Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Response: Taking Advantage Of Neural ... - Blogs - Education Week

(This is the third of a multi-part series on "brain-based learning." You can see Part One here and Part Two here.)


The question asked two weeks ago was:

What are the best ways to practically implement what we know about how the brain learns into our teaching?

I've seen the phrase "brain-based learning" used often, and sometimes in ways that do not seem particularly helpful. However, it is short enough to fit in a blog post headline....

This post is the third in a four-part series on this topic. Last week's post included responses from three neuroscientists associated with BrainFacts.org. Earlier this week, educators Wendi Pillars and Wendy Ostroff shared their ideas. Today, Dr. David Dockterman, Renate N. Caine, Ph.D., and Kevin D. Washburn, (Ed.D) are contributing their thoughts on the topic. I'll be featuring another guest and reader opinions in the final post next week. In addition, I've brought together my favorite useful related resources here.

Response From Dr. David Dockterman

Dr. David Dockterman is an Adjunct Lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and the Chief Architect, Learning Sciences at Scholastic Education. A former classroom teacher, he helped launch Tom Snyder Productions, an educational software pioneer, in the early 1980's. David has designed dozens of award-winning instructional technology programs, including FASTT Math Next Generation:

As a high school teacher fresh out of college in the late '70s, I imagined the brain as a filing cabinet. My job was to help my students fill up their mental file folders with knowledge. While we still have much to learn about how the brain works, I at least know that a filing cabinet is an inept metaphor for what we now understand about cognitive function. Bits of knowledge don't exist in isolated "files" in our brain. The brain is a tangled, interconnected, mess of neural networks inside our skulls.

But don't fear. We're learning more every day about how to untangle the mess, and about strategies that help learners build connections and boost academic performance.

Here are a couple do's and a couple don'ts:

Don't focus on a single perceived "learning style" for each student. No research supports the notion that some students are innately visual, auditory, or kinesthetic learners (read what neuroscientist Daniel Willingham has to say). Meaning and memory are boosted by connecting representations of knowledge.

So do feed the network by providing not just multiple paths into content but by offering specific instruction to help students see how those representations are connected. In math that can mean consciously using language ("three groups of four") that reinforces the meaning of symbols (3x4) with matching spatial images:

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Don't take for granted that your students' reference points are the same as yours. I didn't get my parents' references to The Great Depression, and they didn't get mine to Marvel comic book heroes. Background knowledge matters. Lack of it can be a big obstacle, for instance, to reading comprehension. Students need to connect the new to something already in their cognitive webs. A story set at the beach can confound students who've never seen one.

So do provide the reference experiences and knowledge that students need to incorporate the content you're teaching. Anchored instruction, for example, provides content-rich background knowledge in virtual form so that students in middle America can, for example, see the beach before reading about it.

Research suggests that our brains are networks of neural networks. Those cross-wired networks give humans special capabilities. Let's consciously take advantage of them in our instruction.

Response From Renate N. Caine, Ph.D.

Dr. Caine is the executive director of The Natural Learning Research Institute, a non profit organization located in Idyllwild, California. She has worked with educators in the U.S., Australia, Canada, New Zealand, England and Germany. Dr. Caine is Professor Emeritus of Education, an internationally sought-after speaker and educator, and was an award winning high school teacher. Books authored by the Caines include Natural Learning for a Connected World, Education, Technology, and the Human Brain, Strengthening and Enriching your Professional Learning Community, and 12 Brain/Mind Learning Principles in Action. Dr. Caine can be reached at renate@naturallearninginstitute.org:

Why are Strategies not Enough?

I have been asked to comment on a few of the best ways to practically implement what we know about how the brain learns and how this might help teachers select appropriate strategies.

My response can be dealt with at two levels. One is to spell out a range of strategies. The other is more complex but much more effective in the long run.

This more complex answer became clear to us after developing the 12 Principles of Brain/Mind Learning we spelled out in the 1991 ASCD publication "Making Connections: Teaching and the Human Brain." We realized that regardless of how many strategies teachers used, even more important is the need for educators to develop a new view of how learning and teaching function in a brain compatible (based, focused, etc.) school and classroom. Strategies emerge out of shifting our deeply held beliefs about learning and teaching in general.

The principles suggested that three overarching elements are essential for great teaching. The first of these three elements was "Relaxed Alertness" which later we defined as the optimal emotional environment for learning, both for individuals and the classroom as a whole. This came from a new understanding of how sensitive human beings are to threat and helplessness, and how critical intrinsic motivation and challenge, provided by personal choice, decision making and application of meaning, are to learning.

The second element we called "Immersion in Complex Experience." This emerged once we understood that the human brain naturally solves problems posed by experience, and that the whole body, brain and mind participate. That is why today we define "learning" as "Making sense of experience, and developing new capacities to act in and on the world."

The third element is the "Active Processing of Experience." An example of processing can be found in the Socratic method. Ultimately, however, active processing refers to the continuous interaction between learner and teacher using non-judgmental but rigorous questioning and challenging of thinking, decision making and emergent understandings. It takes for granted a more dynamic, ongoing and developmental perspective of what it means to learn.

The deeper problem

Education is caught up in what the biologist Dawkins called a "meme." A meme is an idea that will not go away. That pervasive idea is that teaching is "delivered" by the teacher from a plan, and that the better students can memorize, summarize, or "learn" the material to be covered, the more successful the teaching. Many of the most popular strategies teachers apply assume that the human brain is relatively passive in learning and therefore the teacher has to spell out the correct way to do things (and so they search for "strategies" that work in this old context). The brain is actually made for dynamic, interactive environments that challenge students to apply and engage with new ideas and experiences. And in the right context there is a natural drive to get better. Just think of how video games function - there is a problem the player cares about, this motivates him/her to pursue a course of action, pursue a goal and practice, practice, practice in order to master a new skill.

The way to get beyond the meme, in my view, is to understand and apply the three elements identified above so that genuine problems are dealt with in appropriately dynamic and interesting contexts.

My coauthor and I call this "Natural Learning" in our newest book "Natural Learning for a Connected World; Education,Technology and the Human Brain." This kind of teaching is found in sophisticated project based learning and it is also very compatible with the new science standards still being finalized. This is also very compatible with the CA teaching standards and the incorporation of technology into the classroom. Technology allows students to pursue their own most urgent questions and ideas to share with fellow students. The teacher and curriculum provide the parameters for focusing student ideas. Think of teaching about the Civil War. According to the three elements the teacher would begin by engaging students in what we call a "multisensory immersive (real life) experience." This can be an actual visit to a site where conflict took place, an intriguing artifact, re-enactment, personal diary written by a soldier or a provocative video that incorporates these elements. Students can generate their own questions such as "Did women serve in the war?" or "How did they handle the dead bodies?" "What roles did slaves play in the war and did they serve as soldiers?"

Teachers and students can group these questions and students can chose to investigate the most meaningful questions to them alone or in pairs or groups.

