the charges and sentenced Nasibov to 90 days in prison,” the broadcaster, funded by the U.S. Congress, said. RFE/RL president, Jeff Gedmin, said the court’s action was “a complete mockery of due process which violates Azerbaijan’s own lawful, judicial procedure.” Nakhchivan police had subjected Nasibov and his wife, who also works for the broadcaster, to harassment by bringing spurious charges against them for more than a year, he said. Both journalists had highlighted human rights abuses and abuses of power in the former Soviet Republic in the South Caucasus. RFE/RL broadcasts 10 hours daily to Azerbaijan, producing most programming in its bureau in the capital Baku. (AFP) Czech lawmakers approve foreign military missions Czech lower house lawmakers late last week approved government plans for foreign military missions next year, which include a boosted presence in Afghanistan but a reduced one in Iraq. In Iraq, Czech Defense Minister Vlasta Parkanova announced plans in October to cut the force from 100 to 20 next year with effect from July 2008. Most of the current Czech contingent is deployed around Basra in southern Iraq, where one of its main tasks is to guard the international base not far from the city. As part of a wider reshuffle, the government also proposed boosting its forces serving in Afghanistan from 224 to 415. The Czech’s largest current foreign contingent, the around 550-strong peace force in Kosovo, should remain at existing levels next year. The government proposal has still to be cleared by the Czech upper house, the Senate. (AFP) Czech gov’t unchanged on missile shield after report The Czech government vowed late last week to press ahead with negotiations with Washington about hosting part of an anti-missile shield despite a U.S. intelligence report downgrading the threat posed by Iran. “The U.S. intelligence report will not influence the attitude of the Czech government in the face of further negotiations with the U.S. over the possible installation of a radar station on Czech soil,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. The threat of a missile attack from “rogue states” such as Iran is frequently cited by Washington as the main reason for its missile defense shield project. The Czech Foreign Ministry stressed that the U.S. report, released Monday, concerned Iran’s nuclear program and not the development of missile delivery systems, which it said was ongoing. “According to the report, Iran will probably be capable of producing a sufficient quantity of nuclear material for the production of a nuclear bomb between 2010 and 2015. “This corresponds with the previous estimates. By this date the European pillar of anti-missile defense should be in place,” the statement said. The U.S. plan calls for the installation of a powerful targeting radar in the Czech Republic and 10 interceptor missiles in Poland by 2012. (AFP) DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 “New Jews” kindle revival in lost heartland Foreign ministers hail new era in ties with Germany agence france-presse ern Europe to escape 11th century pogroms, and on the eve of World War II, there were around 3.5 mln there. The capital Warsaw alone had a Jewish community of 400,000, ranging from the entirely non-religious to traditionally-dressed Orthodox believers. It was the largest Jewish city in Europe and the second in the world after New York. After invading Poland in 1939, Nazi Germany transformed Warsaw’s Jewish district into a Ghetto, to isolate and eventually wipe out the population. Half of the six mln Jews killed by the Nazis were Polish, and most died in Nazi concentration camps set up in occupied Poland, such as the infamous Auschwitz-Birkenau. In 1945, Poland’s surviving Jewish population numbered just 280,000. Many emigrated to the U.S. or Israel, either immediately after the war or during waves of anti-Semitism in the 1950s and 1960s. Many Holocaust survivors who had been able to hide their Jewish identity during the war decided to keep it that way in the postwar era to protect the next generation. Others came from mixed Catholic and Jewish, or non-religious, families, where identity was not hard and fast. Another recent convert, Maciej Krasniewski, 20, adjusted his yarmulke skullcap as he recalled the day he learned he was Jewish. “I found out when I was 13,” he said. “I had got interested in my family’s name. Polish names ending in ‘ski’ can mean you have origins in the nobility, so I was looking up my roots. I asked my father, and he said: ‘Our real name is Kirschenbaum.’” Krasniewski’s paternal grandfather had survived the Holocaust, and the family picked a Polish name in 1954. Kransiewski said he took five years to convert to Judaism, due to both fears of public reaction and his lingering Catholic belief that it would be a sin. The spark for Krasniewski and his twin brother was a recent holiday. “We were standing in the middle of Prague’s old Jewish district, and we decided to convert,” he said. “At first there was a struggle in our family, to stop us going back to what they had escaped from,” he added. But the twins’ grandfather eventually warmed to the idea, and finally told them the story of the brothers and sisters he lost during the Holocaust. Krasniewski’s brother chose to become an Orthodox Jew, and follows a strict kosher diet. Krasniewski considers himself a conservative. He said he is still wary of wearing his yarmulke in public due to lingering anti-Semitism, but, borrowing a phrase from the gay rights movement, says he plans to. “It’s like coming out. We’re here, we won’t go away, get used to it. If you don’t do it, no one will know there are Jews in Poland,” he said. Poland’s “new Jews” also want fellow Jews, notably those from the U.S. and Israel who come to visit the sites of Nazi-era death camps, to wake up to the growth and even the very existence of their community and stop seeing Poland only as a vast cemetery. “Other Jews need to see the reality of Jewish life in Poland,” said Anna Janot-Szymanska, 37, who learned of her roots as a teenager and said she is still a “Jewish beginner” with a more cultural than religious interest. Her 27-year-old sister Malgorzata, who runs the Jewish center in Warsaw, wants visitors to come and meet with the growing community. “Out of the ashes of the Holocaust, there’s a spark,” she said. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his new Polish counterpart Radoslaw Sikorski said late last week they hoped to mend bilateral ties that soured under Poland’s former government. “We both said that we want to open a new chapter in German-Polish relations,” Steinmeier said after talks with Sikorski in Berlin. He thanked Sikorski for coming to Germany on his first visit abroad as the top diplomat in liberal Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s government. “We see this as a sign of your interest and willingness to play a role in breathing new life into the relationship between Germany and Poland.” Sikorski told reporters: “I would like to second every word of that.” Ties between the two neighbors suffered under nationalist Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who was soundly defeated by Tusk and his Civic Platform in October elections. Kaczynski missed few opportunities to reproach Germany over its World War II past. He told fellow EU leaders during a row about voting rights in the bloc this year that had the Nazis not invaded Poland it would today be a nation of 66 mln people instead of 38 mln. But while Steinmeier and Sikorski exchanged warm remarks, Tusk’s new advisor on relations with Germany, Russia and Israel sounded a warning over a simmering row triggered by German plans to honor those expelled from their homes in central Europe at the end of World War II, including Germans who were forced to flee modernday Poland. The project has the support of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, but has been condemned by Warsaw for failing to make a distinction between the victims and the aggressors in the war. Wladyslaw Bartoszewski said in an interview with Die Zeit weekly published on Thursday that he was saddened by Berlin’s plans to create a center in memory of those expelled after the war. “It does not suprise me but it saddens me,” said Bartoszewski, who is a survivor of the Nazis’ Auschwitz death camp. “We should not create a situation which forces the new Polish government to react in the same manner as the old government,” he warned. When Ryszard Legutko replaced Giertych as education minister a few weeks before the end of the Law and Justice party’s two-year reign, he said he saw no reason for religion to be in the exam. One of the archibishops, Slawoj Leszek Glodz apparently thought it was a Law and Justice double-cross. On Aug. 18, he threatened an all-out war over the issue, and Legutko relented. The government drew up a plan to include religion in an exam to be given to 1,000 students at 50 schools in the spring of 2008. Then the Civic Platform party ousted Law and Justice in the national elections of late October. The victors said they would drop the idea of putting a religious component in the comprehensive exam. Church officials were apoplectic about the government turn-about. Archbishop of Warsaw Kazimierz Nycz demanded, and got, an audience with Deputy Minister of Education Krystyna Szumilas to discuss the issue. Szumilas said after the meeting that she saw no problem continuing work on the proposal. Tusk’s statement later that no decision has been reached on the issue suggested that the government could back away from it, however. The plan that church officials worked out with Giertych was to include religion in a list of subjects in the exam that high school seniors would not have to pass in order to obtain their diploma. The current education minister, Katarzyna Hall, said that if some students want to show a mastery of religious content by passing a religion section of the exam, the ministry should make the component available to them. Other Civic Platform officials oppose the idea. And the Left and Democrats party has threatened to sue if the Tusk administration decides to include a religion component in the exam. They believe such a move would be unconstitutional because it would be inserting religion into the educational process. Education experts point out that universities use scores on the comprehensive exam to help decide which students to admit. Thus, these experts say, the Education Ministry should draft all questions on the exam. If a religious component is included in the exam, the experts say, the church will be deciding the questions, not the Education Ministry. That means the ministry will be ceding its authority for overseeing the exam to outsiders, these experts say. Tusk said that although he feels “great esteem for and sympathy toward Archbishop Kazimierz Nycz,” the decision about a religion component in the final exam will not be made in talks between government officials and “people from outside the government.” It will be made solely by government officials, he said. The arch-Catholic Giertych said the Law and Justice government did so much work on the proposal that backing away from it now would amount to breaking a promise to the Catholic Church and others who championed it. “Any change is impossible without consultation with the Conference of Polish Bishops,” he added. Left-leaning politicians detest the idea of a religion component in the exam. “It is a sign of primitive conservatism,” Jerzy Szmajdzinski, the deputy head of parliament, said in a radio interview. He is one of the leaders of the Union for Democratic Left Wing party. He maintained that politicians should promote tolerance, openness and respect for all religions but not be involved in forcing into the comprehensive exam a section that basically deals with one denomination – Catholicism. Introducing religion into the exam also would favor students wanting to go into university theol- ogy departments, he added. Beata Gorka, a spokeswoman for Catholic University of Lublin agreed that the religion-component results would help those interested in theology gain admission to universities that offer theology programs. What does the public think about the issue? The polling group PBS DGA reported that more than 61 percent of Poles it polled for the daily Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper opposed the idea of a religion component in the comprehensive exam. Thirtytwo percent supported the idea and seven percent were undecided. Thus public sentiment is running 2 to 1 against the idea. Schools do not require students to take religion courses. Students can choose to take religion courses, can choose to take ethics courses or can choose to take neither. Jaroslaw Zielinski, an MP and member of Law and Justice party’s chamber of ethics, said one out of three students at most schools take neither religion nor ethics courses. Tadeusz Bartos, a journalist who is also a theology expert, said on TOK FM radio that government officials should remember that they represent all Poles when they consider proposals to include such a religion component in the comprehensive exam. The notion that a decision about the issue might be made in private talks between an archbishop and a deputy minister is unacceptable, he said. There should be a public debate on the issue, he contended. The debate should include the question of “what is the function of religion as a school subject,” he said. Is that function instilling knowledge or proselytizing, he asked. If the main function of teaching religion is instilling knowledge, then there is a case for including it in the comprehensive exam, he said. If it’s to proselytize, then it is inappropriate to include it in the exam, he suggested. Polish Jews celebrating Hanukkah. agence france-presse In Europe’s former Jewish heartland, flickering Hanukkah candles are a symbol of both the annual religious festival and the inner light guiding dozens of Poles to their roots and the culture of their forebears. The revival of Judaism in Poland is being kindled by “new Jews”: Poles raised in the shadow of the Nazi Holocaust and Communist-era anti-Semitism, who have chosen to leave the mainstream in a country that is overwhelmingly Roman Catholic. After ceremonies marking Hanukkah in Warsaw’s Jewish cultural center, recent convert Agnieszka Kwasniewska, 37, recalled her awakening. “When I came to the synagogue, it was like I had always belonged,” she told AFP. “It was like coming home.” Like many of her counterparts, Kwasniewska’s conversion began as a quest to understand the things left unsaid by her family. “We never talked about my ancestors. It was like something had been broken,” she said. As a 12-year-old, her paternal grandmother had told her she had been forced to hide during World War II because she “looked like a Jew.” “I knew there was something not quite right in this story. She cried a lot. We never talked about it again.” “Later I asked my father and he said, ‘That’s past history, and there’s no going back. We’re Catholics’,” said Kwasniewska, whose conversion to Judaism has caused tension with her family. According to various estimates, Poland counts just 3,500 to 15,000 Jews out of a total population