walmart biz stories 1999 2000

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Change location » Little Rock, AR Weather: 30° F | Clear A subscription is required to access daily content. Registration is free. Search ArkansasOnline Stories Go Delivery date : Sunday, January 02, 2011 8:01:03 pm Username : kstar72 :: (Log out) Your query : kristal kuykendall Charge for this story: $1.95 Publication: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Page(s): A1 Section: A1 Original Date: 06/05/1999 Watch the Web, Wal-Mart CEO says Cybersales to 'crank up,' shareholders told KRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE FAYETTEVILLE -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. plans to "crank up" its Internet sales effort, Chief Executive Officer David Glass said at the annual shareholders meeting Friday. Glass did not provide details, amid growing speculation the Bentonville retailer will make a strong push to grab a slice of the increasingly lucrative online market. He said the company, in trying to capture nonstore retailing dollars, has in the past considered home-shopping networks and catalogs but chose not to enter those markets. "We want to serve the customer who wants to shop at home," he said. A few years ago, the retailer created a World Wide Web site. Glass promised Friday that Wal-Mart will "crank up its initiative on the Internet" later this year. For the past several months industry watchers have speculated that Wal-Mart is planning a major upgrade of its Web site to compete better with Amazon.com Inc., Toys R Us Inc. and others with strong Web presences. Asked later by a shareholder for more details of what may be in store, Wal-Mart Online chief Glenn Habern said there's an "effort under way, but we're not ready to talk about it yet." At the Friday meeting, shareholders witnessed few surprises. Company officials, continuing to be secretive about the strategy of the world's largest retailer, said little about the Web venture or Wal-Mart's experimental Neighborhood Market concept. Shareholders seeking details about either subject were rebuffed during the question and answer period of the meeting. Still, they have reasons to be happy: The stock of the $137 billion retailer split in April, and shares have risen more than 50 percent since last June. The "first lady" of Wal-Mart did make an unexpected appearance. A week ago, Wal-Mart said Helen Walton, the widow of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton, was still recovering from serious injuries suffered in a car accident and wouldn't attend. Then, several hours into the meeting at Bud Walton Arena, a security guard propelled her out in a wheelchair, her daughter Alice at her side. In a red suit, Walton smiled feebly while the crowd gave her a five-minute standing ovation. Shareholders hoping to hear Wal-Mart officials talk about their plans for the Neighborhood Markets left disappointed. The stores, at 40,000 square feet, are much like traditional groceries. Wal-Mart has been testing four of the prototypes in Arkansas since last fall. Glass said the Bentonville store has undergone extensive "fiddling" as executives have worked to improve the format. He said Wal-Mart has approved 10 new distribution centers, now being built. That includes four general merchandise and four food distribution centers. The food centers would support new Supercenters under construction but also could supply new Neighborhood Market stores. Glass didn't give many details about how a roll-out of the markets might proceed; he said only that Wal-Mart "has become much more comfortable" with the concept and that the company will continue to build the stores. One will open in Fayetteville and two in Oklahoma City later this year. Meanwhile, the company is continuing its rapid roll-out of its established store formats, Glass said. The Bentonville retailer will open 275 to 285 stores in the year that ends Jan. 31, 2000, he said. That includes 40 new discount stores, 150 of the massive Supercenters, 10 to 15 Sam's Clubs and 75 to 80 stores abroad. Ninety of the new Supercenters will be converted discount stores. Glass said the new international stores will be in existing markets. Earlier this year, after international division chief Bobby Martin visited British Prime Minister Tony Blair, speculation arose that Wal-Mart was considering entering new markets. The retailer later said firmly that it has no such plans this year. Also during the meeting, Wal-Mart's 15 board members were re-elected, and shareholders approved a doubling Home News Obituaries Business Entertainment Sports Photos Videos Features Classifieds Jobs Real Estate Autos Arkansas Online Archives http://library.ardemgaz.com/ShowArchiveStory.asp?Path=ArD... 1 of 2 1/2/11 8:01 PM

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Page 1: Walmart biz stories 1999 2000

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Delivery date : Sunday, January 02, 2011 8:01:03 pmUsername : kstar72 :: (Log out)Your query : kristal kuykendallCharge for this story: $1.95Publication: Arkansas Democrat-GazettePage(s): A1Section: A1Original Date: 06/05/1999

Watch the Web, Wal-Mart CEO says Cybersales to 'crank up,'shareholders toldKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTEFAYETTEVILLE -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. plans to "crank up" its Internet sales effort, Chief ExecutiveOfficer David Glass said at the annual shareholders meeting Friday.Glass did not provide details, amid growing speculation the Bentonville retailer will make a strong push to grab aslice of the increasingly lucrative online market. He said the company, in trying to capture nonstore retailingdollars, has in the past considered home-shopping networks and catalogs but chose not to enter those markets."We want to serve the customer who wants to shop at home," he said. A few years ago, the retailer created aWorld Wide Web site. Glass promised Friday that Wal-Mart will "crank up its initiative on the Internet" later thisyear.For the past several months industry watchers have speculated that Wal-Mart is planning a major upgrade of itsWeb site to compete better with Amazon.com Inc., Toys R Us Inc. and others with strong Web presences.Asked later by a shareholder for more details of what may be in store, Wal-Mart Online chief Glenn Habern saidthere's an "effort under way, but we're not ready to talk about it yet."At the Friday meeting, shareholders witnessed few surprises. Company officials, continuing to be secretiveabout the strategy of the world's largest retailer, said little about the Web venture or Wal-Mart's experimentalNeighborhood Market concept.Shareholders seeking details about either subject were rebuffed during the question and answer period of themeeting. Still, they have reasons to be happy: The stock of the $137 billion retailer split in April, and shares haverisen more than 50 percent since last June.The "first lady" of Wal-Mart did make an unexpected appearance. A week ago, Wal-Mart said Helen Walton, thewidow of Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton, was still recovering from serious injuries suffered in a car accident andwouldn't attend.Then, several hours into the meeting at Bud Walton Arena, a security guard propelled her out in a wheelchair,her daughter Alice at her side. In a red suit, Walton smiled feebly while the crowd gave her a five-minutestanding ovation.Shareholders hoping to hear Wal-Mart officials talk about their plans for the Neighborhood Markets leftdisappointed.The stores, at 40,000 square feet, are much like traditional groceries. Wal-Mart has been testing four of theprototypes in Arkansas since last fall. Glass said the Bentonville store has undergone extensive "fiddling" asexecutives have worked to improve the format.He said Wal-Mart has approved 10 new distribution centers, now being built. That includes four generalmerchandise and four food distribution centers. The food centers would support new Supercenters underconstruction but also could supply new Neighborhood Market stores.Glass didn't give many details about how a roll-out of the markets might proceed; he said only that Wal-Mart"has become much more comfortable" with the concept and that the company will continue to build the stores.One will open in Fayetteville and two in Oklahoma City later this year.Meanwhile, the company is continuing its rapid roll-out of its established store formats, Glass said.The Bentonville retailer will open 275 to 285 stores in the year that ends Jan. 31, 2000, he said. That includes40 new discount stores, 150 of the massive Supercenters, 10 to 15 Sam's Clubs and 75 to 80 stores abroad.Ninety of the new Supercenters will be converted discount stores.Glass said the new international stores will be in existing markets. Earlier this year, after international divisionchief Bobby Martin visited British Prime Minister Tony Blair, speculation arose that Wal-Mart was consideringentering new markets. The retailer later said firmly that it has no such plans this year.Also during the meeting, Wal-Mart's 15 board members were re-elected, and shareholders approved a doubling

