Saturday, June 30, 2012

Listening to Women

The first character to utter those words is Margaux Williamson (a character based on Margaux Williamson). Her friendship with Sheila (the character, not the author?not exactly, anyway) is the closest thing the story has to a driving narrative force. This is a story of girl meets girl, girl talks to girl, girl talks to girl again, girl buys same dress as girl, girl makes up with girl, and so forth. There are other friends in the constellation Heti presents, but they are dwarves to Margaux?s supergiant, at least in Sheila?s ordering of the universe. And it?s in her relationship with Margaux, a painter, that Sheila investigates, and reinvestigates, and reinvestigates, the question that obsesses her. This is not the kind of book you can really spoil, but I will say, right off the bat, that the process of asking turns out to be just as important as the answer.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=f2c7ffc03a9fc633301ee451bfdd0e46

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Here's Why Investors Are Already Dubious Of This - Business Insider

Mrs. DoubtfireWall Street has already begun weighing in with negative opinions on the new European deal to use bailout funds?the European Financial Stability Facility and the future European Stability Mechanism?to recapitalize troubled banks in Europe, despite the positive reaction we've seen in the markets so far today.

Morgan Stanley?has criticized the plan as?failing to take a "meaningful step forward."?The Bank of New York Mellon?argues that this measure and others announced so far at the EU summit have failed to address continuing weakness in Greece.?JP Morgan?and?Goldman Sachs?have made similar arguments, predicting that the value of the euro will continue to fall.

Regardless of this angst, these new measures do indeed appear to be a positive development for banks, stemming interbank lending pressures that have threatened to upset stability in the euro area. But the main problem with the principles of the new plan is that it still doesn't go far enough towards fixing the financial plumbing of the European area.

The plan is an attempt to temporarily reduce borrowing costs for Spain and Italy, which it is doing, at least temporarily.

But it doesn't address one of the root problems in Europe, which is that the European Central Bank attempts to reduce countries' borrowing costs by effectively coercing banks to buy sovereign bonds in a behind-the-scenes way.

Let's briefly compare this to the U.S.

In the current system of quantitative easing and Operation Twist, the Federal Reserve gives banks an incentive to buy Treasuries because they buy them more cheaply at auction than they sell them back to the Fed under Operation Twist. This is very up front and out in the open.

In Europe, banks must apply to the?European Central Bank?for permission to be primary dealers?the firms that coordinate bond sales in the market. Ultimately, this means that the ECB wields far more power over banks than the Fed according to a source consulted by Business Insider, as it holds the power to withdraw the banks' ability to be primary dealers (something which makes them a lot of money). Thus, the ECB can essentially coerce financial firms to buy sovereign bonds potentially against their better judgement.

Further, the lack of capital markets in Europe also means that financing in general is a lot less transparent. The public knows fewer details about investments and what goes on at banks because less of this data is public.

Therefore, use of the European bailout funds to finance new bank purchases of sovereign bonds does not fix the transparency problems that plague sovereign borrowing in Europe. Indeed, the new plan essentially exacerbates them. One of the most significant obstacles in the future of a functioning Europe is transparency and efficient European regulation of markets, so moves that induce more coercion fail to make progress towards achieving that goal.

That said, the practices that allow European banks to muddle through the crisis have resoundingly positive short-term effects, seen already in the?drop in Spanish and Italian borrowing costs. Therefore, investors are torn between what is good in the now and what is good in the future.

NOW READ:?Europe Goes Bonkers After EU Leaders Agree To Bank Recapitalization Master Plan?>

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/flaws-remain-in-europes-new-bank-recapitalization-plan-2012-6

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India seeks to ease investor fears on tax-avoidance rules

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/india-seeks-ease-investor-fears-tax-avoidance-rules-065742081.html

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Giant to Further Expand Capacity of Assembled Bicycles in China

Taipei, June 29, 2012 (CENS)--To meet increasing demand in China, Giant Manufacturing Co., Ltd., the largest bicycle manufacturer in Taiwan, will further expand production there by doubling annual capacity at its plant in Kunshan, Jiangsu Province, and Tianjin to about 2.5 million units this year.

At the recent shareholders meeting, Giant CEO Tony Lo pointed out that revenue is expected to grow 20% this year thanks mainly to hot sales in Asia, especially in China, despite debt-impacted shipments to Europe.

In the first five months, Lo pointed out, sales in North America climbed 7% to 8%, and that in China were up more than 30% year-on-year (YoY). As a result, though sales in Europe were affected, Giant`s first-five-month consolidated cumulative revenue increased 13% YoY to NT$21.39 billion (US$713 million).

Some institutional investors recently reported that disposable incomes in China have been rapidly rising to create pickier demand for high-end bicycles. With the global brand image and higher average selling prices, hot sales in China is expected to drive Giant`s annual profitability to 14% this year.

Due to prioritized duty-reduction allowed under the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) signed between China and Taiwan, and Chinese central governmental policy to cut carbon footprint, industry sources said that sales of electric bicycles in China are expected to drive revenue growth for Taiwanese makers.

In 2011, Giant`s Taiwanese factory had revenue of NT$19.03 billion (US$634.3 million), and consolidated revenue of NT$47.38 billion (US$1.6 billion), for net earnings of NT$3.03 billion (US$1 billion) and earnings per share (EPS) of NT$8.04 (US$0.27).

Last year, Giant`s six global factories turned out 5.77 million bicycles, up 10% from a year earlier.

(by Quincy Liang)

Source: http://cens.com/cens/html/en/news/news_inner_40593.html

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Friday, June 29, 2012

Empty promises, then massacre in infamous Kadhafi jail

If the walls of Abu Slim prison could speak, they would tell the horrific tale of two days in 1996 when Moamer Kadhafi's forces gunned down 1,200 inmates.

Those who lived still tremble with the memories of June 28 and 29. The families of those who didn't, who received terse death certificates only 12 years later, continue to be consumed with suffering.

But a three-day exhibition in the gutted grey complex in a southern district of Tripoli invites Libyans to take a deep, hard look at one of the darkest moments of their history, pay tribute to the dead and demand justice.

The target of those demands is Abdullah Senussi, spymaster for the late dictator, whose empty promises to striking prisoners set the stage for the massacre.

Abdesalam al-Ugbi, a 40-year-old sports teacher who lost his brother, insists that Senussi, now being held in Mauritania, be tried in Libya and punished in accordance with the teachings of the Koran.

"We want him to get the death penalty, with the sword, the Islamic way."

It all started when prisoners reportedly overpowered and captured two guards, stripping them of their keys.

Their demands were simple: no more torture, trials, time in the sun, family visits, access to books and information about the outside world, and the punishment of abusive guards.

Abu Slim was a top security prison notorious for torture and human rights abuses during the time of Kadhafi, who ruled with an iron-fist for 42 years until a popular uprising led to his ouster and killing in 2011.

Ali al-Kermi entered Abu Slim when he was just 22 and didn't leave for 28 years. He was arrested in 1984 for belonging to Liberation, an underground movement dedicated to creating an Islamic state in Libya.

In fluent French, he recalls the agony endured by prisoners.

Electroshock, rubbing salt on razor cuts, ripping out nails and teeth, hanging prisoners on a rod like a "roasted chicken," beating the soles of the feet and and penetration with white-hot metal rods.

Now a father of four, the youngest of whom is only 39 days old, he heads an association for prisoners of conscience.