Information is shared as the teacher challenges everyone to place the information into "time lines" or connect their variously researched areas to create a comprehensive picture of the war, including the causes.

Students need freedom, respect and agreements to engage in this sort of independent learning. Hence "Relaxed Alertness" is absolutely critical and plays a part in helping students and teacher to communicate and listen to new ideas and discoveries.

Both the multisensory experience and the active search for information and critical events, and sharing and discussion of ideas are active, and ongoing. Hence, "Immersion in Complex Experience."

And finally, the teacher is continually making certain that facts are correct, conclusions are well thought out, information is accurate, and skills (writing, documentation, historical research) are mastered. Hence the standards become actualized through student dynamic interaction and teacher guidance. Hence "Active Processing".

We call this way of teaching and learning the Guided Experience Approach.

Response From Kevin D. Washburn, (Ed.D.)

Kevin D. Washburn, (Ed.D.), is Executive Director of Clerestory Learning, Cofounder/Co-owner of Make Way for Books, author of the Architecture of Learning instructional design model and its training program, the Writer's Stylus instructional writing program, and co-author of an instructional reading program used by schools across the country. He is the author of The Architecture of Learning: Designing Instruction for the Learning Brain, and is a member of the International Mind, Brain & Education Society, and the Learning & the Brain Society. His experience as a teacher in elementary through graduate level classrooms combines with his penchant for reading and research in educational and scientific areas to uncover important implications for learning. His blog is The WINDOW. This is an excerpt from one of his posts:

How can we educators convert breakthroughs in understanding the brain into tools and tactics for teaching?

Choose carefully. Not every finding neuroscientists uncover has value for teachers. I often sit in researchers' presentations and think, "Okay, so that particular region of the brain 'lights up' when you have someone in the fMRI and flash a photo of such-and-such before their eyes. If it's relevant for learning, how do I generate that neural activity in the classroom?"

Sometimes the interpretation of what is relevant gets misapplied by well-intentioned teachers. A few years ago, many educators thought the brain's need for hydration meant that students should have never-empty water bottles at their desks. While this may help with hydration, it definitely increases use of restroom passes. The "solution" may create more problems than it solves. Additionally, this is a surface-level response to a below the surface challenge. Does the brain need water? Absolutely. Is constant sipping the best approach? Probably not. Learning is influenced less by water bottles than it is by effective teaching.

Having to discern what is and is not relevant for the classroom is both freeing and frustrating. It suggests that I do not need to be aware of every study and its findings because most will lack classroom relevance. However, to find the useful among the merely interesting, I have to 1) search for findings that may have relevance, 2) be sure I do not ignore research just because an application is not immediately obvious, and 3) identify sources that help me sort through the research avalanche.

I find focusing more on neurocognitive research and less on purely neuroscientific research is helpful. Neuroscience is often, but not always, focused on brain "geography," finding the neural islands that come alive when specific stimuli are streamed through the senses. Neurocognitive research focuses more on the interaction of cognitive processes, such as decision-making, and neurobiology. It takes its cues from neuroscience and psychology. As a result, neurocognitive research is more likely to examine learning and its supporting cognitive capacities, and findings from its studies are more likely to have classroom relevance.

Begin small but be consistent. Rather than creating the ideal, "brain-friendly" classroom all at once, find a significant fact or principle and apply it in everything you teach.

For example, several years ago David Sousa alerted us to the brain's need for "downtime," a period of reflection following intense input of new material. I began planning "processing pauses" in everything I taught. These immediately influenced my students' learning. They were recalling more, understanding more, and able to apply more of the material than they had before. Applying this principle to my teaching became natural and consistent. Now planning "downtime" is simply part of "how I teach," even when I do not have it included in my lesson plan.

Consistently applying one principle at a time provides experience without overwhelming you, and such successes form a foundation for applying additional findings from research.

Find a framework. Whether it's an instructional design model based on neurocognitive research (e.g., Architecture of Learning), or another research-based teaching framework, having a referential organizational scheme guides educational applications of neuroscientific findings. For example, I have attended the Learning and the Brain Conferences as often as possible for several years. When I adopted the Architecture of Learning as a reliable model for designing teaching, I suddenly had a "place" for using the often-detailed findings presented by the conference's presenters.

At one of these conferences, a presenter explained the brain's inclination for metaphor and how the mind uses this cognitive tool to both construct and communicate understanding. With an instructional framework in mind, I was able to identify immediately where such thinking would be optimally effective in learning (and thus, in teaching). As a result of having a "place" for the research finding, I've been able to apply it much more consistently than I would have if I had just made a note about metaphor being a good activity to include in my teaching.

Thanks to Doctors Dockterman, Caine, and Washburn for taking the time to contribute their responses!

Please feel free to leave a comment sharing your reactions to this question and the ideas shared here. I'll be including those comments in a post next week.

Consider contributing a question to be answered in a future post. You can send one to me at lferlazzo@epe.org.When you send it in, let me know if I can use your real name if it's selected or if you'd prefer remaining anonymous and have a pseudonym in mind.

You can also contact me on Twitter at @Larryferlazzo.

Anyone whose question is selected for this weekly column can choose one free book from a selection of seven published by published by Jossey-Bass.

Just a reminder -- you can subscribe to this blog for free via RSS Reader or email....

And,if you missed any of the highlights from the first year of this blog, you can check them out here.

Look for Part Three of this series in a few days....

Source: http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/classroom_qa_with_larry_ferlazzo/2012/10/response_taking_advantage_of_our_neural_networks_in_the_classroom.html

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Heat get rings, then win over Celtics, 120-107

MIAMI (AP) ? LeBron James got cramps, Ray Allen was snubbed and Dwyane Wade was steaming.

None of that spoiled the Miami Heat mood on ring night.

Wade scored 29 points, James finished 26 points and 10 rebounds while missing much of the second half because of cramps in both legs, and the reigning NBA champion Heat beat the Boston Celtics 120-107 on Tuesday night in the season opener for both teams.

There were actual fireworks before the game to close the ceremony where the Heat got their championship rings and raised their title banner. There also were plenty of figurative fireworks late, first with Boston almost digging out of a 19-point hole and, after the outcome was decided, Rajon Rondo flagrantly fouling Wade by wrapping his arms around his neck on a drive.

In the end, though, the first Celtics-Heat matchup of this season was like the final one of last season ? with Miami winning.

"It was good to cap this night off with a win," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. "It was an emotional time for all of us in our organization."

Even for the newcomers, like Allen. He scored 19 points ? needing only seven field goal attempts ? in his first game with Miami since leaving Boston over the summer. Chris Bosh had 19 points and 10 rebounds for Miami.

Allen got chants from the Heat crowd, which is nothing new. Except this time, they were positive.

"Never thought I'd hear that here," Allen said.

Paul Pierce scored 23 points, Rondo finished with 20 points and 13 assists, and Leandro Barbosa scored 16 for Boston. The Celtics, who lost to the Heat in last season's Eastern Conference finals, were not on the court for the ring ceremony.

