Friday 26 October 2012

Boris Johnson set for US presidency

Boris promised to make this face a lot

Johnson shocked the world by announcing his intention to run on last night?s Letterman Show, when he crashed onto the set riding a penny farthing.

After colliding his outlandish bike into the host?s desk and ending up dangling slapstick-style from a lighting rig, Boris announced: ?I?d be quite up for a crack at this president thing, sounds like a wheeze.

?I?d have to watch the old red button though, if I put my cup of tea on it we?d all go boom!?

The power of Johnson?s bumbling charm is such that all election rules have been waived to permit the London?s mayor?s presidential candidacy. Boris is standing as an independent candidate with no policies other than to have a smashing time.

Less than 12 hours after entering American politics, he has a 94% poll lead.

US voter Tom Logan said: ?He?s like a cross between Hugh Grant and an albino polar bear. Also he lives in Downton Abbey, it?s almost too amazing.?

Former Republican Emma Bradford said: ?What this country badly needs is croquet, and to become like an imaginary version of pre-war England. And although I?m not 100% sure what Boris?s vision is, I?m fairly sure it?s along those lines.?

Meanwhile Obama looks increasingly like a man who just wants to pack it all in and start a provincial cake shop, while the Republicans have alienated most of humanity by focusing on the somewhat niche ?rapist vote?.

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Source: http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/news/society/boris-johnson-leading-race-for-the-white-house-2012102646528

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First Person: Why This 72-Year-Old Floridian is Voting for Obama

Florida's seniors, who represent about 22 percent of the state's voting-age population, may play a large role in how the state swings on Nov. 6. As Election Day nears, Yahoo News asked Floridians who are or nearing retirement, Medicare and Social Security age to share their thoughts on the election. Here's one perspective.

FIRST PERSON | The 2012 presidential race is nearing a close, and the incumbent has a narrow lead. There are arguments to be heard both for and against giving President Obama a second term. Let me tell you a little about myself, and why Obama is my choice.

I am a 72-year-old retiree living in Tampa. I raised my children as a single mom, their father and I having divorced in the mid 1970s. I experienced first-hand the trials and stress of being a female head of household. I feel that Obama can relate to my life story.

Education was a vital factor in my gaining the ability to qualify for something other than a minimum-wage job. I earned my college degree as a mature student, and found it necessary to borrow through the student loan program. I repaid these monies, and was grateful for their availability. I believe that Obama best values the continuance of student loans and grants in our educational system.

Looking beyond personal interests, I greatly value world peace, and mostly agree with President Obama's policies and actions in achieving it. I see him as an intelligent, thoughtful negotiator with the skills necessary to deal with other world leaders on a level playing field.

Our economy is admittedly not good, but has been gradually improving. I refuse to blame our president for the financial mess he has tried to untangle. I believe he deserves the chance to try and right our "ship of state" with a second term.

It is a mystery to me how so many citizens can attach such value to the Medicare system, in which I participate, and yet not see the fallacy in our country's lack of a comprehensive health care system. I see the idea of voucher payments to seniors to purchase health care as a step backwards! Obama's health care reform is at least a step in the right direction.

Regarding insurance coverage of birth control and contraceptives, I find it hard to believe that our society has regressed to even consider this questionable. I am beyond needing these items, but I want them to be available for my granddaughters!

A sign I've seen recently states, "Leave my Social Security Alone!" I can surely agree with this sentiment, since I couldn't afford to be retired without that income. My pension would not suffice! It is my belief that we can find a way to strengthen and continue the Social Security system.

It is my deepest hope that we can find a way to unite as a country and support whomever is elected. Our future and that of our children and grandchildren depends upon it!

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/first-person-why-72-old-floridian-voting-obama-155300920.html

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20 DIY Home Improvement Projects for this Winter

If you're looking at a fixer-upper, the Federal Housing Administration rehab loan may be the mortgage for you.

Are you interested in buying a fixer-upper, but don't have the cash to remodel it? Or maybe you have saved money for remodeling and you've found a house you love, but your lender won't allow you to buy it because the house isn't considered habitable without toilets.

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There are always properties on the market that weren't maintained by cash-strapped former owners, were treated poorly by renters or were deliberately trashed by formers owners before they lost their home to foreclosure. Shouldn't there be a way for someone like you to fix up these neighborhood eyesores and bring them back to life?

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A Gift From the Government

There is, and it's brought to you by the federal government. The Federal Housing Administration's rehab loan product, the The FHA 203(k) Loan was designed for individuals who want to rehabilitate or repair a damaged home so they can live in it as their primary residence. These loans are endorsed by the government to encourage lenders to offer what would otherwise be considered a risky loan product. Because of the risk and expense involved, rehab projects are normally handled by professional real estate investors who can buy properties with cash and therefore don't need any bank to approve the property's condition.

According to the FHA, "All persons who can make the monthly mortgage payments are eligible to apply" for a 203(k) loan. To find a lender in your area who is experienced with FHA 203(k) mortgages, use the search tool at http://www.hud.gov/ll/code/llslcrit.cfm and check the box for 203(k).

You might be surprised by the variety of home repairs and improvements that can be financed with the 203(k) loan. These include, but are not limited to:

  • Painting
  • Room additions
  • Decks
  • Patios
  • Site grading and drainage
  • Bathroom remodeling
  • Kitchen remodeling, including appliances
  • Finishing an attic or basement
  • Structural alterations and repairs
  • Adding or decreasing the number of units in a dwelling (e.g., single family to duplex)
  • New siding
  • Second story addition
  • Elimination of lead-based paint problems
  • Heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems (HVAC)
  • Plumbing
  • Roofing
  • Flooring
  • Energy conservation
  • Disabled access

The FHA does not allow "luxury items" such as tennis courts, swimming pools, hot tubs and barbecue pits to be financed with a 203(k) loan, but some items that you might think of as luxuries, such as whirlpool bathtubs, are actually allowed. Talk to your lender about the specific improvements you want to make to see what you can finance.

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Applying for an FHA 203(k) Loan

At AmeriFirst Home Mortgage, we are your 203k Specialists. You can find us in several states in the 203k Loan Directory.

Bottom Line

Let us know how we can help, and feel free to download our FREE 203k Survival Guide anytime.

Source: http://blog.amerifirst.com/amerifirst-blog/bid/90847/20-DIY-Home-Improvement-Projects-for-this-Winter

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Thursday 18 October 2012

RIM says BlackBerry users are ?black sheep by choice?

