You May Not Know About the Great Television on PBS

I used to joke with my mom that she would watch anything that moved on TV unless it was on PBS. But that's my favorite network. My first real addiction came during "Upstairs, Downstairs." The five-season series was the most popular Masterpiece Theater program ever, and it had lots of competition. The host at that time was Alistair Cooke. Sesame Street (one of the educational children's shows, if there's anyone left who doesn't know that) had a segment in which Cookie Monster played "Alistair Cookie," hosting a show called "Upstairs, Downstairs." The show consisted of Grover going up the stairs, then down the stairs.

There were many more to follow that brought quality programming each Sunday night. "Jeeves and Wooster" (a very young and different Hugh Laurie), "Last of the Mohegan's," "Anna Karenina," so many Shakespearian dramas and comedies, many stories from Dickens, historic dramas, and my absolute favorite, "Prime Suspects."

Helen Mirren is always superb in the other Masterpieces like "Painted Lady" and "Elizabeth I," but her portrayal of Jane Tennison amazed me. Now the complete Jane Austin is keeping me tuned.

Then there are the wonderful science and nature programs. Nature, Nova, Scientific American Frontiers, Wired Science, plus many special programs about health entertain as well as educate. Alan Alda adds humor and a willingness to participate on Scientific American Frontiers. Nature is so full of beauty and information that I learn something new every episode.

Not only is there Sesame Street for the young and young at heart, but my favorite, Reading Rainbow. It introduces a book, and then takes the viewer on a sometimes worldwide exploration of topics related to the book. I used this in my classroom from fifth grade to kindergarten when I taught. That's only a few of the exceptional children's shows.

Ken Burns presented many in-depth histories of wars, baseball, jazz, the West, biographies, and more. The American Experience, History Detectives, and other specials offer unique views of history.

Britcoms on PBS have been some of my favorite shows to watch. The Vicar of Dibley with Dawn French was hilarious as well as touching. It was comedy with a cause. Judi Dench as Jean and Geoffrey Palmer as Lionel in As Time Goes By were a perfect match. This fall they are returning with the rest of the cast for two more specials. It's really something I will look forward to viewing. Among the popular shows are Waiting for God, Keeping Up Appearances, Chef, and Faulty Towers.

Another wonderful show from the BBC is All Creatures Great and Small. After reading all the stories by James Herriot, I was doubtful this series could live up to the books. It was so well done that it did, and I'm enjoying the reruns now. It's a delight to animal lovers, but captivating stories for anyone.

There are how-to programs for just about anything you want to know how to do. The French Chef with Julia Child started it all with me. She continued with master chefs to present many different cuisines. Now there are various shows that inspire cooking many new dishes. And This Old House inspires us to remodel and tell us how.

News is reported in many different ways. The Jim Lehrer New Hour usually presents a balanced reporting on major issues. I just wish it weren't on at the same time as the local and national new on my cable network. Bill Moyers, Charlie Rose, and others look closely at important issues.

Music, from opera to rock, is a part of PBS. Great Performances continually lets us see musical programs that are superb. Boston Pops has a summer program that includes backstage interviews as well as the weekly concerts. Andre Reiu and his Johann Straus Orchestra have put on some spectacular events. There is a changing and exciting parade of performers.

I'm grateful to PBS for introducing me to so many experiences that would have passed me by. It's hard to pick one, but if I had to, it would be Koko the gorilla who speaks with sign language. If you don't know about Koko, you should watch PBS.

Movie Comedy

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The Whole Marvelous Super Ultra Cosmic Magical Comic Book Universe

The forge of creativity & business that was Marvel Comics was a synchronic chord sounded by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko and all the authors and artists and inkers and colorists who worked there. It all started during the early 1960's when the Fantastic Four and Spider-man and the X-men (The Uncanny X-Men) were formed from the imagination of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby.

X-men was a box office smash last summer. I'm sure you also remember the highly successful Hulk TV show.

The earliest X-men consisted of Jean (Marvel Girl) Grey (who later became the extremely popular Phoenix), Professor X (Xavier), Cyclops (Scott Summers), the intelligent Beast (Hank McCoy), and Iceman (Bobbie). Mutants born with special "super-mutant" abilities.

Later came the New Mutants with younger characters possessing mutant powers that sometimes seemed to possess them (the only type of comic book story I don't like).

These characters from X-men including (Nightcrawler, Wolverine, Storm, Banshee, Kitty) evolved with the advent of the creativity of John Byrne (starting in issue #108 of X-men) and Chris Claremont (Giant Sized X-men #1 and Uncanny X-men #94 now valued at $500. up in "mint" condition. The most popular character was the main star in the X-men film--Wolverine. There is sure to be a sequel for this box office smash.