Kermi said he was in a different wing of the prison the day hundreds were shot dead. He remembers hearing the terrifying racket of bullets raining from soldiers on the rooftop.

How it all started has become part of the collective memory.

As the story goes, Senussi came to speak with the prisoners. He negotiated the release of the captive guards and promised there would be no reprisals.

Sheikh Mohammed Abu Sedra said he told Senussi the prisoners wanted "either to live as honourable people or die as martyrs. You are trying to kill us your way; we want to die our way."

He told AFP Senussi approved most of the demands as reasonable but said any trial of prison guards would have to be sanctioned by Kadhafi.

"We asked people to please get back in (to their cells) because they told us we would be safe," said Abu Sedra, who spent 21 years in Abu Slim, adding that he survived "only by the grace of God."

But many of the prisoners saw it coming, hugging each other and begging each other for forgiveness in what proved to be their final moments.

United in grief and the desire to see the perpetrators tried, entire families drift as in a dream through damp corridors and into tiny, sombre cells that were once packed tight with more than 20 men each.

Only in his forties, but already an old man, Khaled is agitated as he brings his new wife to his old cell and shares the details of his most troubled days: "See these holes? It was the only to way to speak to our friends. There was no electricity."

He says he was jailed for wearing a long beard and calling for an Islamic state during a "tyrannical regime that manipulated and distorted the Muslim faith to oppress its people."

Sumaya Mohammed, who lost four siblings in the massacre, said she "wanted to see the place where my brothers were tortured and kept in solitary confinement."

The bodies of those killed in the massacre were never recovered by their families, and Hafiz Rahayib simply wanted to know: "Where is my brother's grave?"

Children carry pictures of loved ones never met but still remembered.

The heart of the exhibition is a courtyard displaying handicrafts made by the prisoners -- such as pouches made of wool and clothes hangers crafted out of plastic bottles -- as well as unsent letters and photographs of the dead.

Relatives recall gathering outside the gates and clamouring for news of their loved ones, only to be driven away by soldiers.

They brought clothes and food for years, unaware of their loss.

Now, 16 years later, Kermi says it is critical for old wounds to be healed in the courtroom.

"We don't want our enemies to drink from the same bitter cup," he said.

The exhibition opened on Thursday and closes on Saturday. The formal day of remembrance is Friday, with special prayers planned in both Tripoli and second-largest city Benghazi.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/empty-promises-then-massacre-infamous-kadhafi-jail-195810724.html

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News Corp board approves company split: source

(Reuters) - The board of News Corp approved in principle splitting the $60 billion media conglomerate into separate publishing and entertainment businesses, a person familiar with the situation said on Thursday.

News Corp's board, overseen by 81-year-old chairman Rupert Murdoch, met on Wednesday and an announcement was expected later on Thursday on the decision to create two publicly traded companies, the source said, confirming a report in the Wall Street Journal.

Ever unpredictable, Murdoch, after years of resisting calls by some large shareholders to spin out or sell off the company's slow-growth - and in some cases, loss-making - newspapers, decided to propose the move rather suddenly.

Details on the management structure are still to be resolved and formal approval by the board is still needed. The process is expected to take about a year, said the source, who did not want to be named as the decision had still to be made public.

Pressure on News Corp to get rid of the newspaper business was ramped up after a phone hacking scandal tainted its British titles and forced the company to drop its proposed acquisition of pay-TV group BSkyB.

"As recently as a month ago he (Murdoch) was still saying no way would he do this," said one News Corp insider with knowledge of the internal conversations.

The Wall Street Journal, owned by News Corp, earlier said one company will hold the entertainment businesses like 20th Century Fox, Fox broadcast network and Fox News Channel, while the other will hold the publishing assets, which include The Times, The Australian, and HarperCollins book publishing.

In a brief statement on Tuesday, News Corp said only that it was "considering" splitting the company. According to people familiar with the matter, News Corp has already enlisted investment banks JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and Centerview to advise on a process.

Wednesday's board meeting lasted about an hour and a half and many details, such as who will run the publishing business, have yet to be resolved, the Wall Street Journal said.

News Corp spokesmen in New York and Sydney were not immediately available to comment on whether the split had been approved.

The board, long criticized for being dominated by the Murdochs or beholden to them, had been expected to approve the split. It was not immediately clear if it will be put to a shareholder vote. If it is, Murdoch controls just under 40 percent of the vote and would likely have no problem getting the extra 10 percent needed.

The process of separating the company's broadcast, cable and film assets from its publishing and education operations stands to be complicated by issues such as regulatory and tax implications and could take up to a year to complete.

The film and television businesses generated revenues of $23.5 billion in the year to June 2011, dwarfing the publishing unit's $8.8 billion. Publishing, including integrated marketing services, accounts for around 7 percent of News Corp's enterprise value, according to analysts at Barclays Capital. It estimates that publishing represents 24 percent of revenues and around 11 percent of operating income.

Analysts estimate an independent publishing division would generate about $1.3 billion in EBITDA at a multiple valuation of 6 times, or $3.25 per share. They expect a standalone entertainment unit to be valued at $52 billion, or $23 per share, based on an 8 times cash flow multiple.

JOCKEYING FOR TOP JOBS

The most speculation revolves around how Murdoch handles the reassigning of his top executives, including his three adult children associated with the company.

With a split between the struggling publishing business and its much larger, faster-growing entertainment business, the majority of the big names are anticipated to jockey for key roles on the entertainment side.

Chase Carey, News Corp's current No. 2, is widely seen as the likely CEO designate for the entertainment business. Liz Murdoch and James Murdoch are expected to report to him. That could raise questions about the current heads of the Fox TV business, Peter Rice and Kevin Reilly.

Less clear is who would run the publishing business. One obvious candidate is Joel Klein, the former New York City chancellor for education, who joined News Corp last year to run its new education business, which so far consists only of Wireless Generation, a digital company for schools. Murdoch's eldest son, Lachlan, a former New York Post publisher and currently a director, is another prospect.

Canaccord Genuity Inc analyst Thomas Eagan believes News Corp stock has room to rise even with an 11 percent gain since news of the split plans broke on Tuesday. "News Corp is still trading below its peers at 6.5 times EBITDA, even after you take out the publishing business and the expected litigation costs," he said.

News Corp's Australian-listed shares jumped more than 3.5 percent to a 4-year high of A$22.29 on Thursday.

(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke; Additional reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Peter Lauria, Prudence Crowther and Ian Geoghegan)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/news-corp-approves-publishing-entertainment-split-wsj-012949846--finance.html

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Americans react to historic health care decision

FILE - In this Setp. 22, 2010, file photo Jerry and Becky Morefield enjoy some time together with their 15-year-old triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. The children are from left to right, Tucker, Taylor and Tanner. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

FILE - In this Setp. 22, 2010, file photo Jerry and Becky Morefield enjoy some time together with their 15-year-old triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. The children are from left to right, Tucker, Taylor and Tanner. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 22, 2010, file photo, Jerry Morefield enjoys some time together with Tucker, one of his triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 22, 2010, file photo, Jerry and Becky Morefield enjoy some time together with their triplets with cerebral palsy in Mahomet, Ill. The children are from left to right, Tucker, Taylor and Tanner. Tucker, the frailest child, died earlier this year. His mother says that thanks to the health care law?s ban on lifetime limits for medical expenses he was able to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman, File)

(AP) ? The mother of two disabled teens called Thursday's Supreme Court ruling on the health care law wonderful because it bars insurance companies from setting lifetime limits for medical expenses ? a big help to her family.