of 38 mln people, more than 90 percent of whom are Catholic. But it is near impossible to say how many Poles have some Jewish ancestry. Jews first emigrated to Poland from west- Problems with school religious exam the krakow post The Ministry of Education has done an aboutface and begun considering whether to add a section on religion to the comprehensive examination that high school seniors must pass before they can graduate. Students would not have to pass the religion component to obtain a diploma. They would simply have the choice of taking it if they wanted to. The ministry’s decision reverses the Prime Minister Donald Tusk administration’s stance on the religious-component issue in its earliest days in office. News of the government’s about-face has touched off an angry debate on the subject. On one side are Catholic Church officials and politicians who support religious values. On the other side are those who want to keep religion out of schools. Prime Minister Tusk said that although his administration is discussing the idea that the previously ruling right-wing party Law and Justice originally proposed, the government is far from making a decision on it. Church officials began pushing for a religion component in the comprehensive exam in 1999, according to Father Piotr Tomasik, who works on education issues for the Conference of Polish Bishops. The ultra-conservative, pro-Catholic Law and Justice party began working on adding religion to the exam after it won the most seats in the lower house elections of 2005. The education minister at the time, Roman Giertych, put together a plan for the religion component in 2006. Representatives of the Catholic Church, 12 other religions and religious associations worked with him on the plan. With the help of this religious advisory group, Giertych produced a sample religion component for the exam. DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 Russia, Poland end meat dispute P O L A N D The Krakow Post Vancouver to make airport changes after Taser death agence france-presse Russia’s agriculture minister late last week agreed to end a ban on Polish meat imports, removing a bone of contention between the historic rivals that has strained EU-Russian ties. “We are in complete agreement on resuming deliveries of meat products from Poland,” Agriculture Minister Alexei Gordeyev told journalists in Moscow. Gordeyev was speaking after talks with his Polish counterpart Marek Sawicki, part of the government under Poland’s new liberal Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who has set out to improve relations with Russia since taking office last month. “An agreement will be signed next week in Kaliningrad between the veterinary services of the two countries,” Gordeyev said, referring to Russia’s westernmost province. “As soon as the memorandum is signed, deliveries will begin again.” The dispute is behind the Polish government’s veto on a wide-ranging EU-Russia partnership and trade agreement meant to smooth relations between Brussels and Moscow. Despite the apparent resolution to the meat problem, the Polish government said it would not remove the veto before the embargo was fully lifted. “There is no timetable. We are waiting for the signature of a document on the resumption of deliveries,” ministry spokesman Piotr Paszkowski told AFP. Vasily Likhachyov, a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee of Russia’s upper house of parliament, said Poland must now respond to the Russian gesture. “After the settlement of the problem of delivering meat from Poland to Russia, there is no basis for the veto,” Interfax quoted Likhachyov as saying. The partnership agreement is seen as particularly important in the EU because it will include provisions for energy relations as the EU increases its reliance on Russian oil and gas imports. Moscow imposed the meat embargo in November 2005, accusing Poland of shoddy food safety standards. Warsaw claimed the ban was groundless and a purely political move. Wednesday’s agreement was the latest sign of thawing of historically poor relations between Russia and Poland, frozen for the past two years under the conservative, nationalist government of Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski. Last week Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov vowed to turn a new page in bilateral relations after meeting his new Polish counterpart Radoslaw Sikorski in Brussels. 3 President at odds with new PM on Iraq: Tusk agence france-presse agence france-presse Western Canada’s biggest airport announced changes late last week prompted by the death of a Polish traveler lost in the terminal for nearly 10 hours before panicking and dying in a violent police arrest. Robert Dziekanski’s case made world headlines after an amateur video of his death was released last month, showing police repeatedly stunning the distraught traveler with a Taser less than 60 seconds after they first approached him. It was in the secure international baggage zone, the size of two football fields, that Dziekanski apparently became lost after he arrived from Frankfurt on Oct. 13, while his mother waited for him on the other side of a wall in the public zone. To avoid such problems in the future, the airport will open an information center for travelers in the international baggage area, Vancouver Airport Authority president Larry Berg told reporters. As well, patrols of secure areas would be beefed up and signage would be improved, he said. Berg said the airport would set up easily identifiable, terminal-wide access to translation services, 24-hour in-terminal medical response, add a messaging service from the secure area to the public greeting area and improve signs with pictograms and multiple languages. Staff would also begin doing walkthroughs each hour in the area to try to identify lost or confused travelers and assist them. Berg said the changes follow a seven- week review of “every aspect of our operations, from customer care to communication, safety and security, and even building design.” He said staff will continue to look at improvements in the future. In video released November 15, four police officers pile onto the Polish man as he writhes and screams in pain on the floor, then falls still within minutes. Dziekanski, 40, had arrived in Canada as a new immigrant who planned to join his mother. Multiple inquiries into his death include a provincial public inquiry, a police homicide investigation and an independent coroner’s inquest. The federal government also ordered a review of the police use of Tasers, while Polish prosecutors are also looking into the case. Poland’s new liberal Prime Minister Donald Tusk admitted late last week to holding divergent views from conservative President Lech Kaczynski on Iraq and the proposed U.S. missile defense shield. “Concerning Iraq, the differences of opinion are quite serious,” Tusk told journalists following a one-hour meeting with the president aimed at ironing out any creases in their potentially awkward cohabitation. Tusk and his liberal Civic Platform dealt a stunning election defeat in October to Kaczynski’s twin brother Jaroslaw, the previous prime minister and current leader of the right-wing opposition Law and Justice party. In a speech outlining his policies to parliament on November 23, Tusk promised that Poland would end its current mission in Iraq by the end of 2008. Tusk said the president was not convinced that this was the correct course of action, but expressed confidence that he could win him round. Defense Minister Bogdan Klich has even indicated that the 900 troops Poland has deployed in Iraq could be back home by next summer. Tusk also said the two leaders held different views about Polish-U.S. negotiations on the installation of interceptor missiles as part of a U.S. missile defense shield. “The president is more enthusiastic than me, without there being a fundamental difference between us on this matter,” said Tusk. “The president is more determined (to find an agreement with the Americans), independently of what it costs Poland.” The U.S. plan calls for the installation of a powerful targeting radar in the Czech Republic and 10 interceptor missiles in Poland by 2012. Tusk also said the presidency had stressed the “good atmosphere” of the meeting. Germany, Poland seek truce on WWII remembrance the krakow post German Chancellor Angela Merkel said early last week she was receptive to a Polish proposal to build a World War II museum but defended a disputed war memorial center planned in Berlin. “It is an interesting idea,” Merkel told reporters after her first talks with new Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk since he took office last month, when asked about his idea for a museum in the northern Polish city of Gdansk. But she said the museum could not replace German plans to build a memorial center for the mlns of Germans expelled from central and eastern Europe after the war. “Our project is in no way intended to make light of the causes and consequences of World War II,” Merkel said, adding that a German delegation would travel to Warsaw soon to discuss plans for the center. Warsaw has raised concerns that the German project would fail to distinguish between the war’s victims and aggressors. Despite the differences over the memorial, Tusk said he was pleased that Merkel had underlined her rejection of individual bids by German expellees to seek restitution from Poland. “It is important to restore relations between our two countries to the same level as our own personal relations,” a smiling Tusk told a joint news conference with Merkel. Relations between the neighbors suffered under Tusk’s right-wing predecessor Jaroslaw Kaczynski, who missed few opportunities to reproach Germany over its Nazi past. In an interview with the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung published last week, Tusk questioned plans to establish the Berlin memorial center and proposed the museum in his hometown of Gdansk, which was once the German city of Danzig. Some 14 mln Germans fled or were expelled, often brutally, from their homes in eastern Europe from 1944 as the Soviet Red Army advanced and Germany’s Nazi Third Reich crumbled. Around half of them lived in what is now Poland. Merkel and Tusk also discussed the planned “Nord Stream” pipeline from Russia’s Baltic coast to Germany and other European countries via the Baltic Sea. Poland, whose territory will be bypassed by the project, has raised environmental and other objections. Merkel said the German and Polish economy ministers would discuss the issue with a view to addressing Warsaw’s concerns. 4 P O L A N D The Krakow Post R E G I O N A L N E W S Suspect in dance master’s death appears before court DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 Tusk focuses on improving foreign policy A man accused of murdering well-known Russian dance master Dmitri Bryantsev was remanded in custody by a Czech court late last week following a brief appearance, commercial broadcaster TV Nova reported. Police have not identified the man thought to be behind the murder of the artistic director of Moscow’s Stanislavsky Ballet but said he was a foreign citizen. Bryantsev, 57, disappeared on a short trip to the Czech Republic in June 2004 and a nationwide search was launched when he failed to return home. His remains were only discovered in woods near the central Czech town of Jicin in June this year. Police said they charged a man with murder in connection with the case on Friday. They believe an argument erupted over a financial deal between the two men as they drove together. The younger man then shot his companion several times and hid the body. The suspect faces a jail sentence of up to 15 years if found guilty. (AFP) Officials dismiss idea of Belarus-Russia union Police bust Vietnamese prostitution ring Czech police broke up a suspected prostitution ring with raids on houses and brothels Saturday night during which 11 Vietnamese were detained, the news web site Novinky.cz reported late last week. Police from a special squad to combat organized crime carried out searches of the Vietnamese’s homes in Prague and the western city of Domazlice, and also swooped on one brothel in the western Czech border town of Cheb and three others in the capital, the news web site said. The raids followed several months of preparations for the operation. Jail sentences of a maximum 15 years could be imposed, it added. The Czech Republic’s Vietnamese community, fostered during the Communist era when Vietnamese were brought over to work in factories in the former Czechoslovkia, represents one of the biggest groups of foreign migrants in the country. (AFP) Greenpeace members end Czech power plant protest Greenpeace activists late last week ended a two-day protest on top of the chimney of the biggest thermal power plant in the Czech Republic, which they say is the country’s biggest polluter. “We succeeded in attracting attention about the links between the biggest Czech thermal plant which emits the most carbon dioxide, the company CEZ, carbon extraction and the Czech position on climate change,” spokesman Jan Pinos said. The Prunerov II plant in the north of the country near the German border is considered to be the country’s biggest polluter, spewing out 8.9 mln tons of carbon dioxide annually. Eleven activists from Britain, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and the Czech Republic scaled the 150 meter chimney in the morning. Five came down that evening. The demonstration coincided with the international climate change conference in Bali, Indonesia, where world leaders will try to chart out the next steps to curb the greenhouse gases blamed for global warming. The protesters are due to meet Czech Green party leader and environmental leader Martin Bursik on Saturday before he departs for the Bali summit. Bursik has attacked CEZ for not investing in the latest clean technology and spending its profits on an acquisitions spree in other European countries. (AFP) PM Donald Tusk. the krakow post Poland’s new Prime Minister Donald Tusk is focusing on improving his nation’s foreign policy. He says the former government’s policy was damaging Poland’s relations with, for example, Germany and Russia. In recent days he has visited Italy, Belgium and Germany to discuss key issues. Together with his Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski, Tusk says he intends to work hard to make Polish foreign policy more open for compromise and cooperation. During his meeting with European Commissioner Jose Manuel Barroso, Tusk showed significant differences with his predecessor, Jaroslaw Kaczynski. Tusk emphasized there was no conflict between the interests of Poland and those of the EU. Barroso and Tusk agreed the mutual relationships should be based on trust. Nevertheless the new prime minister is not going to bow to every EU demand but rather make the relations based on solid negotiations and a rapid resolution of any conflict. “It’s important to stand up for your nation, to defend the crucial interest of your nation,” Tusk told the EU commissioner. “This tough defense, if you will, of your interest in the EU also means the ability to cooperate, the