X-men Comics taught kids that prejudice is evil. People who live in fear and thus greed try to destroy that which they don't understand.

Interesting that both the most recent Star Wars film and X-men film took a hard look at politicians (Congress). If power corrupts absolutely is it possible our system is absolutely corrupt? The Senator in the X-men film learned his lesson a little late.

Spider-man--the new Marvel film in the works--is about a kid who with usual teenage angst (bullies beating him up, not getting any babes, acne and so forth is mild stuff compared to today's school experiences--such as not getting shot & killed while going to or attending school or being seduced by a deadly drug or infected by a killer disease) is merely bitten by a radioactive spider (radical stuff for the early 1960's).

This gives Peter Parker super powers--insect powers--if amplified a man could lift a truck and carry it 20 miles as ants do. (Don't get me started talking about Henry Pym the Antman who became Giant Man in the Marvel's Avengers ((Capt. America, Thor the Thunder God etc.))). Add to that Peter Parker was also a brilliant student who was able to invent a web shooter and other great inventions. And Spider-man was born as a bi-product of the bi-product known as radioactive material (which Science still doesn't know how to get rid of). (Try telling that to the Bush administration). Everything is energy! Remember Tesla coils.

But Marvel was not the only place parading superpowered characters.

D.C. Comics (Time Warner), too, utilized mythology and stories of Biblical proportions to entrain, energize and excite generations of teenagers, kids and adults from the 1940's to present.

Some characters such as Superman, Atom, Flash, Batman, Green Lantern, JLA and others & even D.C.'s version of Capt. Marvel may have been inspired by spiritual literature which told of Hindu Gods and Goddesses and even Biblical personages who could stand in fire etc.

Scripts & Wit

Super Heroes: originating through human imagination and from literature, mythology, religion.

Though probably comic creators just made up their wondrous stories.

Once when I interviewed Gerry Conway for the Comics Journal he admitted to me that he had researched some of the comics he wrote. Conway's friend partner Roy Thomas no doubt researched Conan and Thor and other material while writer & editor at Marvel. They worked together on the great animated Fire and Ice film. (Ralph Bakshi/Frank Frazetta).

And initially Thomas got the Conan property over to Marvel from Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzana, CA. (Tarzana--Tarzan...get it? Yep, it too is a comic.)

Older folk know and love the countless Films and TV shows and serials featuring these and other favorite colorful characters: Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon, Commander Cody (which may have inspired the Rocketeer comic and film).

COMIC BOOKS -- Born by the sheer exhurberance of the Universe itself through the vehicle of the Human Being!

The Comic Industry is a metaphor for life. A cosmic drama unfolding. But not to put old wine into new bottles: Many times in the past Marvel and D.C. have teamed to do specials that benefits the play of creativity. I first met Stan Lee while I was the manager of a Comic Book Store in Studio City, California in the 1970's.

Or, more accurately, I met him through his works at Marvel Comics -- his extraordinary scripts & wit in 1961.

Very clever interaction with the fans through clubs and letter columns in the good old days made one feel as though one was a part of something. With Merry Marvel "we belonged."

Stan Lee's stories contained real life character's, complete with dilemmas and the germ of great new ideas and principles for living a good life.

As when Spider-man didn't stop a Burglar -- the same Burglar who later killed his kind Uncle--Peter Parker (Spider-man) got the message -- serve mankind. With great power comes responsibility.

And responsibility is the ability to respond.

Exciting fictional stories full of adventure and excitement with morals. Illustrated profusely.

Marvel Super characters were at first looked on by society as bad guys. Even after saving human butt thousands of times.

J. Jonah Jameson (cheap Editor of the Daily Bugle newspaper) has hated Spider-man for over 30 years. Jameson actually tried to destroy Spider-man by becoming a super villain.

Daredevil (blind Attorney yet Batman-esque in abilities & physical strength and agility--but with heightened senses) the Man without fear was often branded a villain too at first.

As was the ever popular Incredible Hulk -- first immortalized as a comic book during the 1960's. Who ranged from dull and stupid to near genius depending on the decade in which this enduring character is read.

What we fear we often regard as evil.

Comics have tried to teach us that the means are as important as the ends they produce.

What we do along the way determines the end result we will get. Comics are published because a word sounds good to the publisher. But some of these new young independent publishers need to know more about the meaning within these words (and so do their customers). But more power to these enterprising youngsters.

What is Yoga, Meditation, Tai Chi, Mantra? What is Zen? (One young upstart publisher of "Zen -- intergalactic Ninja" had never heard of Alan Watts -- great promoter of Zen until I told him Alan Watts was a famous and popular theologian turned beatnik Philosopher & Author (one of many) responsible for introducing Eastern Religions to the spiritually starved West--often heard on KPFK radio. Alan Watts is possibly the foremost promoter of Zen. Watts' book " The Wisdom of Insecurity," mentions, of all things, Comic Books. What are Chakras? The Tao means what? When kids grow up and learn about Meditation will they be tainted by our stupidity and greed?