But a retiree on Medicare called it a "sad day" and worries that the law's new rules coming in 2015 will interfere with treatments doctors can provide.

Across the country, some Americans haven't been dramatically affected yet by the law, which will take a few years to reach full force. But many others say they have felt its effects already and have strong opinions about it.

___

Name: Becky Morefield

Home: Mahomet, Ill.

Age: 51

Occupation: Stay-at-home mom of two disabled teenagers

Insurance coverage: Private insurance through husband's employer

As Morefield sees it, the health law allowed her son Tucker to die peacefully at home with private health insurance covering his care.

Tucker, one of three triplets with cerebral palsy, was always the most fragile of the siblings, Morefield said. Five years ago, he maxed out the $1 million lifetime limit in his family's policy when he went into respiratory failure and was hospitalized for 12 weeks.

Hitting the lifetime limit meant the insurance company would no longer pay Tucker's medical bills. The state of Illinois picked up the slack through a program for children with special health care needs. But the program put strict limits on certain medical supplies, leading the family to wash and reuse equipment meant for single use.

Tucker's coverage was reinstated Jan. 1, 2011, because the health law barred lifetime dollar limits on coverage. He lived another 15 months covered by private insurance. At the end, he had doctor visits at home, oxygen and enough pain medication ? all care that Morefield said would have been restricted under the state program.

"It was a blessing for us," Morefield said. "People who've not had the ongoing medical things we've had don't understand."

Morefield reacted to the Supreme Court decision on Thursday, her birthday, with joy. She called it a great gift that will grant her and her husband peace of mind.

"It's wonderful," she said.

___

Name: Margo Criscuola

Home: Chicago

Age: 66

Occupation: Education consultant

Insurance coverage: Medicare

Criscuola is worried that a controversial board created by President Barack Obama's health overhaul will ration health care and also dictate treatments to doctors. She has family members with a rare genetic condition that she said requires experimental therapies.

"I was listening to the radio this morning and heard the news. I think it's a very sad day for this country, for our medical industry and for our health in this country," Criscuola said.

"If you have a law that requires doctors' treatments to be approved on the basis of their general effectiveness and doctors are not permitted to experiment with other kinds of approaches, that makes it very difficult for special diseases like these to be treated."

The board, called the Independent Payment Advisory Board, is meant to hold down Medicare costs, beginning in 2015. Republicans are targeting the provision for repeal. Criscuola fears the board's influence will go beyond Medicare and permeate the health care system. The White House has said the board is crucial to holding down costs and is barred by the law from rationing care.

The law also encourages a payment model for hospitals, insurers and doctors called "accountable care organizations," which Criscuola believes also will limit doctors' choices in treating patients.

Criscuola has benefited from a provision in the health care law that provides free annual wellness exams to people with Medicare.

"Do I use it? Yeah. Is the benefit I receive from it more than if I had kept the money I paid into Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes and invested it myself? No. It's considerably less," she said. "Will it be around in 15, 20 years? Probably not."

___

Name: Bev Veals

Home: Near Wilmington, N.C.

Age: 48

Occupation: Stay-at-home mom of a 17-year-old and a 20-year-old

Insurance coverage: Coverage under the new law for people with pre-existing conditions

On Thursday morning, waiting for the news, Veals was watching CNN, which initially reported incorrectly that the law had been overturned. She was tense with worry that she would lose her coverage.

"I'm totally, absolutely right now dazed because they first, initially said it had been overturned," Veals said. "I'm sitting here gasping for breath. ... Now they're saying it's being upheld." She added: "It's a relief."

The expense of her breast cancer treatments led to bankruptcy and foreclosure for her family over a horrific 10-year period. Finally, it cost so much that she could no longer afford health insurance. She and her self-employed husband decided to drop her from the family's insurance plan four years ago to reduce their monthly premiums from $1,700 to $400 a month.

She spent the next 27 months uninsured. Then in 2011 she signed up for insurance made possible by the new law. The program helps people who have been turned away by insurance companies because of pre-existing medical conditions. She now pays $377 a month for her insurance with a $1,000 deductible, meaning she pays that much out of pocket before the coverage starts.

"It has only been a little over a year for me, but I can't tell you the dignity being covered brings," Veals said. "My biggest fear was I would have to beg for help to cover medical bills. Panhandling to pay a doctor's bill ... not my idea of the American Dream."

Though raised as a Republican, Veals said her politics are changing.

"As a conservative, I believed if you can't make your way, you don't get your way. Now I've cost more medically than I will ever be able to make. I've changed my political stance because of this," she said. "It doesn't do our economy any good when we have so many people having to file for medical bankruptcy."

___

Name: Carlton Grimmett

Home: Atlanta

Age: 43

Employment: Night security guard at upscale apartment complex

Coverage: Uninsured

Two years ago, Grimmett had a job with good insurance and a wife with diabetes and other health problems. But then his job, doing plumbing and HVAC work at an Atlanta university, was outsourced and he no longer could cover his wife's medical bills.

His wife had to stop going to the private doctors she was seeing, and her husband tried to get her into care elsewhere. But at other facilities, they encountered paperwork, delays and foot dragging, he said. Her health deteriorated.

"When you don't have insurance, they treat you different," he said.

In January 2011, Mary Grimmett started struggling to breathe and was rushed to Grady Memorial, Atlanta's safety net hospital. She qualified for a program that provides discounted and even free care to uninsured people who qualify. But by that time she had pneumonia (as well as a broken ankle that needed surgery) and was very sick.

She spent two weeks in the hospital and then died of congestive heart failure ? a complication of her other illnesses. She was 39.

Today, Grimmett has a job, making $25,000 a year, but he still has no insurance. Under the new health care law, he will be eligible for a government tax credit to help with the cost of buying private health insurance.

That would reduce his estimated annual premiums for health coverage from $5,054 to $1,726. He might have to pay additional copays for doctor visits, but his income would make him eligible for modest subsidies to help with those out-of-pocket expenses.

He is healthy, but the loss of his wife was a tragic lesson in the importance of coverage, he said. When he heard about the Supreme Court ruling from others at a nonprofit where he was volunteering, he said he felt grateful to Obama for helping the poor.

"He's listening to the voice of Jehovah God," he said. He added: "I'm grateful for the hope and opportunity to have health insurance, not just myself but all people who can't afford health insurance. It's a great thing that has taken place today."

___

Name: Jim Schreiber

Home: New York City

Age: 26

Occupation: Works for small beverage business

Insurance coverage: Private insurance through his employer

Schreiber's young and healthy, but still had reason to worry about the Supreme Court decision. He works for a small business and is responsible for switching the company to a new health insurance plan. He has found a plan at a reasonable price, but that price won't be locked in until August.

Early Thursday, he was concerned that the price would jump with a confusing decision on the health care law, or if the court overturned it. Like many other Americans, he saw contradictory news reports about the ruling and "my heart dropped."

He repeatedly refreshed the Web pages on his computer screen and, finally, when the ruling became clear, "it was a relief."

The company is among the 30 percent of businesses with fewer than 10 employees that offer health coverage. Small businesses often pay more for insurance than large companies.

Schreiber is hoping his company can qualify for a tax credit made available by the health care law for small businesses that provide health insurance. The tax credit is one of the most popular ideas in the health law, according to opinion polls, but only about 4 percent of potentially eligible businesses claimed it in 2010.