ability to show mutual respect. As a representative of the Polish government alongside with others who have fought for the EU, I will stand up and defend the European interest as well but always in the spirit of mutual trust and cooperation.” Foreign Minister Sikorski met his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, in Brussels for the highest level talks between the two countries in over a year. Diplomats said the meetings would have Poles seek equal retirement age for men, women the krakow post Ombudsman Jan Kochanowski has sued the Constitutional Tribunal over regulations governing the retirement age of women and men. Currently, retirement age in Poland for men is 65 and for woman 60. In the ombudsman’s opinion, it should be 65 for both sexes. Kochanowski thinks that different retirement ages are unjust and discriminatory, because women’s shorter work lives mean lower government pensions. “A woman retiring at the age of 60 will be given a payment of 66 percent of a man’s pension. If she would work until age 65, the percentage would be 88.7,” Kochanowski said at a press conference. In addition to this, Kochanowski said, an earlier retirement age for women increases their risk of being fired after they qualify for pensions. The real drama will start in 2009 when the pension reform act of 1999 takes full effect. Savings will be taken into consideration, and women may be penalized with lower pensions. In addition, Polish women on average have five times lower salaries than men. If women cannot earn more, perhaps they can work longer. Currently women stop working earlier because it has very little effect on their pensions. Ombudsman Kochanowski believes that the age of retirement should be flexible, so that women will not be forced to work until age 65 if they do not want to. The ombudsman says that the equalization of retirement age is a European trend. The equal retirement age is mandatory in Denmark (65 years), Germany (65), Spain (65), Ireland (65), Holland (65) and France (60). A very interesting rule was introduced in the Czech Republic: The more children reared by a woman, the lower the retirement age. Jolanta Fedk, minister of labor and social policy, also approves of equal retirement ages, but she says that Poland is not prepared for such a change and should wait for the Constitutional Tribunal verdict. Fedk also is considering a so-called marriage pension where the pension would be inherited by the surviving spouse when the other spouse died. According to a survey by the newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza, 56 percent of those polled said they want no retirement changes, and 30 percent said they want to equalize the retirement age of men and women. In Kochanowski’s opinion, equalizing the retirement age is not all that should be done. “Raising the retirement age is needed” for both sexes, he added. Retirement and pensions will become a more urgent issue in coming years. In 30 years, up to 45 percent of Poles will be over 50 years old. Currrently, 29 percent of Polish people are 50 and over. In 2060 it is estimated that each working person will be supporting three nonworking persons. Polish police seek Santa agence france-presse Polish police were searching late last week for a suspect who robbed a village grocery disguised as Santa Claus. Witnesses of the hold-up Thursday in Ploty, northwest Poland, found it difficult to describe the robber who wore a Santa costume with a plastic face mask and long white beard, police said. The thief gave his best wishes to the saleswoman before brandishing an item resembling a handgun and making off in a getaway car with several thousand zloty (several hundred euro, dollars). The robber chose November 6 for the heist, celebrated as the feast of St. Nicholas in Poland. Wanted: Santa. Andrzej Kowalski Russian officials dismissed late last week talk of an impending deal with Belarus to make President Vladimir Putin head of a “union state” comprising the two countries, Echo of Moscow radio reported. The reports came ahead of a visit by Putin to neighboring Belarus today for talks with his counterpart Alexander Lukashenko. “This absolutely doesn’t accord with reality,” a Kremlin spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said when asked if the two sides would sign an act of union. Earlier Echo of Moscow cited unnamed sources in Lukashenko’s administration as saying the two leaders would sign a “constitutional act on the creation of a union state of Russia and Belarus” and that Putin would head the new entity after his term as Russian president ends next year. Under the scenario, Lukashenko would become speaker of the “united parliament,” the station reported. Lukashenko’s spokesman Pavel Lyogky rejected the reports, telling AFP they had prompted “surprise in Belarus.” “We don’t confirm the information that Alexander Lukashenko and Vladimir Putin in the near future will sign in Minsk a constitutional act and share powers in a union state,” he said. Speculation is mounting over possible scenarios by which Putin could retain power after the end of his second term in May, when he is constitutionally obliged to stand down. While Belarus and Russia have close ties – Putin regularly refers to the neighboring state as “fraternal” Belarus – there are also strains. When Putin was named at a meeting of his United Russia party to stand at recent parliamentary polls, Lukashenko commented that watching the meeting on television he had “wanted to vomit.” Lukashenko, who has been branded a dictator by the West, was on a visit to Venezuela on Friday. (AFP) a symbolic dimension since Tusk, a centerright liberal, had promised in the election campaign and in his inaugural speech to put Poland back in the EU mainstream and to end verbal hostilities with Russia. Poland’s relationship with Russia, after a year of tensions between the two countries, was also at the top of the agenda in talks dominated by EU issues during Tusk’s meeting with his Italian counterpart, Roman Prodi, in Rome on Dec. 7. The Italian prime minister complimented Tusk on Poland’s efforts to improve relations with Russia. This follows a previous Polish government stance to block talks on a new EURussia agreement after Russia imposed a ban on imports of Polish meat products. Another very important issue of Tusk’s foreign policy is Poland’s second big neighbor, Germany. As Germany and Poland are looking to repair their bilateral relations, first Sokorski and then Tusk visited Berlin. Relations between the two countries have been strained because of the previous Polish government’s stance on certain EU issues and discussions about a proposal for a controversial Center for Displaced Persons in Germany by an association concerned with the fate of Germans expelled from Eastern Europe after World War II. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier assured Poland that the German government didn’t support the controversial property claims by some Germans organized into the Association for Displaced Persons against Poland. “I am glad that we are also able to talk about the difficult subjects, and I can call them that, in a very open and trustworthy atmosphere,” Steinmeier said. And indeed the atmosphere seemed more friendly. Sikorski and Steinmeier were even on first-name terms. The meeting brought forth mutual assurances that the political relations between Germany and Poland would improve. Retired couple window shopping in Krakow. DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 Stolen British tractors turn up in Poland: police agence france-presse Two hi-tech tractors stolen in southern England by a suspected vehicle trafficking gang and apparently bound for Ukraine have turned up in Poland, police said late last week . “They are luxury-end John Deere and New Holland tractors,” said Tadeusz Kaczmarek, a police spokesman in the central Polish city of Radom. The tractors, which were snatched in the southern English county of Hampshire, were discovered by Radom police in a sealed truck which was traveling from Britain to Ukraine. A third tractor found in the truck had had its chassis number filed off, preventing police from immediately identifying from where it had been stolen. Three individuals were arrested, Kaczmarek told AFP. Police later discovered a fourth New Holland tractor without a chassis number at a site related to the suspected thieves. Such tractors are the farm world’s equivalent of a luxury car, boasting features such satellite navigation, air conditioning and even the latest in-vehicle sound systems. “We estimate the price of the vehicles we have recovered at around a mln zloty (280,000 euro, $400,000),” Kaczmarek said. “There are more arrests on the horizon. It looks like we’re dealing with a whole theft and trafficking network,” he said. cc:sa: Solipsist Poland busts Romanian gang that used fake British cards agence france-presse Polish police said late last week they had arrested around 20 Romanians who were using forged British credit cards to withdraw cash. “Five groups of three to four Romanian citizens have been arrested in the space of the past five months,” Polish national police spokesman Zbigniew Urbanski told AFP. The gang created cards with magnetic strips thanks to reading devices stashed in cashpoints in Britain, and used hidden cameras to record personal identification numbers (PINs) typed into the keypad by genuine card holder. Polish police believe that identity thieves try to take advantage of differences between Britain and Poland’s cashpoint systems, which make it easier to pass off fake cards as the genuine article. Unlike their British equivalents, few Polish cashpoints require a card to have a microchip, which provides additional protection against fraud. Criminal gangs around the world often produce fakes encoded with genuine, stolen credit card details, in order to make payments and cash withdrawals at the expense of victims of data theft. Encoding data into a magnetic strip is cheaper and easier than trying to fake a microchip. In March, Polish police arrested three British citizens who were using 85 separate forged cards to withdraw cash in Warsaw. Last month, police in Spain said they had bust a credit card gang largely made up of Romanians, arresting 44 people. P O L A N D The Krakow Post 5 Poland stands behind capital punishment the krakow post The Tusk government has reversed Poland’s refusal to go along with a European Day Against Capital Punishment – a stand that had prevented the Council of Europe from establishing the day throughout Europe. Joyful European ministers reacted to Tusk’s decision by immediately moving to establish the day. Much of the rest of Europe had resented Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski’s refusal to accept such a day. Poland was the only country out of 47 in the Council of Europe to refuse to go along with the designation. That refusal was tantamount to a veto because council rules require a unanimous vote of member countries before a special day can be established. The Kaczynski government’s stand not only rankled other Europeans but also contradicted Poland’s own position on capital punishment. The government stopped executing criminals 19 years ago and outlawed the death penalty 10 years ago. Kaczynski had maintained that because no court with jurisdiction over all of Europe had outlawed the death penalty, there was no reason to have a European Day Against Capital Punishment. Tusk’s decision to reverse Poland’s opposition to an anti-death-penalty day has already improved relations with the rest of Europe, according to Ministry of Internal Affairs and Administration Grzegorz Schetyna. “Everything has changed in Poland,” he said. “The government has changed, Poland has changed and the decision has changed.” Non-governmental organizations opposed to the death penalty designated October 10 an International Day Against Capital Punishment some years ago. The Council of Europe decided in September to establish a Europe-wide anti-death penalty day on October 10 as well. In the last few weeks of his administration, Kaczynski refused to go along with the day. That killed the day for this year. Kaczynski’s refusal prompted European leaders to describe Poland as being backward. A leading European socialist, Martin Schulz of Germany, asked how long the rest of Europe would swallow Poland’s effort to block the day. EU leaders should do everything they could to show how out of touch Poland was on the issue, Schulz said. Tusk’s new Minister of Justice Zbigniew Cwiakalski contends that “there was no reason to object to establishing the European Day Against Capital Punishment. I am surprised that Poland came out against it. Poland engaged in capital punishment for the last time in 1988, and it has been eliminated from the penal code for over 10 years.” Klaus Buchman, a well-known German political scientist and journalist, said officials might be able to justify capital punishment in countries with no well-established legal and penal systems – as was the case in America’s Wild West territories. Many territories lacked secure prisons, so there was a real threat of a dangerous criminal continuing to roam free, he suggested. Thus territorial governments often imposed the death penalty to threaten criminals by severity of punishment. In Europe, however, legal and penal institutions are so strong that the death penalty has been abolished on human-rights grounds, Buchman said. Nowadays, at least in Europe, capital punishment looks like a relic of the past. Some compare its abolition, in terms of moral force, to the abolition of slavery. New bird flu case, minister reports agence france-presse Poland was hit by a fourth case of deadly H5N1 bird flu late last week when the disease was discovered at a poultry farm, the Agriculture Ministry confirmed. “The new case was discovered in the village of Saldowo, near to Biezun, (central Poland) close to other recent cases,” Farms Minister Marek Sawicki told reporters in Warsaw. “Just as in the previous cases all the chickens will be culled,” Agriculture Ministry spokeswoman Malgorzata Ksiazyk. Three previous cases of H5N1-type bird flu, which is fatal to humans, were discovered earlier this month at chicken and turkey farms 120 kilometers (72 miles) northwest of Warsaw. Veterinary authorities ordered a cull of 110,000 chickens in the area on Sunday. A 30-kilometer isolation zone was established Monday around the farm where the newest case was discovered. Smaller zones were created around the three other contaminated farms in nearby villages. The cases of H5N1 are the first to be recorded in Poland among domestic fowl. Last year the disease was discovered only among wild birds. AGENCJA NIERUCHOMOSCI www.property-krakow.com NEW IDEA OF BEAUTY NOCLEGI W APARTAMENTACH Cosmetic cabinet & SPA EGO offers: - Wide range of face & body care - Dermatology & dermabrasion - Relaxing & healthcare massages - Circumstantial makeup - Home healthcare cosmetics - Atmosphere of relax & recreation We guarantee satisfaction every minute in our office. www.aaakrakow.com cosmetics & spa OPEN: Mon-Fri 9.00-20.00 Sat. 9:00-15.00 ul. Wielopole 15 Tel. 012/ 429-6556 www.ego.zaprasza.net office@aaakrakow.com CALL IN AND SEE