Buzz words usually lower consciousness and cause confusion. Of course when I use to publish stuff as a youngster I made up names that sounded good but had little or no meaning such as: Beyond Infinity, Eon the Magazine of Graphic Illusions. I know less now than I did then. What is craft, art, Love, Truth?

I held several autograph parties with Stan Lee and Jack Kirby in the 1970's and 1980's. I threw over 50 successful autograph parties with many wonderful comic book artists and writers. I'd host the event, provide refreshments, do all the advertising, graphic art, press releases, etc. It was an exhilarating experience. It was fun to interact with pros and fans. I gave away a lot of free promo stuff.

Ninth Nebula's first autograph party was held with Stan Lee, publisher of Marvel Comics. For ten years my shop endured in North Hollywood, CA next door to the world's oldest Science Fiction Club (a built in audience of friends and fans and computer fiends).

The Stan Lee event evoked long lines of Comic Book fans of all ages drooling for Stan's signature on the splash page of their old and new comics. Nowadays professionals sign comics on the cover of their title en mass which I don't approve of. (But who listens to me).

Comics forms are often abused by aspiring young publishers who use several unnecessary full page splashes when the effect could be achieved in a tiny panel -- waste of money, ink and paper if you ask me. Unlike the good old days when Steve Ditko gave us our money's worth in the form of about 6 panels per page -- he in his way was like a Zen Master -- the precision of his work rivaled the art of Chinese Calligraphy (see his unique style in old Atlas Comics from the 1950's). Some of the recent experimentation's by Frank Miller & other talents have all done exceptionally creative work too.

Stan Lee's arrival in a Limosine exemplified the style and pizzazz in which he lived his life. He was the spokesperson, promoter and Publisher of Marvel Comics at the time.

Stan has more energy than many men half his age. Did you catch the Hitchcock-like cameo in the awesome recent excellent X-men film where he was a Hot Dog vendor (on the beach).

Ninth Nebula was a context for many things but few know it was my 2nd book shop. My first store was opened in 1978 in the Santa Monica area and was called Beyond Illusion: New Age Book and Comic Shop. But comic books paid the rent even back then.

From 1985 through most of 1986 I threw over 19 successful mini Comic book Conventions (the San Fernando Valley Comic Book Convention). This show allowed me to open Ninth Nebula--the Complete Comic Book Store. Small in size, yet packed with all the best stuff.

Jack Kirby appeared at one of my autograph events too. Kirby was Lee's partner on all the important Marvel titles in the early 1960's when they were formed such as Fantastic Four, (Strange Tales) Nick Fury Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D., Hulk, X-men, Daredevil, Avengers, Journey Into Mystery) Thor, (Tales to Astonish) Ant-Man, (Tales of Suspense) Iron-man, Capt. America, etc.

Around 1961 Amazing Fantasy #15 was issued which is the first appearance of Amazing Spider-man and if in perfect shape could fetch $20,000 or more. Check your price guides.

Comics were serious business until the Death of Superman (and then it exploded further) which created new problems and opportunities as the comic industry began new birth pangs in 1993.

I gave 100% service & attention to all my customers at all times. I had to become innovative since often the store became overflowing and I could not mention all the new titles. I'd push a button on my tape recorder when people said "what is new." Then the many fans and readers would get an audible list of every last detail of the new comics that had just come in. I was busy ringing sales with other customers so this made it possible for me to sell more comics. When shipments were bumped due to mail I'd say put my comics in some coffins -- I need 'em now (Capital City never did). When I lived on the premises I had a buzzer so I was the first 24 hour comic store that I know of.

As a kid I'm proud to have collected and owned several complete mint sets of every Marvel Comic Book (1961 to present).

In fact I feel the Lee, the Ditko and the Kirby are three awards the Comic Industry should create (I said this loudly prior to 1984). Though as often as I try to turn him into one of his characters (such as Doctor Strange the occult master of mystic arts) Stan remains a human being -- a man, down to Earth -- courageous and kind. But I'm sure it was Stan's business savvy that made and kept Marvel such a colossal success for many years.

Long may Vishnu (Hindu God of preservation) bless the best that the "Comics Industry" has brought forth in creative inspiration down through the decades.

With comics you get to read and enjoy them over and over again and someday they will be worth something. Sure the overproduced over hyped stuff may be valueless, but if you buy what you enjoy you can't lose.