Before he turned 26, Schreiber was insured for a year on his mother's health plan because of another provision in the health care law. The law isn't perfect, Schreiber said, but "it's a starting point to move forward."

___

AP Medical Writer Mike Stobbe contributed from Atlanta.

___

AP Medical Writer Carla K. Johnson can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/CarlaKJohnson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-06-28-Supreme%20Court-Health%20Care-Ordinary%20Americans/id-537ec5488b30465fba59b53c237b7586

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STC Summit Chicago - Writing for Global Audiences

As promised, here is the text of my presentation, "Writing for Global Audiences", at the recent Society for Technical Communication (STC) Summit in Chicago. In Part I, Part II and Part III of this series I reviewed conference sessions related to translation and freelancing.


by Barbara Jungwirth, reliable translations llc
at the 59th STC Annual Conference, May 20-23, 2009 in Chicago, Ill.

Hi. I'm Barbara Jungwirth of reliable translations. I translate and edit software documentation and other technical documents between German and English. Before becoming a translator, I used to write software documentation.

Increasingly, English-language technical documents intended for global audiences are no longer translated into multiple languages. Instead, technicians and others are expected to be fluent enough in English to understand these texts in their original language. While these professionals generally know the English terminology for their specific field, their overall command of the language may not be quite so fluent. Add to this the fact that the English spoken in, say, New Delhi or Capetown differs considerably from that spoken in New York or Chicago and you can see how a document written for an American audience may be difficult to understand elsewhere.

But if you are mindful of some issues that may pose problems to non-native English speakers you can greatly increase the likelihood that global audiences will understand your document. In this presentation I will outline two areas of potential problems:

  • Writing issues - that is word choice, grammar and syntax
  • and
  • Formatting issues - that is text formatting and images

Finally, I will briefly talk about evaluating how your text may fare with a global audience.

Writing Issues

One of the most important writing issues is consistency in word choice: use the same term for the same concept. If a widget is a widget in the help system overview, that same widget should not have morphed into a thingamajigg in the section on installing widgets and a gizmo in the appendix about different widget types.

A corollary to this rule is to use standard terms with standard spelling. If the widget is spelled "w-e-e-g-i-t", a reader unfamiliar with the term cannot look it up in a dictionary and is forever left to wonder what this item might be. Also, minimize the use of words with the same spelling, but different meanings. These are sometimes confused even by native speakers and are often difficult to distinguish for non-native speakers.

Similarly, use the literal meaning of words, and avoid wordplay and metaphors. That said, many modern computer terms are, in fact, non-literal versions of older words -- e.g., mouse -- and universally understood in their new meaning. So, don't try and find a more "literal" word to describe a computer mouse -- when reading a manual, no one will think of the furry animal when encountering this term.

Don't use words in non-standard ways, such as using nouns as verbs and vice versa. When it comes to grammar, most languages are not as flexible as English. When reading foreign-language texts, many people subconsciously translate into their native language. The closer you stick to "schoolbook English", the easier it will be for non-native readers to translate the text for themselves.

Long convoluted sentences with many dependent clauses are difficult to understand even for native speakers. Complex concepts with many variables can still be explained in a series of sentences. Each of these sentences should refer to the concept explained in the previous sentence by name. Non-specific pronouns, such as "this," are harder to interpret than if the specific term to which "this" refers is repeated.

Most non-native speakers reading technical documents in English will be quite familiar with the terminology specific to their particular field. They may, however, not know colloquial expressions common in documents written for U.S. readers. This applies especially to expressions referring to sports, movies, or cultural icons. References to politics and religion, as well as anything even slightly off-color, should obviously be avoided when writing for people from different cultures.

Keep in mind that time zones, units of measure and national holidays differ among countries. Some of these references may be unavoidable, but don't add unnecessary references to location-specific items. In particular, don't provide unnecessary measurements. Since most of the world operates on the metric system, the reader will need to convert all such measurements.

Avoid acronyms and abbreviations as much as possible. If they are unavoidable, provide a list of abbreviations. That, however, does not necessarily apply to very common acronyms, particularly when the acronym may be better known than the phrase from which it derived (e.g., UNESCO).
Write in a formal tone. Many languages distinguish between two (or more) forms of address, depending on the degree of familiarity between speaker and addressee (or writer and reader). Being too formal is rarely considered offensive, while being too familiar can offend. That said, don't start using archaic phrases or stilted language. Imagine you are addressing, say, your local mayor -- assuming you are not from a small town where the mayor is your personal friend. You wouldn't call him or her "His Excellency", but you wouldn't slap his or her back, either.

Formatting Issues

While it is relatively easy to understand how vocabulary and syntax issues may affect understanding, formatting questions are often overlooked. Bulleted or numbered lists may be a better way to illustrate a set of options than a long paragraph describing the choices available. Tables, too, can present the relationship between distinct pieces of information in a fairly intuitive way.

Not all images are worth a thousand words, but procedures can sometimes be summarized in flow charts that require little linguistic knowledge. That said, writers and designers need to be mindful that a left-to-right progression is not necessarily obvious for readers who come from right-to-left (or top-to-bottom) languages. The significance of specific symbols may also not be apparent to everyone. Most U.S. readers will recognize an eight-sided red sign with white lettering to mean "Stop", but the corresponding road sign in Japan is triangular and in Tonga the sign is a white circle with a red triangle inside.


When creating documents that will be read online also take into account slower download speeds and differing standard fonts on non-English computer systems. A page that downloads quickly over your broadband connection and displays nicely in Verdana may look quite different on a machine running the Russian version of Windows and using a dial-up connection. Whenever possible, try to test online documentation in the countries where it will be mostly viewed.

Evaluating Your Work

Besides trying to test under local technical conditions, it's a good idea to have colleagues from the countries where the document will be mostly used read your text. What seems perfectly clear and understandable to you may not be so for someone coming from a different language. If people who actually live in the target countries are not available, native speakers of the languages in question who live in the U.S. are a good second choice. Failing that, people familiar with the native languages of the people likely to read the text may be able to point out significant problems.

Two other presentations at this Summit cover related topics: Bruce Poropat will speak about "Plain Language for Technical Writers" immediately following this progression and John R. Kohl, the author of The Global English Style Guide will be speaking tomorrow at 11:30. I have also prepared a short list of additional resources, which you are welcome to take.

Resources


  • Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. "How to Write for an International Audience". Technical Communication Center (Jan. 29, 2009). www.technicalcommunicationcenter.com/2009/01/29/writing-for-an-international-audience/.
  • Gerald J. Alred et. al. Handbook of Technical Writing, 9th ed. (New York, NY: St. Martin's Press), 2009.
  • John R. Kohl. The Global English Style Guide: Writing Clear, Translatable Documentation for a Global Market. (Cary, NC: SAS Institute, Inc.), 2008.
  • Michael Kriz. "10 Tips for Writing International Technical Content". The Content Wrangler (July 8, 2011). http://thecontentwrangler.com/2011/07/08/10-tips-for-writing-international-technical-content/.
  • Philip Rubens. Science & Technical Writing: A Manual of Style, 2nd ed. (New York, NY: Routledge), 2001.
  • Edmond H. Weiss. The Elements of International English Style: A Guide to Writing Correspondence, Reports, Technical Documents, Internet Pages for a Global Audience. (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe), 2005.
  • Dovie Wylie. "Tips for Writing Globally". Multilingual Computing, 10.1 (Oct. 1998). www.multilingual.com/articleDetail.php?id=515.
  • Sun Technical Publications. Read Me First! A Style Guide for the Computer Industry, 3rd ed. (Sun Technical Publications).