US! ul. Napoleona Cybulskiego 2 6 P O L A N D The Krakow Post R E G I O N A L N E W S Italian PM Prodi, Pope hail new PM Donald Tusk Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi hailed late last week the prospect of better relations between Poland and its neighbors as he hosted his new Polish counterpart Donald Tusk. Tusk took office last month promising to repair damage caused by the previous conservative government’s tough line towards Russia and the EU. Improved relations between Warsaw and Moscow and Brussels were in the interest of the whole of Europe, Prodi said after talks with Tusk. He said Poland and Italy would work together to help formulate an energy policy for Europe, which relies on Russia for much of its gas supplies, and a long-term relationship with Moscow. Prodi said both countries would hold regular top-level meetings, the first of which could be early next year in Poland. Tusk for his part said there were no points at issue between himself and Prodi. Following their talks the Polish leader went on to the Vatican, where Pope Benedict XVI wished him every success in governing largely-Catholic Poland in a 20-minute meeting. A Vatican statement said the two discussed subjects “relating to Europe and Poland’s international role.” Tusk said afterwards that he had told the pope he would always be welcome in Poland. (AFP) Belarus opposition party elects new leader Belarus’ main opposition party, the Popular Front, elected a new party leader, Lyavon Barshchevsky, at a party conference in Minsk Sunday. Barshchevsky, the 49-year-old co-founder of the party, received 211 votes out of a possible 236. Former Popular Front leader Vintsouk Vetsherka was elected the party’s senior vice president. Barshchevsky is a translator, teacher, man of letters and linguist. He was a member of the Belarus parliament from 1990 to 1995. Very strict laws constrain the activities of Belarus’ political parties, limiting any challenges to the power of President Alexander Lukashenko. Last month the UN General Assembly’s human rights committee passed a resolution expressing “deep concern” about the Minsk authorities’ use of the criminal justice system to “silence political opposition and human rights defenders.” (AFP) Ex-Czechoslovak prosecutor appeals jail sentence A former Communist-era prosecutor will appeal her eight-year jail sentence for her role in the 1950 show trial and execution of a Czech national hero and three others, her lawyer said early last week. “We received the (sentence) decision last week and lodged an appeal,” defense lawyer Zdenka Havlikova told the CTK news agency of her client, 86-year-old Ludmila Brozova-Polednova, who was convicted of murder in early November. Brozova-Polednova is the last surviving prosecutor involved in the death sentence of Milada Horakova, a former WWII resistance hero and Czechoslovak lawmaker. The three others sentenced and executed a half century ago were Jan Buchal, Zavis Kalandra and Oldrich Pecl. Communist authorities, who seized power in a coup at the start of 1948, charged Horakova and a handful of accomplices with plotting to overthrow the state. Her courageous self-defense and refusal to play the role plotted for her in the show trial resulted in Horakova becoming one of the main symbols of the anti-Communist resistance. Horakova’s sentence was cancelled in 1968 but her name was not fully cleared until 1990, soon after the fall of the former Czechoslovak Communist regime. The Communist regime executed a total of 243 people for political reasons between 1948 and 1989. (AFP) Arrest warrant on tycoon Krauze lifted DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 Chechen independence leader takes part in Polish TV debate the krakow post The arrest warrant for business tycoon Ryszard Krauze has been lifted. One of Poland’s richest citizens can now come back to Poland and will not be automatically detained. The opposition Law and Justice party suggests that this decision is connected with the taking over of the Ministry of Justice by Zbigniew Cwiakalski. Krauze, owner of Prokom, one of Poland’s biggest software companies, and many other businesses, is charged with false testimony as well as obstruction of justice in connection with an action of the Central Anticorruption Bureau (CBA) against Ministry of Agriculture employees, which failed after an information leak. According to prosecutors, Krauze, former Interior Minister Janusz Kaczmarek, former Police Chief Konrad Kornatowski and Jaromir Netzel, the former chairman of the country’s biggest insurer, PZU, were the people responsible for the failure. The arrest warrant was issued on Aug. 30. Krauze since then has remained abroad, officially on business. The warrant was lifted on Nov. 15, a day before the new Donald Tusk government stepped into office. In this cabinet, Cwiakalski replaced Zbigniew Ziobro, who personally appeared at many press conferences devoted to Krauze’s case. The opposition party responded to the lifting of the warrant with a press conference at which it called this decision scandalous and pointed to the fact that Cwiakalski was the author of an expert opinion which was used by Krauze’s pleaders. Some Law and Justice politicians called on Cwiakalski to resign. But the justice minister said the decision on Krauze was taken before he assumed office and he didn’t even know about it until last week. He also declared that his expert opinion was only based on Supreme Court verdicts and not on Krauze’s situation. According to Cwiakalski, Krauze’s case will be handled the same as that of any other citizen and when back in Poland, he should testify. Even though the arrest warrant was lifted, the charges against him weren’t. Cwiakalski’s candidacy for the justice post was strongly opposed by Law and Justice as well as President Lech Kaczynski. They both pointed out that in the past Cwiakalski was an advocate of people charged with corruption and that this stands in opposition with his new role of chief prosecutor – an office which is automatically held by the justice minister. Cwiakalski argued that he is no longer an active lawyer and stressed that in the past many advocates had become justice ministers. He was also backed by Tusk, who expressed his full trust in him. agence france-presse Poland risked the ire of Russia early this week after Chechen independence icon Akhmed Zakayev, who is wanted by Moscow on terrorism charges, appeared on a talk show on Polish public television. Zakayev came to Poland to take part in an edition of the popular program “Warto Rozmawiac” (Worth Talking), which was broadcast in the evening by the TVP2 channel to mark World Human Rights Day. “I want to thank the Polish people for your help,” Zakayev said on the program. “The fate of Poles and Chechens has much in common,” he said. “You have proved through your determination and sacrifice that freedom can be achieved. You are an example to us,” he added. Chechnya’s violent struggle for independence from Russia broke out after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. It attracted support from some Poles, who draw parallels with their own nation’s years of resistance, both violent and peaceful, first to imperial Russian and later to Communist rule before Poland broke free from the then Soviet-dominated Communist bloc in 1989. But Moscow has accused Zakayev of involvement in terrorist acts. Zakayev was once the envoy to Europe of former Chechen separatist president Aslan Maskhadov, who was slain in 2005. He currently lives in Britain, where he has had political refugee status since 2003. British authorities have sparked Moscow’s anger by refusing to extradite him, citing lack of evidence and concerns about the integrity of the Russian judicial system. Russia regularly denounces countries that host visits by Zakayev. In June, for example, France found itself under fire after Zakayev came to the eastern city of Strasbourg to attend a session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, the human rights and democracy body. Zakayev’s latest appearance comes as Poland’s new liberal Prime Minister Donald Tusk tries to mend fences with Russia. Tusk has to contend with two years of increasingly chilly Polish-Russian relations during the two-year incumbency of his predecessor, conservative nationalist Jaroslaw Kaczynski. Hungarian Cuisine and More... Christmas approaches with shopping madness the krakow post Christmas is coming soon and with it a fury of shopping. Shops are trimmed with Christmas trees, silver chains, reindeer, Santa Claus and snowflakes appear on shop shelves and carols are heard everywhere from dawn to dusk and beyond. All that is to make people feel the Christmas spirit and to open their wallets and for once in the year to forget about saving money. Merchants have waited for this moment all year. The average Pole will spend 240 zloty for presents this year (Ipsos). One out of 10 will spend more than 500 zloty. The more educated people are the more money they spend. Men, who often say they’re not going to spend much, end up spending more than women (on average men 245 zloty women 236 zloty). “We will buy even more next year,” said economist Witold Orlowski. “If the economy develops people buy more and that is right.” Internet shopping also is feeling the Christmas crush. Shopping online is becoming more popular because it is easier than traditional shopping. This is especially true of busy big-city dwellers. Online shopping can be done regardless of the time of day, which is one reason e-markets will be most popular just before Christmas, said Jaroslaw Sobolewski, analyst and e-business expert working for Interactive Advertising Bureau. Poles spend huge amounts of money on Christmas, often using credit—as merchants rub their hands in delight. Analysts say some Poles may run up a bln zloty in debt this season. Hypermarkets and banks have credit to offer. Bank counters are located just next to cash desks. Consumers can get money quickly and easily. At Media Market and Saturn credit covers as much as 60 percent of sold commodities. Shops try to lengthen the Christmas shopping season. Many start with promotions and sales of Christmas trees even in November. Shopping peaks Dec. 15-17. “It is a kind of exaggeration. Just yesterday we bought chrysanthemums and candles and now we are made to buy Christmas trees. In the past it was possible to buy a Christmas tree just two days before Christmas. Ornaments we made ourselves. We had enormous joy. Now every part of Christmas is aimed at just spending money,” said Jadwiga Doroszkiewicz, a pensioner. Poland at Christmastime differs from other countries. In Great Britain, for example, the first Christmas decorations can appear as early as September. In the U.S., Christmas shopping starts on socalled Black Friday, the fourth Friday of November, the day after Thanksgiving. “Christmas decorations on display almost everywhere are to make us think about presents and consequently to use credit,” says Tadeusz Poplawski, sociologist and chairman of the faculty of marketing and enterprise at Technical University of Bialystok. Such spending is dictated by Christmas “temples of consumption,” the huge market centers. Such centers make the greatest profits with small shops trying to keep up. Christmas, a time of reflection, meditation, joy and love, changes into a race between shops. Stary Kleparz Pharmacy Momotown Hostel 28 Miodowa St. tel. 012 4296929 info@momotownhostel.com www.momotownhostel.com 10% discount with this ad! We speak English and French. Rynek Kleparski 14 Tel.: (0) 12 430-0410 www.starykleparz.pl B U S I N E S S DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 cc:sa:Diliff Schengen creates panic among visa-less Americans The Krakow Post European Commission says Polish steelmaker misused state aid agence france-presse The European Commission said early this week that Polish steel maker Huta Warszawa misused state aid for restructuring in 2003, before it was bought by Arcelor. Under a restructuring of the Polish steel industry, the company received around 50 million euros ($73.5 mln) of state aid, mostly in the form of a guarantee for a loan to fund investments in 2003 and 2004. However, the Commission found that around 30 mln euro ($44 mln) of the loan was used in 2004 to pay off several old Downtown Prague. agence france-presse More European borders come down this month and there is panic among Prague’s large U.S. community with a last minute rush to get visas in order or quit the country. Eric Snow, a 32-year-old from San Diego, California, went through a six-month bureaucratic nightmare when he decided to upgrade his visa. Corry O’Brien, a 53-year old retired government worker, who came to Prague with thoughts of a long stay is cutting it short rather than risk becoming an illegal alien. Traditionally, U.S. citizens with a 90-day tourist visa took a three hour train ride from Prague to the Czech Consulate in Dresden, Germany, to get an extension there. Many used the system to live and work undeclared as permanent tourists. The EU’s so-called Schengen zone has changed all that. The zone, where passports are not checked once a traveler is inside, will be extended on Dec. 21 to the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia. But it means that Americans and other expats in Prague will have to go outside the zone to get a new visa, and that means going to the Ukraine, Switzerland or Romania as some of the nearest destinations. And tourist visas now only allow residence within Schengen countries for three months in any six-month period. Snow feared he would have to endure a 90-day exile outside the Czech Republic “somewhere in the East” as he wrestled with getting his new visa. “I was afraid I might have to leave the country, or at least go away for a time. I did not want that, I have made a life here,” exclaimed the English language teacher. “This Schengen thing came out of the blue,” exclaimed O’Brien. “I thought I could go somewhere for the visa extension but I did not know I could not come back for 90 days,” added the grey-haired collecter of “cultural experience” whose family is CALL TO ADVERTISE: Andrzej Kowalski, Marketing Manager, +48 (0) 798-683-160 of Czech-Irish descent. “I did not realize you would have to go to Switzerland or some non-EU country. I can hardly afford to stay here because the dollar has dropped so much,” she added, referring to the halving in the dollar-koruna exchange rate since 2000. “To me its a shame I feel I have to go, but I will not break the rules,” she concluded. Snow feared he would face the Schengen sanctions if he did not get his new visa before the old one expired. At one stage in his personal paper chase and trial, Snow witnessed a Czech consulate and the foreign police squabbling over who should deal with his papers. That followed a trip to the Dresden consulate that he later found he did not need to make. Like most other foreigners trying to unscramble Schengen, Snow tried at first to work out himself what to do by searching an expats’ web site. “It was completely wrong,” Snow mused. He brought his mediocre knowledge of the Czech language to bear on official information sources, but found them lacking and eventually hired an “agent” to circumvent