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in the number of available shares of common stock for future use, to 11 billion.Shareholders also rejected four proposals, all opposed by the board, one of which would have tied the level ofexecutive compensation to the company's financial performance.Slug Line: Bwm-meeting05 FOR 1AThis article was published on page A1 of the Saturday, June 05, 1999 edition in the A1 section.

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Retail: Wal-Mart buys brands to control product linesKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE*NW EDITION* When Wal-Mart Stores Inc. recently bought the Sasson brand of apparel, it continued tohone an approach that gives the retailer advantages over the standard way of doing things.Traditionally, companies that hold licenses for branded products strike deals with numerous retailers to sell theirwares. Usually, the same popular brands of toys, jewelry, household goods, office supplies and electronics aresold in many retailers' stores.Sometimes, when a brand is unique or appears poised to take off, a retailer will pay a fee or a percentage to thebrand owner (or take a smaller cut of each sale) to be the exclusive retailer selling that brand. These deals areoften struck for apparel lines, as well as for some home improvement products.But Wal-Mart, ever the aggressor, no longer stops there.When the opportunity presents itself, the world's largest retailer snatches up brands entirely, license and all. Theapproach gives Wal-Mart more control over a line's image, quality, price and profitability, and likely at a bargainprice because the brands tend to be lesser known, experts say.It's just one more way for Wal-Mart to gain the upper hand in the battle for consumer dollars and loyalty."It makes sense for the retailer to do this," said retail analyst Alan Mak of Argus Research in New York. "Itsomewhat elevates their image because these were well-known brands at one point."Certainly, Wal-Mart still has "normal" brand-retailer relationships. It sells tens of thousands of items that fill theshelves of every general merchandise store in the country: Tide detergent, Crest toothpaste, Ivory soap, Hasbrotoys, Bic ink pens, RCA stereos.It also has exclusive agreements with popular lines, such as Better Homes & Gardens outdoor supplies, PopularMechanics tools and Magic Chef kitchen items. Kmart Corp. and Target Stores have similar licensingagreements with some of their popular brands. Target, for example, has the lone rights to sell Cherokee clothingfor women and children.But Wal-Mart appears to be the leader in outright purchases of established brands, experts say. It has bought atleast five.Last month, the Bentonville retailer paid an undisclosed sum for Sasson, which sold well at high-end departmentstores Bloomingdale's and Saks Fifth Avenue in the early 1980s.Wal-Mart's earliest such purchase could have been eight years ago, officials say, when Wal-Mart bought Equate,a brand of discounted pharmaceuticals and health and beauty aids.The deal has proved lucrative for Wal-Mart, analysts say. The company wouldn't release sales figures, but thebrand is prevalent throughout the chain's health and beauty departments. And it appears to be doing well, bydesign: Containers describe what name-brand product each Equate item is similar to, and each is deliberatelyplaced next to competing products.Another example of a brand purchase is Wal-Mart's Faded Glory line of apparel, acquired several years ago.Although the brand is no Gap or even a Kathie Lee (which is licensed exclusively to, but not owned by,Wal-Mart), Faded Glory appears in several Internet magazine articles on affordable fashion picks for teens andyoung women.If Wal-Mart buys a brand for a reasonable price, it's likely to turn out to be a good deal, said Brandon Cashion,vice president of brand consulting firm Addison Whitney in New York."Owning and managing a brand is very different from just selling it," he said. "Wal-Mart can promote it, havecontrol over the message that accompanies it, build it. ... They have the opportunity to influence how the brandis perceived."If you just sell something, you're under the control of the brand owner," Cashion said.To be sure, the advantages of owning a brand aren't lost on Wal-Mart."When you purchase a brand, you've got brand recognition already -- you don't have to build up that name,"

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Wal-Mart spokesman Laura Pope said. "It's a quicker means to making customers aware of your product.They've already attached a value to it, whether it be the quality or the design."Sasson was a premium brand name that fell out of the spotlight. Sasson jeans commercials once filled theairwaves."Sasson had a very positive brand awareness during its heyday," Cashion said, "and it was reasonablyexpensive."Wal-Mart is trying to revitalize a brand that pulled in high profits and that gives the discount retailer a higher-endline of clothing, he said.In this case, it may be hard to pull off, Cashion said."It's very hard to revitalize a brand that's been damaged or ignored for a number of years," he said. "But it's agreat opportunity to build something if the brand's perception is still positive."Cutline: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/MICHAEL MARSHALL DeeDee Baker of Delaney fills racks with FadedGlory women's apparel at the Wal-Mart Supercenter in north Fayetteville. Faded Glory is one of several brandnames that Wal-Mart has bought to sell exclusively.Slug Line: walmart 8/8This article was published on page BM11 of the Sunday, August 08, 1999 edition in the BM11 section.