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Video: Siblings strike same wacky pose 23 years in a row



>>> everybody takes family photos, but these siblings have found a way to make theirs extra special. they've been striking the same kind of goofy pose for their family album for the past 23 years, and they are with us now. good morning to all of you.

>> good morning.

>> good morning.

>> getting any harder to lift those legs, ladies as the years go by? i was impressed.

>> not yet.

>> 1999 this started, right?

>> '89.

>> just a typical family picture. and who decided this should be done every single year?

>> it was a group decision. we decided we'll do it year after year wherever we were.

>> you've done it at weddings, all kinds of settings. but you all agree there are two that are particularly special over the years. why?

>> field of dreams , because the president of field of dreams , significant to us. and so we really enjoyed having that picture. and second one, when our mom passed away , we went on the beach in galveston and were able to do it there the day she passed away .

>> what does this tradition mean to you? there's a silliness to it and it's also touching.

>> just kind of fun, i think the fact we can do something and we can be silly and completely shameless and have a good time. and we do it anywhere we go in front of anybody any time.

>> on the " huffington post " and as a result of we had a couple of friends on our show who also did the same pose, and you all realized you had the same kind of thing going here. and you guys got great reaction. a lot of people commented about your relationship really, about how close you all are. is that really the tie that binds keeps you guys together here?

>> i think that's the best part about it.

>> as we've grown up, we've

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/49460257/

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HHS Announces Winners of Two EHR-Related Challenges | News ...

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) at the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) recently selected the winners of the Blue Button Mash Up Challenge and the Electronic Health Records (EHR) Accessibility Module Challenge. The winners, which were announced during the Health 2.0 6th Annual Fall Conference in San Francisco, are new tools to help patients better manage and access information in their EHRs.?

The Blue Button challenge was intended to build on a prior challenge to make personal health information more usable and meaningful for the individual consumer or patient. The winner, iBlueButton, submitted by Humetrix of San Diego, is described as a dual-application system designed to provide an intuitive, patient-centered, secure two-way mobile solution where patients can connect to their Blue Button and other health records. iBlueButton features include patient- and physician-optimized displays and dashboards, medication look-up, and new tools to download or print health information. As the challenge winner, Humetrix reportedly received $45,000, while the second place finisher, Intelligent Decisions, received $20,000, and Get Real Consulting, the third place team, received $10,000.?

For the EHR Accessibility Module Challenge, participants were asked to create and test a module or application that makes it easier for disabled individuals to access and interact with the health data stored in their EHRs. Pinaxis reportedly won the challenge with its creation Apollo, described as a fully accessible Internet portal that could allow patients to interact with any provider?s existing EMR system over the Internet. Pinaxis was awarded $60,000, and the two runner-up teams, RegisterPatient and Remedy Systems, each received $5,000.?

The challenges are reportedly part of ONC?s Investing in Innovation program, designed to use prizes and challenges to inspire innovation and obtain solutions to intractable health IT problems. A full list of winners is available here.?

Source: United States Department of Health and Human Services

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Source: http://www.ptproductsonline.com/news/2012-10-17_01.asp

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Flagler Auditorium Flagler's Performing Arts Center | FlaglerLive ...

Paid Advertising | October 17, 2012

Flagler Auditorium is Flagler County?s premier performing arts center. It was created by a public bond issue twenty years ago. This 1000 seat venue is available for professional performances, community performances and activities, and for Flagler County School needs. The Auditorium offers a large variety of entertainment: nationally touring Broadway, cultural programs, big bands, symphonies, family theater and celebrity entertainment.

Artist fees and operating expenses are supported mostly through ticket sales; however, additional funds come from our sponsors, advertisers, and our wonderful patrons. Governmental help is provided from the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of cultural Affairs, the Florida Arts Council, National Endowment for the Arts, and Tourist Development Council (TDC). Other needed funds are provided by fund-raising activities.

The Flagler Auditorium Governing Board relies upon the generosity of individuals and corporations to present the latest professional performances at affordable prices and to help support the arts in Flagler County Schools. Please help us to enhance the cultural life of Flagler County by becoming a patron, sponsor, or advertiser. All donor levels are 100% tax deductible.

The Flagler Auditorium Governing Board has created an Endowment for the Arts at Flagler Auditorium. To obtain information on various committees and charitable contributions, visit us on line at http:www.flaglerauditorium.org or call us directly at 386-437-7547 or 1-866-FLAGLER (866-352-4537)

UPCOMING SHOWS

Drumline Live ? National Tour
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2012
7:30 p.m.

This versatile group of musicians and dancers brings an explosive energy and athleticism to an eclectic mix of sounds. Equally at home with the hottest contemporary hip hop, R&B, classic Motown tunes, and the rousing sounds of the great brass tradition, DRUMLINE LIVE is thrilled to share the Amercian Marching Band Experience!

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Titanic ? 100th Anniversary ? National Tour
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2012
7:30 p.m.

On the 100th anniversary of its tragic journey, TITANIC recounts the dreams, hopes and aspirations of those aboard the fateful ship. WINNER OF FIVE 1997 TONY AWARDS including BEST MUSICAL.

Bowfire ? Holiday Heart Strings ? National Tour
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2012
7:30 p.m.

BOWFIRE Holiday Heart Strings mixes greatest hits with a holiday twist! Celebrate the festive season with some of the world?s greatest fiddlers and violinists in many genres, with stepdancing like you have never seen.

BOWFIRE Holiday Heart Strings mixes greatest hits with a holiday twist! Celebrate the festive season with some of the world?s greatest fiddlers and violinists in many genres, with stepdancing like you have never seen. Get ready for a Ho Ho Ho Down!

Holiday Heart Strings includes all time favorite classics, such as The Nutcracker Suite, Sleigh Ride, So This Is Christmas, Dreydl, Dreydl, Dreydl, and The Christmas Song, with added singing as well as the best of BOWFIRE that audiences have come to love from its years of touring and performing.

As seen on PBS, BOWFIRE?s ensemble of world-renowned musicians takes audiences on a journey that moves seamlessly from Jazz to Classical to Bluegrass to Celtic to Rock. It is a must-see performance.