the administrative maze. His first agent got him nowhere but a second one got him to his grail, albeit around 5,000 koruna (190 euro/$279) poorer. “I would never try to do this on my own. Get an agent is all I can say,” he concluded. The U.S. Embassy in Prague estimates there are 5,000 Americans in the Czech capital but an unknown number of the 400,000-500,000 U.S. tourists each year stay behind. According to Snow many Americans are taking their children out of Prague’s English language schools because of Schengen. But visa-enabling agents are enjoying a boom. “We have got about half again as much interest as we did at this time last year,” said Nora Vinduskova in her small central Prague office, adding that Australians, Canadians, Japanese and Thais as well as Americans are her main clients. EU court defends right for firms to move abroad to save costs agence france-presse The European Court of Justice late last week upheld the right of EU companies to shift activities to another member state, dealing a blow to trade unions seeking to prevent so-called social dumping. However in the same ruling, regarding a Finnish shipping company’s move to sail under the Estonian flag, the court also ruled that unions were allowed to take collective action to persuade a company not to decamp to a cheaper location and workforce. That right, the court in Luxembourg ruled, only applies where jobs or employment conditions are “jeopardised or under serious threat.” The general ruling resulted from a particular case involving the London-based International Transport Workers Federation (ITF) and the Finnish shipping company. The federation was unhappy that the Finnish shipping company, Viking, in a cost-cutting move, sought in October 2003 to staff one of its passenger ferries, the loss-making Rosella, with a cheaper Estonian crew and sail it under the Estonian HOTEL EDEN Hotel Eden ul. Ciemna 15 31-053 Krakow Tel. 012 430 65 65 eden@hoteleden.pl www.hoteleden.pl debts, which was not part of the restructuring plan. The Commission calculated that the loan guarantee gave the company an interest subsidy worth two million euro, which it has agreed to pay back. The company was taken over in 2005 by steel group Arcelor, which itself has since been bought by Mittal Steel to form the world’s biggest steelmaker. Huta Warszawa is one of the bigger producers of steel in Poland and has the capacity to churn out nearly one million tons per annum. announces our annual festive CHRISTMAS and NEW YEAR’S PARTIES. We also provide EXCEPTIONAL CATERING SERVICES for your own holiday parties or functions throughout the year. flag for its Tallinn-Helsinki trips. The ITF sent a circular to all its affiliates asking them not to deal with the Viking Line, with the threat of sanctions attached. This had the effect of preventing Estonian trade unions from entering into negotiations with Viking. After Estonia joined the EU in 2004, Viking brought the case to the British courts seeking to force the ITF to withdraw its circular and asking the court to order the Finnish Seamen’s Union, an ITF affiliate, to honour its right to reflag the ferry. Britain’s Court of Appeal referred the case to the European Court of Justice which ruled Tuesday that the union action amounted to “restrictions on the freedom of establishment ... (which) cannot be objectively justified. “Such a restriction can be accepted only if it pursues a legitimate aim such as the protection of workers,” the court said, throwing it back to the British courts to decide whether the collective action went “beyond what was necessary.” NEW EMPLOYMENT PORTAL LAUNCHING NOVEMBER 2007 REGISTER FOR FREE TODAY BE FIRST! SEND YOUR CV NOW MAKE YOURSELF VISIBLE TO EMPLOYERS IN IRELAND, UK AND MIDLAND EUROPE REGISTER NOW ON www.snazzyjobs.ie Czech gov’t cancels tank contract after series of problems agence france-presse The Czech government said late last week it had canceled a 798-mln-euro ($1.17-bln) light tank contract with Austria’s Steyr-Daimler-Puch. “The contract has not been properly fulfilled and within the timeframe agreed” and accordingly it was cancelled on Monday, Defense Minister Vlasta Parkanova told a news conference. The contract, one of the largest ever in Czech military history, was for the supply of 199 Panur tanks. The tanks already built had not passed control tests and “there were a whole series of problems,” Parkanova said, without giving further details. “The terms of the contract are confidential,” she said, while adding that the delivery of the first 17 tanks in November as agreed had not happened. “Our decision may seem radical at first but we are convinced it is right. Any concession [on the terms] on our part would have only led to others,” the minister said. The local office of Steyr-DaimlerPuch declined to comment, wanting first to study the statement. 7 B U S I N E S S The Krakow Post B I Z Czech unemployment rate falls to nine-year low The Czech unemployment rate fell to 5.6 percent in November from 5.8 percent in October to the lowest level for nine years, the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs announced early last week. The number of workers seeking and able to take up jobs immediately fell to 312,558, a drop of 8,082 compared with the figure the previous month, the office said. Analysts had expected November’s unemployment rate to dip to 5.7 percent. (AFP) Blast hits Russia-EU gas pipeline: report An explosion late last week in Ukraine knocked out of service one of the main pipelines exporting Russian natural gas to the EU, the Russian Vesti television news channel reported overnight. The explosion, which cut the pipeline carrying Siberian gas through Ukraine to Germany and other EU clients, forced the operators to suspend the flow on the pipeline. However, there would be no interruption in the deliveries to the EU, a source in the Ukrainian government quoted by the channel assured. “One of the Ukrainian gas grid’s specifics is in its multiple branches, which allow us to re-route gas around the hit section,” the source said. There were no reports of casualties or injuries. The pipeline had suffered a similar incident earlier this year, when a blast ripped off a section and it took 10 days to repair the damage. (AFP) Arriva PPC launches private Polish railway An announcement was made on Monday stating that a decision will be made concerning the separation of the Telekomunikacja Polska sectors by mid 2008. Anna Strezynska, director of the Urzad Komunikacji Elektronicznej (the Electronic Communication Office – UKE), made the announcement on TVN CNBC early this week. She stated that the decision to separate Telekomunikacja Polska would be made by mid-year, while analytical research will be conducted throughout the beginning of 2008 to determine what benefits the separation will bring to the consumer and to the company. Strezynska also added the current discussions are more concerned with separating the operational, rather than the structural, elements of the Slovak industrial output rose 17.3 percent in October on a 12-month comparison following a revised 15.3 percent in September, the Slovak Statistics Office announced late last week. Output from the key auto sector, Slovakia’s three major car plants, Volkswagen, PSA Peugeot Citroen and South Korea’s Kia Motors, was one of the major factors fueling the rise, with production up 59.8 percent on a 12-month comparison. Over the first 10 months of the year industrial production had climbed 14.4 percent compared with the same period last year. (AFP) Czech inflation at six-year high of 5.0 percent Czech inflation rose to 5.0 percent in November on a 12-month comparison from 4.0 percent in October, the highest level since August 2001, the Czech Statistical Office reported early this week. More expensive food and non-alcoholic drink were the main factor fuelling the price rise with inflation in this category at 10.4 percent on a yearly comparison. “Double digit year on year growth in this division was last recorded more than 11 years ago,” the office added. Prices rose by 0.9 percent in November compared with October following a 0.6 percent rise in October compared with the previous month. Czechs are bracing themselves for a raft of price rises in January as value added tax is increased across a range of goods in response to the center-right government moves to switch the tax burden from direct to indirect taxes. (AFP) Latvia continues sharp growth in Q3 The Latvian economy continued its breakneck growth in the third quarter, expanding 10.9 percent compared with a year earlier, official data showed late last week. In the first and second quarters of this year, the economy grew 11.2 percent and 11.0 percent respectively, giving a marginal slowdown in the three months to September. In 2006, the economy boomed with 11.9 percent growth, the fastest rate since independence from the crumbling Soviet Union in 1991 and the strongest rate in the then 25-member EU. Growth has been fuelled largely by robust domestic consumption, particularly since Latvia joined the EU in 2004. On the downside, Latvian authorities are struggling to stem rising inflation, which has sparked regular warnings about overheating. In October, 12-month inflation hit 13.2 percent, which was the highest figure since November 1996. (AFP) krakowpost.com Telekomunikacja Polska to separate its retail sector by mid-2008 the krakow post Slovak industrial production rises 17.3 percent in October the krakow post The British-Polish company Arriva PCC has begun operating the first privately owned railway in Poland. Until Arriva PCC began carrying passengers in northwest Poland on Dec. 10, Polish National Railways was the country’s only rail operation. Passengers hope the new company will be both cheaper than Polish National Railways and have better on-time performance. Arriva PCC is a partnership of Britain’s Arriva and Poland’s PCC. The two companies teamed up last year. A key attraction for Arriva was the fact that the Polish government had already granted PCC a private-railway operating license, according to Gazeta Prawna. Arriva PCC won a bidding process in June 2007 to serve passengers in the Pomeranian and Kujawy districts. To help Arriva PCC start its service, local government officials in those districts gave it 13 passenger cars. The company also bought two new luxury cars at a total cost of 15 mln zloty. The maker, Bydgoszcz-based PESA Bydgoszcz SA, is the only European company providing luxury passenger cars to Ukrainian Railways. To round out its fleet, Arriva PCC is refurbishing 30 cars that had been used on Denmark’s railways. It expects them to be ready at the beginning of 2008. Arriva PCC will serve four stations to start with – Bydgoszcz, Torun, Chojnice and Czersk. It wants to increase that number as time goes by. The new company employs about 120. Arriva is a big player in Europe’s rail market. Its 12,000 trains provide more than one bln passenger journeys a year. It has 30,000 employees. PCC Rail Holding consists of 12 Polish and foreign companies that specialize in railway transportation logistics. International Women’s Association of Krakow www.iwak.pl iwak_krakow@yahoo.com company. According to Gazeta Prawna most experts are of the view the structural process should be made separate from the operational element. The operational element includes retail and wholesale, which, according to analysts, should function separately from the structural side of the telecommunication company. The biggest single share holder in Telekomunikacja Polska is France Telecom with 47.5 percent of the shares in the company. Some 3.87 percent of the shares are owned by the state, while the remaining 48.6 percent are owned by various other private shareholders. Telekomunikacja Polska made a debut on the Warsaw Stock Exchange in 1998. Strezynska has assured she is supporting the separation of the operational element of the company. After analyzing the pros and cons of the decision, Telekomunikacja Polska will not want to make a decision that is against the European Commission, which has supported the option of separating the operational element of the company, according to Strezynska. Although restructuring may be in the cards for the company, it is a decision which will be more time consuming and involve a higher level of risk. According to the UKE’s director, restructuring could take up to four years. A separation in the operational element in Telekomunikacja Polska will mean a separation of the units responsible for the company’s retail sector. Separation would mean Telekomunikacja Polska would have to operate its retail sector by playing the same rules as those played by other operators on the market. Wojciechowski has announced the capital will experience an investment boom as far as tenders are concerned. The biggest projects will be announced next year, with their completions by 2009-2012. The city is estimating a 4.5 bln zloty cost associated with the Euro 2012 investments. Seven major projects are anticipated, including the new metro line as well as upgrading the Legia Football Club stadium. The remaining five projects are set to improve the infrastructure around the capital at an estimated cost of 1.25 bln zloty. According to Wojciechowski, as reported by Gazeta Prawna, the upcoming expenditures will be labeled as Euro 2012 investments. This is a precautionary measure to prevent projects lapsing beyond mandatory deadline for completion and eliminating the possibility of contractors asking for time extensions. The city of Warsaw will be looking to the biggest construction companies for offers. One contractor will be held responsible for the overall construction. That company will in turn enter into contracts and agreements with subcontractors for the projects’ completion. Warsaw to spend 4.5 bln zloty for Euro 2012 the krakow post ANNOUNCEMENT DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 LUK Agency R E G I O N A L cc:sa:Solaris8315 8 The upcoming European Football Championships Euro 2012, which will be hosted by Poland, will lead to an investment boom in Warsaw. The city will be announcing its major tenders early next year, with one already set for this December. According to Gazeta Prawna, the city is planning to expand its one line metro to a second line. The estimated cost of the development would be 3 bln zloty. Gazeta Prawna reports Deputy Mayor of Warsaw Jacek B U S I N E S S DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 GDFL 1.2:M.Minderhoud Consultancy agencies to fight for customers in 2008 when more EU funds become available The Krakow Post Krauze’s Polnord to build in St. Petersburg the krakow post the krakow post Regional councils responsible for the distribution of EU funds for the period 2007-2013 will announce, according to Gazeta Prawna, the first lot of competitions for the best business plans in the first quarter of 2008. The application process will commence earlier. Companies seeking to win are looking for help to outside agencies that specialize in getting EU funds. Within the years 2004-2006 the most efficient agencies in the field were Faber Consulting and Ernst & Young. The general atmosphere from larger companies is to pay a specialist agency rather than waste