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Cover Story The Grocery Gamble Wal-Mart gears up to go head to headwith the nation's supermarketsKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE*NW EDITION* It s no secret that Wal-Mart Stores Inc., long the king of discount retailing, is looking totake a big bite out of the grocery industry.The question is how and when they re going to do it.The Bentonville retailer first experimented with groceries in its Supercenters. But the huge parking lots andcavernous stores didn t lend themselves to quick shopping trips.Since last fall, the world s largest retailer has been testing a new concept, the Neighborhood Market. The40,000-square-foot stores are one-fifth the size of a Supercenter. Wal-Mart won t release sales figures for its firstfour stores, but new Neighborhood Markets are planned.A Wal-Mart official revealed in an interview that the company will open its fifth, sixth and seventh stores thisyear: one in Fayetteville and two in Oklahoma City.Wal-Mart s leap into the traditional grocery format has sent tongues wagging across an industry that is highlycompetitive, fragmented and already too crowded with stores, analysts say.Wal-Mart doesn t seem worried about its prospects.Henry Jordan, director of operations for Wal-Mart s Neighborhood Market division, said the retailer has beenvery happy with sales from its first four stores.If history is any indication, Wal-Mart will be an aggressive rival. When the retailer started selling groceries in itsfirst Supercenter a decade ago, the concept took off like a grass fire. By the end of last year, Wal-Mart hadsprinted to third place in the grocery race, with about $32 billion of food sales.Supermarket News, a leading industry publication, says Wal-Mart is the No. 3 food seller in the United States.But Wal-Mart knows it has captured only a sliver of the $436 billion grocery pie.FILLING A NICHE The idea behind the Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market came from customers who said theyneeded a particular kind of convenience: speed.There are certain times during customers schedules where they just need to drop in and pick up a few items,and the Neighborhood Market is designed for that, Jordan said.The Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market is basically a slimmed-down Supercenter. It stocks about 20,000 to 25,000different items, selected from the 100,000 at a typical Supercenter.The stores are about two-thirds groceries and one-third general merchandise, such as household goods, autosupplies, health and beauty aids and toys. They don t have a deli counter or a bakery, but they have afull-service pharmacy and a one-hour photo lab.It s the first traditional grocery store to have a drive-through pharmacy. Customers using the drive-through canpick up a pager, which buzzes when their order is filled.Strategically, the small stores complement the Supercenters.They boast similar low prices, benefiting from the company s size and efficient distribution network. They alsocan fill market niches in towns not big enough for a Supercenter.A main purpose of the Market is as a fill-in, said retail analyst Asma Usmani of Edward Jones in St. Louis.Wal-Mart is looking at markets that are just too small for a Supercenter, she said.Neighborhood Markets also may be ideal candidates for big urban centers with packed downtowns, Usmanisaid. Those places, such as downtown Chicago, Boston or New York City, are too crowded for a giantSupercenter.THE STRATEGY Observers are watching closely for clues as to how Wal-Mart will roll out the latest weapon inits retail arsenal.Chuck Gilmer, editor of the grocery publication The Shelby Report, acknowledged industry whispers of apossible acquisition by Wal-Mart.

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Specifically, he said, there were rumors of Wal-Mart s eyeing Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. of Jacksonville, Fla. Thechain has 1,178 stores, mostly in the Southeast, and brought in $13.9 billion in grocery sales last year.But Winn-Dixie, which usually doesn t comment on speculation, has flatly denied the rumors, Gilmer noted.For Wal-Mart, buying existing stores and Wal-Martizing them might be wise because it cuts the risk of addingoutlets to an overcrowded market.The grocery industry is very mature, and already there are too many grocery stores for the nation s existingpopulation, said retail consultant Jerry Morton, who runs Store Systems Consulting in Lawrence, Kan.Wal-Mart officials have not publicly ruled out the idea of acquiring a grocery chain, Usmani noted.If an attractive deal comes on the block, Wal-Mart would definitely consider it, she said.For the moment, Wal-Mart appears to be content to test the concept close to home, much as the retailer didsuccessfully with the Supercenter model. The testing schedule seems speeded up, though.When Wal-Mart started its Supercenter trial in March 1988, it opened only one store. Nine months later, itopened a second, then a third a few months after that.From 1989-93, with a base of six Supercenters, Wal-Mart took its time getting things right, fine-tuning thegrocery side of the Supercenter operation. Then, when Wal-Mart opened its first grocery distribution center in1993, the store format was able to take off.Now, 11 years later, Wal-Mart boasts 591 Supercenters.This time, because of advances in technology and in Wal-Mart s ability to monitor its sales, results of theNeighborhood Market experiment will be available much sooner, Usmani said.Chances are pretty high the Markets will be successful, Usmani said. I think within a year to 18 months we llstart hearing about plans for an aggressive rollout of the stores.Retail analyst Dan Barry of Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. in New York thinks the company could announce planswithin a year for a significant expansion.If that proves true, Wal-Mart, after rocking the retail boat with its discount stores and then with Supercenters, willsend yet another tidal wave through the industry.That s because the Market concept is so much more flexible than previous Wal-Mart stores, experts say. Theadaptable design erases the limitations Wal-Mart faced with its larger discount stores and Supercenters.But Wal-Mart will likely focus on the smaller markets before moving into any big cities, consultant Mortonpredicted. For starters, urban real estate is much more expensive. Also, a move into crowded downtown areaswould almost certainly require an acquisition, and Morton doesn t think that s in Wal-Mart s cards any time soon.It s just not typical for Wal-Mart to acquire retail outlets, he said. I d be surprised.FRAGMENTED AND COMPETITIVE The measured pace of the Neighborhood Market s growth reflects anappropriate caution by the world s largest retailer, experts say. The current overabundance of grocery storesconstantly hammers at the industry s profits and expansion opportunities.It s a slow-growth industry that grows primarily with the population, said Patrick Schumann, a grocery analyst atEdward Jones in St. Louis. People can only eat so much.Plus, Schumann said, it s an extremely competitive sector.It s very fragmented. You have thousands and thousands of players, and it makes for a tough environment, hesaid.The nation s top grocer, The Kroger Co. of Cincinnati, commands 10.8 percent market share, once its pendingmerger with Fred Meyer Stores of Portland, Ore., is figured in. That s up from 7 percent last year.Kroger, founded in 1883, has 2,200 grocery stores and 800 convenience stores. In 1998, it rang up $43.1 billionin sales, according to Supermarket News and the Food Marketing Institute.Kroger has 31 stores in Arkansas. Its North Little Rock store on John F. Kennedy Boulevard, recently renovated,is about a mile from Wal-Mart s Neighborhood Market in Sherwood.The Wal-Mart grocery seems to be standing its ground despite all the competition in the area. Besides theKroger, right down the street is a locally owned independent grocer and a brand new Harvest Foodssupermarket. But over two weeks recently, morning and evening visits to the Neighborhood Market showed aparking lot always at least half full.In Springdale, Wal-Mart's Neighborhood Market sits directly across the street from a Harps grocery. Harps FoodStores Inc. officials did not return several calls seeking comment, but a large banner over the Harps door speaksto the intense battle: WE WILL MATCH ANY WAL-MART AD!On two recent weekday afternoons, Harps, which is 20,000 square feet bigger than its challenger, had about 20more cars in its lot than the Market.If the Neighborhood Markets take off, Wal-Mart could catch up with the No. 2 grocery retailer in the country,Albertson s Inc. The Boise, Idaho, chain recently merged with American Stores of Salt Lake City. Once theacquisition is completed, Albertsons will have about 2,500 stores in 25 states, including Arkansas, and 1998sales of $35.7 billion.Ranking right behind Wal-Mart is Safeway Inc. of Pleasanton, Calif. Safeway, with 1,541 stores in the westernhalf of the country, had $25 billion in sales last year.A LEARNING PLATFORM Leading Wal-Mart s charge into the stepped-up battle for grocery market share isJordan, a private, humble 33-year-old who started out stocking shelves for Wal-Mart.Since 1985, he earned his stripes managing a discount store, then a Supercenter. Most recently, he headed aSupercenter district of 80 stores.He s been in charge of the Neighborhood Market division since May 1998, when plans for the first few storesstarted firming up.Jordan refused to discuss the Wal-Mart strategy in much detail. He would not release details of the plans for the