They almost wrecked the festive mood with a late comeback.

An 11-2 run late in the fourth quarter got Boston within 111-107 on Courtney Lee's layup with 2:09 left. That was the last Celtics' hurrah ? Bosh scored the game's next seven points, sealing it for Miami.

"I thought they were the aggressor the whole game," Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. "They got on the floor where they wanted to get on the floor. They took us out of stuff that they wanted to."

Rashard Lewis scored 10 points for Miami, which held on even while James, last season's MVP of both the regular season and NBA Finals, was in the locker room for the second time because of the cramps, first in his right leg and then his left.

"It's not an all-the-time thing," James said. "I'm not too worried about it."

The Heat got their championship rings from owner Micky Arison before the game, then watched the banner get hoisted to the rafters. More emotion came late, when Wade drove past Rondo ? and the Celtics guard grabbed Wade around the neck. Wade appeared as though he was ready to throw the ball at Rondo in retaliation, and stopped himself.

"I thought he hooked me," Rondo said.

Wade had a different opinion.

"It was a punk play by him," Wade said. "The league will take care of it. He clotheslined me, with two hands."

So Rondo raised eyebrows by putting hands on Wade. Kevin Garnett made news by not offering his hand to Allen.

As Allen entered the game for the first time, he trotted toward the Boston bench, exchanging a handshake, embrace and a few words with Rivers, who hasn't hidden his displeasure about his former shooting guard's decision to sign with Miami and didn't sound certain before the game how he would react when he saw Allen in Miami colors. Allen then briskly shook hands with a few assistant coaches.

But when Allen tried to engage Garnett, the mutual pleasantries ended. Allen tapped Garnett on the shoulder as he sat on the Boston bench; Garnett didn't even flinch, staring straight ahead, refusing to acknowledge the gesture in any way.

"I was just trying to focus as much as I could. I am such an intense person," Garnett said. "It was a blank. Obviously he's on the other side. It's time to play the game, man."

Allen didn't seem flustered. His first shot in a Miami uniform was ? what else? ? a corner 3-pointer, which swished.

"He was by himself in the corner," Rivers said. "You'd think we'd know better."

Miami controlled much of the first half, taking a 62-54 lead after James went by Pierce and Garnett for a two-handed dunk and yell for the crowd.

The first Heat angst of the season came in the third quarter, when James walked slowly to the bench after a timeout with 4:40 remaining, favoring his right leg and then headed out the tunnel toward the locker room.

When he left, the Miami lead was 79-70.

When he returned to open the fourth quarter, the lead was 93-76. The Heat scored the final eight points of the third, with Bosh, Allen, Mario Chalmers and Lewis all scoring in the final 2:17 to give the Heat their biggest lead of the game.

James ? who was dealing with a cramping issue, like he experienced at times in last season's NBA Finals ? opened the fourth quarter with a jumper to extend the run to 10-0, and Miami seemed well on its way. But he returned to the locker room a short time later, the cramps having flared up again.

"Once you start cramping, there's nothing you can do about it," James said.

Jeff Green, who had season-ending surgery for an aortic aneurysm last January, played in a game that counts for the first time since May 11, 2011 ? also in Miami, when the Heat ousted the Celtics from that season's playoffs. Green finished with three points in 23 minutes.

NOTES: Wade passed the 15,000-point mark for his career early in the second quarter, becoming the 123rd player in NBA history to reach that mark, according to STATS LLC. ... Rondo had at least 10 assists for the 25th straight regular-season game. ... The Celtics allowed 62 points in the first half; they gave up 62 or more only seven times in 379 regular-season and playoff games over the past four seasons. ... Miami players wore sneakers with gold somewhere in the color scheme; James' were primarily gold ? in honor of the ring ? and trimmed in white and red.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/heat-rings-then-win-over-celtics-120-107-024853404--spt.html

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Germany's Schaeuble tells skeptical UK "EU needs you"

OXFORD (Reuters) - German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble urged Britain on Monday to remain strongly engaged in the European Union, responding to a tide of Euroskepticism that Berlin fears could sweep London towards the exit.

Schaeuble's plea, delivered during a visit to Oxford University, came days after British Foreign Secretary William Hague mapped out a very different vision of a much looser EU in which Britain would opt out of many policies.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said she would visit Britain, an "important partner", for talks with Prime Minister David Cameron next week.

"In my view the British voice is sorely needed in this (European) competition of ideas," Schaeuble, known for his passionately pro-European views, told a mainly academic audience at Saint Anthony's College in Oxford.

"I firmly believe Europe would be the poorer without this input to our debates. Britain should retain and regain a place at the center of Europe because this will be good for the European Union."

Merkel echoed his comments on Monday evening at a gathering of members of her center-right Christian Democrats (CDU) in the northern German town of Schwerin.

"Britain is an important partner in the European Union ... Britain has to some extent other ideas (about Europe), it does not want such close integration. But from the German perspective, from the point of view of our interests it is an important member of the EU," she said.

"They (the British) are for free trade, for greater competitiveness, so they are a very good partner."

Berlin has long valued London's free-marketeering influence in the EU as a counterweight to France and other states that take a more protectionist line and favor state intervention in industry.

But Germany, the EU's biggest economy, has grown increasingly frustrated with the Euroskeptical instincts of Cameron and the bulk of his Conservative lawmakers.

To Berlin's dismay, Cameron has signaled he wants to use the euro zone crisis and the moves it has fostered towards much closer integration between the area's 17 member states to negotiate a much looser relationship between Britain - which does not have the euro - and the EU.

Last Tuesday Hague told his hosts in Berlin that public disillusionment in Britain with the EU was "the deepest it has ever been" and he rebuffed pleas from Germany and Finland to join a pan-European banking union and push for more joint EU foreign and defense policy.

"Europe is also good for Britain ... I fear this is not always recognized," Schaeuble said in Oxford on Monday.

Among those listening to his speech was Chris Patten, a former British EU commissioner and one of a dwindling band of prominent pro-European Conservatives. Patten is now chancellor of Oxford University and is no longer politically active.

(Additional reporting by Andreas Rinke in Schwerin; writing by Gareth Jones; editing by Andrew Roche)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/germanys-schaeuble-tells-skeptical-uk-eu-needs-203616033.html

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The Case for Price Gouging

People try to get through the aisles at Whole Foods Market in midtown in New York on Sunday, as residents do last minute food shopping in preparation for Hurricane Sandy. People try to get through the aisles at Whole Foods Market in midtown in New York on Sunday, as residents do last minute food shopping in preparation for Hurricane Sandy

Photograph by Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images.

Read Slate?s complete coverage of?Hurricane Sandy.