time on procedures usually foreign to the business entrepreneur. According to Gazeta Prawna, smaller business plans competing for amounts between 200,000 to 300,000 zloty, are better off preparing their plans themselves rather than seek consultancy companies. Przemyslaw Sulich, director of a consultancy agency A1 Europe, points out the agencies do not only assist in writing up the application documentation. Agencies can also double-check if all relevant information passed on to the funding committee is in order, or they can help in training an employer or employees in EU funding matters. The risk involved in contracting a consultant today is not similar to that of the time when Poland entered the EU. Once the Union opened its doors to Poland and its funding possibilities, thousands of inexperienced consultancy firms flooded the market with promises of quick gains Top Management Native English Teacher eng_schoolkrakow@ yahoo.com Place a career resume here! jargonmedia@gmail.com MINI Place a job offer here! jargonmedia@gmail.com Helper/Au-Pair MINI M 31, University degree in engineering, 6 years of top management experience in leading companies in industrial cooling, refrigerating sector. Project management. Negotiations. Prepare technical solutions. Full scope of technical support: pre-planning. PC. Contact: jerrybarrows@ yahoo.com Business/Personal Assistant We are looking for a Helper/Au-Pair. Native English speaker preferred. aupair152krakow@ yahoo.com Place a job offer here! jargonmedia@gmail.com RESUME If you are interested, please write to us: jargonmedia@gmail.com VACANCY Successful applicants will: - enjoy the art of selling and meeting new people - have a minimum of one year of sales experience - be communicative and flexible with a non-09:00-17:00 mentality VACANCY We are currently looking for people to join our Marketing & Sales team. A school of English in Krakow is looking for a native English teacher. The position is available immediately for a period of one year. The individual should be enthusiastic and creative, possession of a recognized teaching qualification (CELTA/TEFL) and some relevant previous experience in work with groups is required. If you are interested in this vacancy or would like further information please do not hesitate to send your CV. RESUME MINI MINI Marketing & Sales Enthusiasts!!! You are wanted! of EU funds. The result was a myriad of applications that had little or no chance of succeeding, with even the most basic information erroneously entered on forms. Currently the Polish market is equipped with consultants who match the consultancy giants with the experience and skill. Client care is a priority with consultants being able to spend more time with their client portfolios individually. The upcoming year will mean a feverous battle among consultancy agencies for a new client base. The end result will not be dissimilar to that of Western Europe, where only a few agencies survived the competition. The customer will be seeking the lowest prices on the market and many of the agencies will be unable to compete. Talented, experienced lady is looking for a job of Business/Personal Assistant (full- or part-time) Degree in Philology, 10 years experience in Western companies. Very responsible, goal excellent organizational and interpersonal skills. Please contact me at: hiopole@mail.ru Place a career resume here! jargonmedia@gmail.com The Polish-owned construction company Polnord, a subsidiary of Prokom, owned by mogul Ryszard Krauze is set to commence on a large scale construction project in St. Petersburg. Gazeta Prawna reports, Polnord signed a preliminary contract with the Moscow-based company OAO Ruskie Samocwiety late last week. The St. Petersburg construction project is estimated to be worth $800 mln. The Polish-owned company along with its Moscow-based partner will construct an office complex of approximately 250 square meters, with offices later being made available for lease. The land upon which the offices will be constructed is owned by the Russian OAO Ruskie Samocwiety. The building plans show the office building construction will be situated in the center of St. Petersburg at a major communication crossroad close to the major train station and the metro station. The area is also close to the shopping district hub. Both parties to the project have agreed on a three-month period in which architectural projects will be completed. The time allocated will also be spent on finalizing financial plans for the construction as well as carrying out market research for the investment. Polnord, a subsidiary of Prokom is owned by Ryszard Krauze, a Polish software mogul who made his fortune in the early nineties. Krauze, originally from Sopot, began his software business in 1991, beginning with an accountancy program which was bought up by stateowned mining companies for their bookkeeping requirements. Prokom later won the tender in 1993 for setting up software for the stateowned news agency company Ruch and by 1996 for Telekomunikacja Polska. Prokom was responsible for establishing a software program that would manage the TP business structure. Later projects included software for ZUS (the state-owned social security agency) and PZU (the insurance company). Krauze has often been labeled as a monopolizer of state tenders. Critics believe Krauze has been responsible for various activities involving corruption and bribing officials and politicians in order to win project tenders. Should a final decision be made as to the St. Petersburg project, a new company will be established to manage the project. The co-partners will be the Russian OAO Ruskie Samocwiety and a new subsidiary of Polnord with 50 percent of its shares in the umbrella company. A final announcement will be made by June 2008. 9 W A R S A W The Krakow Post Digital headhunter Skyscraper to tower over Poland the krakow post Security system in Warsaw. the krakow post Criminals – it doesn’t matter if they are from the U.S., France, Germany, Poland or anywhere else – use the newest technology, including Internet and computers. To fight them, police must use the same high-tech equipment. Warsaw authorities have decided to test and perhaps buy a new system that allows the computer to recognize faces of pedestrians recorded by monitoring cameras. Here’s how it works: The digital monitoring photos are reworked by the computer system. The faces of the pedestrians are scanned and compared with faces in the police data base. The computer detects individual, characteristic features like intervals between eyes, ears and nose, etc., to make a geometrical map of a face. Then a computer program compares it with pictures of “wanted” criminals, which were also analyzed carefully. The most difficult challenge for the scientists was to “teach” the computer how to recognize those characteristic features of a face in every circumstance, such as a different haircut, mimicry, beard or make-up. Systems like these are expensive, but they can be worth it as they help to make video monitoring, which also costs a lot of money, more useful. An officer usually is able to watch a monitoring screen carefully for 20 to 30 minutes. The computer works all day long with the same efficiency and precision. If the system points out a suspect, it is never 100 percent correct. But for the police it is enough to check the suspect’s ID to confirm that he is indeed a wanted criminal. The police hope Warsaw authorities decide to buy this system. “We run many extradition cases in which the most difficult thing is to pinpoint a wanted man’s location,” said John Bienkowski, the FBI’s representative in Poland. “A system like this would do it faster and cheaper than traditional methods,” he told the daily newspaper Dziennik. The digital headhunter already has been working successfully in Great Britain. Airports in the U.S. also have started to use it. Tests of the headhunter will be done in Poland next year. Warsaw authorities have applied for EU grants to help finance the system. It is estimated that it would cost 230 mln zloty to install the digital headhunter in Warsaw. ANNOUNCEMENT CLASSICAL GUITAR MUSIC FOR TOP RESTAURANTS Our repretoire of Spanish, Argentinian and Italian classical music will create the special ambience you need to maximize your guests’ fine-dining experience. Good rates and top quality. guitarcatering@gmail.com DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 GFDL.1.2:Janusz J. 10 The Palace of Culture and Science, the tallest building in Warsaw and in all of Poland, is set to be overshadowed in four years’ time. A consortium led by Jan Kulczyk, one of Poland’s richest people, plans to build a 282.4-meter-high skyscraper, which would be the tallest building in continental Europe. According to the daily newspaper Rzeczpospolita, the skyscraper will be located in the very center of the Polish capital, just a few steps from the 230 meters-high palace built in 1955. The new building will have 68 floors filled with luxury apartments for sale and a hotel. The name of the building remains unknown, but it is likely to include one of the major worldwide hotel chain brands. The design for the skyscraper hasn’t yet started, and it‘s unknown who will do it. Usually, ventures like this hire the world’s most famous architects to gain credibility and quality and thus summon investors and clients. According to the plans, the building will cost 1 bln zloty (278 bln euro), with construction to start by the end of 2009 and completion scheduled in 2011. Chmielna Development, a company owned by Kulczyk, will cover only 9 percent of the cost. The rest is to be financed by banks. The current tallest European building is the Commerzbank Tower in Frankfurt, Germany (258.7 meters not including antenna on the top). The Warsaw structure will be 260 meters high, topped by a 22.4meter spire. But it’s already known that by the time the Warsaw skyscraper is complete, the new London Bridge Tower will exceed its height. The 310-meter London building should be finished by the end of 2009. Currently, Warsaw has 14 buildings higher than 100 meters. The tallest is still the Palace of Culture and Science, which was built between 1952 and 1955 as a gift of the Soviet Union to Communist Poland. It became one of symbols of the city even if many consider it an awful example of social re- alism in architecture. Today, skyscrapers are also being planned and built in other major cities in Poland. Leszek Czarnecki, the richest Pole according to the most recent “Forbes” ranking, is investing in a residential building in Wroclaw called Sky Tower. It will be 258 meters high and should be ready by 2010.In Gdynia, two 138-meter Sea Towers are already at an advanced level of construction and will be opened in February 2009. They will contain luxury apartments and are located close to the coast. In nearby Gdansk, a 202-meter skyscraper called Big Boy is to be finished in 2011. In Krakow, plans for a skyscraper district are being discussed by architects and local authorities. It would be located close to Czyzyny in Nowa Huta, far away from the city center in order not to disrupt the architectural balance of the old town. For now, the tallest building in Krakow is Blekitek on Rondo Grzegorzeckie at 105 meters and 20 floors. Judges to earn more nationwide the krakow post Budget plans for next year suggest an additional one billion zloty will be spent on the judiciary. The Minister of Justice has also suggested regulation is needed to improve the status of judges. From July 1, 2008, a new statute is being enacted which will raise the artificial wage basis upon which judges’ salaries are decided. His Honor Slawomir Rozycki from the Ministry of Justice told Gazeta Prawna, the new budget will also extend to creating more positions for support staff required in the running of the judiciary. This will include 800 judges’ associates’ positions as well as 1,500 court staff and 200 support officers. According to Rozycki, the reason behind the creation of additional job vacancies is to lessen the workload of judges, who should only be concentrating on handing down judgments and not other administrative matters. The court process is to become more efficient. Among the new positions created, there are no plans to increase judiciary posts. The only increase in additional judges will be seen in the 293 law graduates who are completing their judicial exams and practical training. The estimated amount spent in next year’s budget on the judiciary is 9.5 bln zloty, a 12 percent increase to this year’s budget. The budget for 2007 was one million zloty less than the predicted budget for next year. Although the judiciary as a whole is pleased with the changes and the additional money, most claim the step is not big enough to put a stop to the large number of good judges leaving their posts. Currently judges receive wage increases every seven years. This period will be reduced to five years as of July next year. According to Gazeta Prawna, the problem lies in wages allocated to young judges who are just starting their profession. Stanislaw Dabrowski, president of the National Judicial Council, reminds that judges who are at the start of their careers are usually in their early 30s at – an age when they are beginning to have families and major financial responsibilities. And it is this group of judges who are mostly discriminated by the wage allocation directives. Dabrowski suggests young judges’ wages should be comparable to the average wage in the private sector. Currently judges’ wages are decided on an artificial scale, which calculates base wages. To solve this problem and to raise the earning power of a judge on a market that is quickly increasing average wages across the board is to somehow balance the wages of a judge to that of the average earnings on the market. According to judges, to retain a high level within the judiciary and to solve the chronic problem of judges leaving the bench to enter private practice, wages would have to increase to around 12,000 zloty per month. DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 K R A K O W The Krakow Post 11 Plaque commemorates Wladyslaw Szpilman Kinga Rodkiewicz Staff Journalist A plaque to commemorate the great Polish pianist and composer Wladyslaw Szpilman was unveiled in Sosnowiec Dec. 5. The plaque, made by Stanislaw Wozniak and Arkadiusz Koniusz, was placed in the tenement house in which the Szpilman family lived before World War II. “A good thing for us (not for him, as one has to admit) that Wladyslaw Szpilman, our Cole Porter, Gershwin, McCartney, was born in Poland,” said Wojciech Kilar, composer of movie music. “Szpilman’s songs evoke the sound of an era of elegance, of good manners, of gracious women and of jazz music.” Also dedicated to the composer is part of the main square in Sosnowiec, where local authorities have placed a piano that automatically plays Szpilman compositions. Works by Wladyslaw Szpilman include Waltz in the Olden Style (1936) for orchestra, Concertino (1940) for piano and orchestra, Little Overture (1968) for orchestra. In the 1950s, he wrote about 40 children’s songs, for which he received an award from the Polish Composers Union in 1955. In 1961, he initiated and