Comics have proven themselves over the last 60 years as a legitimate American art form. Comic Book audiences are growing faster than in any other hobby form including electronic games & virtual reality. It isn't over yet. In fact, one could say we are at the beginning.

("He who knows, knows, they who say they know, don't." --Lao Tsu). Like Meditation, you won't know what it is unless you try it.

There are many Star Trek and Star Wars Comics from Marvel and D.C. that have been issued and I collected in the past all of which are very popular. These use to be issued by Gold Key in the 1960's. Shatner co-created TEK comics. Spielberg and Lucas were influenced by the Comic Book genre. Roger Corman is cashing in with his Cosmic Comics. Even Leonard Nimoy has a successful Comic out. Other comics sport logos from deceased Isaac Asimov & Gene Roddenberry.

In the 1960's, Underground Comix & Fanzines made the scene. One could say this was the beginning of the Independent line of comics. Vaughn Bode' (Cheech Wizard) kids have emulated this sadistic character through their Graphitti on the walls of washes in the past for years) Rick Griffin, George Metzger are but a few of dozens of innovative Philosopher/Artists whose work not only represents the 1960's but whose originality rivals the Will Eisner's (The Spirit), Harvey Kurtzman's (MAD ), Milton Canniff (Steve Canyon), AL Capp (Lil Abner) of their day. Though sex and drugs were the order of the day, during the 1960's, Underground's did not and do not represent mainstream comics--which are clean and not usually politically or spiritually sophisticated. Though political cartoonist Ron Cobb punched the unrightous right wing in their gut when necessary during the 1960's.

If you know where to look one can find incredible literary treasures in this unique American art form--The Comic Book, now worldwide in acceptance, popular in every country (indeed, as a teaching tool one could learn other languages).

Fanzines and Underground's contain some of the earliest and most bizarre art by today's seriously great Comic Creators.

A successful new film has been released a few years ago about the life of Robert Crumb creator of Fritz the Cat. Robert Crumb also created Zap and Mr. Natural (I've seen original Mr. Natural artwork prominently displayed framed on my best friend's Fathers' wall. (A Psychiatrist by profession in the early 1970's).

Gerber's four volume Photo Journal Guide To Comics is a masterpiece chronicling comics history with full color photos of the covers of old back issue comics from the 1940's--1970's loved by many generations of people who wished their mother hadn't thrown them away so they could retire in style today. I explain it is never too late to begin again as gems are published weekly and the selection is enormous.

Many Doctors, Lawyers, Film People, Teachers, Musicians, Computer Experts, Politicians, Artists & Authors people from all walks of life still all read comics & or collect them. I've sold comics to Clint Eastwood and his son. Robin Williams once roller skated into my first Comic Store in 1978 and bought Art Books & material related to the Comic Book genre. My friend reminds me that when I threw a mini comic con Leo DiCapprio worked for me briefly (I bought Underground comics from his Dad George).

Social Relevance

Comics indeed, teach art and story writing skills by their very nature. And are used by storyboard artists in making films, doing animation and more.

At my suggestion Marvel and D.C. issued Hunger Awareness comics in the late 1970's with proceeds going to charity. Various talents offered their artistic skills as a donation. Marvel and D.C. have done other promotional activities for charities protecting wildlife, anti-drug campaigns etc.

Other social issues Marvel has utilized in their Comics: Scientist/Inventor Tony Stark wrestled with his own inner demons as an alcoholic with heart problems who is kept alive by his suit as Iron Man (see the new film coming up).

The blind Daredevil fought the (Kingpin) Mafia & Crime with his supersenses. Radioactivity and a spider created Spider-man.

A nuclear test created the Hulk.

As I read Dr. Strange (one witnesses a 30 year battle with Dr. Strange that sadly and finally ends as the villain Baron Mordo dies of Cancer--fully forgiven by Dr. Strange all the evil rendered unto him.

World War two vet Nick Fury (Secret Agent) dies just after his creator Jack Kirby passes away.

I discovered new worlds in micro dimensions and negative zones in the Fantastic Four (Human Torch lives) back in the early 1960's.

Marvel Lee/Kirby even created the Black Panther at the same time as Black Panther's were active in America--and this tie in with history and comics is not an unusual thing. This version of the Black Panther was a Chief from Africa with super powers of a sort.

In the 1980's Aids Awareness comics were issued (Ninja high School). And a major character also died from Aids in Marvel's (Canadian Mutants) Alpha Flight.

Some Comic Books teach Science or even other languages. Ms. Mystic by Neal Adams and Green Arrow by Mike Grell and Hawkmistress by yours truly (ask to see the script) often tackled environmental issues. Am I preaching to the converted.

Kids like to read & try their hand at creating comics. Classes (including Distance Learning internet classes on comics and other themes are available around the nation. In other words people can get credit and training without leaving their homes.