For more information on BOWFIRE, its cast and tour dates, please visit www.bowfire.com

Please support FlaglerLive. Go to our Contributions/Donations Page.
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Source: http://flaglerlive.com/45500/flagler-auditorium5500-east-hwy-100-palm-coast386-437-7547-or-toll-free-1-866-352-4537/

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Texas landowners take a rare stand against Big Oil

A pipeline worker walks the length of a pipe as work continues Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012, in Sumner, Texas. Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

A pipeline worker walks the length of a pipe as work continues Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012, in Sumner, Texas. Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Pipeline workers bend a large section of pipe in preparation for its' installation Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012, in Sumner, Texas. Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Large sections of pipe are shown on a neighboring property to Julia Trigg Crawford family farm Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012, in Sumner Texas. Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Julia Trigg Crawford reads letters of encouragement and support with some accompanied by donations while taking a lunch break from working her family farm Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012, in Sumner, Texas. Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

Julia Trigg Crawford stands on a road in front of a neighboring property to her family farm where work by TransCanada continues on a oil pipeline Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012, in Sumner, Texas. Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez)

(AP) ? Oil has long lived in harmony with farmland and cattle across the Texas landscape, a symbiosis nurtured by generations and built on an unspoken honor code that allowed agriculture to thrive while oil was extracted.

Proud Texans have long welcomed the industry because of the cash it brings to sustain agriculture, but also see its presence as part of their patriotic duty to help wean the United States off "foreign" oil. So the answer to companies that wanted to build pipelines has usually been simple: Yes.

Enter TransCanada.

As the company pursues construction of a controversial 1,179-mile-long cross-country pipeline meant to bring Canadian tar sands oil to South Texas refineries, it's finding opposition in the unlikeliest of places: oil-friendly Texas, a state that has more pipelines snaking through the ground than any other.

In the minds of some landowners approached by TransCanada for land, the company has broken an unspoken code.

Nearly half the steel TransCanada is using is not American-made and the company won't promise to use local workers exclusively; it can't guarantee the oil will remain in the United States. It has snatched land. Possibly most egregious: They've behaved like arrogant foreigners, unworthy of operating in Texas.

To fight back, insulted Texas landowners are filing dozens of lawsuits, threatening to further delay a project that has already encountered many obstacles. Others are allowing activists to go on their land to stage protests. Several have been arrested.

"We've fought wars for it. We stood our ground at the Alamo for it. There's a lot of reasons that Texans are very proud of their land and proud when you own land that you are the master of that land and you control that land," said Julia Trigg Crawford, who is fighting the condemnation of a parcel of her family's 650-acre Red'Arc Farm in Sumner, about 115 miles northeast of Dallas.

Oil and agriculture have lived in peace in part because a one-time payment from a pipeline company or monthly royalties from a production rig can help finance a ranch or farm that struggle today to turn a profit from agriculture. The oil giants also respected landowners' fierce Texas independence, even sometimes drilling in a different yard or rerouting a pipeline to ensure easy access to the minerals below.

TransCanada is different. For one, it has sought and received court permission to condemn land when property owners didn't agree to an easement.

"This is a foreign company," Crawford said. "Most people believe that as this product gets to the Houston area and is refined, it's probably then going to be shipped outside the United States. So if this product is not going to wind up as gasoline or diesel fuel in your vehicles or mine then what kind of energy independence is that creating for us?"

Activists have handcuffed themselves to machinery. A group has moved into a grove of trees on a TransCanada easement. A 78-year-old great-grandmother, Eleanor Fairchild, whose late husband worked in the oil industry, spent a night in jail after trespassing ? along with actress Daryl Hannah of "Splash" fame ? on land condemned on her 425-acre farm. On Monday, eight others were arrested for their protest activities.

TransCanada's pipeline, some landowners say, is more worrisome than those built by other companies because of the tar sands oil the company wants to transport. They point to an 800,000-gallon spill of mostly tar sands oil in Michigan's Kalamazoo River in 2010. It took Enbridge, the company that owns that pipeline, 17 hours to detect the rupture, and the cleanup is still incomplete.

With a pipeline, landowners give up control of the land for a one-time check, risking a spill that could contaminate their land or water for years. It's a risk many are willing to take in exchange for cash ? to a point.

Some say the risk of a spill now is too high to cooperate. Others want guarantees TransCanada will take full responsibility for a spill.

Many just want respect.

Most pipeline projects in Texas have been completed with an average of 4 percent to 10 percent of condemned land. TransCanada, however, has condemned more than 100 of the 800 or so tracts ? or about 12.5 percent ? of the land it needed to complete a 485-mile portion of the pipeline that runs through Texas.

Many of the lawsuits in Texas are about TransCanada's "common carrier" status. This allows companies building projects benefiting the public to condemn private property. The Texas Supreme Court recently ruled if a landowner challenges a condemnation, the company must prove its project is for the public good.

Crawford, whose family has denied other pipelines access to their land, argues that since TransCanada's pipeline will have only one access point ? or a place where oil can get into the pipe ? at a hub in Cushing, Okla., it does not qualify for the status, which requires the pipeline be accessible in Texas.

"This is not about the money," said Crawford, who notes that TransCanada's final offer of $20,000 amounts to about $1 a year over 60 years, less time than her family has been on the land. "This is about the right of a landowner to control what happens on their land."

David Dodson, a TransCanada spokesman in Houston, said the company has agreements with 60,000 landowners in North America, hundreds of them in Texas. Many have been reached easily, he said. The problems in Texas, he believes, may just be a sign of the times.

"These days, anyone who attempts to build a linear infrastructure project, Texas, wherever it is, it doesn't matter, is facing increased opposition," Dodson said.

David Holland's 3,850-acre rice farm and ranch in southeast Jefferson County is littered with nearly 50 pipelines. In the five years since he was first approached by TransCanada, he said he has signed contracts with two other companies. He insists he would do the same for TransCanada ? if they offered him fair value for his 10.5 acres.

Until now, Holland said, he and other landowners had given pipeline companies a roughly 20 percent discount because it was cheaper than fighting Big Oil. TransCanada offered him more than $400,000 for his land. But that, he said, was about $200 less for every 16.5 feet than he had previously received. After Holland declined, the court allowed TransCanada to take the land for $13 for every 16.5 feet ? totaling slightly more than $20,000.

"Every landowner in the state is furious at them," he said.

Some landowners have reached agreements without a problem. Henry Duncan, whose 200-acre farm is across the road from the Crawford's, wouldn't say how much TransCanada paid, but feels he was fairly compensated for his 7 acres. He does wish they would use American-made steel for the pipe and hire local workers. He, too, feels they bullied landowners, but is realistic.