Even in these polarized times, there are some things politicians of both parties can agree. Price gouging, for example, is wrong. New York Attorney General Eric Scheiderman, a Democrat, wants you to know it. But this isn?t just for soft-hearted liberals. New Jersey?s notoriously tough conservative governor, Chris Christie, also put out a weekend press release warning that ?price gouging during a state of emergency is illegal? and that complaints would be investigated by the attorney general. Specifically, Garden State merchants are barred from raising prices more than 10 percent over their normal level during emergency conditions (New York?s anti-gouging law sets a less precise definition, barring ?unconscionably extreme? increases).

The bipartisan indignation is heartening, but there?s one problem. These laws are hideously misguided. Stopping price hikes during disasters may sound like a way to help people, but all it does is exacerbate shortages and complicate preparedness.

The basic imperative to allocate goods efficiently doesn?t vanish in a storm or other crisis. If anything, it becomes more important. And price controls in an emergency have the same results as they do any other time:? They lead to shortages and overconsumption. Letting merchants raise prices if they think customers will be willing to pay more isn?t a concession to greed. Rather, it creates much-needed incentives for people to think harder about what they really need and appropriately rewards vendors who manage their inventories well.

Consider the case of poor Thakur Gas of Branchville, N.J., which was hit with a $50,000 fine in late September for price gouging charges arising out of Tropical Storm Irene. Christie specifically cited the case over the weekend as a cautionary tale of what awaits New Jersey retailers who try to adjust prices to shifting supply and demand conditions. Thakur?s crime, according to court papers, was raising the prices 17 percent when the storm hit, causing the store?s gross margins to spike.

This seems like a straightforward violation of New Jersey law, but what Thakur did also make perfect business sense. If there?s elevated demand for your product, you try to sell more of it. But if you can?t sell more volume because supplies have been disrupted by a storm, you raise prices. Customers aren?t going to like it (and the need to maintain good will with your customers should be a factor in any business?s decision-making) but they?re also not going to like it if you run out of gasoline by 2 p.m. because it has all been bought up by earlier, stockpiling drivers.

What Branchville, N.J., drivers ought to fear isn?t a few days of high gasoline prices, it?s the risk that station owners might not bother to open the station at all. For customers to suffer from a gasoline shortage even while gasoline sat idle in the storage tanks of local businesses would be absurd. If higher operating margins are what it takes to tempt people to brave difficult driving conditions for the sake of opening the store on a day when customers are likely to be scarce, that?s a small price to pay.

Indeed, many of the problems associated with weather emergencies are precisely caused by the fact that we can?t count on shops to ?gouge? their customers. I live in a neighborhood with buried power lines in a building that contains a supermarket on the ground floor. But I nonetheless found myself stuck in line Sunday evening at the Safeway stockpiling emergency supplies just in case something went badly wrong and knocked power out throughout the city. The issue wasn?t that I wouldn?t be able to get to the store in a worst-case scenario, as that I was afraid other people would already have bought up all the stuff. And indeed, by the time I made it, the shelves had been largely denuded of essentials such as bottled water, canned soup, batteries, and Diet Coke. Greater flexibility to raise prices would not only tend to curb overconsumption directly by encouraging people to buy less, it would inspire confidence that shortages wouldn?t arise, reducing the tendency toward panicky preemptive hoarding.

Last but by no means least, more price gouging would greatly improve inventory management. There is a large class of goods?flashlights, snow shovels, sand bags?for which demand is highly irregular. Maintaining large inventories of these items is, on most days, a costly misuse of storage space. If retailers can earn windfall profits when demand for them spikes, that creates a situation in which it makes financial sense to keep them on hand. Trying to curtail price gouging does the reverse.

None of which is to say that people should be greedy all the time. Disasters really are times when people pull together and we see large and small acts of kindness that rightly inspire us. But consider that declining to raise prices in the face of spiking demand and inelastic supply is a very odd form of charity: It doesn?t create any new resources, just allocates them arbitrarily to whoever shows up first. If you feel bad about the idea of earning windfall profits off the misfortunes of others, then donate the money to charity. If that seems too impersonal, give your employees a bonus for showing up under difficult circumstances. But storm or no storm, the best practice is to try to set prices that balance supply with demand. State governments shouldn?t be trying to stop you.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=cc09f6f3f6646af125dd48f4be6c935a

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Whether legal or political, the Holy Land Five struggle will continue

Holy Land 5 banner Obama HqOn Thursday, Holy Land Five supporters rallied outside Barack Obama's presidential campaign headquarters in Chicago. (Photo: Roger Beltrami)

"Ultimately the only recourse is likely a political one," attorney Stanley Cohen tweeted about the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (HLF) case yesterday. He may be right.

Of course I (and Stanley, I am sure) hope for the best of all possible outcomes today: that the Supreme Court will announce its decision to hear the last remaining legal appeal of Ghassan Elashi, Shukri Abu-Baker, Mohammad El-Mezain, Mufid Abdulqader, and Abdulrahman Odeh, immediately recognize the grave injustice that has been done to them, and move quickly to reunite them with their families.

Their imprisonment for more than eight years is an absolute travesty. From secret evidence, to anonymous expert testimony, the prosecution made the Holy Land Five an example of the political climate, rather than trying them for their actions?sending contributions to the same legal zakat committees that also received funds from USAID. Furthermore USAID continued to fund those same zakat charities for an entire year after the U.S. government shut down the HLF. In light this double standard, there is nothing in this case to reassure Americans about the state of our government or our protections under its laws.

"The most important thing we need people to know is that the US government has a certain view of Middle East policy," Ghassan Elashi's brother Bayan told me three months ago, after his own prison sentence and deportation to the Gaza Strip:

If anybody has an opinion opposing this policy, the government will use its legal system against them. The courts will yield to the government?s wishes and overlook, and even violate, all the legal and constitutional rights of the individual. They'll hand him a harsh sentence just to please the government, knowing, without a doubt, that he didn?t violate US law.

Especially if that person is a Muslim or an Arab or a Palestinian or from Gaza.

Recounting current U.S. efforts against Muslims, from the HLF prosecutions to NYPD spying operations to drone killings, civil rights attorney Michael Ratner told the Real News Network Thursday, "What you have is what, I would say, is probably the darkest period in American history in terms of the overt repression of a particular population, through every legal means."

The crusade against the HLF was, in many senses, a harbinger of later efforts. And its targeting of five Palestinian-Americans, with the close collaboration of Israeli intelligence sources and an anonymous witness, may have foreshadowed what Mark Levine would, in 2011, call "New York becom[ing] the Occupied Territories" in more ways than one. George W. Bush?s December 4, 2011 executive order, which closed the HLF and began the prosecution of its leadership, followed, by one day, a Presidential meeting with then-Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.

On Thursday, supporters of the Holy Land Five rallied for their freedom in Chicago, New York, Tampa, and other cities across the United States. This offered a momentary glimpse, and perhaps a rudimentary organizational infrastructure, of the kind of campaign that will be needed if the Supreme Court proves Stanley right and dismisses the HLF appeal. The prosecution ? or is that persecution? ? of these five men has always been entirely political, and not at all legal; a successful fight against it may need a similar form.