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three new stores.Two of the new groceries will mark the line s expansion outside Arkansas. Oklahoma City planning officialsconfirmed that Wal-Mart has applied for building permits for at least one 40,000-square-foot store.Schumann of Edward Jones said he wasn t surprised that Wal-Mart was already building the stores outside thestate. They have a fantastic infrastructure. When they do something, they do it big, and recently, they ve beendoing it well.Jordan said Wal-Mart officials are listening carefully to customers during the testing of the Neighborhood Marketconcept, but he wouldn t discuss what they ve learned so far.He gave a few examples, however. Merchandise at the stores is being adapted to specific neighborhoods, hesaid.In one store, we went in and added more Hispanic-type merchandise, such as authentic Mexican food, Jordansaid. The Neighborhood Markets are being used as a learning platform, he said.Wal-Mart observers expect the company to learn its lessons fast and turn the Neighborhood Markets conceptinto a hit in its quest to dominate the grocery industry.The probability of this being successful is 100 percent, said Barry of Merrill Lynch. If they can do it with the hugeSupercenters, they can do it with the smaller Markets.Cutlines: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/WILLIAM E. THOMPSON The Neighborhood Market in Bentonville,across the street from Northwest Arkansas Community College, opened in October. About the same time,Wal-Mart also opened trail Neighborhood Markets in Springdale, Fort Smith and Sherwood.PAGE 17 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/WILLIAM E. THOMPSON Neighborhood Market division cheif HenryJordan reviews operations with Debbie Grogan, an assistant manager at the Bentonville store. Jordan beganoverseeing the Market division in May 1998, when plans for the new, smaller grocery stores began firming up.PAGE 18 Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JEREMY SCOTT In Springdale, the Harps grocery store directly acrossthe street from Wal-Mart's Neighborhood Market is fighting back against its rival. The two stores are locked in acost-cutting battle as the Neighborhood Market, open since last fall, tries to lure shoppers.Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/KAREN VANDONGE Todd Sherron prepares for the opening of the NeighborhoodMarket in Sherwood last fall by checking bar codes on snacks. The store is within two miles of three othergrocery stores, including a renovated Kroger, a brand new Harvest Foods and a locally owned IGA store.PAGE 16 Map: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/MATT JONES Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market locations PAGE 17Graph: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/MATT JONES Top 5 U.S. grocers @Page:E1 @Category:Features@Date:6/1/99 @Headline: June Calendar Flags, fabric and folderol Miss Arkansas juggles her crown with atomato, a rose and a basketball.@Byline:Ron Wolfe Arkansas Democrat-Gazette @Text: CORRECTION 060299 The Shakespeare Festival ofArkansas' production of Romeo and Juliet has been canceled. It should not have been listed in the calendar ofJune events in Tuesday's Style section. Romans named the month of June for Juno, their goddess of marriage,and crazy combinations have been happening ever since. This rare month marries Hopalong Cassidy to frozenyogurt, Miss Arkansas to Donald Duck, and Elvis to a Bradley County tomato. Reception follows.1 National Fabric Care Month washes out -- eeeww! what is this? -- some kind of dribbly pink National FrozenYogurt Month. m Hot strings, hot sings, Hot Springs Music Festival through June 13. m Festival ChamberPlayers' Got Schalk? at 7:30 tonight, St. Lukes Episcopal Church. Call (501) 623-4763. m Murry's DinnerPlayhouse builds a better Mousetrap through June 27. Call 562-3131.2 The determined Ziolkowski family keeps chipping away at their Crazy Horse mountain carving in SouthDakota's Black Hills. This year is the 60th anniversary of when Lakota Chief Standing Bear asked sculptorKorczak Ziolkowski to carve the 563-foot-high monument that so far shows the face of Crazy Horse but nohorse.3 Eureka Springs' 10th annual Blues Festival wails into the sunset through June 6. Call (501) 253-5366. m O'Shakespeare Festival of Arkansas' Romeo and Juliet, Romeo and Juliet, wherefore art thou? 7 p.m. nightlythrough June 6 in MacArthur Park. Call 376-PLAY.4 A walk on the Wildwood side: Grand Wildwood Festival Parade , 7:30 p.m. at Wildwood Park for thePerforming Arts. Month-long Wildwood Festival continues with events including T he Pirates of Penzance , PeteFountain jazz concert, zydeco street dance. Call 821-7275, ext. 232. m Solid Brass of Little Rock concerts, 7tonight and June 5-6 at Wildwood Park, June 11-12 at the Old Statehouse Museum, June 27 at River MarketPavilion. Call 666-0814. m Mena's Lum 'n' Abner doin's include quilt show in the middle school auditoriumthrough jot-'em-down June 5. Call (501) 394-6018.5 TV cowboy William "Hopalong Cassidy" Boyd's birthday, 1895. Hoppy once sold 15 million comic books ayear, but he still watched his pennies. The price of Indians is way up. I used to get a whole tribe for practicallynothing. Now, they have a union. -- William Boyd East is East: Asian Festival , 11 a.m.-4 p.m. at JacksonvilleCommunity Center, call 918-2601. m Jefferson County Blues Fest with Marvin Sease, starts at noon at CookPark and Recreation Center north of Pine Bluff. Call (870) 534-9791. m Corps D'Arte art show and sale throughJune 6 at University Mall. Call 225-1949.6 National Headache -- ow! -- Awareness Day spills the aspirin down the sink.7 Introduction of the world's first VCR, the $995 Sony Betamax, leads to world's first video late-return fee, 1975.8 Frank Lloyd Wright's birthday, 1867. Cake proves structurally sound in harmonic design with ice cream andcandle accents.9 Donald Duck's birthday, 1934. Sixty-five years old is one darn old duck.10 World Pork Expo in Des Moines, Iowa: a pig on a mission.11 Playing ketchup: 43rd annual Bradley County Pink Tomato Festival through June 12 in Warren. Call (870)