Pipeline money helps keep his 100 head of cattle roaming the pastures. It could help him and his wife as they age.

"To be quite honest, I'd like to see another one come through because they pay good," Duncan said.

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Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP

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Website: www.standwithjulia.com

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-17-Oil%20Pipeline-Texas%20Landowners/id-6de5c38bef994edaaab090d2a37960b0

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Tuesday 16 October 2012

Indonesia's Agriculture Minister Lashes Out at OECD Food Report ...

Indonesia's Agriculture Minister Lashes Out at OECD Food Report
Jakarta Globe | October 15, 2012

An Indonesian minister has attacked the OECD over a report that last week criticized the nation?s policy of food self-sufficiency, accusing the global research body of a hypocrisy given similar policies are in place in developed countries.

?They were not being objective,? Agriculture Minister Suswono said of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. ?In developed nations, agricultural sector is subsidized and protected by the government.?

He said the United States, a member of the OECD, provided $383 million in disaster relief funds to shield livestock producers from volatility in feed prices.

Suswono said the policy amounted to protectionism, the offense of which Indonesia stands accused.

He said Indonesia would stand by its policy of securing the nation?s foods supply via a self-sufficiency program.

The OECD report said that the Indonesian government?s food self-sufficiency goal starves poor consumers, including the majority of Indonesian farmers, who buy more staples such as rice, cooking oil and sugar than they sell.

The OECD, which counts as members most developed nations, said that Indonesia, the world?s 10th largest agricultural producer, should open its food markets to international trade and move away from its ?self-sufficiency? objectives.

The report also criticized the government?s use of import protection to increase returns to farmers because the policy also led to an increase in food costs for poor consumers and hindered the competitiveness of the agricultural sector.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has set the goal of making the nation self-sufficient in rice, cattle, sugar, corn and soybean by 2014.

The government imposed either taxes or quotas on imports of the five commodities in order to encourage local farmers to produce and discourage imports.

Suswono said that foreign entities should not intervene in the government?s effort to boost local production.

The policy seeks to control the price local farmers receive for their goods.

The government has been grappling with rising global commodities price, including for items that are popular among Indonesian consumers.

In August, the price of soybean rose sharply, causing the price of products such as tempeh and tofu to increase significantly. In response to the public outcry, the government scrapped import duties for soybean, but it had little impact on the price. The experience prompted public calls for local production of the commodity.

The OECD report also noted that Indonesia is becoming increasingly hostile to foreign investment in the agriculture sector, with the exception of palm oil, by imposing export taxes on several commodities. This is seen as limiting investors? ability to sell products overseas.

Indonesia has been criticized elsewhere for the adverse consequences of its move toward beef self-sufficiency.

Source: http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/business/indonesias-agriculture-minister-lashes-out-at-oecd-food-report/550218

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The Power of Prevention: October is Domestic Violence Awareness ...

By Ruth Matsey

As we attempt to provide awareness about domestic violence and abuse, we are acutely conscious of the fact that children frequently live in these homes where abuse occurs. 15.5 million children in the United States live in families in which partner violence occurred at least once in the past year, and seven million children live in families in which severe partner violence occurred. (Journal of Interpersonal Violence. 18(2): 166-185.)

Children who witness family violence are affected in ways similar to children who are physically abused. These children are affected by the abuse in a myriad of ways. The child?s reactions can vary depending on the child's gender, age, and the duration of the violence. Some children are remarkably resilient.

Children exposed to family violence are more likely to develop social, emotional, psychological and/or behavioral problems than those who are not. Recent research indicates that children who witness domestic violence show more anxiety, low self esteem, depression, anger and temperament problems than children who do not witness violence in the home. The trauma they experience can show up in emotional, behavioral, social and physical disturbances that effect their development and can continue into adulthood. (http://www.acadv.org/children.html)

No member of the family escapes the violence of abusive relationships. When families are under stress they create children who are also under stress. We cannot continue to separate child abuse and intimate partner abuse. They so frequently go hand in hand. Some children, especially infants and toddlers in their mother?s arms, are attacked when the abuser attempts to hurt the mother. Other times the abuser abuses the child as well as the mother.

At Phoenix House, our transitional home for women and their children who are fleeing domestic abuse, we have noticed a lot of behavior difficulties with the children of the victims. The children act out their frustrations and anger. They are finally in a safe place where advocates are able to help them deal with their problems.

A wealth of excellent information can be found by Googling Jeffrey Edleson and children and domestic violence. Dr. Edleson has conducted research for many years at the University of Minnesota. He is presently Dean and Professor at the School of Social Welfare at UC Berkeley.

Ruth Matsey is the President of the Starke County Coalition Against Domestic Abuse and Starke County Prevent Child Abuse.

Source: http://preventchildabuseindiana.blogspot.com/2012/10/october-is-domestic-violence-awareness.html

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Monday 15 October 2012

Beautiful butterfly wings hold sea snail's toxin

An Asian butterfly's white wings tipped with vibrant red-orange are not only eye catching, they contain a poison, scientists have found.

They share this venom with an unlikely counterpart: predatory sea snails, which harpoon their prey to inject a cocktail of paralyzing venoms, including this one.

The butterfly, Hebomoia glaucippe, likely uses the toxin as a defense rather than a weapon, writes the Austrian research team, noting that many of the butterfly's predators, including birds, ants and the orchid mantis, avoid the wings. Hungry geckos, however, may not be bothered by it, because they eat the entire animal, wings and all, they add.?

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    4. Farmer finds Maya murals under plaster

The team analyzed the proteins from the bodies and wings of H. glaucippe butterflies collected from multiple locations in southeastern Asia, finding a relatively high abundance of the toxin called glacontryphan-M. This toxin has so far only been found in the sea snail species Conus marmoreus, commonly known as the marble cone snail.?

The researchers write they are now examining samples of the butterfly collected elsewhere for the toxin and looking at other toxic animals for clues as to the evolutionary reason a butterfly and sea snail share an identical toxin.

The study was published online Oct. 15 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Follow LiveScienceon Twitter@livescience. We're also onFacebook &Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49422112/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Xbox Music to offer on-demand music free on tablet

This image provided by Microsoft Corp. shows a screen image of their new service called, Xbox Music. Buyers of tablets that run Microsoft?s newest operating system, Windows 8, are in for a pleasant musical surprise: they?ll be able to handpick from a selection of millions of songs and stream them for free as long as they put up with an audio ad every 15 minutes. (AP Photo/Microsoft Corp.)