Jerusalem activist Hala Turjman wrote in August that "discourses surrounding the incarceration of Palestinians should not debate whether the practices of the [Israeli Prison Service] are legal, or whether their practices constitute torture, but rather return to the fundamental principle: that of an anti-colonial struggle."
"Incarceration should not be seen as an isolated 'problem' or as a practice that should be legalized, or 'humanized,'" she continued. "Instead it is a tool used by the colonial power to break the will to resist and is just another form of colonial violence."

The imprisonment of the Holy Land Five is a conscious act of imperial repression against Palestine no less than those of Khader Adnan, Hana Shalabi, Mahmoud Sarsak, or Hassan Safadi, returning today to his family in Nablus. Like their freedom, the HLF prisoners' may boil down to a question not of laws, but of solidarity, mobilization, and power.

And if the court breaks with precedent and acts, for the moment, like the highest judicial body of a nation governed by laws, rather than imperial consideration and the shameful pandering of politicians, the Holy Land Five will still need all our support. A Supreme Court appeal requires significant legal resources; the prisoners, I can attest, are always happy to hear from supporters; and their incarceration, which George Galloway rightly called "one of the most monstrous injustices in modern times in America," cannot be forgotten, by activists or the public, even in the midst of ongoing litigation.

A week ago, one Gaza Strip recipient of an HLF scholarship told me, "We feel sorry for their imprisonment, and we hope the HLF resumes its work very soon." I am confident that it will, one way or another, whatever it takes. Yalla.
?

Joe Catron is a U.S. activist in Gaza, Palestine, where he works with Palestinian groups and international solidarity networks, particularly in support of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) and prisoners? movements. He blogs at joecatron.wordpress.com and tweets at @jncatron .

Source: http://mondoweiss.net/2012/10/whether-legal-or-political-the-holy-land-five-struggle-will-continue.html

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Monday, October 29, 2012

New Obama TV Ad: Collapse - "Wrong Then, Dishonest Now" (Little green footballs)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/259166710?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Pokki Is a Start Menu Replacement for Windows 8 That Does So Much More

Pokki Is a Start Menu Replacement for Windows 8 That Does So Much More Windows: We've discussed some great ways to bring the Start Menu back in Windows 8, but Pokki doesn't just offer a good-looking, feature-packed start menu replacement, it also offers its own app store, packed with mini-apps you can install with a single click and use right from the taskbar, no additional windows or fancy tiles required.

The last time we discussed Pokki, it only had a few apps to its catalog, and while it offered great one-click taskbar apps like Gmail, Facebook, and Twitter, it still had some growing to do. With Windows 8, Pokki has come into its own. There are hundreds of Pokki apps to choose from, from games to webapps to productivity tools. The Gmail Pokki app, for example, gives you real-time notifications and the option to check your inbox without opening a browser. The Instagrille app lets you keep up with your Instagram friends right from the taskbar, and the Tweeki app alerts you to DMs and lets you read your stream without opening a new app at all.

In addition to its app catalog, Pokki brings back the start menu, and also offers quick access to your Pokki apps, your favorite desktop apps, system-wide search, your commonly-used folders, and system settings?everything you would expect from a Start Menu replacement. Pokki is completely free and available now. If you're looking for a start menu replacement that adds some useful features and apps of its own to your Windows 8 install, give it a try.

Pokki

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/cAPx-FICgY0/pokki-is-a-start-menu-replacement-for-windows-8-that-does-so-much-more

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Creating a Health-Promoting Work Environment | Timi Gustafson RD ...

More and more companies are enrolling their workforce in health and wellness programs to cut staggering health care costs, reduce absenteeism and foster productivity as well as morale and loyalty, according to several studies on recent changes in employer-based health care policies. There is a fast growing interest in taking preventive measures such as promoting weight control, physical activity and cessation of tobacco use, not only among big corporations but also small and mid-size businesses.

Lifestyle-related (and therefore preventable) illnesses make up approximately 80 percent of the burden of health care costs for companies and 90 percent of all health care costs, according to one?study.

Health and wellness incentives have long been considered a luxury only large corporations can afford, not a strategic imperative for all businesses to keep ever-increasing health care costs at bay, say the authors of a?study published in the?Harvard Business Review. That view is rapidly changing.

There is no shortage of examples where investments in employees? social, mental and physical health has paid off. For instance, Johnson & Johnson has estimated that their wellness program, which started out in 1995, saved the company about $250 million in health care costs over a decade, according to the report.

Despite of these encouraging case studies, many wellness programs continue to evolve and companies are still trying to figure out exactly how or if their initiatives affect their bottom line, according to?analyses by business insurance companies.

To be sure, not all employees welcome these programs in their place of work. Sometimes additional incentives such as reductions in premiums and co-payments and other cash bonuses are needed to get them to join.

A few employers have begun requiring health risk assessments and biometric screening for their workers to qualify for health care coverage, a step some may consider an undue intrusion in their private affairs.

Experts warn against an antagonistic climate around the issue of health in the workplace. Employers should design their policies and programs around the needs of their employees, advises?Judith A. Monroe, MD, State Health Commissioner of Indiana. If there are a number of smokers in a company, offering cessation counseling may be important. If weight problems are of concern, access to exercise and nutrition programs could be provided.

?One of the components that is key to the overall success of wellness programs is the development of a culture of health within the organization,? says?Dr. Steven Noelder, a consultant with?Total Health Management in Newport Beach, California. ?Not only do you need top-down support, you also need support at the grassroots level.? In other words, only when everyone feels that the measures taken are in his or her own best interest can health and wellness programs produce the desired outcome and make a difference for the better.

Timi Gustafson R.D. is a registered dietitian, newspaper columnist, blogger and author of the book ?The Healthy Diner ? How to Eat Right and Still Have Fun??, which is available on her blog, ?Food and Health with Timi Gustafson R.D.?, and at?amazon.com. You can follow Timi on Twitter and on Facebook.

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com/timigustafsonrd/2012/10/28/creating-a-health-promoting-work-environment/

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

O'Brien Heating and Air Conditioning, Neheb map

O'Brien Heating and Air Conditioning serving greater Orlando provides excellent air conditioning & AC Repair in and around Central Florida. Whether your home or office is too cold or too hot, O'Brien Heating and Air Conditioning offers the heating, cooling and HVAC services to get you back in your comfort zone quickly and affordably. O'Brien serves commercial and residential customers in Orlando and Surrounding Counties with superior products and professional, ethical service. Over the years heating and cooling manufacturers have continued to improve their products and O'Brien Mechanical has kept pace by continually working to offer our customers the most effective, energy efficient HVAC products available.

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Native Heat and Air

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Health Hope Institute is an alternative medicine practice that provides: acupuncture, aesthetic medicine,manual therapy, injection therapy, evox, & weight management to clients in Oviedo, which is near Orlando, Florida.

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Toys are Tools -Thoughtful Toy Reviews: Saturday MindFeed: A ...