organized Sopot International Song Festival in Poland and founded the Polish Union of Authors of Popular Music. The pianist was born in Sosnowiec in 1911. After early piano lessons with his mother Esthera, he continued his piano studies in the early 1930s at the Warsaw Conservatory under A. Michalowski and at the Academy of Arts (Akademie der Künste) in Berlin under Artur Schnabel and Leonid Kreutzer. He also studied composition with Franz Schreker. On April 1, 1935, he joined Polish Radio, where he worked as a pianist performing classical and jazz music. His career was abruptly broken off by Germany’s attack on Poland in 1939. He and his family, with all people of Jewish roots, were forced to move to the Ghetto, where he continued to work as a pianist in the restaurants of the Ghetto. When the rest of his family was deported to Treblinka, an extermination camp in the east, Szpilman managed to flee from the transport loading site with the help of a friend, who grabbed him from the crowd and took him away from the waiting train. None of his family members survived the war. As set out in his memoir, Szpilman found hiding places in Warsaw and survived with the help of friends from Polish Radio and by a German captain, Wilm Hosenfeld, whose real name Szpilman discovered in the early 1950s, when Hosenfeld’s wife wrote him a letter. Despite the efforts of Szpilman and other Poles to rescue Hosenfeld, he died in Soviet captivity in 1952. Outside Poland, Szpilman is widely known as the protagonist of the Roman Polanski film “The Pianist: The Extraordinary True Story of One Man’s Survival in Warsaw, 1939-1945, by Wladyslaw Szpilman,” recounting how he survived the Holocaust. сс:sa:Mohylek Krakow without barriers New Year competition among cities Urszula Ciolkiewicz Staff Journalist the krakow post are too high, and people with vision defects cannot read them. There are too few traffic lights with sound signals. The disabled would also like to see in Krakow the Wien system that has been used in Lodz, Bydgoszcz and Poznan. The system was invented in Wien to give the blind remote controllers similar to those for cars. They switch them on when they hear an approaching tram. Near the tram’s door is a chip which reacts to the remote controller signal and announces the tram number and its direction. In the budget proposed for 2008, one mln zloty would be spent on removing barriers. Some things can be done during new construction, too, such as building ramps when building stairs. And some improvements cost nothing, such as hanging a street name plate a bit lower so that it can be seen by people in wheelchairs. Quality Accommodation for Less CALL TO ADVERTISE: Andrzej Kowalski, Marketing Manager, +48 (0) 798-683-160 TOURNET Guest Rooms ul. Miodowa 7 Kazimierz District, Krakow Tel.: (0) 12 292-0088 www.accommodation.krakow.pl krakowpost.com Krakow may become a friendlier city for the disabled. The City Council hopes to adapt the city to the needs of disabled people through technical improvements. The first discussion will take place during December’s City Council session. Krakow is an old town with old architecture. With each step we encounter stairs, gates with high entry portals and steps down to many cellars. Museums, offices, schools and other institutions are situated in old buildings not easily accessible for wheelchairs. Apartments built in the 1970s are equipped with elevators which are situated above ground level and accessible only by climbing a flight of stairs. Pawel Sularz, an author of a new project on removing barriers, says the most important improvements needed are those that deal with public transportation and the ability of disabled people to board trams. A few years ago, Krakow introduced low-floor buses and trams to assist children and the elderly in addition to the disabled. Now the City Council is planning to install in all trams devices which announce the next stop; the blind will be equipped with personal vehicle identifications, giving signs of approaching cars, and convex maps with Braille descriptions. The next barrier to fall will be the curb stones that obstruct wheelchairs. There must be a compromise, however. Completely flat surfaces are best for wheelchairs. But the blind prefer different levels for sidewalk and street that they can detect with their walking sticks. Jan Otryl, a member of the Blind Union in Malopolska, has other complaints. Timetables at bus stops The biggest Polish cities are competing for the title of the best New Year’s party organizer. Television stations are participating in the parties in Krakow and Wroclaw. Thanks to TV support, the budgets for these parties are as high as 3 mln and 5 mln zloty. Last year’s New Year’s parties attracted 100,000 participants in Wroclaw and more than 140,000 in Krakow. Warsaw’s party costs 5 mln zloty, while Lodzspends only 250,000 zloty. The Warsaw party will be televised on TVN. In front of the Palace of Culture and Science we will have the opportunity to see, among others: Tatiana Okupnik, Kasia Kowalska, Lady Pank, T. Love, Bracia, Feel, Jet Set and Zygmunt Kukla Orchestra. Warsaw’s New Year’s party will be transmitted from 20:00 to 01:00 from what promises to be a gorgeous stage design. There wasn’t any party in Warsaw the two previous years because the City Council feared the risk of a terrorist attack and because of a lack of regulations governing mass audience events. Last year’s New Year’s party in Krakow had the biggest TV audience of all. “It was watched by one out of three Poles,” said Agata Mlynarska of Polsat TV. This year is supposed to be even better. Last year’s TV program lasted for five hours, and this year’s will be longer. “We hope to promote Krakow as a modern and beautiful city,” said Mlynarska. According to organizers and the Polsat channel, the success of the party is guarantied by both the participants and the TV program. Krakow has invited, among others: Shakina Stevensa, Lou Bega, Boney M., Bajm, Budka Suflera, Czerwone Gitary, Golecu Orkiestra, grupa Kashmir, Vox, Urszula and Szymon Wydra. After midnight the audience will hear a classical singing concert by Andrzej Lampert and Alicja Wegorzewska-Whiskerd. Wroclaw vows not to be outdone. “We decided to show the party on five huge TV screens,” said Malgorzata Wojciechowska, a Wroclaw City Council official. “We are preparing a professional fireworks show as well,” she added. Partygoers and party watchers should remember two important conditions for a successful celebration: delightful company and morning headache pills. 12 K R A K O W The Krakow Post DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 New low cost route Krakow-Paris The low-cost French-Dutch airline Transavia has begun flying between Krakow and Paris. Transavia’s Vice President Helene Abraham said it is the airline’s only route to Poland. And it will remain that way, the Polish Press Agency said. The reason is that Transavia’s parent, Air France-KLM, does not want the low-cost carrier competing with it on other routes. Air France-KLM already serves the rest of Poland’s major cities. “Thanks to the new connection, French people will be able to discover this beautiful city, and we will take Polish people to the capital of France as well,”Abraham told the Polish Press Agency. The airline’s Boeing 737-800s have 186 seats. They fly to Krakow three times a week – on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Krakow’s French consul, Pascal Vagogne, predicts that the new connection will make Krakow more popular with French tourists. Only 8 percent of the city’s tourists last year were French, the Polish Press Agency said. Transavia is the 21st carrier to serve the Krakow- Balice airport. Last year the facility handled 2.4 mln passengers. Transavia offers 67 flights a week from Paris to a dozen destinations, including cities in Italy , Spain, Greece, Morocco and Tunisia. It has about 164 employees. AGH makes student hostels comfortable Iwona Bojarczuk Staff Journalists AGH University of Science and Technology plans a renovation of its dormitories that will transform the current 10-person units with one shared bathroom into twoperson units with private bathrooms. It will be a huge project because AGH has more dorm rooms than any university in the city. The dorms accommodate up to 4,000 students in each of the fall and spring semesters. Cost of the renovation is estimated at 7 mln to 8 mln zloty per four-story dorm. With five buildings, the overall cost will be about 36 mln zloty. The AGH campus has 20 student hostels. There are plans to rebuild five hostels, starting with buildings: 16, 17, 1, 5, 9. The total number of buildings that will undergo reconstruction is not known. The Ministry of Education will be pro- viding much of the money for the work. The university is making the changes partly because good deals in the privateapartment rental market are luring students away from the dorms. Some students would rather pay more than they would pay for dorm rooms for newer and more private accommodations. Right now each dorm unit has four rooms, some of which accommodate three students and some two. The four rooms are connected to a collective bathroom, which contains two sinks, one shower and one toilet. In the new setup, each unit in the dormitories will have two rooms plus a bathroom. Units will accommodate one or two students. Each of the new units will also have a small kitchen. Although the two-person units will end such traditions as talking with others during tooth-brushing and sock-washing sessions, students want better accommodations, said Faculty of Materials Science and Ceramics student Caroline. The new rooms will also have better furnishings, university officials say. The old military-style steel-framed beds will be out, as will bunk beds – unless students in a unit demand a bunk bed. The new furniture will be modern and attractively designed instead of just functional, said Chancellor Henryk Ziolo. If some students want to use a bunkbed to free up more space in their room, they can certainly do that, he said. Renovating the dorms will not only benefit students, but also summer tourists on limited budgets. AGH rents dorm rooms to tourists in summer, becoming the largest “hotel” in Krakow. Half of its guests are foreigners. The university will renovate its oldest buildings first. Dorms buildings 16 and 17 should be ready before the holiday break next year. LUK Agency LUK Agency the krakow post DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 A R T S & I D E A S Celebrating the year of Stanislaw Wyspianski the krakow post The year 2007 is the hundredth anniversary of the death of Stanislaw Wyspiański, one of the most intriguing and broad-minded Polish artists. The phenomenon of Wyspainski consisted of his versatile activity, fascinating even today because of the variety of concepts employed during his short 38 years of life. He studied at Krakow’s School of Arts (1884-1885 and 1887-1895) and at Jagiellonian University (1887-1890 and 1896-1897). As a student he helped Matejko (together with J. Mehoffer) to create polychromes of Mariacki Church (1889-1890). His creative activity, realized mainly through pastel technique (portraits, landscapes, flowers) was dominated by symbolism and the secession style. The main means of expression was a twining line along a contour of depicted items, which were marked through colored stains. His polychrome projects and stained glasses characterized the motif of blazing flame and calligraphically treated plants. In literature he is known as one of the best drama writers, especially tragedies. Referring to ancient tragedy, he showed the role of fate as a main motive of action, often localized in national historical reality. In the late period of his artistic activity (from 1900), apart from historical and political polemics against contemporary life (among others “The Wedding,” “Liberation”), there appeared a trend to philosophically interpret Polish history (“The Legion,” “Boleslaw Smialy,” “November Night”) and to show mythological stories (“The Odys Return”). Wyspianski was not submissive; he could be classified as incorrigible and a rude artist. For almost all his short life (he suffered from syphilis) he fought against parochial styles of thinking and middle-class conformism. Stanislaw Wyspianski died on Nov. 28, 1907 and his funeral in Deserved Crypt at the Church on the Rock became a huge national demonstration. The 100th anniversary of his death is the occasion of several artistic events at the National Museum in Krakow: exhibitions, theater plays, multimedia shows. There also are lectures and books about Wyspianski and his artistic activity. The main building of Krakow’s National Museum has an exhibition entitled “Stanislaw Wyspianski’s Great Theater.” The multimedia show runs through March 2 and features static and motion pictures, sounds and light, etc. Video screenings include parts of theater, television and film adaptations of Wyspianski’s dramas. Exhibition visitors can stand inside scenery reconstructing the scene from the premiere of “The Wedding,” built according to the author’s stage direction. Janusz Walek, creator and custodian of the exhibition, says that the unusual character of the show casts a spell on visitors, expanding their imagination and allowing them to see Wyspianski as a whole. Through March 9, the National Museum will display at a Szolayski tenement house in ul. Szczepanska 11 an exhibition entitled “You Pile the Stake Yourself…” The idea is to remind visitors of the ceremonial funeral of the artist and at the same time Krakow’s last huge funeral ceremony organized by the city council. Laznia Nowa, a theater in the Nowa Huta District, joined the celebration of the anniversary. A music-theater festival, “Wyspianski Liberates,” showed Wyspianski’s other faces and ran from Nov. 28 to Dec. 2. Also at the festival was a poster display covering more than 30 billboards with such slogans as “Krakow is not enough developed!” and “I was beaten and that is why I won.” The festival also included a play directed by Paul Passini, “Resting,” and concerts in which artists challenged Wyspianski’s texts. “We do not want to embalm a mummy; we will not close Wyspianski in a crypt” said the artistic director of Laznia Nowa. “He was a Pole who tore off the comfortable masks of EPE Translations English - Polish - English Agency providing translation services for companies working in multicultural environment as well as for private individuals. Deliver standard, technical and sworn translations at competitive prices. Also provide interpreters located in Ireland, UK and Poland. Check out www.epetranslations.com tel: (0048) (0) 12 4212300 his compatriots. He was frustrated, furious and defiant.” Another exhibition worth mentioning is “Stanislaw Wyspianski in the Art of the Disabled.” It is at Kotlownia, the Gallery of Krakow University of Technology in the ul. Warszawska 24. The exhibition will continue through Dec. 14 from Monday to Friday at 09:00 to 16:00. There you can find 105 works made in different techniques: painting, drawings, graphics, ceramics, weaving. The cultural events connected with the anniversary of Wyspianski’s death are very popular among foreigners living in Krakow. “I