This image provided by Microsoft Corp. shows a screen image of their new service called, Xbox Music. Buyers of tablets that run Microsoft?s newest operating system, Windows 8, are in for a pleasant musical surprise: they?ll be able to handpick from a selection of millions of songs and stream them for free as long as they put up with an audio ad every 15 minutes. (AP Photo/Microsoft Corp.)

(AP) ? Buyers of tablets that run Microsoft's newest operating system, Windows 8, are in for a pleasant musical surprise: They'll be able to handpick from a selection of millions of songs and stream them for free as long as they put up with an audio ad every 15 minutes.

The new service, called Xbox Music, is not on offer anywhere else at the moment.

Sweden's Spotify, for instance, allows track selection and playback on personal computers for free ? with the occasional audio ad ? but doesn't allow you to pick exactly the song you want on tablets unless you pay $10 a month for its premium subscription. Pandora's popular free online radio service also doesn't let you pick specific tracks.

Although this is a step forward for the music industry, its appeal is limited by the expense of most mobile data plans. Most cost more the more data you use, which can make streaming music on cellular networks fairly expensive.

The free version of Xbox Music won't let you download songs and save them for offline playback. That will require paying $10 a month.

The paid subscription is also required if you want to use Xbox Music on the Xbox 360 game console or on smartphones that use Windows Phone. On the game console, an Xbox Live Gold membership, which costs $60 a year, is also required.

On PCs running Windows 8, Xbox Music will match Spotify's offer of free track selection and playback.

In a demonstration on Friday, Xbox Music General Manager Jerry Johnson showed how one's playlists are saved online and can be accessed when switching between the service on the Xbox 360 game console, a Windows Phone and a Windows 8 tablet.

Each iteration looked similar and had a clean interface with sharply detailed cover art. Xbox Music will be the default music player on all new Windows 8 devices, which will be available upon the launch of the new operating system on Oct. 26.

Current users of the Xbox ? about 66 million worldwide ? will gradually be introduced to the service with a 30-day free trial starting Tuesday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-10-15-Microsoft-Xbox%20Music/id-9822a757a79649bc81ed8dda897267f4

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Keyshia Cole Calls Out Gucci Mane For 'Spreading Lies' In Jeezy Feud

She and T.I. were dragged into Gucci's beef with Young Jeezy this weekend, but Cole says she has 'no place' in the drama.
By Rob Markman


Keyshia Cole
Photo: Johnny Nunez/ WireImage

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1695554/keyshia-cole-gucci-mane-young-jeezy-beef.jhtml

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Sunday 14 October 2012

Prison Planet.com ? Health alert: Why you DON'T want ripped abs if ...

Mike Adams
Natural News
Oct 14, 2012

You show me a guy with ripped abs, and I?ll show you a guy very unlikely to survive the coming economic collapse. There are three scientific reasons for this:

#1) Having ?ripped abs? is only achieved by shedding excess body fat and achieving a dangerously low body fat level (such as 5% for men).

#2) People with ribbed abs (i.e. very low body fat) have?virtually no excess calories to keep them alive if access to food is suddenly limited.

#3) People with ribbed abs have?no built-in insulation from the cold. A person with very low body fat is extremely vulnerable to?hypothermia. This may be a life-or-death matter if an economic collapse arrives during the winter months and electricity or heating fuels are not available for extended periods of time.

Having very low body fat is dangerous to your survival

It?s almost comedic that men are running around the gym these days, trying to build up their biceps and shed body fat. Neither of these is useful in a collapse scenario. They are purely a cosmetic reflection of today?s cultural fashions. (For hundreds of years, for example, being plump was considered a lot more attractive than being lean.)

In a collapse scenario, you?ll wish you had some extra body fat. Obviously you don?t want to face a crisis as an obese person, but carrying around 15 ? 20 percent body fat (for men) or 20 ? 28 percent body fat (for women) is actually a smart survival strategy, especially if combined with regular physical fitness and resistance training.

  • A d v e r t i s e m e n t

A 6? tall man weighing 215 pounds and carrying some belly?fat, for example is a lot more likely to survive hard times than a 6? tall man weighing 175 with ripped abs and virtually no body fat.

Scenarios where you?ll wish you had body fat

? If food is suddenly in short supply and you have to survive with a prolonged calorie deficit.

? If you?re forced to travel on foot for extended durations (such as days or weeks). You?ll burn fat along the way. If you don?t have sufficient fat, your?body will start breaking down and burning your muscles.

? If you?re forced to sleep outside, possibly in a tent, where you need thermal protection from the elements.

? If you?re sleeping in a home or apartment, but the heat is cut off in the winter.

In each of these scenarios, some spare body fat actually adds to your survival potential.

Don?t use this as an excuse to pig out, though

Of course, you probably don?t want to carry around more than 25 ? 30 pounds of extra body fat, even if you?re preparing for hard times. Don?t use this article as an excuse to pig out this holiday season. I can just see sometime stuffing their face with ice cream and declaring, ?The Health Ranger said this was a good way to get prepared!?

That?s not what I?m saying at all. In fact, if you do carry around some extra stored?body fat, make sure it was built with the healthiest foods you could find. You want body fat derived from healthy foods and healthy oils, for example. Not ?junk food fat.?

You want to be?healthy, fit and well-fed but not obese. For men, obese means 25% body fat or higher. For women, it?s 32% or higher.

The bodybuilding ?health? myth

As you consider all this, remember that people who have ?ripped abs? are really sporting a temporary fiction. Body builders, for example, are in terrible overall health. They spend months over-feeding themselves, gorging on calories to build muscle, then they spend a month or two ?cutting? calories through planned starvation so that they shed all their body fat by competition day.

A day or two before competition day, they then force themselves through a grueling?dehydration regimen, to the point where they?re about to pass out during the competition itself. The body you see during bodybuilding competitions is, technically,?very close to death by dehydration, starvation and mineral (salt) deficiency. That is not a healthy body. We should not strive, in any way, to look like those bodies. Even bodybuilders don?t look like that, day to day.

Immediately after bodybuilding competitions, the participants?drink so much water and salt that they can gain as much as 30 pounds in 24 hours. They also begin to eat huge portions again, bringing themselves back from the brink of starvation. In just 72 hours after a competition, a typical bodybuilder looks nothing like their on-stage performance. That was a ?performance,? not a lifestyle.