Today is October 27, 2012. ?Where was this website one year ago? ?Basically, it had not been "born" yet. ?But in a few days, Toys are Tools will celebrate its one-year birthday! ? I have a big story planned for that day. ?It's something you'll want to have in your family for generations!

First, please let me thank you from the bottom of my heart. ?The fact that anyone is interested in what I have to say still amazes me. ? (You should see how ignored I am in my own home!) ?But seriously, with the one year anniversary of Toys are Tools coming, I thought it might be nice to share with you what I've learned.

  1. The toy world is full of companies run by people who are passionate about toys and learning through play. ? This corner of the world has the lion's share of very creative inventors, designers, & small business owners.???Some of the toys you've seen on this site are actually the result of someone's second job!. ?I am so privileged to know them.
    ?
  2. I still won't write negative reviews. ?You can call me a chicken, that's okay. ?I've been chicken my whole life and it is true that?once in a while my testers and I have encountered a toy that made us say as Tom Hanks said in Big, "I don't get it." ? Why don't I tell you about those? ?I believe that your time is limited and that you are here to find out what to buy. ?Finding out what NOT to buy doesn't expand your choices. ?I would only write a negative review of something if I thought everyone in the world would be standing on line at 2 AM to buy it but I don't believe that the readers here shop that way.


    We Made All Kinds of Things?from?david wells?on?Vimeo. ?(Thank you to David Wells and all the experts who have NEVER BEEN PAID by anyone but have talked to me so that Toys are Tools readers make the most of out of their toy purchases - and most importantly.... have fun!)

  3. Toys are Tools Readers are VERY VERY SPECIAL.??Some of you are moms of toddlers and you're still here even though I don't write about toddler toys! ?Some of you are therapists and teachers who love the toys like the way a sushi chef loves his thousand-dollar knife. ? Some of you are seriously?really savvy parents. ?Your tips and ideas?blow me away.
  4. Blog Reviews: Things that Make You Go HMMMM??? I love writing reviews but I don't think I quite get this blogging business. ?I have encountered blogs "whose opinions are their own" but then they also say "Even though the owner(s) of this blog receives compensation for our posts.." ?Uh, okay.... well maybe that could be true but...?What I've even found is that some "reviewers" may even charge companies by the number of hyperlinks and even photos that they publish in their "review" and yet still that apparently qualifies as "words are my own."? ? hmmmmm.....
      1. But Being Impartial is NOT Easy.??While I feel lucky that most of the stuff we've seen has been fantastic, I am fairly certain that at least some companies, will not send me another product submission if I don't write a favorable review. And believe me I need their cooperation. ?For example, the numbers tell me a review with a giveaway gets read SO MUCH MORE than a review without one at least within the first month of posting. ?So I readily admit to you that I have made more editorial space for toy reviews whose companies have a history of giving away items to my readers.??I?should also tell you that irregardless of giveaway promotion offer, there have been a few occasions that I've decided not to publish a review. ?It's always really cool when the company is grown-up about it and believe me, I've met some. ?Additionally, I still do review products from toy companies who do not offer a product to giveaway to readers and those reviews get my full effort just the same.
      2. Shopping Is Weird Now.? ?Shopping used to be really fun- just a little hard on the feet. ?But now for so many of us, a shopping list becomes a list of research projects. ? Even reading my review is more work for you! ? Whatever happened to the salesperson who knew about everything in the store and gave you the best advice? ?I found that kind of person at the Children's General Store in Manhattan where the manager, Michael, was so incredibly knowledgeable, I told him that I was just looking and yet he and I talked forever about toys. ?Of course, I did end up buying something after all, and it was from a company that I had never heard of but Michael said it was good and if you met Michael, you'd he knows everything.
      3. We are Not Always "Showrooming."? Many?stores don't have someone like Michael and we need him because we have less money to waste and less patience with ourselves. ?Now when I walk into a brick-and-mortar store, I will feel badly about going online to read about something that has caught my interest, because they think I am automatically doing price comparison. ? But honestly, sometimes I go online because?the box looks interesting but I CAN'T OPEN IT and I want to know more before buying it.??Like wine shoppes, I think brick and mortar stores, online retailers, and a toy company's e-commerce section can start displaying links to professionally written reviews right at the add-to-cart/product description page or on a little card hanging off the shelf to demonstrate how and why it is so great. ?Retailers, if you have blogger programs, this will make better use of your investment in them. ?The "In the News" page is not interesting for parents deciding whether to buy or not to buy.
      4. Skip Reading Reviews Once in a While.?? ?Yes, I did just say that. ?Well, as you can imagine, my shopping time and research time and cross-referencing of info and coupon search time has diminished somewhat and you know what I've managed to do with all the extra time? ?Play!!!! ? Besides, making a mistake or being successful based on your own observations and conclusions will always make a better consumer out of you. ?One of the reasons why I am able to write these reviews is because I have made a million mistakes (and counting...)
      5. Thank Goodness That Only Two of the Testers are My Own Children.?? This was one of the best decisions I've ever made. ?Believe me, I am such a hog. ?I want to see and touch and keep everything but that would really hurt my kids. ?What kid gets 2-3 new toys every week? ?That would dampen their creativity and slow their drive for inquiry and experimentation. ?Not to mention they would become... dare I say it.... spoiled brats! ?So I am so grateful to the testers and their parents who take awesome pictures, give me incredible feedback, and work hard to figure out how to best use a toy. ? ?For one $12 toy, I may get 15 emails full of pictures and keen observations and that is likely on top of a phone call and more requests from me to get a shot of this or try playing with something this way..... ?

      Will Toys Are Tools Still Be Here in 2014? ? 'Tis Your Call

      I am going to need your help to make this website see the holiday season of 2013. ?I do not know how to make money with this site other than doing all the wretched things that I described above and still refuse to do. ?I thought there'd be dozens of toy companies wanting to advertise here but no one has been knocking on that door. And don't be mad, ok?...... At least at the companies that I've featured here. ?Like I said, there are so many awesome companies out there and the fact that these companies
      1. NOT only send?product submissions?to unknown-with-emerging-readership-Toys are Tools?
      2. BUT many of them also send review units to an expert of my choice too???????
      3. AND then give me one toy or game to give away to readers?
      All that for a blog with just 600 Facebook Likes? ?If these companies are going to advertise, they are going to have to advertise at a blog with heavier traffic, right? ?The readership here is a small community and yet these companies have made a huge effort in trying to get your attention. ??
      Conclusion: You Are the Boss You might be asking me how I could keep this going if it is as unprofitable as it has been. ?In truth, it has been high octane fun that has been fueling this engine. ?Personally, I really needed that. ?In the past two weeks I have written about toys originating from the UK, Japan, Taiwan, and the U.S. ?Next week I'll be talking to you about toys from Sweden and the Netherlands! ?But all this takes a lot of work and luckily I have begun freelance writing at a magazine but to maintain this site as my primary occupation, it has to make more cents because this kind of reviewing and all these photos and interviews with experts and testers takes a lot of time.