PS: This was a short "Progression" session. I will be holding a full 45-minute session on the same topic at the tekom conference in Wiesbaden Germany, October 23-25.


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Dave Johnson: Here Is Why Our Elites Are Not Fixing The Economy

When we had democracy, We, the People made the rules and we ran our country and our economy for our benefit. Now that we are a plutocracy things are different. The reason our elites are not doing anything to fix the economy is because from their viewpoint, things are just fine.

Merriam-Webster: plu?toc?ra?cy noun \pl?-?t?-kr?-s?\

1: government by the wealthy

2: a controlling class of the wealthy

Our political leaders dance with the ones that bring them. Increasingly they are dancing with the billionaires and their giant corporations.

Our politicians are doing and saying increasingly incomprehensible things. The separation from regular people is unbelievable. But in politics you "dance with the one that brung ya," and these things become comprehensible and believable when you look at who is bringing them to the dance.

Our Benefit

In a democracy a successful business is the result of our investment in infrastructure, education, and a system that enables our businesses to thrive. A business can't deliver products except over the roads or ports or the Internet our government built. Our police and firefighters protect our businesses. Our schools and universities train and educate the inventors and managers and line workers. Our scientific research brings about the innovation that leads to new technologies and products.

"Entitlements" are the things We, the People are entitled to as citizens of a democracy. Those who do well as a result of our investment in our system pay back through taxes, good jobs and great products. When we were a democracy we were entitled to a minimal level of retirement, and health care, education, protection if we lost our jobs, protection of our environment, protection from corporate fraud, and other things that are now disappearing.

Now that democracy is gone, a wealthy few are living off our past investment, and cutting back on the things we used to do for each other.

Why All the Cuts, No Jobs?

Here is the reason that our leaders are cutting back on the things our country does for We, the People, and are not working very hard to do anything about the high unemployment and economic troubles most of us are feeling:

2010: Corporate Profits Were the Highest on Record Last Quarter

2011: Corporate Profits At All-Time High As Recovery Stumbles

2012: Corporate Profits Just Hit An All-Time High, Wages Just Hit An All-Time Low

2012: Bank CEO pay rises. Corporate profit margins rise. Worker wages, not so much.

2012: Richest 1 Percent Account For Nearly All Of U.S. Recovery's Gains: Report

The billionaires and their giant corporations are doing just fine, thank you.

The reason our leaders are not doing anything to fix the economy is because, from the viewpoint of our real leaders, the economy is working just fine.

Golden Oldie

A golden oldie (updated a bit): Democracy Or Plutocracy? A Chart

DEMOCRACYPLUTOCRACY
We, the PeopleWealthy Few
One Person One VoteOne Dollar One Vote
MajoritiesMarkets
GovernmentLimited Government
MajoritySupermajority
BudgetsBudget Cuts
Taxes on the WealthyTax Cuts for the Wealthy
InformationPropaganda
Public SchoolsPrivate Schools
EducationTraining
Studying the arts, literature, history, philosophy, etc.Mocking people for studying the arts, literature, history, philosophy, etc.
Jobs programsBank Bailouts
WelfareWarfare
Express Lanes for 2 or More PeopleExpress Lanes for 2 or More Dollars
Security Lines at AirportsSpecial First-Class Security Lanes at Airports
Public InvestmentPrivate Investment
Public TransportationPrivate Jets
AccountabilityImpunity
Rule Of LawAbove The Law
JusticeJust Us
TransparencySecrecy
Sustainable growthPolluter Growth
Medicare-For-AllHealthcare For Profit
Clean ElectionsRigged Elections
Savings AccountsOffshore Accounts
Credit Card DebtCredit Default Swaps
Union membersSerfs
LayoffsPayoffs
HomiesCronies
GrassrootsAstroturf
Pensions401Ks
Honest BrokersSelf-Interest
Free WillAt Will
CitizenConsumer
CitizenEmployee
Participant Observer
ActorActed On
DoerDone To
Healthy CommunitiesGated Communities
Bedford FallsPottersville
George BailyHenry F. Potter
SavingsDebt
America the BeautifulAmerica the Profitable
The ManyThe Rich
PeopleCogs
HumanityEfficiency

This post originally appeared at Campaign for America's Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture. I am a Fellow with CAF.

Sign up here for the CAF daily summary

?

Follow Dave Johnson on Twitter: www.twitter.com/dcjohnson

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The Secret to Baby Boomer Dating Success ? Part 1 ? 3 Questions ...

Are you newly divorced, widowed or single? Thinking of diving (or wading) back into dating? What used to feel like a pool can now feel like an ocean, leaving you feeling out of the loop. Instead of throwing in the towel by settling for a fixed Saturday night date with your favorite hunks?Ben&Jerry?s or a solitary dinner, here?s a powerful way to take charge and transform your love life from fizzling to sizzling!As a savvy Boomer you should be objective. How will you start dating or find a partner if you don?t get back in the pool?on or offline? Don?t waste time swimming in circles!I have been in the dating pool myself and have helped countless Baby Boomers start dating again successfully after divorce, the loss of a partner or years of solitude. So I understand it can be pretty intimidating, especially if all you have heard are disaster stories, one after the other.Avoid (or lessen) the cold water shock and the struggle so many Baby Boomers, like yourself, are experiencing when it comes to testing the dating waters again. Taking the time to prepare yourself before taking that dive or dipping your toes in the pool will make a huge difference in your dating experience.Now grab a pen and some paper. Jot down the vital point I am about to reveal. It will literally determine if your love life sinks or swims.Savvy Baby Boomers get help.If you want to start enjoying a great dating life and get concrete results, you should invest in yourself and get help. Especially if your love life is in a rut. Get a like-minded, positive friend to help you.If you are looking for quicker results and are willing to invest in yourself, then a mentor or coach can help you move a head leaps and bounds. Your success rate skyrockets when you do so.Here are the benefits of having a great mentor or coach:* Getting crystal clear about what you want and what you do not want.* Overcoming obstacles that stand in the way of you having a successful love life.* Putting together an action plan based on your comfort zone.* Inspiring you, keeping you on track and giving you support when you need it.* Providing wisdom to get the best out of your experience and avoid pitfalls.So what if you are not ready to invest in a mentor or coach? No worries! Here is what you can do to start taking charge of your love life today. Use that pen and paper I asked you to grab and take 15 minutes to answer the following questions:1. What do I want my life to look like? This is a great question to ask yourself when you are not quite sure what you want. It should be easier to describe what you want your life to look like. For example: I want to have a few romantic dates each week. I want to share my love for theatre with my new partner.2. How do I want to be treated by my date or new partner? How do I want to feel about my new lifestyle or relationship? When you know how you want to feel, you are unlikely to settle for treatment that is not what you want. For example: I feel safe, loved and respected in my new relationship.3. What challenges are keeping me back? Knowing what your challenges are will help you see clearly and take the action steps needed to get your love life back on track.This exercise has saved clients I have worked with from wasting precious time with incompatible people, time-wasters and bad dates. Following these two points will greatly increase your chances of finding a great date or wonderful new partner in less time.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

How sweet it is: Tomato researchers discover link between ripening, color and taste

ScienceDaily (June 28, 2012) ? For many grocery shoppers, those perfect, red tomatoes from the store just can't match the flavor from the home garden. Now, researchers at Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research at Cornell University, USDA and the University of California at Davis have decoded a gene that contributes to the level of sugar, carbohydrates and carotenoids in tomatoes.