Comics are a safe addiction for the whole family.

Big Little Books (short thick early one page comics, every other page just text--hardbound, from the beginning of this century) are a form of early comic books.

Violence in any form is wrong (physical, emotional etc. or against Nature). Scape-goat-ism / facism of an economic, political, militaristic, religious, talk show, judicial, prison or from any source is wrong.

Other comics explored the murders of JFK, Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King. Most comics are not humorous. And History can effortlessly be learned, through the enjoyment of comics.

Capt. America and the Human Torch fought Hitler & fascism in Captain America comics during the 1940's, for example.

Comics can be better than film or TV when done right. Though few have translated to the screen all that well so far except for X-men and a sleeper called Unbreakable (as of June/July 2001 it's extremely hot at the video stores). (A great film! But it seems the comic industry is attacking itself? with this sort of material.)

There are comic books as high in vibrational quality as classical music. E.C. comics Weird Fantasy, Incredible Science Fiction, Weird Science & Weird Science Fantasy & others from the 1950's (regarding art and story) & certain comics from Marvel & D.C. and other companies may sometimes be likened unto the much higher vibration of John Lennon or Vivaldi (quality wise). (See Dreyfus in Mr. Holland's Opus to understand what I am saying or even Finding Forester with Sean Connery). Because of the level of story and rendering of art back in the 1950's when issued. These were projects of love and survival.

The new way to sell comics is Ebay, Amazon.Com and Yahoo auctions. Among others. Ebay is the most successful so far.

Keeping track of your collection is a full time job. There is now inventory software for organizing Comic Collections.

I've enjoyed watching a few good "Electronic" or internet Comics at DC, stanlee.net and elsewhere. But animation is still better (as far as I am concerned). Beast Wars is a really well done 3-D cartoon originating from talents in Canada. Beast Wars is probably the best animation being produced these days.

Store owners didn't mind the plethora of first issues until around 1996 when new people took over at Marvel and elsewhere. Comics are a viable art form no one should take advantage of. But retailers and fans feel they have been used. And we resent it.

One funny footnote, Frederick Wertham, the much hated Psychiatrist blamed for the demise of E.C. Comics and other companies during the 1950's paranoid Senate subcommittee hearings where he testified against the "violence in Horror & Crime" Comics actually found something in Comics of value a little later in his life and began publishing Comic Book Fanzines. Yes Wertham got into Comics Fanzines and self publishing!: Wertham complemented Fanzines as a good that came out of Comics.

Fanzines are of many types from Science Fiction to Comic Book from art-zines to zines that specialize exclusively in one genre: Dr. Who, Star Trek, mainstream Science Fiction books etc. There are pro-zines (published by professionals in the comic industry) and zines that are "self published" by fans.

Censorship is wrong unless it is self imposed.

D.C.'s Elseworld's stories are extremely creative and good and take comics to the next level. Putting Superman or Batman in a unique setting in time and space isn't a new idea but the way DC executes these tales with details is usually innovative and exciting.

Where does one classify the classic Cerebus the Aardvark by Dave Sim, Reed Fleming Milkman, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles or Hate Comics?

Classics Illustrated (classic literature illustrated) helped many people with time constraints pass a book report.

Black & white Warren Magazines (Vampirella, Creepy, Eerie) from the 1960's often contained some of the best art & story for any time. Some fans are reeling still from the talent of Richard Corben (Den, Nevermore), Mike Ploog (Frankenstein), Jim Starlin (Warlock, Dreadstar), P. Craig Russell (Night Music, Elric.) Great work hidden in Tower Comics (Wally Wood) and Charleton Comics (Ditko) too.

The unacknowledged older audience pray that Marvel and D.C. maintain as high a standard of quality as possible.

New talent should not copy from other people's work. Draw from life and photos. Regardless of what misinformation you may get.

Stan and Marvel literally saved the Comic Industry from extinction during the last 35 years I feel.

Eventually fans may focus on Silver Age and Golden Age comics from the 1940's--1960's. Or the E.C.'s from the 1950's as I did at age 15 after acquiring every Marvel and D.C. issued during the 1960's. But one really can't outgrow comics. Once it is in your blood it will always be in your blood. New or now-agers would say I'm "too attached" to my possessions (comics). Possibly so. But a really well written nicely illustrated comic is better than watching Disney's Fantasia/Fantasia 2000 in an Isolation float tank isn't it.

Remember when I said one felt part of something with Marvel in the early days -- "The Merry Marvel marching Society" etc. This is very true. People want to participate in an active way in their lives. This is one reason costuming is so successful at Comic and Science Fiction conventions. And one reason why Toys and Magic the Gathering and the internet comics, where you get to direct the outcome of the adventure, are so viable as hobbies. Because instead of watching TV one gets to enter in and play to be active and to participate.