      Here is how you can fuel this engine:

      1. If you shop at Amazon, step in through my door first. ?Here it is below- just click the square and then you can bookmark it and use that bookmark everytime you want to go to Amazon. ? Amazon doesn't give tons of money and there are a few purchases that don't apply for "commission" but for ones that do, Toys are Tools would get a small percentage. It may not sound like much but if everyone does their shopping through this door or any of my other Amazon links- almost all of their purchases will qualify- toy or not- even a pair of snow boots that someone bought this month after coming through one of my "doors" counts! ?The catch is that you have to put it in your shopping cart before you log out of Amazon if you did indeed go through my link.? If you go through my link today and you put it in your cart right then and there but buy it next month, I will still receive the commission.
      ??

      2. ?Believe me, I didn't even want to do this link thing myself - what if you think I'm hyping up the review just so you'll buy it through my Amazon link? ?I think long time readers will know from my writing that I wouldn't do that. Also, most of you come to read toy news and you are not coming because you are in the mood to shop but the next two months may be different, right? ?Basically, I want to keep these reviews going for anyone?who wants to see them and I need your help. ?I understand if you do the Amazon thing for church or school already but if you don't, then please consider bookmarking my Amazon link and using it forever and ever and ever, okay?

      3. In case you're wondering...., I CAN NOT SEE who made the purchases but I can see what was purchased?and that means so much to me. Of course it's okay if you don't buy anything but if you did, I get to know that I might have helped someone make a decision. ?That's also another form of payment.


      4. ?Finally, my last request is that you share this site with as many people as possible.? ?I think rather than buying random ads everywhere, it is better to attract your circle of friends because Toys are Tools readers are a different breed of people and most likely your friends have similar goals and interests. ? Print out a current review/giveaway and give it to your teacher, OT, SLP, psychologist, friends, grandparents.... ? ? That will help this teeny tiny infant revenue possibly grow up to early toddler stages. ? Or just write on Facebook or whatever is your social media of choice... "Hey guys, I found a really great place that tells you about the best toys for our kids. ?Really fun and educational! Stuff you've never seen before..."

      So that is it. ? You are all part of this experiment. ?Collectively, we control the future of this site because despite my passion for Toys are Tools, soon I will have to start talking to the husband about boring stuff like saving money, college fund, retirement... ugh.... ? If you want to keep this site going a little longer, these are the ways you can help for now. ?Happy shopping everyone! ?May only reputable vendors appear in your path and may you get the best deals ever!!!!

      Yours truly,

      Jenn Choi
      Editor, Toysaretools.com

      Disclosure statement: Toys are Tools has not been compensated in any fashion?by the manufacturer of any of the mentioned products?for the publication of this post.? The product was given to Toys are Tools' testers and expert to facilitate a review.? Reviews are never promised.?






      Source: http://www.toysaretools.com/2012/10/HappyBirthdayToysareTools.html

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South Africa's Zuma drops suit over rape cartoon

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African President Jacob Zuma intends to drop a four-year-old lawsuit claiming nearly $600,000 in damages from a cartoonist who depicted him poised to rape "Lady Justice", his office said on Sunday.

The Sunday Times, named as a defendant in the case, also said it had reached agreement with Zuma's lawyers for the suit and all claims to be ended.

"The president ... would like to avoid setting a legal precedent that may have the effect of limiting the public exercise of free speech, with the unforeseen consequences this may have on our media, public commentators and citizens," his office said in a statement.

It added that it still saw the cartoon as an affront to the dignity of the president.

The civil case had been due to start on Monday. Under the settlement, Zuma will pay part of the legal costs of the defendants, his office said.

Zuma, facing re-election for leader of the ruling African National Congress (ANC) at the end of the year, has been criticised for pushing laws seen as trying to muzzle the media.

If the case went forward, it could have provided ammunition for foes in the party who say he wants to silence his critics through bullying.

Zuma had been seeking 4 million rand for defamation from Avusa media and an additional 1 million rand from a former Sunday Times editor for publishing the 2008 cartoon.

Ray Hartley, the current editor, said in the paper: "A lot of time and taxpayer money has been wasted on an ill-considered effort to curtail free expression."

The cartoon from award-winning Jonathan Shapiro, better known by his pen name "Zapiro", shows Zuma's supporters holding down Lady Justice while Zuma stands over the woman with his trousers unzipped.

It was published when Zuma was facing corruption charges that could have blocked his path to the presidency.

A court in 2006 acquitted Zuma of raping an HIV-positive family friend in a case that garnered widespread public interest in a country with one of the world's highest recorded rates of sexual violence.

Zuma's ANC took a Johannesburg gallery to court and led massive street rallies earlier this year to protest a painting called "The Spear" that portrayed Zuma with his penis exposed.

The ANC, which has ruled since apartheid ended in 1994, called the image racist and intended to tarnish Zuma's dignity.

Zuma's critics say the image was reflective of his colourful personal life. A Zulu polygamist with four wives and more than 20 children, he has also been caught having extra-marital affairs.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/africas-zuma-drops-suit-over-rape-cartoon-paper-095658064.html

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Benefits of Joining myDealCompass | MyDealCompass Blog ...

myDealCompass combines an innovative platform, amazing local deals and easy navigation, which has made saving money on the purchases you make simple. All this state-of-the-art technology is brought to you at absolutely no cost. You can use the DealMap to find local savings and redeem them all for free. This makes the savings you receive even bigger than what you find at those other well-known couponing sites.

Businesses can also reap huge benefits by using myDealCompass. Some of the features that you have as a business owner is the ability to offer local deals, hot deals and featured deals. Each of these savings features offers you the opportunity to reach your customers in a unique way. Location-specific savings means you are targeting a customer base who is actually interested in what you have to offer. Hot deals are those savings that demand attention and draw customers to your store. Featured deals are ones that are on the home page of the site when potential customers access the site. This means your deals, savings and coupons get added visibility with the potential to attract even more customers.

The benefits of myDealCompass are far reaching and changing the way customers shop and businesses advertise savings. It is free for consumers and only a small monthly charge for businesses to advertise on the site. Additionally, myDealCompass offers unique features that cannot be found at other couponing sites and makes saving simple, quick and efficient. Customers do not even have to keep up with endless paper coupons; they can access the savings on their phone and redeem at the time of purchase. It will not be long until myDealCompass is a household name and helping thousands of people save big each and every day.

Source: http://mydealcompass.com/blog/index.php/benefits-joining-mydealcompass/

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

Baby boomer model Dorothy Brooks, looking better the second time ...

?
Wow. We?ve run lots of stories on BoomerCaf? about people reinventing themselves. But this one takes the cake: Dorothy Brooks, now 60, has become a model. For the second time. And she?s loving it.

I call myself an Ex-Flowerchild, which I am proud to be! And now I?m equally proud ? at the age of 60 ? to be a model!!