Cuong Nguyen, a Cornell graduate student in plant breeding working at the Boyce Thompson Institute (BTI), along with colleagues at BTI, USDA, UC Davis, Universidad Politec?nica de Valencia (Spain), Universidad de M?laga (Spain) and University of Suleyman Demiral (Turkey) revealed the gene that underlies the uniform ripening mutation.

This gene also influences how tomato fruits ripen and is used by commercial breeders to create tomatoes that develop into perfectly red, store-ready fruit. "Practically, it is a very important trait," says James Giovannoni, a plant molecular biologist with BTI and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, who is a senior author on the paper. "It's a gene that whether you realize it or not, most of your tomatoes have." However, this same trait reduces sugars and nutrients in the fruit.

Naturally, tomatoes have uneven ripening, showing darker green patches when unripe and variable redness when ripe -- traits that still show up in garden-variety and heirloom breeds. However, in the late 1920s, commercial breeders stumbled across a natural mutation that caused tomatoes to ripen uniformly -- from an even shade of light green to an even shade of red. This mutation, known by plant biologists as 'uniform ripening', has become indispensable to the $2 billion a year US commercial tomato market, showing up in almost all tomatoes produced for grocery stores. The uniform redness makes it ideal for the grocery sector, which has to appeal to customer expectations of evenly colored, red fruit.

Nguyen conducted positional cloning and, with access to solgenomics.net, an online, public database hosted at BTI, he determined that the uniform ripening gene was located at a specific location on chromosome 10. With this location now known, the team could decipher the gene coding for the protein that controls photosynthesis levels in tomato fruit. While leaves are the primary photosynthesis factories in a plant, developing tomato fruit can contribute up to 20 percent of their own photosynthesis, yielding high sugar and nutrient levels in fully ripe fruit. The uniform ripening mutation, which commercial breeders select for, eliminates this protein in the fruit, therefore reducing sugar levels. "This is an unintended consequence," says Giovannoni, explaining why commercial growers continued to select for the trait. "Producers currently don't get a penny more for [flavor] quality."

This discovery has practical applications. Commercial producers -- who wish to produce uniform red fruit over multi-colored, flavorful ones -- can now do an early test on seedling DNA for the uniform ripening mutation, rather than waiting to observe the mature fruit. Conversely, those who don't care about appearances can make sure of the opposite -- that their plants are mutation free and thus may have better-tasting fruit.

Ann Powell, a research biochemist who led the UC Davis team's efforts on the research, says that the study "is a rare chance to translate scientific findings to the real world?it provides a strategy to re-capture quality characteristics that had been unknowingly bred out of modern cultivated tomatoes."

Funding for the Giovannoni lab at BTI is supported by the USDA and the National Science Foundation.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Cornell University, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. A. L. T. Powell, C. V. Nguyen, T. Hill, K. L. Cheng, R. Figueroa-Balderas, H. Aktas, H. Ashrafi, C. Pons, R. Fernandez-Munoz, A. Vicente, J. Lopez-Baltazar, C. S. Barry, Y. Liu, R. Chetelat, A. Granell, A. Van Deynze, J. J. Giovannoni, A. B. Bennett. Uniform ripening Encodes a Golden 2-like Transcription Factor Regulating Tomato Fruit Chloroplast Development. Science, 2012; 336 (6089): 1711 DOI: 10.1126/science.1222218

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Expose your Business more with Internet Marketing

Internet marketing may seem an easy and simple way to buy or sell different products as well as services. However, if you are a marketer and you are trying to promote and sell a certain product or service, you should know that there are different types of internet marketing that you can use depending on what you offer and what you want to achieve ball mill. There are also different business models that you chose and this will also depend on your or your company?s needs.

Internet marketing is used to increase income and promote your own product in different sites. Internet marketing involves selling your product through email messages, as long as you have your own computer with an internet connection you can start working on your business dryer machine. Negotiating with different clients via email is much easier, faster and hassle free. As an internet marketer, you must know on how to convince those who visited your website and your target audience. Show the advantages of the product, encourage the viewers to try on the product and tell them why they need it.

Internet marketing helps in increasing your sales, this is considered as the best strategy in order to make your product popular. Online marketer helps in increasing your sales, instead of hiring an advertising company which charges way too high prices for ads, lame commercials and billboards why not hire an online marketer? You?ll save more cash and the results are faster, expect to have increase of sales within a shorter span of time.

There are people who are expert in this field, they do know that taking your business online is not enough. The main goal of putting your business on the internet is to make it global, reach more people and make money online. You will need an online marketer who will make things easier for you. They provide virtual office, complete with the tools, training, technical support and other resources that your business needs. There are also mentors who will guide you in your business, these people are professional, backed up with vast knowledge and have a wide experience when it comes to business. Taking advises from these mentors is the key to become successful.stone crushing plant:http://www.china-hxjq.com/p65.html
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There are companies that help those who are in need of online marketers. A potential client must be referred, this is limited for qualified applicants only. Those who have potential are accepted. Not everyone can be accepted because the company wants to protect their integrity.

If you have an online business and you are selling a product or service, you must keep in touch with your visitors. Online marketers helps in communicating with your visitors by sending letters, emails regarding the benefits of the product and why they must acquire the product. Without follow ? up, your business might be forgotten by the visitors, which only means you lose a client. As the owner you are too busy to handle all of these. Outsourcing will make things easier, let online marketers take some weight off your shoulders. All you have to do is count your profits and watch the sky rocketing sales of your product. Now that?s a way to have a successful online business!

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Get fired up this Fourth with these budget grills

By Kara Reinhardt, Cheapism.com

The Char-Griller Grillin' Pro 3001 starts at $186.

?For many Americans, meals prepared on the grill rank right up there with Fourth of July fireworks as an essential ingredient in summer. Nearly 90 percent of owners will be firing up their grills for the upcoming holiday, according to an annual survey by manufacturer Weber-Stephen Products. These days, so-called ?outdoor rooms? are furnished with $3,000 stainless-steel mammoths. A more modest grill might look a little silly encased in custom stonework, but it?s all you need to partake in this holiday tradition for less than $200.

Below are Cheapism?s top picks for affordable grills.

  • The Char-Griller Grillin' Pro 3001 (starting at $189) strikes both consumer and expert reviewers as a good value for the money. In feedback posted online, they note this gas grill?s solid construction and consistent heating across the three main burners. A powerful side burner can heat up sauces and side dishes, and porcelain grates resist sticking. (Where to buy)
  • The Char-Griller Wrangler 2123 (starting at $106) outdoes other charcoal grills in this price range with 435 square inches of grilling space, convenient features such as a warming rack, and cast-iron grates that can be adjusted to provide more control over the cooking temperature. Online reviews call the grill sturdy and durable. (Where to buy)
  • The Brinkmann Grill King 810-2410-SB (starting at $199) is the largest grill on our list, with four main burners, plus a side burner and warming rack, for a total cooking space of 638 square inches. It?s also the only one that boasts porcelain-coated cast-iron grates, known for heating food evenly and keeping it from sticking. Experts and users cite ease of use and cleaning in favorable reviews of this gas grill. (Where to buy)
  • The Weber One-Touch Gold 22.5 (starting at $130) takes its name from the highly regarded brand?s One-Touch cleaning system, which confines the mess to a removable ash catcher. Reviewers give this charcoal grill almost universally high ratings and admire its quality. Weber makes cheaper One-Touch kettle grills as well; the 18.5-inch Silver model starts at $79. (Where to buy)

Both charcoal grills and gas grills have their partisans. Some patio chefs swear by the smoky flavor of charcoal, alleging that propane simply can?t compare. Charcoal barbecues also cost less up front, although buying bag after bag of briquettes or lump charcoal eats away any savings; it?s cheaper to refill a propane tank periodically. Gas grills heat up more quickly, tend to be easier to use and control, and promise easier cleanup, with no messy ash disposal.