am delighted by the talent presented by Wyspianski,” said Inge, a Swedish student living in Krakow for two years. “I did not know him before. Now after participating in two projects and visiting some galleries I will probably write my MA on the topic of his nonconformist way of living and creating.” The Krakow Post 13 Local teacher looks to change face of educational system From SCHOOL on Page 1 The need to improve rural schools is so pressing that Klosowski’s reservations are inane, Lackowski said. “The deterioration of education in rural areas, where year after year more and more students do not pass their exams and thus do not continue school, is a huge problem,” Lackowski said. “With school vouchers, there may be three times more money for rural areas,” he said. “Vouchers improve the equality of education. Better teachers should go to rural areas and be better paid.” Krakow already has a voucher system but it is not the kind that Lackowski and Hall envision. It does not give parents the increase in power and responsibility that the Lackowski-Hall system would because it does not allow students to choose their school. They must go to the one to which they are assigned. “It must be changed,” said Jaroslaw Gowin, a member of the upper house of parliament from Krakow. “Otherwise people will become discouraged about a really good idea.” The Krakow voucher system does include one provision of the system that Lackowski and Hall advocate, however: It bases teachers’ salaries on the number of students they teach rather than the number of classes. Another key difference between the Krakow voucher system and the system that Lackowski and Hall want is that Krakow principals have no authority to manage their schools’ finances. In other words, they can’t shift money from one category of expense to a category where there is a greater need. National educational officials decide how much a school gets – and the categories where it is spent. By being able to send their child to the school of the family’s choice, parents would in effect become managers of public-education funds. “In such a situation parents show their power in the educational market,” Lackowski said. “And the school principal, when talking with parents, is aware that he is speaking with the co-owners of the school.” The Lackowski-Hall system would also improve teaching by pegging teacher salaries to classroom effectiveness. Better teachers would get more money, poorer ones less. Lackowski said vouchers are a tiny part of the educational change Poland needs. Creating public support for reform means convincing Poles to change the way they think about education, he said. “People must see that reform is an opportunity, not a danger,” he said. The key is getting the public to understand that “competition improves the level of education.” Under a voucher system, the best public schools wouldn’t have to beg any more for money for elective courses – those the Education Ministry doesn’t require. Neither would the best schools have to beg for money for facility renovations. Private schools also would be likely to embrace vouchers. That’s because the voucher system would allow students to go to either private or public schools. With money from vouchers, private schools could reduce the fees they charge parents. Henryka Bulat of Krakow, the mother of a junior high school girl, is one parent who likes the idea of vouchers. In deciding which school her daughter attends, she said, the voucher system will let her “take into account the schools’ achievements.” They would include the number of students in a school who had passed their comprehensive exams, the number of students who had won citywide or regionwide academic competitions, the number of electives a school was offering and the condition of the school facility itself, she said. “If I can influence the financing of a school, why not?” she asked. A Krakow teacher who wanted to remain anonymous said it is hard for her to predict what would happen under a voucher system because few details of the system have been made public. However, she said, her sense is that “if there is a good principal who fights for his school then the level of education (under a voucher system) would be raised and that would be good for children.” Without an aggressive principal, however, the voucher system could cause such “huge problems” that a school’s quality could diminish rather than improve, she said. Lackowski has so far offered no timetable for a voucher system or other educational reform. However, he said, “it would be best to introduce reforms gradually.” In the case of vouchers, that would mean introducing them “in big cities at a secondary school level and afterwards gradually extending them.” “Vouchers should have been introduced in cities a long time ago,” he said. “There is no reason to assign students to schools in specific districts when it is possible for them to travel by public means.” Hall said vouchers could show up as early as 2009. “I am sure that any changes should be introduced very carefully, gradually and after having been given thorough consideration,” she said. Educational reform should be reform and not revolution, she said. Many teachers are likely to oppose a voucher system, of course, because it threatens the way they do business. Teacher association leaders are already posturing on the proposed change. Slawomir Broniarz, the chairman of the Polish Teachers Union, contends the voucher system would violate the Constitution in terms of unequal access to education and also laws on how local governments spend their money. Lackowski answers: “There is no need to change the constitution because education would still be free,” Lackowski said. “We need to eliminate the teacher’s card” that gives teachers too much power over education, he said. “Poland needs the determination to succeed, and the question is if Polish politicians will have that same determination.” Another teachers union objection is that, in abolishing the current school assignment system, the voucher system would create problems that would be difficult to deal with. For example, union leaders say, what happens when many more students want to attend a school than it can admit? What would be the criteria for deciding which students would get into that school and which would not? Some student groups dislike the idea of vouchers, too. Artur Juszczyk, co-leader of the student organization Initiative Against Paid Studies, contended that “the educational voucher is the first step to privatizing education. We think that education is a right, not a commodity, so it should not be subject to the rules of free market.” Those who are unsure whether the voucher system will improve schools can get an idea by looking at what happened in Koszalin, in northern Poland. That school system used vouchers to introduce a journalism class, a ballet class, speech therapists, psychological counselors and career specialists. Although vouchers are an interesting idea, many people in and out of education believe that whether they will be a success in Poland will hinge on that old adage “The devil is in the details.” FOR PERMANENT, TEMPORARY AND CONTRACT STAFF IN IRELAND & UK l Ireland tel: (00353) 45 883420 e-mail: claire@issrecruitment.com l Manchester, UK tel: (0044) 0 161 9090050 e-mail: issrecruitment@yourcomms.net www.issrecruitment.com krakowpost.com 14 K A T O W I C E The Krakow Post DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 Xmas crib on main market in Gliwice the krakow post Gliwice residents can catch some of the real Christmas spirit by helping to build a manger scene on the main market square. The community effort, which starts tomorrow, makes it “something special,” said Dariusz Jezierski, who came up with the idea. He is director of Gliwice’s National Theater. A collective effort to create the manger scene “will emphasize the community character of Christmas,” Jezierski said. A manger, or animal feeding trough, was where the Bible says Mary placed the baby Jesus after his birth. It has become a symbol of Christmas worldwide. “Right now the best-known manger scene is in Krakow,” Jezierski said. “Maybe that will change.” Many residents have expressed interest in helping to build the Nativity scene, including students from the Silesian Polytechnic Institute in Gliwice. There is still a need for carpenters and bricklayers, however. Each volunteer can propose ideas about the interior of the scene, gifts for the baby Jesus and the clothes of the main characters, including Mary and Joseph, shepherds and the three Wise Men. During the nine-day construction period, which will end Dec. 23, the main market square will be alive with the sights, sounds and feel of Christmas. Each day, for example, youth choirs will give Christmas concerts. Soloists and theater groups will also perform, Jezierski said. A culmination of the festivities will be Bishop Jan Wieczorek performing a Christmas Mass at the Saint Peter and Paul Cathedral on Sunday Dec. 23. Saint Francis of Assisi came up with the idea of building the first Nativity scene in the Italian city of Greccio in 1223. The custom that he started spread throughout the world. The Roman Catholic Church’s Franciscans, an order of monks named for the saint, were a catalyst in spreading the manger-scene tradition. They built scenes wherever they established monasteries. The Nativity scene is a deep-rooted tradition in Poland because Franciscans built their first monasteries here in the 13th Century. Today, every Roman Catholic church has a manger scene with Jesus, Mary and Joseph. Hey hits Krakow MUSIC LIVE the krakow post Top Polish rock outfit Hey are in Krakow this Saturday Dec. 15 at Klub Studio as part of their fifteenth anniversary national tour. Hey skyrocketed to fame in the early 90s signing with Izabelin Studio label after being noticed by Katarzyna Kanclerz at the Jarocin Festival – only one month after the group formed in 1992. Their 1993 debut album Fire has been called one of the most important Polish albums of the 90s. The combination of vocalist and lyricist Katarzyna Nosowska with guitarist Piotr Banach, resulted in songs popular across Poland including Moja i Twoja Nadzieja, Teksański, or ZazdroSc. When Fire sold more than a hundred thousand copies in the first five months, probably no one, including the band, dreamt that their second release, the 1994 album Ho!, would achieve even greater success, selling just under a mln copies in 6 months. These were the band’s golden years, and though they never came back, during the next decade Hey have consolidated their position with excellent albums, such as Karma, Hey and Echosystem in 2005. Singles from these releases have hit number one in national charts, and the band continues to attract a large fan base to their performances. As part of the band’s anniversary year, they have released a copy of their live unplugged MTV recording at Roma Theater in Warsaw this September, with remixes of their most popular songs and covers of P.J. Harvey and Iggy Pop. The album Unplugged went gold on the first day. The national anniversary tour 92-07, is stopping in 12 cities across Poland with over two hours of on stage time and all their favorite songs featured in the sets. Hey will be supported by the indie group Muchy, who have been called the “Discovery of the year” by Machina magazine. Gig info: Klub Studio, ul. Budryka 4 – in the AGH Student Campus from 19:00, tickets 32-37 zloty from www.ticketpro. pl or at the club’s ticket office. ARKA NOEGO Our restaurant is located in one of the oldest buildings in Kazimierz. We serve all kinds of Jewish cuisine, based mostly on local recipes. Come to enjoy delicious Jewish dishes. Live klezmer music every night at 20:00. Open daily: 09:00-02:00 ul. Szeroka 2 +48 (12) 4291528 arkaszerok2@op.pl www.arka-noego.pl www. All your favorite articles online! krakowpost .com C L A S S I F I E D S DECEMBER 13-DECEMBER 19, 2007 BUILDING & REPAIR BOOKS ANGLO-POLISH EXPERT BUILDERS Specialists in Interior Renovations. Quality, Efficiency and Reliability. In Poland and Across Europe. References Available. Please Call: +48 608-849-189 Looking for books of Betrand Russell in English. anaksymander@wp.pl WOODEN HOMES Companies wanted who can built wooden houses in Western Europe. pas@fruitier.nl MEDICAL SERVICES Medical Service for Foreigners +48 609-201-372. Since 1990. GUITAR CATERING Are you looking for classical guitar music for your restaurant or gathering. Spanish, Argentinian and Italian classical music. guitarcatering@gmail.com EDITING SERVICES Need help editing your English-language texts? Write: media.editing@gmail.com PRIVATE LESSONS Lessons in English with native speakers – journalists. Improve your conversation skills and grammar through reading, analyzing and discussing interesting articles. Decent rates. jerrybarrows@yahoo.com Learn Russian from native speaker in Krakow. susanna202001@yahoo.com NETWORKING A Dutch businessman is looking to meet fellow countrymen based in Krakow and the region for networking, chatting and generally being cheap together. Write: namhctud.gniylf.eht@gmail.com The Krakow Post I want to find any and all books printed by Soviet and pre-Soviet Russian publishing houses, or even old samizdat. I am also looking for Soviet newspapers and magazines of sorts and genres. krichlvivpublications@yahoo.com APARTMENT FOR RENT Krakow, Wroclawska Street, 40 sqm, living room with open kitchen and bedroom, 3-rd floor/4, lift, extremely high standard, air conditioning, parking place, secure. Price: 2200 pln + media. Mobile: +48 889-659-084 INVESTORS Looking for those interested in investing in a growing and successful business in Poland. Please write: alec_news@mail.ru CATERING Interested in trying homemade Russian pelmeni or Armenian pierogi? Top Russian chef offers great quality for low prices. Write: russianchef@gmail.com PERSONALS Looking for a HOT time in the middle of winter?? We’re organizing a New Year’s Eve party with a climate for swingers. Krakow area in a modern restaurant/club with food and drinks and a hot show to begin with then the party will get started!! top10magazine@gmail.com Looking for Russian speakers to hang out, talk, have a good time. Please write me at: jamisonmarshall@gmail.com Searching for lonely depressed people who are questioning the meaning of life. yourfavoriteunclebob@gmail.com Mini Guide Real Estate TOWER Estate Agency Investments, rentals, sales of residential, lands and commercial properties. www.tower-krakow.pl tower@tower-krakow.pl Tel.: +48 012 421-9126 Office: 33 Main Square Looking for individuals interested in investing in a growing successful media business in Poland. Write: alec_news@ mail.ru Taxis Barbakan ul. Ks. St. Truszkowskiego 52 (0) 12 683-3599 biuro@barbakan.krakow.pl www.taxi.barbakan.krakow.pl Car Rental JOKA RENT A CAR ul. StarowiSlna 13 31-038 Krakow tel/fax: 012 429-6630 www.joka.com.pl 10% discount with this ad 37 Mogilska St. Tel.: (0) 12 411-7441 Cell: (0) 506-698-745 Krakow’s top night club offers the most beautiful escorts in town. In-house and outcall. Professionalism and safety guaranteed. Open: Mon-Sat: 11:00-06:00 Sun: 20:00-06:00 CALL TO ADVERTISE: Andrzej Kowalski, Marketing Manager +48 (0) 798-683-160