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226-5225. m Third annual International Butterfly Festival flits and flutters through June 13 on Mount Magazinenear Paris. Call (800) 980-8660. m Crossett Centennial celebration with gospel concert, 7 tonight in the CrossettAuditorium; Arkansas Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. June 12 in the auditorium. Call (870) 364-6591.12 Hoopfest: nothing but net through June 13 in the River Market District. Call 663-4667.13 National Men's Health Week. We men are such two-fisted bruisers, We sneer at the awfulest pain; But giveus a hack Or a sneeze with a -- gak! And we're flopped on the sofa again.Long may you wave your blankets and lawn chairs at the third annual Stars & Stripes Flag Day Celebration withconcert by Little Rock Wind Symphony on the grounds of the Decorative Arts Museum, starting at 6 p.m. Call372-4000.14 Flag Day. Run it up the flag pole, see who salutes.15 Bubble-blower Tom Noddy burbles at the Museum of Discovery through June 19. Call 396-7050. m 41stannual Antique Auto Show and Swap Meet beep-beeps through June 19 on Petit Jean Mountain near Morrilton.Call (501) 727-5427. m Arkansas is the 25th state, 1836. Bears parade.16 Crowning achievement: 38th annual Miss Arkansas Pageant through June 19 at Hot Springs ConventionCenter. Call (501) 321-3506. m Smackover's 28th annual Oil Town Festival, goat roast and arm wrestlingthrough June 19. Call (870) 725-3521.17 National Candy Month melts all gummy-gooey on the dashboard.18 Movie critic Roger Ebert's 57th birthday. He called The Phantom Menace "an astonishing achievement," withno Gene Siskel around to snap him out of it.19 Arkansas Railroad Club show and sale, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at Robinson Center. Call 225-0826 . m NationalJuggling Day. What goes around, comes around.20 Father's Day -- Dad's time to do nothing and see if anybody can tell the difference.21 First hazy, lazy, crazy day of summer.22 Stop and smell the National Rose Month.23 National Carpenter Ant Awareness Week -- all over what's left of the shrubbery .24 You deserve a brick today: Malvern's 19th annual Brickfest through June 26. Call (501) 865-2801.25 Big Brother is watching George Orwell's birthday, 1903. Custer's last stand, 1876, but fans await the prequel.26 Till we meet again: Emerson's 10th annual Purple Hull Pea Festival and World Championship Rotary TillerRace. Call (870) 547-2065.27 National Descendants Day. Do you know where your children will be? m Arkansas Chamber Singers'Summer Sing, sing-along concert at 3 p.m., Pulaski Heights United Methodist Church. Call 377-1121.28 Full Moon. King Henry VIII's birthday , 1491. Coincidence? Tell it to the headsman.29 Memphis names Elvis Presley Boulevard, 1971. Rejected names: Big Hunk O' Street, Burnin' RubberBoulevard, Return to Fender.30 International Brotherhood of Magicians with nothing up their sleeves convention through July 3 at Arkansas'Excelsior Hotel. Pick a workshop, pick a seminar, pick a magic act, don't show it to anybody. Call 455-6242.Coming next month: July! Call 399-3633 or e-mail [email protected] by June 15 to suggest Julycalendar entries or what to do about carpenter ants. Even worse -- those do-it-yourself home fix-it ants that startall sorts of projects with their little hammers and their itsy-bitsy Time-Life books on kitchen remodeling andbuilding your own redwood deck, and then leave it all a mess. Raaaaaaaid!Slug Line: junecal0601This article was published on page BM16 of the Sunday, May 30, 1999 edition in the BM16 section.

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Copyright © 2010, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.All rights reserved.This document may not be reprinted without the express written permission of Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.

Material from the Associated Press is Copyright © 2010, Associated Press and may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, orredistributed. Associated Press text, photo, graphic, audio and/or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcastor publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. Neither these AP materials nor any portion thereof may be stored in acomputer except for personal and noncommercial use. The AP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissionstherefrom or in the transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages arising from any of the foregoing. All rightsreserved.

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Delivery date : Sunday, January 02, 2011 7:41:06 pmUsername : kstar72 :: (Log out)Your query : kristal kuykendallCharge for this story: $1.95Publication: Arkansas Democrat-GazettePage(s): A1Section: A1Original Date: 01/15/2000

Glass resigns as Wal-Mart chief He sees 'it's time to make way'; ViceChairman Scott takes top spotKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTEBENTONVILLE -- At 7:15 Friday morning at the weekly managers' meeting, David Glass, Rob Waltonand H. Lee Scott Jr. delivered the news that everyone knew was coming but didn't expect sosoon:Glass was resigning as chief executive, and Scott is Wal-Mart's new top executive.Glass, 64, who helped Bentonville-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc. grow into the world's largest retailer during his12-year tenure as chief executive, will take the helm at Wal-Mart's board of directors executive committee andstay on full time for at least a year, the company said Friday.Scott, 50, becomes Wal-Mart's third chief executive and president after 20 years of working his way up from hisfirst job in the logistics department. Before Scott, a native of Joplin, Mo., was named vice chairman and chiefoperating officer a year ago, he was chief executive over the Wal-Mart Stores division, executive vice presidentof merchandising and senior vice president of logistics.Glass resigned now "because he was ready and he felt Lee Scott was ready for the job," said Wal-Martspokesman Jay Allen. "Glass has been saying for several years now that he didn't want to work as presidentand CEO of Wal-Mart forever. He just feels like it's time for him to make way for the new guy."At least some of Glass' plans for the future have nothing to do with retail: He's been chairman of the Kansas CityRoyals board of directors since 1993, and he recently announced he will try to buy the team.His resignation is not related to his activities with the Royals, Wal-Mart said.The sale still has a long way to go and must be approved by the team's board and by Major League Baseball,but Glass is the obvious favorite, said Soren Petro, a popular sports radio talk-show host in Kansas City."The feeling around here, all over Kansas City, is that [Glass' purchase of the team] is all but a done deal," Petrosaid Friday. "He was handpicked by former owner Ewing Kauffman, who said he wanted Glass to own the teamafter he died."Scott, widely respected in the retail industry for his behind-the-scenes work on Wal-Mart's distribution andlogistics systems, is, like Glass, a quiet introspective type who listens first and decides later, several people whoknow him said Friday.George Billingsley, Sam Walton's former tennis partner and a longtime Wal-Mart investor, said Walton, who diedin 1992, would definitely be pleased with Friday's developments."Sam brought David Glass to this company, and David brought Lee Scott," said Billingsley, owner ofInternational Tours in Bentonville and chief executive of Pacific Resources Export Limited."Sam followed Mr. Scott's career and was very enthused about his future with Wal-Mart. He knew he had awinner in Lee Scott."For the past year, Scott has trained the top spot, working at Glass' side overseeing Wal-Mart's domestic stores,international operations and Sam's Club division.If Glass' reputation and background is any indication, Scott has learned a lot during the last year.In 1964, Wal-Mart founder Sam Walton heard about a financial wiz named David Glass working at a drugstorechain in Missouri. Walton started wooing Glass -- he would do so for 12 more years before snagging him -- andinvited Glass to the grand opening celebration at the second Wal-Mart store, in Harrison.It was a disaster."It was the worst retail store I had ever seen," Glass wrote later in contributing to Walton's autobiography, MadeIn America . "It was about 115 degrees, and the watermelons began to pop, and the donkeys began to do whatdonkeys do, and it all mixed together and ran all over the parking lot."Inside, Glass wrote, the mess was just as bad; people had tracked the mixture of donkey droppings andwatermelon all over the floor."I wrote him off," Glass recalled. "It was just terrible."