Good art and stories are essential. Stan use to say "put it out there and see if someone salutes."

When we were kids, of course, comics cost just.10 cents to.12 cents each. The first.02 cent raise meant we had to cut back a certain number of comics. Today Action Comics #1 (where Superman first appeared in 1938) goes for $175,000 in near mint in auctions but was onJy $400.00 when I was a 15 years old kid.

I was selling Joe Kubert original Hawkman art to people on Military bases back then and then buying more comics with the profits. (See how Comics taught business, indirectly).

When comics were released I was the kid waiting to cut the plastic strip off the piles of new D.C. and Marvel comics before the manager got around to it back in 1961 at Thrifties so I could get the newest releases before anyone & pull out the most pristine "mint" issue each and every Tues. and Thurs. year after year.

Actually I was just trying to get the next issue to read and collect as soon as it was issued. Then in 1986 when I started Ninth Nebula I started air freighting the new comics to my shop and had 500 regular weekly customers. I also gave generous discounts.

We grew up, married, had kids, started our own comic stores.

More & more "readers and collectors" abhor this wanton greed and unfairness in the comic book marketplace to their pocketbooks and sense of right. They want quality not just quantity.

In a way this is where OLD Marvel really succeeded. Marvel taught its readers to think for themselves.

Most real long term retailers find nothing wrong with investors investing in Comics or Marvel Stock, and everyone made short term money with D.C.'s two first editions of the Death of Superman. Retailers made out quite well on Superman's Death--especially the Black Bagged version. As did Newsstands who bought them from retailers and resold them at higher amounts. Copies sell at around $25.00 now for the "black bagged edition." The day this issue was released copies sold from $5.00-- $50.00 each. Reports went as high as $250.00 for a single issue. But there are so many titles produced that since comics are not returnable to the distributor the amount of left over inventory with any "real store" will be immense and costly. Profits for shops are not as high as you may think.

Another super successful comic, Astro City by the author of Death of Superman and the Painted Marvel's, Kurt Busiek, was published by Image Comics. Demand rivals that of the D.C.'s acclaimed winner The Watchmen (a story of some out of shape Super Heroes who try to prevent New York and the world from getting blown up, written by English Author Alan Moore). My favorite comic lately is the Spectre which began in the 1940's. I also love various issues of Hellblazer and Swamp Thing. Tastes vary and so do types of comics. When one says Archie or Casper or Disney or Richie Rich that might be the only frame of reference a novice has about what is available. Great or unique art draws me into reading the comic. Quality matters.

At Ninth Nebula our customers were 30-50 years old and spent $30.00 or more each week all year long. They'd get 30 comics all totally different from all publishers. Most customers still focus on Marvel and D.C. but Independent publishers are here to stay.

Mad Magazine was originally a smaller size E.C. Comic. At issue #24 Mad became an entirely black and white magazine in a larger format. The ever popular talented humorous generous Sergio Aragones has been on TV's Bloopers and Practical Jokes and other shows and is co-creator of Groo the Wanderer (with writer Mark Evanier) started with Mad many years ago. Their Groo the Wanderer at Marvel literally had me laughing hysterically on the floor after I fell off my chair.

If you are just exploring comics for the first time be sure to check out stores that carry old and new issues.

Direct Market is strange now because there is only one real main stream distributor of comics today. Diamond. If you want to start a shop don't order randomly--find out what your customers will buy. Use their order form. There are small publishers too from whom you might be able to order directly and internet subscription services.

Other material to check out when you get into Comics reading and collecting: Comics Values Monthly (think it still exists in some form), Wizard, The Comics Buyer's Guide and The Comics Journal (Published by Fantagraphics. Opinionated Gary Groth is the editor). And of course the price guide Overstreet. Which should be used as a guide but not as the bible. My famous saying remains: "Buy what you enjoy--if it goes up that is an added bonus."

This "industry" will endure for all those with faith who work hard and make wise choices in ordering: Marvels, D.C.'s and Independents.

New is no longer so sacred a word. But together we can make it so when it again deserves it. We are moving in the correct direction. Thanks Stan, you helped give the "Comic Book Generation" the ability to think, better than schools ever could. And the desire to keep on learning.

Remember we've moved from a you or me world to a you and me world. These aren't just words but lifestyles millions of people adhere to now. And we are not the "fringe."

I share this Truth as a service to the Comics Industry: "Wider is not better." (Except for the car & luxury industry). Give us quality and we will give you our money, time and attention.

As King Arthur and Stan Lee might say: "Excelsior! " Or as I might say: "Where's my Digel."

