пятница, 14 сентября 2012 г.

Still in the game: Burghardt's takes team approach as it passes ball down the line. - The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee, WI)

Byline: Doris Hajewski

Aug. 28--Brookfield -- The fifth generation of Burghardt family owners is preparing to take over the 125-year-old sporting goods store.

Kathy, 37, Brian, 35, and Carl, 32, have experienced mostly good times since they joined the family business in the mid-1990s. Sales have been strong enough that Burghardt Sporting Goods added 5,000 square feet to the store at 14660 W. Capitol Drive this year, bringing it to 20,000 square feet. But dad Chip, 66, says it's been a challenge to compete and succeed in the competitive world of sporting goods retail.

'It hasn't been a cakewalk,' the elder Burghardt said. The business is thriving now because the family followed a path taken by other independent sporting goods stores that are successful: They specialize, and they give good service. 'The independent retailers that have stayed in business tend to be specialized, rather than being a full-line retailer,' said Larry Weindruch, spokesman for the National Sporting Goods Association in Mount Prospect, Ill. The trade group estimates that Americans spent $51.3 billion on sports equipment, clothing and footwear last year, based on a survey of 100,000 households. That's up from $49.3 billion in 2004. But consumers have many choices when it comes to shopping for these items, and stores such as Burghardt's are in competition with mass retailers such as Wal-Mart, big-box stores, such as Sports Authority, shoe stores and the Internet. The Burghardts have carved out a niche serving teams and schools. Other independents that are successful focus on just one sport, golf for example, Weindruch said. The family believes that its business may be the oldest surviving independent sporting goods store in the United States, and Weindruch agrees. The next-oldest business that the association is aware of is Modell's, in New York, which was started in the 1890s, Weindruch said. Charles Burghardt started the business in downtown Milwaukee in 1881 as a stationery and book supplier, selling supplies to schools and retail stores. Eventually, as schools started adding sports programs, the Burghardts began selling equipment. By the time Chip joined the business as a young graduate of the University of Wisconsin School of Business in the 1960s, the name of the store had been changed to Burghardt Sporting Goods, located at 117 E. Wells St., across from the Pabst Theater. Back then, the store was near a power plant. 'We used to have soot on our front windows,' Chip recalled. Business then consisted almost entirely of selling to schools.

The family moved the store to W. Capitol Drive at N. 63rd St. in 1967, near what was then Capitol Court shopping center. The location had 4,000 square feet, and it allowed the Burghardts to expand into retail sales. 'Things went crazy and sales just went up,' Chip said. The good times lasted until 1981, a time when interest rates soared and the economy soured. On top of that, the situation around Capitol Court had started to deteriorate. 'We had a perception of a neighborhood problem,' Chip said. 'The problem wasn't real.'

Burghardt's also had decided at that time to expand, and opened a second location on S. 76th St. Sales there didn't take off the way they had at the Capitol Drive store when it opened. But the move eventually paid off because the family was able to trade the property for its Brookfield site, where the family opened the current store in 1995 and closed both older sites. The first three years in the new store were difficult, Chip said. Operating costs were higher in Brookfield, and the family had to build a new customer base. Because Brookfield is closer to the Lake Country area, the Burghardts tried selling water skis. And they offered camping gear, only to have REI, a major national outdoors equipment store, open just down the street. 'We realized that team athletics is really our bread and butter,' Brian said.

Now Burghardt's gets 40% of its revenue by selling direct to schools, YMCAs and other athletic programs. The remaining 60% is from retail sales to customers who come into the store, but a lot of those visits stem from a connection to a team. Baseball is the biggest sport at Burghardt's, so much so that the store has batting cages to let customers try out its products. The store also carries a large selection of equipment for football, lacrosse, soccer, volleyball, basketball and wrestling. Letter jackets are another big seller for Burghardt's. The store will attach letters to jackets for customers and also provides screen-printing services for team uniforms. Bruce Young, regional sales manager for DeLong Sportswear Inc. of Grinnell, Iowa, a manufacturer of the team jackets, said Burghardt is in the top 10% of DeLong's U.S. customers for high school letter jackets. Burghardt's advertises on radio and through direct mail, but the family says word-of-mouth recommendations really drive the business. 'Our strongest advertising is happy customers telling other customers,' Brian said. The family has no plans to add another store but expects to launch an Internet store within the next two months. And Chip Burghardt expects to stick around for the foreseeable future, staying involved as his children gradually buy out his ownership of the business.