If an economic collapse were to occur the day before a bodybuilding competition, those participants would quite literally find themselves on the verge of death and need to take immediate action to rehydrate and intake mass quantities of salt and calories just to get back into functional shape again.

Do you see how silly it is to wish to have ?ripped muscles? when the global economy is on the brink? Or when a Fukushima-scale nuclear accident could happen at any time?

That?s why I encourage you to?take care of yourself and carry around a reasonable quantity of spare calories. Stay fit, eat well and exercise regularly, but don?t try to drop so much body fat, salt and water that you put yourself at risk in an uncertain world.

And of course, in addition to storing a bit of extra energy around your waist or hips, also store some preparedness foods in your home. When today?s world such an uncertain place, it only makes sense to keep you and your family ready for whatever might be coming our way.


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Source: http://www.prisonplanet.com/health-alert-why-you-dont-want-ripped-abs-if-you-hope-to-survive-the-coming-economic-collapse.html

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Cardinals, Giants each pulled off remarkable rally

San Francisco Giants relief pitcher Sergio Romo, center, celebrates with teammate after the Giants defeated the Cincinnati Reds 6-4 in Game 5 of the National League division baseball series, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2012, in Cincinnati. The Giants won the final three games, all in Cincinnati, and advanced to the NL championship series. (AP Photo/Michael Keating)

San Francisco Giants relief pitcher Sergio Romo, center, celebrates with teammate after the Giants defeated the Cincinnati Reds 6-4 in Game 5 of the National League division baseball series, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2012, in Cincinnati. The Giants won the final three games, all in Cincinnati, and advanced to the NL championship series. (AP Photo/Michael Keating)

Cardinals' Skip Schumaker (left) and manager Mike Matheny (center) congratulate Carlos Beltran (foreground right) after Beltran and Adron Chambers both scored on a single by Daniel Descalso to tie the game in the ninth inning during Game 5 of the National League Division Series between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Washington Nationals on Friday, Oct. 12, 2012, at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Chris Lee, Post Dispatch)

San Francisco Giants' Pablo Sandoval (48) sprays Nicole Vogelsong, wife of Giants pitcher Ryan Vogelsong, in the locker room after the Giants defeated the Cincinnati Reds 6-4 in Game 5 of the National League division baseball series, Thursday, Oct. 11, 2012, in Cincinnati. The Giants won the final three games, all in Cincinnati, and advanced to the NL championship series. (AP Photo/David Kohl)

Members of the St. Louis Cardinals pour beer on relief pitcher Jason Motte's head after Game 5 of the National League division baseball series against the Washington Nationals on Saturday, Oct 13, 2012, in Washington. St. Louis won 9-7. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

St. Louis Cardinals pitchers Marc Rzepczynski, left, and Joe Kelly, right, pour beer on teammate Edward Mujica's head as they celebrate in the locker room after Game 5 of the National League division baseball series against the Washington Nationals on Saturday, Oct 13, 2012, in Washington. St. Louis won 9-7. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

(AP) ? As many times as he gets asked, Cardinals closer Jason Motte still has no perfect answer for how St. Louis found a way to win at Washington after trailing 6-0 and advance to the NL championship series again.

"These guys just prove what big hearts they have and how much they go out there and work their butts off," said Motte, Friday night's winning pitcher in Game 5. "Someone asked me last night how we keep doing it, and I said, 'I don't know, maybe we're just stubborn. We just don't give up.' That's kind of how you have to be."

The San Francisco Giants get it, all right. They've been doing it the same way.

The last two World Series winners sure are showing their championship mettle in mid-October.

St. Louis manager Mike Matheny will watch the game again, once things slow down, so he can truly appreciate just what his Cardinals accomplished in beating the Nationals ? the team with baseball's best record this season.

San Francisco skipper Bruce Bochy doesn't need another look to know how impressive the reigning World Series champions' ninth-inning comeback was for a 9-7 victory in the nation's capital.

Bochy's team had its own remarkable rally that's not quite as fresh as the Cardinals' feat: Three road wins at Cincinnati to advance after dropping the first two games of the division series at home to the Reds.

They will face off in Game 1 of the NLCS on Sunday night at San Francisco's AT&T Park. Left-hander Madison Bumgarner gets the ball for the Giants against 6-foot-5 right-hander Lance Lynn.

"Both teams had their backs against the wall," Bochy said. "It's impressive what the Cardinals did. And, really, if you look at the game we had and the game they had, they were similar. We were up 6-0, barely hung on, and they found a way to get it done. ... I think that says a lot about the two clubs, the character of the clubs and how hard they fight ? and it should be a really hard-fought series here."

Bumgarner, a 16-game winner this year, lost Game 2 of the NL division series here to Cincinnati. But the strong left-hander is not one to get rattled, and he gained his share of experience during the Giants' surprising run to the World Series title in 2010 ? the first for the franchise since moving West in 1958.

"I felt good last time, things just didn't go my way," Bumgarner said. "That's the way this game is."

While the Giants became the eighth team to erase a 2-0 deficit to win a best-of-five series and first in major league history to do it on the road, the Cardinals earned the biggest comeback ever in a winner-take-all postseason game, according to STATS LLC.

"It really hasn't sunk in," Matheny said after an all-night, cross-country trip to the Bay Area. "I see a knockdown-drag out ahead of us. I'm certain Major League Baseball has to be very pleased with the caliber of baseball that's happened so far in this postseason. And I don't see any reason why the excitement wouldn't continue. We're looking at two well-rounded teams."

These clubs have played twice previously in the NLCS, most recently in 2002. The Barry Bonds-led Giants went on to the World Series only to fall short in the decisive Game 7 against the wild-card Angels after coming within six outs of a championship in Game 6.

Daniel Descalso hit a tying, two-out single, and Pete Kozma added a go-ahead, two-run single to lead the Cardinals' rally. Now, Descalso gets to play back home in his native Bay Area, where he grew up going to Athletics games across San Francisco Bay in Oakland.

"It was a long night for us," Descalso said. "It's nice we had this day off to kind of regroup and get a little rest. But it's hard not to be excited after a game like last night, the way that game ended, and to get on a plane and fly all the way across country. We're still recovering."