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But 12 years later, Glass was persuaded in a bidding war to leave his job as general manager of a regionalMissouri grocery chain, and he became executive vice president for finance and distribution, then the No. 4 spotat Wal-Mart.Before long, an obvious rivalry developed between Glass -- a favorite of Walton's -- and Jack Shewmaker, theNo. 3 executive.Both Glass and Shewmaker were believers in technology. Both encouraged Walton to invest heavily in computersystems that later would prove key to making Wal-Mart the world's top retailer.Shewmaker, referred to by some insiders as brash and headstrong, was highly regarded by Wall Street and theretail industry. As president, he often staked out the more visible positions while Glass, the more quiet, analyticalof the two, focused on the underpinnings of the company.Then, in 1984, Walton shocked both the men by telling them they were switching jobs: Glass would bepresident, and Shewmaker would be chief financial officer.Shewmaker, although he was wooed by several rival retailers, stayed with Wal-Mart despite his obviousdisappointment at being replaced in the important line of succession.And Glass worked harder than ever, with employees at every level within the company, to prove his worthinessof the promotion.His hard work paid off eventually, but first it bit back -- with a heart attack, in 1985. He refused a suggestedbypass operation and instead opted to rest, take medication, improve his diet and exercise. Within weeks, hewas back at work, putting in more hours than ever.Three years later, almost to the day, Walton made him chief executive officer. That same day, Wal-Martannounced that Shewmaker was retiring to pursue other interests, such as his Bentonville cattle ranch.Since then, Wal-Mart has undergone enormous growth. Sales under Glass have soared -- nearly 1,000 percent-- to an estimated $165 billion this fiscal year, which ends Jan. 31.More than anything, though, Glass is credited with ensuring the development of Wal-Mart's backbone, itstechnology systems that run its enormous distribution system from purchases to stocking to sales to reordering.(That work started early. In 1976, he supervised the construction of a satellite network that enabled stores tocommunicate with the central office -- long before intranets or the Internet were commonplace. He alsocomputerized the company's distribution systems, which he found to be "shockingly" antiquated in 1978.)Immediately after Glass took charge, Wal-Mart introduced a new kind of store, a really big one. The firstWal-Mart Supercenter opened in Washington, Mo., as a test, and a few more followed over the next few yearsas the company made adjustments to the concept.In 1992, Walton died. The next year, Wal-Mart shares began to drop -- from $34.13 just after a stock split tounder $20 two years later in 1995.To help increase sales and drive the stock price back up, Glass pushed hard for the national expansion of thesupercenters. Glass also looked at international expansion. He set a long-term goal of $300 billion a year insales.Wal-Mart already had a handful of stores in Mexico under a joint venture agreement, as well as 15 stores inPuerto Rico.But in 1994, the nation's largest retailer began its transformation into the largest in the world. Between 1994 and1999, Glass led Wal-Mart into six new countries and buy a majority interest in its Mexican operations, Cifra SA,its largest international chain to date.The most recent acquisition, completed in July, was likely Glass' most important contribution to Wal-MartInternational: By buying United Kingdom retailer Asda Group Plc, the company more than doubled itsinternational division's annual revenue and secured a home base for future expansion in Europe, home to theworld's largest retail markets."David Glass will certainly be viewed as one of the best CEOs of this century," said Wal-Mart spokesman Allen.Now that he's resigned as Wal-Mart's head, Glass will stick around for at least a year and will run the topcommittee of Wal-Mart's board of directors; the committee acts on behalf of the board between meetings.Wal-Mart officials declined to say whether Glass' pay -- which last year was nearly $10 million -- would change.Last year Glass announced his intention to try to buy the Kansas City Royals.He's long been involved with the team and was a lifelong friend of now-deceased former owner, Kauffman.The auction for the team hasn't even officially opened yet, but word around Kansas City is that Glass is thefavorite. The only other person who's come forward as a possible buyer is New York businessman MilesPrentice, whose bid to buy the team last year was rejected by Major League Baseball."People here really want Glass to get the team," said talk-show host Petro in Kansas City. "I mean, he's workedwith the guys on the board for years, and some on the board aren't sure about some of the investors inPrentice's group."[The fans] are comfortable with Glass, and other owners in Major League Baseball have said the same thing."According to protocol, bidding for the team and approval could take at least another year to complete."He wants the system to move faster," Allen said. "He's impatient for it to move along."Graph: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/GREG MOODY SOURCE: Bloomberg Business News Wal-Mart underDavid Glass Map: Arkansas Democrat-Gazette SOURCE: Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.Research: Sarah L. Courteau Wal-Mart's worldwide locations Photo: David Glass Slug Line: bwalmartglass151A, w/artThis article was published on page A1 of the Saturday, January 15, 2000 edition in the A1 section.

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Copyright © 2010, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.All rights reserved.This document may not be reprinted without the express written permission of Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.

Material from the Associated Press is Copyright © 2010, Associated Press and may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, orredistributed. Associated Press text, photo, graphic, audio and/or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcastor publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. Neither these AP materials nor any portion thereof may be stored in acomputer except for personal and noncommercial use. The AP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissionstherefrom or in the transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages arising from any of the foregoing. All rightsreserved.