Copyright (c) 2006, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business

News.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

HUSBAND CHARGED IN WIFE'S KILLING - The Record (Bergen County, NJ)

Duane Stoltzfus, Record Staff Writer
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
01-14-1992
HUSBAND CHARGED IN WIFE'S KILLING -- GOES TO POLICE AFTER SHOOTING
By Duane Stoltzfus, Record Staff Writer
Date: 01-14-1992, Tuesday
Section: NEWS
Edition: 5 Star, Also in 3 Star, 2 Star, 1 Star

While their three children were in school Monday morning, a
43-year-old Moonachie truck driver killed his wife at home with a single
shotgun blast to the face, the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office charged
later Monday.

Prosecutors arrested Paul Burghardt inside the Moonachie Police
Department on charges of killing his 38-year-old wife, Virginia, a
homemaker. They have three children, ages 9 to 14.

Prosecutor John J. Fahy said the couple had an argument in their
home in the morning. Afterward, Virginia Burghardt sat down in the
family's enclosed porch. Her husband then picked up a 12-gauge shotgun
and fired once, authorities charged.

Burghardt apparently then walked from the home at 17 Ramella Ave.
to the police station, where he reported the shooting. The family's back
yard is only a hundred yards or so from the Moonachie municipal complex.
Police arrived to find Virginia Burghardt dead.

At an arraignment before Judge Bruce A. Gaeta in Superior Court in
Hackensack, Burghardt spoke in a whisper and kept his eyes downcast.
Burghardt, whom authorities said had been receiving psychiatric
treatment, then was sent to Bergen County Jail on $1 million bail.

Fahy said the couple's dispute remained a mystery. Authorities were
unaware of any prior violence in the home. 'There was no indication they
were anything other than a happy couple,' he said.

The children were in school at the time of the shooting. Relatives
will care for them, Fahy said. The daughter, 14, attends Wood-Ridge High
School. The sons, 12 and 9, attend Robert L. Craig School in Moonachie.

Authorities asked for $1 million bail in part because of
Burghardt's resources. The couple owns two adjacent homes in town and
has additional savings.

Burghardt, who is 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 210 pounds, has
been a truck driver for 22 years with Greenwich Mills Co. in Secaucus.
The company roasts, packages, and delivers coffee. He is also a
volunteer firefighter.

When reached at her Moonachie home, Helen Burghardt, Paul's mother,
said little. 'I'm too upset to talk,' she said. 'I don't know what
happened. He was a good, shy, nice boy. That's all I can tell you.'

Virginia Burghardt's family lives in Little Ferry.

Addie Testa, who lived across the street from the Burghardts, said
Virginia Burghardt was always on the move, shuttling the children to
school and sporting events.

'She was a good neighbor,' Testa said. 'She was always there when I
needed her. She would sometimes drive my daughter to school for me. I
don't know if this has hit me yet. I can't believe this happened. I just
can't.'

The couple had been married for 17 years, all the while living in
Moonachie. On Monday afternoon, police were guarding the house. A
bicycle in the driveway leaned against the building.

Frank Migliorino, an attorney from Moonachie, said he and Paul
Burghardt attended grammar school together and later played on the same
high school baseball team.

'He's always been a wonderful family man,' Migliorino said. 'She
was a superlative mother. This is something no one can figure out. The
whole town is in shock.'

Moonachie Administrator Paul Hansen said he and other officials met
with staff members from Craig School and from South Bergen Mental Health
Center on Monday to search for ways to help people cope with the
shooting.

Hansen said teachers spoke with students in their classrooms about
what happened, and notes were being sent home to parents.

Hansen said counselors are available both for students and parents.
Interested people can call the center at 935-3322 or a Bergen County hot
line at 262-HELP. A meeting for parents was scheduled for tonight at the
school.

'Everybody is so upset,' Hansen said. 'This is a small community. A
lot of people knew the family.'

Keywords: MOONACHIE. FAMILY. MURDER

Copyright 1992 Bergen Record Corp. All rights reserved.