Model Dorothy Brooks

It?s all possible because our generation has been fighting aging, tooth and nail. The picture years ago of a 60-year-old woman with grey hair, her figure gone, with very little exercise and turned to seed, is outdated. At least in my life; I always said I would fight that.

And my mother, who died ten years ago, was my role model. She was a model in the Fifties for the classic New York department store Bergdorf Goodman. She is the one who took me to a model agency when I was 17.

Then 27 years ago, when I moved to Washington D.C., I signed with an agency in upscale Georgetown, and did print, runway, and commercials.

Several years later I started my own casting agency and eventually it went from just 40 models to a data base of 2,000. I spun off into photography shooting actors, models, CD covers, executives, whatever I could do that clients needed.

Many people along the way had asked me to model again. But I was running the agency and didn?t think much about it until it hit me this year: looking at ads and commercials targeted at baby boomers, I put the rebirth of my modeling career on the Bucket List.

And now I?m doing it. Why? Maybe because I had so much fun as a model in my 20s that I want to recapture some of my youth, make more money, meet people, and show women that you can be sexy and fun at any age. I have not had facial cosmetic surgery but I am not opposed to it; most likely one day I will do it, just to weed out the garden. Ha!!

I have had a lot of fun putting together a portfolio at the age of 60. Being on the front side of the camera again, I am reminded that it is a lot of work to get that perfect expression that will sell the product.

But I am excited to see where it takes me. Our road is different at 60 than it was at 20. I can?t afford to miss a second. I have sent pictures to the prominent agency Ford Models. Their ?classic? division is terrific and of course they have top clients. If things work out, I?ll work for some of them. The need for actors and models for print ads is huge these days. And baby boomers are the audience.

My makeup is on ? and my fingers are crossed.

Dorothy Brooks is online ? click here.
?

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Tags: Featured

Category: Baby Boomer Culture, Baby Boomers, Dorothy Brooks

Source: http://www.boomercafe.com/2012/10/26/baby-boomer-model-looking-better-the-second-time-around/

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Vogelsong took long journey to World Series start

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong (32) during Game 6 of the National League championship baseball series against the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/The Sacramento Bee, Jose Luis Villegas) MAGS OUT; LOCAL TV OUT (KCRA3, KXTV10, KOVR13, KUVS19, KMAZ31, KTXL40); MANDATORY CREDIt

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong (32) during Game 6 of the National League championship baseball series against the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/The Sacramento Bee, Jose Luis Villegas) MAGS OUT; LOCAL TV OUT (KCRA3, KXTV10, KOVR13, KUVS19, KMAZ31, KTXL40); MANDATORY CREDIt

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong throws during the first inning of Game 6 of baseball's National League championship series against the St. Louis Cardinals Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong throws during the first inning of Game 6 of baseball's National League championship series against the St. Louis Cardinals Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong throws during the first inning of Game 6 of baseball's National League championship series against the St. Louis Cardinals Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

San Francisco Giants starting pitcher Ryan Vogelsong throws during the third inning of Game 6 of baseball's National League championship series against the St. Louis Cardinals Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

(AP) ? Ryan Vogelsong stood on the cut grass at AT&T Park in his crisp San Francisco Giants uniform, giving an interview for Japanese broadcaster NHK in English. No need for an interpreter.

The backdrop on the scoreboard said it all: World Series.

Halfway around the world and back, Vogelsong's journey is ready to go global. The resilient right-hander will start Game 3 in Detroit opposite Anibal Sanchez on Saturday night looking to pitch the Giants one win away from another championship and cap a comeback that has become more improbable each time out.

"A lot of faith. A lot of hard work," said Vogelsong, who will take the mound with San Francisco ahead 2-0 in the best-of-seven series. "You also have to have some things go your way to get opportunities."

For so many years, they so often didn't.

Vogelsong was drafted in the fifth round by the Giants in 1998 and became the primary piece of a trade to get future ace Jason Schmidt from the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2001. The promising prospect later underwent elbow ligament replacement surgery, failed in the big leagues, bounced out of the minors, had mixed results in Japan, then struggled with the Phillies' and Angels' minor-league affiliates and at age 33 figured his career might be over.

One last chance came a year ago from the most unlikely team: the defending World Series champion Giants.

Vogelsong, now 35, didn't make the club out of spring training. He went back to riding buses and staying in motels for Triple-A Fresno, not an easy decision with his wife, Nicole, and son, Ryder, then 20 months old, left to share the burden.

While Vogelsong was sitting in the stands at a game in Las Vegas charting pitches between starts, his manager asked for his cell phone number. Barry Zito had been placed on the disabled list with a sprained right foot and the Giants were looking for a replacement.

Sure enough, just before Vogelsong boarded the bus, his phone rang. Giants Vice President Bobby Evans was on the other end with news that set Vogelsong on a path to this World Series: he was heading back to the big leagues to make a fill-in start for San Francisco against ? who else? ? the Pirates.

He held the Pirates to four hits and two runs in 5 2-3 innings for his first major league victory in almost five years.

"I just believe that God had a plan for me this whole time," Vogelsong said. "I feel like all the stuff that I went through ? going to Japan and going to winter ball at 33 years old, and getting back here last year, is stuff that He was doing for me to get me prepared for this moment."

Now Vogelsong is living in one of America's most scenic cities amid a reshaped reality.

No more eating fish guts as he did to bond with Japanese teammates. Instead, he's spraying sparkling wine from Napa Valley with the rest of his Giants teammates after every series victory.

The minors are long behind him, and so is the silence at the end of some starts in Japan. The San Francisco sunsets have held some of his most shining moments, with fans chanting "Vogey! Vogey!" louder than they ever had in his Game 6 victory in the NL championship series against St. Louis starting in the California twilight.

"He pitches with conviction," reliever Jeremy Affeldt said.

Vogelsong earned All-Star honors last season and was the NL ERA leader as late as Aug. 12 at 2.27 this year. His last 10 regular-season starts lifted that figure to 3.37, but just like Vogelsong had so many times before, he rallied.

Vogelsong became the first Giants starter to complete at least six innings this postseason when he allowed four hits over seven innings in a 7-1 victory in Game 2 of the NL championship series against St. Louis. Then he struck out a career-best nine on his biggest stage yet, allowing only four hits and one run in San Francisco's 6-1 win in Game 6.

"He's throwing the ball as well as anybody on the staff," said Giants manager Bruce Bochy, who had no problem putting Vogelsong in line for a Game 7 start.

With San Francisco winning 8-3 and 2-0 in the first two games, Vogelsong has a chance to help end the series far sooner.

He earned himself a shot to be the latest Giants pitcher to shut down Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera, slugger Prince Fielder and the hard-hitting Tigers.

"It's great to be here with everything I've been through, but I've got to pitch my next game," Vogelsong said. "The two starts before really mean nothing right now. It's about pitching the game on Saturday."

__

Antonio Gonzalez can be reached at: www.twitter.com/agonzalezAP

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-26-BBO-World-Series-Vogelsong/id-e2a668c68728422da3af245687c92e1a

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