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Delivery date : Sunday, January 02, 2011 7:38:07 pmUsername : kstar72 :: (Log out)Your query : kristal kuykendallCharge for this story: $1.95Publication: Arkansas Democrat-GazettePage(s): D1Section: D1Original Date: 02/04/2000

Sales in January for Wal-Mart, Dillard's modestKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTEBENTONVILLE -- Arkansas' two largest retailers turned in less-than-stellar January sales results onThursday as the industry posted "shockingly great" increases and topped off its best year since 1984.In the four weeks ended Jan. 28, Bentonville-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc. sold 4.1 percent more than lastJanuary at stores open at least a year, a figure at the top end of expectations but lower than the nationalaverage, which was 5.4 percent.It was the first month since June that Wal-Mart's increase was lower than the industry average.Dillard's Inc., the nation's No. 3 department store chain, continued to struggle as it turned in a 1 percent rise insame-store sales for January. For the fiscal year ending Jan. 31, Dillard's same-store sales increased 3 percent.Industrywide, many retailers said their January sales were better than expected, leading Wall Street analysts toraise some fourth-quarter earnings estimates."Retail sales were shockingly great, and that's surprising because of the cold and snow at the end of the monthshould have kept people at home," said Kurt Barnard, who runs Barnard's Retail Trend Report , a New Jerseyconsulting firm.The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi retail sales index, which tracks sales at about 80 chains, rose 5.4 percent inJanuary based on a preliminary estimate, considerably higher than the 4 percent gain forecast. Sales fromstores open at least a year, known as same-store sales, are considered the most accurate measure of aretailer's business.January's robust gains cap a very strong 12 months for retailers, whose fiscal year runs from February toJanuary. The Bank of Tokyo's index rose 6.5 percent for the year, the biggest gain since 1984.Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, said revenue during January totaled $11.6 billion, up 23 percent from lastJanuary's $9.5 billion. For the fiscal year ended Jan. 31, Wal-Mart's sales hit a record $164.8 billion, 20 percentmore than the previous year.Wal-Mart's January sales results were pulled down by its Sam's Club division, which was hurt by bad winterweather and the "2000 pantry effect," said spokesman Mike Maher.After many customers stocked up on staples in December to prepare for possible problems when the date rolledover to 2000, purchases in January dropped. Also, about 10 percent of the company's 463 U.S. Sam's Clubswere forced to close for at least a day because of winter storms pounding the nation during January, especiallyon the East Coast.Sam's Club warehouse stores open at least a year sold 1.9 percent less than last January, when it posted an 8.7percent increase. January's numbers also were affected by an accounting period one day shorter than normal,Maher said.The Wal-Mart Stores division, which does not include Sam's Club stores, posted a same-store increase of 5.7percent in January, higher than the industry average but far less than last January's 10.8 percent rise.Shares of Wal-Mart, which has 3,978 stores in the U.S. and nine other countries, were unchanged on Thursday,closing at $58.38 on the New York Stock Exchange.Dillard's, the nation's No. 3 department store chain with 342 stores, said its sales in January were $472.2 million,up slightly from $469.1 million last January. For the fiscal year ended Jan. 31, sales were up 12 percent to $8.7billion, from $7.8 billion the previous fiscal year.Analysts said part of Dillard's problem could be lingering difficulties from Dillard's acquisition in 1998 ofMercantile department stores."It's usually a clearance month, selling what didn't sell during December," said Karen Sack of Standard & Poor'sin New York. "Dillard's [January same-store] numbers aren't great, but it's not that big a deal."Dillard's shares closed Thursday at $19.75, up 38 cents, on the New York Stock Exchange.Gap Inc., the nation's second-largest clothing chain, led the industry in January, reporting an 11 percent increase

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Material from the Associated Press is Copyright © 2010, Associated Press and may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, orredistributed. Associated Press text, photo, graphic, audio and/or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcastor publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. Neither these AP materials nor any portion thereof may be stored in acomputer except for personal and noncommercial use. The AP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissionstherefrom or in the transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages arising from any of the foregoing. All rightsreserved.

in same-store sales.Other retailers with positive results were: Sears Roebuck & Co. said same-store sales rose 1.7 percent.Kmart Corp., the No. 2 discount chain behind Wal-Mart, said same-store sales were up 3.6 percent.Target Corp., formerly known as Dayton Hudson, said same-store sales rose 5.7 percent. Its Target discountstores rose 6.4 percent, while sales at its department stores fell 0.3 percent.Limited Inc. said same-store sales were up 9 percent.At J.C. Penney Co. Inc., same-store department store sales were up 6.1 percent; same-store sales at Eckerddrugstores were up 5.2 percent. Information for this article was contributed by The Associated Press.Slug Line: bretail04 1d statecityThis article was published on page D1 of the Friday, February 04, 2000 edition in the D1 section.

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Delivery date : Sunday, January 02, 2011 7:36:39 pmUsername : kstar72 :: (Log out)Your query : kristal kuykendallCharge for this story: $1.95Publication: Arkansas Democrat-GazettePage(s): A1Section: A1Original Date: 03/11/2000

Union chief sees Texas vote turning tide at Wal-MartKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE*NW EDITION* Brad L. Edwards is convinced: The walls of Jericho are beginning to crumble.For nearly two years, Edwards and his fellow regional directors at the United Food and Commercial WorkersInternational Union have been marching around the corporate walls of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., trying to crack intothe largest retailer in the world.Like a giant swatting at a mosquito, Wal-Mart has swept away the union's attempts to unionize meat cutters --until last month.On Feb. 17, Edwards saw his hard work come to fruition when the 11-person meat department at a Jacksonville,Texas, Wal-Mart Supercenter voted to join his union and became the first U.S. Wal-Mart employees to do so.And meat workers at another Texas store have filed a petition to have their own vote.Now with Wal-Mart moving to close the meat-cutting departments in Texas and five other states, those Texasworkers will speak out publicly on Monday, along with national and local labor leaders, at a rally in Tyler, Texas.As Edwards sees it, it's the beginning of the end of Wal-Mart's union shutout. Since Wal-Mart's announcement,inquiries from the retailer's employees have soared into the hundreds, he said."All those cheers and chants that Wal-Mart employees have to do every day are backfiring," Edwards said onFriday. "Now, after seeing the union vote in Texas, Wal-Mart employees across the nation are chanting 'If theycan do, so can we.' "Despite appealing the election results to the National Labor Relations Board, Wal-Mart maintains that itsdecision to close meat-cutting departments in Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas hasnothing to do with the union vote in Jacksonville.After a year-long test program at its Northwest Arkansas stores, the world's largest retailer is switching toprepackaged, or "case-ready," meat at 180 supercenters and Neighborhood Markets in those states.Case-ready meat looks neater, saves money and gets the meat to the consumer more quickly, according to theAmerican Meat Institute, an trade organization.According to institute spokesman Patricia Pines, case-ready meat is a growing trend in food retailing, and everyone of the nation's top 50 grocers is testing it or has already switched over.Still, the timing of Wal-Mart's announcement angered union officials, who say the retailer feels threatened by thegrowing interest among its work force.Wal-Mart says it doesn't see it that way at all."They have seven out of 915,000 U.S. associates who have shown interest in unionizing," said Wal-Martspokesman Jessica Moser. "Wal-Mart associates have achieved unprecedented results in the last 30 years, andthere's no way they could have done that if they weren't excited about their jobs and weren't being rewarded."Maurice Miller, the Wal-Mart meat cutter in Jacksonville who organized the union vote last month, said he's tiredof paying too much for health benefits and bringing home too little pay. He won't be attending Monday's rallybecause he underwent back surgery on Feb. 25 and is still recovering.But he's hopeful that the rally will help draw attention to the cause.In October, Miller learned that meat cutters at the Kroger down the street from his Wal-Mart were making muchmore than him. At Kroger, the average union butcher makes around $13 an hour; at Wal-Mart, it's less than $10.He says he approached his supervisor about a raise, but was told "Wal-Mart couldn't pay meat cutters that kindof money."So he called Edwards, the regional director for the UFCW, and started talking to his co-workers aboutorganizing."They were all scared to discuss it at first, worried about losing their jobs," Miller said. "We haven't received anyreal threats, but they started treating us differently, giving us the cold shoulder."A few days after the vote, Miller recalled, he and another meat cutter walked into an empty break room and

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Copyright © 2010, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.All rights reserved.This document may not be reprinted without the express written permission of Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Inc.