вторник, 11 сентября 2012 г.

Still in the game: Burghardt's takes team approach as it passes ball down the line. - The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee, WI)

Byline: Doris Hajewski

Aug. 28--Brookfield -- The fifth generation of Burghardt family owners is preparing to take over the 125-year-old sporting goods store.

Kathy, 37, Brian, 35, and Carl, 32, have experienced mostly good times since they joined the family business in the mid-1990s. Sales have been strong enough that Burghardt Sporting Goods added 5,000 square feet to the store at 14660 W. Capitol Drive this year, bringing it to 20,000 square feet. But dad Chip, 66, says it's been a challenge to compete and succeed in the competitive world of sporting goods retail.

'It hasn't been a cakewalk,' the elder Burghardt said. The business is thriving now because the family followed a path taken by other independent sporting goods stores that are successful: They specialize, and they give good service. 'The independent retailers that have stayed in business tend to be specialized, rather than being a full-line retailer,' said Larry Weindruch, spokesman for the National Sporting Goods Association in Mount Prospect, Ill. The trade group estimates that Americans spent $51.3 billion on sports equipment, clothing and footwear last year, based on a survey of 100,000 households. That's up from $49.3 billion in 2004. But consumers have many choices when it comes to shopping for these items, and stores such as Burghardt's are in competition with mass retailers such as Wal-Mart, big-box stores, such as Sports Authority, shoe stores and the Internet. The Burghardts have carved out a niche serving teams and schools. Other independents that are successful focus on just one sport, golf for example, Weindruch said. The family believes that its business may be the oldest surviving independent sporting goods store in the United States, and Weindruch agrees. The next-oldest business that the association is aware of is Modell's, in New York, which was started in the 1890s, Weindruch said. Charles Burghardt started the business in downtown Milwaukee in 1881 as a stationery and book supplier, selling supplies to schools and retail stores. Eventually, as schools started adding sports programs, the Burghardts began selling equipment. By the time Chip joined the business as a young graduate of the University of Wisconsin School of Business in the 1960s, the name of the store had been changed to Burghardt Sporting Goods, located at 117 E. Wells St., across from the Pabst Theater. Back then, the store was near a power plant. 'We used to have soot on our front windows,' Chip recalled. Business then consisted almost entirely of selling to schools.

The family moved the store to W. Capitol Drive at N. 63rd St. in 1967, near what was then Capitol Court shopping center. The location had 4,000 square feet, and it allowed the Burghardts to expand into retail sales. 'Things went crazy and sales just went up,' Chip said. The good times lasted until 1981, a time when interest rates soared and the economy soured. On top of that, the situation around Capitol Court had started to deteriorate. 'We had a perception of a neighborhood problem,' Chip said. 'The problem wasn't real.'

Burghardt's also had decided at that time to expand, and opened a second location on S. 76th St. Sales there didn't take off the way they had at the Capitol Drive store when it opened. But the move eventually paid off because the family was able to trade the property for its Brookfield site, where the family opened the current store in 1995 and closed both older sites. The first three years in the new store were difficult, Chip said. Operating costs were higher in Brookfield, and the family had to build a new customer base. Because Brookfield is closer to the Lake Country area, the Burghardts tried selling water skis. And they offered camping gear, only to have REI, a major national outdoors equipment store, open just down the street. 'We realized that team athletics is really our bread and butter,' Brian said.

Now Burghardt's gets 40% of its revenue by selling direct to schools, YMCAs and other athletic programs. The remaining 60% is from retail sales to customers who come into the store, but a lot of those visits stem from a connection to a team. Baseball is the biggest sport at Burghardt's, so much so that the store has batting cages to let customers try out its products. The store also carries a large selection of equipment for football, lacrosse, soccer, volleyball, basketball and wrestling. Letter jackets are another big seller for Burghardt's. The store will attach letters to jackets for customers and also provides screen-printing services for team uniforms. Bruce Young, regional sales manager for DeLong Sportswear Inc. of Grinnell, Iowa, a manufacturer of the team jackets, said Burghardt is in the top 10% of DeLong's U.S. customers for high school letter jackets. Burghardt's advertises on radio and through direct mail, but the family says word-of-mouth recommendations really drive the business. 'Our strongest advertising is happy customers telling other customers,' Brian said. The family has no plans to add another store but expects to launch an Internet store within the next two months. And Chip Burghardt expects to stick around for the foreseeable future, staying involved as his children gradually buy out his ownership of the business.