DVD Movie Action

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Tintin Trailer II 2011 HD

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Shopping in Malaga

The Costa del Sol not only offers beautiful beaches and a wide range of leisure options. It also offers an interesting range of shopping centres to suit all tastes. For those who enjoy shopping under a bright blue sky, we propose a ride along the coast of Malaga with its best malls.

In Malaga city we find several shopping centers. Very near the train station is located in the Larios Shopping Centre. This mall is located in one of the best areas of Malaga, next to Avenida de Andalucia, in heart of the city, which facilitates access to it from the nearby towns.

Two kilometers from Malaga airport lies the Plaza Mayor Leisure Park, with very good access from the motorway and the local train Malaga-Fuengirola.

The Plaza Mayor has a large number of restaurants, family entertainment, live animations and shops with the typical Spanish Plaza as a basis. A day in Plaza Mayor is a unique experience. Visitors to Plaza Mayor can enjoy special evenings under the open sky and a unique opportunity to enjoy the exciting Spanish night, enjoying the extended opening of bowling, cinemas, bars and outdoor terraces and shows and animations held throughout the year.

This mall is perfect for both shopping and to go for a drink and then go to the movies. It has a Plaza where they usually put great attractions for young children. When there are important football games, there is put up a giant screen for people to go there to see it. You can spend a whole day with your family there and not get bored.

Torremolinos Shopping Centre has two pedestrian entrances, one from the Avenida Palma de Mallorca - the main artery road of Torremolinos - and another from the pedestrian Plaza de la Independencia. A third entrance is in the parking of Isabel Manoja Street, which opens 24 hours. To ensure that customers can shop in comfort, within the grounds are enabled a children's play area and restaurants where you can take a break and a snack.

The Puerto Marina Shopping Mall in Benalmadena has a privileged situation, as part of the Puerto Deportivo de Benalmadena, one of the busiest marinas on the Costa del Sol.

Puerto Marina in Benalmadena is a different place, with thousands of details from different cultures, which invites for a troll among good taste and a unique architecture, with a balanced mix of shopping and family entertainment next to the sea. Puerto Marina Shopping has been specially designed to provide the widest variety of restaurants, services, family entertainment, fashion and accessories.

The Mall and Entertainment Park Miramar in Fuengirola offers an area of 119,000 m2 and thus is one of the major commercial areas of the Costa del Sol. With a privileged location, very close to centre of Fuengirola and the beach area and direct access to the motorway A-7, Miramar Shopping Centre has a wide range of shops and entertainment, offering the most prestigious national and international fashion, accessories, furnishings and services. A modern and spacious free parking for customers makes visiting the centre even more convenient. Miramar Park also has a 12-screen movie theater with movie in Original Version and a large children´s playground.

One of the major malls in Marbella and the Eastern Costa del Sol is the commercial centre of La Canada. You can spend an entire day at this mall on the Costa del Sol which is very similar to the U.S. The dining area has approximately 10 restaurants. The stores include what exactly might be interesting for Marbella residents and visitors: the most famous clothing brands or exclusive shops for interior design. A multiplex cinema with the current blockbusters is also a good option to end the day. A particularly important advantage is that La Canada has one of the few stores FNAC in Spain. The store itself offers weekly events in its exhibition space and has therefore been added to the list of main galleries and concert venues in Marbella.

Costa Marbella Shopping Centre in Puerto Banus is a shopping paradise for drugstore, perfumery, household, leisure clothing, to give some examples. Designer furniture blends perfectly with colorful towels, curtains, tablecloths, the latest for home, with modern appliances and a wide range of products related to sound, image and information technology.

Also fashion claims its space in Costa Marbella, where you can find trends for all tastes and ages and the best shoes and accessories, perfumery and furthermore a large leisure offer.

In general, all shopping centres are open Monday to Saturday from 10:00 am to 10 pm. So there is more than enough time to enjoy shopping.

Last not least we want to highlight three markets.

The market in Fuengirola is one of the most famous in the area and one of the largest and located on the fairgrounds. You can visit it on Tuesday or Saturday and you can see or buy any type of clothing, also second-hand, crafts, music and more.

The market in Estepona is also located in the fairgrounds and takes place every Wednesday. Here you can find fruits and fresh seasonal vegetables, clothing, footwear, typical products, etc.

The largest flea market in along the whole Costa del Sol takes places every Sunday in Torremolinos on the fairgrounds next to the bullfighting ring.

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Tattoo Drawings of Crosses - Discover Blockbuster Designs in the Next 5 Minutes!