Material from the Associated Press is Copyright © 2010, Associated Press and may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, orredistributed. Associated Press text, photo, graphic, audio and/or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcastor publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium. Neither these AP materials nor any portion thereof may be stored in acomputer except for personal and noncommercial use. The AP will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissionstherefrom or in the transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages arising from any of the foregoing. All rightsreserved.

found that day's newspaper lying on the table. The front page had a picture of Miller with the story about thevote, and someone had scrawled the words "Not Wanted Dead or Alive" across Miller's picture.Despite the chilly atmosphere, however, Miller says he doesn't hate his employer."I just want a decent salary, and I want to go back to cutting meat at Wal-Mart."Slug Line: bwalmartunion11 NEW HED ONLY 1A NWThis article was published on page A1 of the Saturday, March 11, 2000 edition in the A1 section.

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Delivery date : Sunday, January 02, 2011 7:33:53 pmUsername : kstar72 :: (Log out)Your query : kristal kuykendallCharge for this story: $1.95Publication: Arkansas Democrat-GazettePage(s): A1Section: A1Original Date: 03/21/2000

Wal-Mart hopes to head off union threat Retailer goes on offensive,promises new meat program won't cut jobs, payKRISTAL L. KUYKENDALL ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE*NW EDITION* BENTONVILLE -- With five of its stores now showing interest in organizing, Wal-MartStores Inc. went on the offensive over the weekend.Executive Vice President Tom Coughlin wrote to the retailer's 915,000 U.S. employees on Friday, promising thatWal-Mart's new prepackaged meat program will not affect any associates' jobs or pay levels."Do not be misled by claims made by union organizers," Coughlin wrote in the letter. "They are only interested inyou paying them to represent you."At issue is Wal-Mart's plans to switch to selling only prepackaged, or "case ready," meat at its 180 Supercentersand Neighborhood Markets in Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Louisiana and Kansas.The Bentonville-based retailer announced the move about two weeks after meat cutters in its Jacksonville,Texas, Supercenter voted to join the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.It was the first time any U.S. Wal-Mart employees had successfully organized .And it apparently is catching on, especially since Wal-Mart's case-ready announcement.Since the symbolic Jacksonville vote five weeks ago, four other stores' meat departments have filed petitionswith the National Labor Relations Board, asking to hold their own elections on whether to unionize. Those storesare in Ocala, Fla., Normal, Ill., Palestine, Texas, and Abilene, Texas.In addition, union officials report that "hundreds" of Wal-Mart workers across the nation have contacted them inrecent weeks, and that at least four more stores will petition for union votes in the near future.Five meat departments averaging about 10 employees each may not seem like a lot to worry about, sinceWal-Mart has nearly a million associates and nearly 3,000 stores in the United States alone.But the retailer isn't taking the threat of unionizing lightly.Government statistics show that union workers make about $2 more per hour than their nonunion counterparts.Meat cutters at the Palestine, Texas, Wal-Mart average about $10 an hour; at the organized Kroger down thestreet, the meat cutters get about $13 an hour.But besides higher pay, union workers get something else, something that could make any large employershiver -- a contract.When employees are part of a union and work under a contract, the employer usually has to tread carefullywhen making changes -- like deciding to save money by switching to case-ready meat.So it's no wonder that Wal-Mart is reaching out to touch its employees with a letter from the top, says KathleenHessert, president of Communication Concepts, a crisis-control consultancy in Charlotte, N.C."Wal-Mart can't wait until more stores unionize to take this threat seriously," Hessert said. "They have to get theirside of the story out to their associates now, and communicating directly is the best way to do that."Meanwhile, Wal-Mart is fighting the union tooth and nail in the five stores where it has established a foothold.In Jacksonville, where the meat cutters voted "Yes" on organizing, Wal-Mart is objecting to the outcome overalleged "inappropriate conduct" on the part of union recruiters and officials. Before the vote, a union official tookmeat cutters to strip bars, gave them alcohol and spending money and promised them paid positions in theunion, said Wal-Mart spokesman Jessica Moser.Union officials deny wrongdoing; a National Labor Relations Board review judge will hear the case next week.Also next week, Wal-Mart will ask the labor board to decline the Ocala meat department's request to hold anelection. The retailer lost similar arguments over elections in Jacksonville and Palestine.But even if the stores all get to hold elections, and they all vote to organize, the outcome is still questionable.Wal-Mart says it is under no obligation to bargain with the Jacksonville employees, or any others who vote tounionize, because the company already was planning to do away with meat-cutting, which would nullify the"unit" that held the election.

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But last week, in approving Palestine's vote, a regional labor board review showed strong disdain for thatargument."The evidence does not support" Wal-Mart's claim that it has reached a final agreement with its supplier to begina full case-ready meat program, the labor board wrote in its ruling. Furthermore, "mere speculation as to theuncertainty of future operations is not sufficient to dismiss a petition or decline to hold an election."According to the National Labor Relations Act, an employer cannot do things -- like restructure meatdepartments or do away with certain positions -- for the purpose of interfering with employees' right to organize.Nor can employers discriminate against employees who do organize.So the legitimacy of the meat cutters' votes to organize will rest on one factor -- whether Wal-Mart announced itscase-ready plans early enough to prevent any further organization efforts.Wal-Mart says the two events are completely separate. It has, in fact, been testing its all-case-ready program inseveral stores for a year, as its Northwest Arkansas rival Harps Food Stores will attest.Nevertheless, the labor board's review over the Palestine case may not bode well for Wal-Mart's attempts tostop the union in its tracks."It all depends on whether the NLRB, and thereafter the federal courts, conclude that what Wal-Mart did wasmotivated by the union activities of its employees or fear that other employees would organize," said Bob Funk,chief counsel for the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. "That will be the determiningfactor for whether any of these votes even matter."Slug Line: Bwalmart21 1A NW w/btext jumpThis article was published on page A1 of the Tuesday, March 21, 2000 edition in the A1 section.

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