Gas grills also typically have larger cooking surfaces. The models on our list come in at around 630 square inches. Note that any side burner or warming rack is typically included in the surface area listed in the specs. Consider how many people you?ll usually be feeding and also the size of your outdoor area. A hefty four-burner model with a side burner and a shelf simply may not fit on a small patio.

More from Cheapism:
Cheap grills
Best cheap ice cream
Cheap sleeping bags
Cheap mosquito traps

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Installment Five: Alex Sharry - Smalldoggies Magazine

In the early 2000s, Mickey Hess taught creative writing at a community college in New Albany, Indiana. Since 2006, he has taught creative writing at Rider University in New Jersey. ?Interviews with my Former Students? finds Mickey tracking down his old students nearly a decade later, to see if they still write and to find out if they learned anything.

Interviews With My Former Students
Installment Five: Alex Sharry
Historic Lawrenceville, New Jersey

Mickey Hess: Alex Sharry, writer and professional armpit model, what have you been up to since you left our fine Rider University campus?

Alex Sharry: Aside from maintaining epic armpits, I?ve kind of been all over the place metaphorically. Geographically, it?s NY. I left Rider the year after I took your creative writing class and transferred to The New School where I studied Writing (when it?s your major, you capitalize the ?W? so people know it?s official).

It was there that I was first introduced to things like anxiety, syntax, trust fund babies, hyperbole, and all the other things that come with people somehow making blowing lines of cocaine off of the lid of a toilet bowl before Don Quixote class ?chic.?

But since those dog days are over, there?s been a lot. There?s been jobs I hated, jobs I was ambivalent about, and jobs I loved. There?ve been people I hated, people I was ambivalent about, and people I loved. Currently, I am coming down from the spin cycle that is your early post-graduation 20s and am a yoga instructor, part-time nanny, and top secret personal diary columnist.

MH: Without exposing your top secret identity, tell me about the writing you?ve been working on recently.

AS: To be honest, my writing has changed as of late. For one, I graduated from school thinking the writing world was my oyster (for lack of a better clich?). I graduated in the heart of the recession. Our dean reminded us of that with his congratulatory speech. Literally, his only words of wisdom were ?This is a really rough time. The world isn?t what is used to be. Take what you can get in the job market, but always remember the enjoyable Liberal Arts experience you had here at Lang.?

It was the most ominous thing? everyone was a little turned off by it because we were so damn eager to become famous professional Joan Didions. Each and every one of us. That was the problem. Under the campus shelter, you ARE a successful writer. You?re writing semi-regular columns for the school paper, stressing about your thesis and working on a new poem that you?ll workshop in class on Thursday. You?re writing? and doing it and getting grades and getting a diploma.

Bur our dean was right. It was a triple slap in the face and one on the ass when we graduated and walked into the real world, which was and still is super fucked up and in a super duper awkward growing pain stage as the digital age continues eating everything for dinner. So, I wrote? but all of a sudden I found myself blogging not as myself. It was literally like someone changed my writerly vocal cords and I was this bitchy blogger kind of just trying to be snarky enough to get read by other miserable people.

Joan Didion

I just broke my collarbone. This one. Right. Here.

It wasn?t inspiration fueling my work, it was imitation. I was writing about stuff I didn?t even want to hear myself write about (mostly about being a 20-something NY?er who is lost in Google translation). So? I literally stopped. I stopped writing like that and began writing on my own personal blog in the format I wanted. It was private and only shared with friends, but it was fun and in that time I reconnected with what it is about writing that I enjoy. Fiction. Creative Non-Fiction.

It all came back a little bit and that?s when I decided that I needed to take a breather from trying to be a successful writer right away. The idea of that was just not even an idea anymore. It was squashed by the reality of the times we live in where? how the HECK do you make a living doing anything, let alone doing what you love? ?So? what I do now is sit and write how I want to write. I recently have been working on a fictional piece about a girl ?dating? her 45-year-old boss. I don?t love it, but I?m writing it.

Before that I documented a break-up? kind of just wrote about 50 one-liners a day about the things that happen? even the most banal. I thought it was interesting enough? my grandma liked it. Also, I have recently been re-reading my diary from high school and have turned some of those entries into little things? I mean, I was a freak in high school. I was this self-loathing miserable half-human walking around feeling so sorry for myself about the stupidest of things. It?s hilarious? especially when I talk about how much I loved my boyfriend and friends and also how much I hated my boyfriend and friends. (You have a daughter? get ready, dude. Women are NUTSO).

There?s also these little moments in there where I guess I was crying as I was writing and my tears smudged the ink and I found it SO necessary to circle the smudge marks and label each one ?tear.? I know. Anyway, In terms of my writing, I think more than anything else, I have been writing about the transition my mind went through when I did my yoga teacher training.

I don?t really know how to compile all of that into this blurb, but I will say it was one of the most enlightening experiences of my life and literally, without me even being conscious it was happening, changed the ways in which my mind functions in the world. So? I often find myself writing about that, about yoga stuff. About mediation? the connection of the mind, body and breath and how relevant that is to everything we do.

In conclusion, All-in-all, Finally; my writing is scattered, but it certainly is mine and I am much happier where I?m at with it now than I was before. I hope one day to write more for the public? get back out onto the blogs, but as of now I?m happy in my little hole.

MH: Sounds like you?ve packed a career?s worth of writer?s anxiety into the past couple years.?Speaking of students being eager to?become famous professional Joan Didions, I have three questions for you:

1. A complaint I?ve heard a lot from my colleagues at schools where I?ve taught is that all creative writing students believe they?ll get rich writing poetry and?a creative writing professor would be fairer to say what your Dean said from day one of class. It?s tough enough out there to get published and to find readers, let alone hope to make even a small supplemental income doing it. Would I have been a better teacher to encourage you to stop wasting your talents on short stories and poems and instead to sign up for business writing?

2. Do you think there?s money in becoming a famous professional Joan Didion impersonator? Like for bat mitzvas or whatever?

3. When a 76-year-old Joan Didion broke her collarbone last year and that news trended on Twitter, I reacted with what I thought was Twitter gold ? ?Where were all you well-wishers when Joan Didion broke MY collarbone? ? and no one retweeted it. Not one person.

Do you think that?s a funny tweet, Alex?

AS: 1. My belief is that a lot of creatives think that because they?re in the art world, business is irrelevant to them. It?s funny because I was having a similar conversation with one of my closest friends just last night. He and I were on his couch talking about writing, the New School, and all that stuff. He is a popular blogger who just signed a book deal and what comes with all of that is the reality that at the end of the day, there?s a lot more business-thinking than there is
creative-thinking.