Copyright (c) 2006, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business

News.

For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

HUSBAND CHARGED IN WIFE'S KILLING - The Record (Bergen County, NJ)

Duane Stoltzfus, Record Staff Writer
The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
01-14-1992
HUSBAND CHARGED IN WIFE'S KILLING -- GOES TO POLICE AFTER SHOOTING
By Duane Stoltzfus, Record Staff Writer
Date: 01-14-1992, Tuesday
Section: NEWS
Edition: 5 Star, Also in 3 Star, 2 Star, 1 Star

While their three children were in school Monday morning, a
43-year-old Moonachie truck driver killed his wife at home with a single
shotgun blast to the face, the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office charged
later Monday.

Prosecutors arrested Paul Burghardt inside the Moonachie Police
Department on charges of killing his 38-year-old wife, Virginia, a
homemaker. They have three children, ages 9 to 14.

Prosecutor John J. Fahy said the couple had an argument in their
home in the morning. Afterward, Virginia Burghardt sat down in the
family's enclosed porch. Her husband then picked up a 12-gauge shotgun
and fired once, authorities charged.

Burghardt apparently then walked from the home at 17 Ramella Ave.
to the police station, where he reported the shooting. The family's back
yard is only a hundred yards or so from the Moonachie municipal complex.
Police arrived to find Virginia Burghardt dead.

At an arraignment before Judge Bruce A. Gaeta in Superior Court in
Hackensack, Burghardt spoke in a whisper and kept his eyes downcast.
Burghardt, whom authorities said had been receiving psychiatric
treatment, then was sent to Bergen County Jail on $1 million bail.

Fahy said the couple's dispute remained a mystery. Authorities were
unaware of any prior violence in the home. 'There was no indication they
were anything other than a happy couple,' he said.

The children were in school at the time of the shooting. Relatives
will care for them, Fahy said. The daughter, 14, attends Wood-Ridge High
School. The sons, 12 and 9, attend Robert L. Craig School in Moonachie.

Authorities asked for $1 million bail in part because of
Burghardt's resources. The couple owns two adjacent homes in town and
has additional savings.

Burghardt, who is 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs 210 pounds, has
been a truck driver for 22 years with Greenwich Mills Co. in Secaucus.
The company roasts, packages, and delivers coffee. He is also a
volunteer firefighter.

When reached at her Moonachie home, Helen Burghardt, Paul's mother,
said little. 'I'm too upset to talk,' she said. 'I don't know what
happened. He was a good, shy, nice boy. That's all I can tell you.'

Virginia Burghardt's family lives in Little Ferry.

Addie Testa, who lived across the street from the Burghardts, said
Virginia Burghardt was always on the move, shuttling the children to
school and sporting events.

'She was a good neighbor,' Testa said. 'She was always there when I
needed her. She would sometimes drive my daughter to school for me. I
don't know if this has hit me yet. I can't believe this happened. I just
can't.'

The couple had been married for 17 years, all the while living in
Moonachie. On Monday afternoon, police were guarding the house. A
bicycle in the driveway leaned against the building.

Frank Migliorino, an attorney from Moonachie, said he and Paul
Burghardt attended grammar school together and later played on the same
high school baseball team.

'He's always been a wonderful family man,' Migliorino said. 'She
was a superlative mother. This is something no one can figure out. The
whole town is in shock.'

Moonachie Administrator Paul Hansen said he and other officials met
with staff members from Craig School and from South Bergen Mental Health
Center on Monday to search for ways to help people cope with the
shooting.

Hansen said teachers spoke with students in their classrooms about
what happened, and notes were being sent home to parents.

Hansen said counselors are available both for students and parents.
Interested people can call the center at 935-3322 or a Bergen County hot
line at 262-HELP. A meeting for parents was scheduled for tonight at the
school.

'Everybody is so upset,' Hansen said. 'This is a small community. A
lot of people knew the family.'

Keywords: MOONACHIE. FAMILY. MURDER

Copyright 1992 Bergen Record Corp. All rights reserved.