The Giants, all the while, waited out the game on their team plane still parked on the tarmac in Cincinnati. Players gathered around iPads to watch the improbable comeback by a Cardinals club managed by former Giants catcher, Matheny.

The Cardinals have won all six of their games when facing elimination the past two years, down to their final strike not once but twice against the Texas Rangers in last year's World Series before prevailing.

This time, they faced the same situation against the team with a majors-best 98 wins.

"I don't why we do it. We love the dramatics. I'd like us to not keep waiting until the last strike," pitcher Kyle Lohse said, "because that's too much for my heart to handle."

The Giants barely beat St. Louis to the West Coast after getting delayed more than three hours as their plane refueled and dealt with mechanical problems.

Initially, the plane had enough fuel to take the NL West winners to Washington. Instead, the Giants got to come home. They landed at 5:09 a.m.

"Everyone was rooting and cheering for the Cardinals because we wanted to go home," third baseman Pablo Sandoval said. "I was cheering for St. Louis. I was excited to be back home. Probably almost everybody was cheering for the Cardinals. Every guy was happy to be home. Once we were in the air, I slept the whole flight."

Yankees manager Joe Girardi fell asleep before the NL clincher ended. The last thing he remembered, the Cardinals were trailing 7-5. His television was still on, and when he opened his eyes at one point he saw the final score.

"I said, 'What happened?'" he said. "I looked at it, the game was over and I closed my eyes and went back to bed. Pretty amazing. You think about the games, and you are down 6-0 and you're able to come back. And you keep going at it. This first round was probably as good as it gets. Probably as good of baseball as we have seen when you talk about eight teams playing."

Bochy will carry all five of his starting pitchers again this round, with Tim Lincecum and Barry Zito available out of the bullpen. Matt Cain is expected to go in Game 3, following fellow right-hander Ryan Vogelsong in Monday's Game 2.

Road weary and riding high, the Cardinals and Giants are counting on more close games and playing all 27 outs no matter who is on the mound.

"It's definitely a fun matchup," said Giants catcher Buster Posey, whose grand slam helped seal Game 5 against the Reds. "These should be some fun games to watch. Both teams have good arms, good offenses. And the resiliency of both teams is the strength of both teams."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-13-NLCS-Cardinals-Giants/id-6f7faaf25f02419bb2fd3e37e18155dc

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Saturday 13 October 2012

Vanguard Communications ? D.C.-Based Vanguard ...

WASHINGTON (October 11, 2012) ? Vanguard Communications, a Hispanic woman-owned, full-service public relations and social marketing firm based in Washington, D.C., has been recognized by the National Health Information Awards (NHIA), which honors the nation?s best consumer health information programs and materials.

The NHIA recognized Vanguard with awards for two programs conducted on behalf of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA):

  • The 2011 Voice Awards: Vanguard received a Bronze Award in the category of Total Special Health Event Program; and
  • SAMHSA?s Wellness Initiative 2011: Vanguard received a Merit Award in the category of Total Health Information Program.

?We already feel privileged to work on behalf of clients that are dedicated to communicating for social change, particularly in the critical areas of wellness and mental health,? said Maria Rodriguez, president of Vanguard Communications. ?It?s tremendously gratifying to see the Vanguard team recognized for its passion, creativity and quality of work. We are deeply humbled and grateful to be acknowledged by the NHIA among such an esteemed group of honorees.?

Now in its 19th year, the NHIA is the most comprehensive competition of its kind. It is organized by the Health Consumer Resource Center, a national clearinghouse for consumer health information programs and materials.

Nearly 1,000 entries were submitted by a variety of organizations in the consumer health field. All materials and/or programs developed and/or distributed between January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2011, were eligible for the competition. The materials or programs submitted must have been developed for use by consumers, not health professionals. To see a complete list of the 2012 winners and the judges? biographies, visit www.healthawards.com/2012winners.

Since 1987, Vanguard has been fortunate to partner with some of the nation?s leading nonprofits, foundations and government agencies in educating the public, changing perceptions and behavior, affecting public policy, and ultimately protecting the health and well-being of our neighbors.

For more information about Vanguard Communications, visit www.vancomm.com, ?like? Vanguard on Facebook at facebook.com/vancomm and follow on Twitter @VanComm.

?Vanguard Communications is a Hispanic woman-owned firm committed to communications initiatives that can change attitudes and perceptions and encourage public debate about critical social issues such as health, mental health, safe food and farming, the environment, education, and other quality of life concerns.

?Contact: Matt Forke, P:202-248-5484,? E Matt Forke

?30?

Source: http://www.vancomm.com/2012/10/d-c-based-vanguard-communications-wins-national-health-information-awards/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=d-c-based-vanguard-communications-wins-national-health-information-awards

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Friday 12 October 2012

Plympton: A New Effort to Produce Successful Serial Fiction | Jane ...

Plympton: serialized fiction for digital readers

In the past year, I?ve run two posts specifically related to serial fiction?a guest post by Roz Morris and a Q&A with Sean Platt. I also wrote a more in-depth piece for Publishing Perspectives on the topic last year.

Last month, Amazon announced Kindle Serials: a new, formal publishing program, exclusive to Kindle, that focuses on publishing serial fiction. Customers who pay $1.99 automatically receive all installments in a series. (For a insider analysis of this program, check Porter Anderson?s write up.)

Plympton?a new digital publishing start up?is one of the companies that has partnered with the Kindle Serials program. Yael Goldstein Love, Plympton?s co-founder and editorial director, was gracious enough to answer a few questions about what?s happening.

E-book serials have been around for a while, though I know some authors have struggled to make it work without a subscription infrastructure in place to help facilitate. Now with Amazon launching Kindle Serials, and formalizing the approach, do you think this changes the game?

I do. There?s been some great stuff happening in serialization for e-books over the past several years and it?s an exciting space. But it?s still a niche market?a passionate and thriving one, but niche all the same.

What we at Plympton want to do is to make serials a standard format, a third option beside novels and short stories. We want serial to be a format that every fiction reader loves to read and every fiction writer at least considers experimenting with at some point.

It sounds bold, I know, but I don?t think it?s far fetched. Think about what?s happened with television. As a culture, we?ve become addicted to serials like Mad Men and Breaking Bad, and they?ve arguably become the dominant form of cinematic storytelling, replacing the movie for sheer exuberance and originality.