Once you have a foot in the door, it switches over to the business of keeping your foot wedged in that door, while hoping to jam your other one in there someday. It?s all business. Certain moves simply can?t be made because of the popularity around your name once you?ve been known to do something or once you?ve adopted a certain online personality. So. What I think should be done is there should be, like, an elective or something that?s called Business of the Arts or The Business of Being Creative. Titles are not my thing, so someone else should name it. Anyone? Thoughts?

But essentially what this class should be is a lecture where there?s always a guest speaker. The class could be an hour and a half, once a week, but folks like you, your pal Mr. Joe Meno and guys like my friend who has made it in the blogging world? people like that? discuss the business.

Liberal Arts students get stuck in the rut I did because they are so fixated on the destination. They just know what they want to be when they grow up and don?t think about the BS they have to go through? the paperwork and grueling business meetings, etc? to get there. So, once an author?s book goes out on the table at Barnes and Noble, said author has readings and book signings and are asked to lecture at colleges and read at colleges, but no one asks them about the annoying parts of getting there. No one asks them how big a pay cut they took to get their book?s front cover facing out on the shelf as opposed to just the spine cover. No one talks about all those things. And that?s fine.

When I was in your creative writing course, it was perfect. We were taught to use our imaginations and write and we did just that. It was innocent, it was fun, it was everything it should have been and it would have been ruined if you were Ebenezer Scrooge in the corner with a jaded, empty stare slamming the idea that none of us are going to be able to buy food let alone pay rent with a writer?s salary.

However, it should be mentioned, and as Lit students/Writing students and I think all Arts students, there should be a requirement to take a course that allows them to hear it from the people who have gone through/are going through it. It?s an opportunity to lift the veil from their eyes, without slamming it in their face during an actual course where within the confines of that course they should just be fanning the fire of their creative mind.

I mean, honestly, there is so much that happens to you when you graduate and hit that wall of realization and personally, I think it?s an important wall to hit because it truly tests the level of passion you have for what you?re doing. As I mentioned earlier, in college it?s easy to feel passionate about everything because you?re a kid-adult just l-i-v-i-n?, man. So, walls are important because they give you the choice to climb them or not. You?re only going to climb a wall as annoyingly huge as the one to be a successful writer if that?s seriously what you want to do.

2. ?I don?t know about bat mitzvah Joan, but I think there?s hope for stripper Joan. Moan Tition. She?s going places.

3. ?I?m sorry no one replied to your tweet. I think it?s funny, Mickey. If I could go back in time I?d retweet it or like it or
counter-tweet or sound my bat signal or something. I just think Joan fans are really serious. They?re all waiting for someone in their life to die so that they can write about it. (But aren?t we all?) #dark

Mickey Hess on Twitter

MH: I?ve talked with Lauren Cerand about teaching exactly that course ? the business of writing. I?m on board. Maybe the three of us can team-teach it.

You?re talking to a man who wrote a book about the business of hip hop, and how rappers like Jay-Z and Wu-Tang have used their art to brag about their business sense. Tao Lin does a little of that with his writing (at least he shows the stats of how much he?s earned from his books), and Kurt Vonnegut was very open about the material side of his career in interviews ? at one time he said he?d made about three bucks off every man, woman, and child who died in the firebombing of Dresden, which he survived to write a novel about.

But I?d want the class, if I taught it, to be less about how to scrounge up a living writing stuff you don?t enjoy writing, and more about studying the people who created their own business model and sustained a readership by writing the stuff they loved and keeping the scrounging for a salary a separate thing.

Since you left Rider I?ve been including more of the business side in my classes. Seems like more of it every semester. One student wrote in a course evaluation that I should not start the semester with all the depressing stuff about how little money a writer can make ? she said it kind of cast a pall over the fun of reading and writing. So that?s the other side of it ? it?d be pretty hypocritical for me to make money teaching a creative writing class that discouraged others from writing.

I had those professors when I was a student, and they just seemed like they?d been beaten down by the futility of their approach to teaching, which was to come in and say they were miserable because they?d written and written and never become as successful as they wanted to be, so by this point they hated writing and teaching writing, and even reading. Those were the professors who told me not to go to grad school in English because I?d never get a job as a professor. And now here I am ready to discourage a whole new generation of students from making the choices I made.?I was trying to achieve a balance but I guess I failed in that student?s case.

Obviously, I?m in a bubble because I?ve made way more money from teaching writing than I?ll ever make from writing. But I wouldn?t discourage anyone from doing either of them. Just find ways not to drive yourself deeper into debt as you do it. My other lesson is that because there is so little money in writing books, never?make big compromises in your writing, because the rewards it brings are not worth it.

So you?ve found a balance, it sounds like, in discovering this yoga teacher/armpit model thing that pays money, and that you love to do, and is entirely separate from writing. That doesn?t sound like a bad way to go.

AS: At the end of the day we do what we can do and what we are best at doing. I think it?s important for all artists to come to terms with the fact that for a second they?ll have to take a shitty job to pay the bills, or be an intern or an editorial assistant for some a-hole one year younger than them. But it?s also important, amongst all the depressing chatter, to remember that it evens out. And eventually you wind up doing what you love, be it writing, teaching, editing or yogaing. I will always define half of myself as a writer. That?s in me. I like it and enjoy it and like thinking about it, but I wasn?t one of those who had the patience to climb that wall at that time in my life.

Let?s team-teach it!! I?m down. Or, also, if you ever just want to spew some ideas I can totally help you out with my input or thoughts or whatever. It?s awesome you?ve been adding the writer?s reality crash course to your classroom dynamic, but at the end of the day, sometimes you just want to write and sometimes it?s fun to live in the fictional world that is undergrad where you?re a famous writer at 25 living in Brooklyn with a Vespa. Just sayin?. Dare to dream.

* * *

(Photo Via: wwwnet1.state.nj.us; joan-didion]

Short URL: http://www.smalldoggiesmagazine.com/?p=5253

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Famed Galapagos tortoise to be embalmed, displayed

In this photo released by the Galapagos National Park Direction, DPNG, the body of the famed Galapagos giant tortoise Lonesome George is removed on stretcher from a corral at the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador, Sunday, June 24, 2012. The Galapagos National Park says in a statement that the tortoise estimated to be about 100 years old died Sunday. Various mates had been provided for Lonesome George over the years in unsuccessful attempts to keep his subspecies alive. (AP Photo/Galapagos National Park Direction)

In this photo released by the Galapagos National Park Direction, DPNG, the body of the famed Galapagos giant tortoise Lonesome George is removed on stretcher from a corral at the Galapagos Islands, Ecuador, Sunday, June 24, 2012. The Galapagos National Park says in a statement that the tortoise estimated to be about 100 years old died Sunday. Various mates had been provided for Lonesome George over the years in unsuccessful attempts to keep his subspecies alive. (AP Photo/Galapagos National Park Direction)

QUITO, Ecuador (AP) ? The beloved Galapagos Islands giant tortoise known as Lonesome George will remain a tourist attraction even in death.

Ecuador's environment minister says the reptile that became a symbol of disappearing species will be embalmed and placed on display on Santa Cruz island.

Minister Marcela Aguinaga told reporters Tuesday that an autopsy determined that Lonesome George died of old age. He was believed to be about 100 years old.

Lonesome George was the last of the Pinta Island giant tortoise subspecies, and he failed to leave offspring despite the best efforts of conservationists.

He was discovered in 1972 discovery on Pinta Island and became an ambassador of sorts for the archipelago off Ecuador's coast whose unique flora and fauna helped inspire Charles Darwin's ideas on evolution.

Associated Press

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