Because of shows like these we?ve actually come to expect our big stories to arrive in bite-size chunks. And I think that?s a happy turn of events because bite-size chunks is a compelling way to experience a story. There?s the delight of the cliffhanger, but there?s also the arguably even deeper delight of the time between episodes, anticipating and speculating about what will happen next. That break between episodes makes our relationship with the characters feel more intimate because they can surprise, disappoint, and betray us in real time.

All of this is to say that I can see serial fiction becoming entirely mainstream, and it?s our goal at Plympton to make that happen. Amazon?s investment in Kindle Serials certainly makes our job easier because what?s needed most at this stage is reader education and no one is in a position to reach readers quite like Amazon.

Some have argued that the ?truest? serial fiction writers are not after profit. Or, put another way, ?pure? forms of serial fiction in contemporary terms?in Asia with cell phone novels, or in fan fiction?are put forth in a very spontaneous way that?s linked to a community rather than revenue. Seen in this light, a formalized, Amazon-corporate approach to serial fiction would seem to kill the essence of it. What do you think? (Just playing devil?s advocate here.)

I guess what I?d say to that is that serials have a long history. In the latter half of the 19th century a novel was rarely published as a book before first being serialized in a newspaper or magazine. We?re not just talking Dickens here. We?re talking Mark Twain, Henry James, George Eliot, Herman Melville, and that?s just in the English language. Flaubert, Tolstoy, and Dostoevksy published their most famous novels as serials as well. And these writers didn?t publish serials just for the love of the written word. They did it to make money. Most of the great (as well as not so great) 19th century novelists needed that money in order to survive, and in fact that was part of the appeal of the serial format: it gave writers an additional income stream, before their full books went into print.

We at Plympton see income for writers as one of the draws as well. We want?writers to get paid for their writing. They should. Writing is hard, passionate, soul-consuming work. A person should be remunerated for it. In an ideal world a person who does it well enough should be able to make a living from it so that they can devote themselves to it entirely. That?s our dream, anyway.

Kindle Serials (through which Plympton titles are available) cost $1.99. I know from my conversations with another serial writer, Sean Platt, that it can be very difficult to make serials pay off at that kind of price point. I?ve heard speculation that $1.99 is an introductory price from Amazon, and the price may increase, or there will be other revenue lines from the project (e.g., print compilations). Any thoughts on this?

It?s not what we would have done ourselves, but if Amazon knows anything it?s how to make money so we?re trusting them on this. I can?t say anything more about their plans, but I will say that we have a lot experiments we?re eager to run in this area and we?ll be doing that with our next titles.

When I researched serials last year, it became clear that readers of serials come in many different forms. Some people will read installments as they are released, others will wait for the entire book to be available, and still others look for an edited print compilation. Is Plympton targeting all of these reader types, or just a segment?

Yeah, we?re targeting all these reader types. Our three titles in the Kindle Serials program will be released as paperback books when the serialization is complete. We?ve also talked amongst ourselves about doing an edited print compilation for some of our future titles. We?re very open to experimentation here. We have a lot of schemes up our sleeves, some of which will no doubt be tremendous flops, but some of which?who knows? Maybe we?ll find that sweet spot that gives a book nine lives. Most books? lives are far too short, don?t you think?

Finally, many authors I spoke with [for the Publishing Perspectives piece] agreed that the process of serialization worked best almost as a marketing device?to build buzz and spread the word before a final book/compilation was released. This means the serialization becomes, in part, a gimmick to sell the final product, but I don?t think Plympton has been launched with this as the philosophy?

No, that?s not our philosophy at all. We really believe in the serial experience. We believe it can enhance reading in all sorts of ways. There?s that anticipation and speculation I mentioned above. There?s also the fact that serials are well-sized to fit into a busy person?s life.?And I can?t help thinking that serials distill the essence of what we love about fiction in the first place?the way it mimics life but more beautifully, more instructively. The way it gives us a chance to actually?be someone else for a while, inhabiting an unfamiliar psyche.?When we live inside these stories for months, years even, it takes those features of fiction to a whole new level.

And here?s where I start to sound like a zealot: I actually think this way of reading can enhance our empathy and our open-mindedness by forcing us to stay inside other minds for longer periods. I have a theory that if Uncle Tom?s Cabin hadn?t been serialized?which it was, by the way?but just published as one complete book, it wouldn?t have had the effect that it had on thousands of white readers. It would have been easier to read it, put it aside, and forget the uncomfortable fact that something horrific was happening in this country. But instead readers had to sit with it for months, worrying about the characters between installments, thinking and wondering as they went about their lives. I bet that made it a lot harder to forget those uncomfortable facts. Not that I?m saying we should all start reading serials because if we do we?ll change the world. (Although how?s that for a slogan?) I mention it mainly because I think it highlights just how much depth and richness the serial experience can add. It?s the furthest thing from a gimmick; it?s an art form.


What do you think about serial fiction as an art form? Do you read serials?or will you give them a try? Give us your thoughts in the comments.

Source: http://janefriedman.com/2012/10/12/plympton-a-new-effort-to-produce-successful-serial-fiction/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=plympton-a-new-effort-to-produce-successful-serial-fiction

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Machete-wielding man on bicycle crashes girl?s birthday party; steals beer

Actor Danny Trejo in the 2010 film "Machete"(20th Century Fox)Florida police are investigating a highly unusual stabbing that took place Tuesday evening. A man reportedly crashed a young girl's birthday party, wielding a machete and attempting to steal beer.

And before being chased off, the man allegedly took a swing of the machete at the father of the birthday girl, clipping his right pinkie finger "until it dangled."

The Naples News reports that the 42-year-old father was hosting the birthday party for his daughter when the man, described as "an acquaintance," showed up and started loading beer into plastic bags and attempting to ride away on his bicycle. When the host tried to stop him, he pulled the machete from his waistband.

Doctors at Physicians Regional Hospital were able to reattach the man's pinky finger with stiches, according to a report which noted that the finger was cut at both the bone and tendons.

As strange as the assault is, it's not the only birthday party machete attack in recent memory. Back in September, 26-year-old Javier Aragon was arrested and charged with two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Police in Galveston, Texas told the Houston Chronicle that the method of attack was "rare" in such cases. "A machete is an unusual choice of weapon, so it's rare that we see it used in an aggravated assault like this," Lt. Michael Gray said. "Thankfully no one was hurt.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/machete-wielding-man-bicycle-crashes-girl-birthday-party-231139057.html

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Forceful Raddatz draws praise as moderator

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