I finally realized that it's no longer easy to look for tattoo drawings of crosses online. I remember back in the early 2000's - those days, it was so easy to find top-quality art. All I had to do was type in the search engine and I was quickly furnished with hundreds of amazing tattoo drawings of crosses. These days, all you get at the top listing of the search engine are a bunch of crappy same old, same old designs. This is a serious issue for many tattoo enthusiasts simply because they do not wish to have their skin inked with lame designs that have been printed out and used by tons of people all over the globe.

Do you experience similar concern? Have you been sitting in front of the computer for hours on end searching for those perfect tattoo drawings of crosses? Well, like I said, finding outstanding artworks by merely typing your query in the search engine is not as effective as it once was due to the high number of generic junk websites polluting the top 10 listings of some of the popular search engines like Yahoo and Google. Therefore, in order to locate websites that are packed with beautiful, custom designs, you must go through other online channels that are seldom utilized by the vast majority of internet users.

Now, what are the "online channels" that I'm referring to? Okay here's a great way to help you get a hold of tons of blockbuster tattoos drawings of crosses ready for print out in the next 5 minutes. My method is to search via web directories. Human edited web directories often compile links to numerous tattoo websites that are very difficult to come across just by using those regular search engines. These websites often get buried deep in the search engine results. Only those who are willing to wade through dozens of search engine listings will be able to locate them. However, by leveraging the power of human edited web directories, you will be able to find websites with unique quality designs including tattoos drawings of crosses, a lot faster!

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Reality TV With a Positive Theme - Hometown Heroes

The 101 will feature exclusive programming including comedies, daytime drama and other shows that won't be available elsewhere. One of the most exciting shows to be featured on The 101 is a brand new, original television series called DIRECTV Hometown Heroes. Hometown Heroes celebrates the people who matter most - their customers. The show will air on The 101 on April 6, 2008 at 9:00 pm.

This new series is dedicated to customers who are inspirational in the positive impact they have on others in their communities. Each 30-minute program will focus on people who make a difference to others in their lives through acts of courage, generosity and kindness. The weekly show will document the lives of these individuals and explore their motivation as well as the impact they have on others. Hometown Heroes will be selected from around the country, and Joan Lunden will host the series.

Hometown Heroes is like reality TV gone good, and the ten episodes are bound to be a refreshing television viewing experience for millions. The show will be exclusive in that it will focus only on DIRECTV customers and air only on it's exclusive entertainment channel, but it will be even more unique because it highlights the positive side of humanity.

For families and individuals that are tired of viewing all that's gone wrong with humanity, Hometown Heroes will be a significant and welcome alternative. If all goes well, it could even open up an entirely new genre of reality TV: ordinary people doing extraordinarily good things. Through Hometown Heroes, could nice guys and gals be popular TV heroes again? Not only will the show focus on the positive, it will focus on the positive in their own communities.

Who will be featured on Hometown Heroes? You'll meet a doctor who provides medical care free of charge to needy patients, one woman who facilitates schooling for homeless children in California, and a man who started a service that provides meals to relief workers and victims of Hurricane Katrina.

In addition to the incredibly talented and experienced host Joan Lunden, Hometown Heroes will feature special show correspondents Dr. Winnie King and Grant Goodeve. If DIRECTV Hometown Heroes sounds like something you'd like to see, tune into The 101 and get a glimpse of what positive reality TV is all about.

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Julia Roberts And Explosions! - "Expendables" Film Review

Tonight's Films: • The Expendables -- Stallone and explosions: always fun - 7/10. • Eat. Pray. Love. -- A boring mid-life crisis - 4/10. Rate Next Week's Films: • Tron: Legacy -- micropoll.com • Inception -- micropoll.com * Tweet a review with the #JPMN hashtag, and have it featured on the show! * ~~ Movie Night ~~ Incorporating your viewer comments, film critic Jonathan Paula reviews everything from opening day releases, recent DVDs, and classics from years past. Along with your votes, these films are scored on the "Rate-O-Matic" for a 1-10 ranking. New episodes published every Friday (Nov through May). Jonathan Paula is a 25-year-old professional YouTuber and creator of the hit web series, "Is It A Good Idea To Microwave This?". He graduated from Emerson College in 2008 with a degree in Television Production and Radio Broadcasting. He currently lives in Rockingham, NH with his fiancée. ~~ Links ~~ Facebook ---------------- bit.ly Twitter -------------------- bit.ly 2nd Channel ------------ bit.ly Movie Night Archive -- bit.ly Tweet Critiques -------- bit.ly Movies I've Rated ----- imdb.to My Best Videos ------- bit.ly FAQ Video -------------- bit.ly T-Shirts ------------------- bit.ly ~~ Technical ~~ Created by ------ Jonathan Paula Camera ---------- Panasonic HMC-150 Microphone ----- Sennheiser ME 66 Software --------- Adobe Premiere Pro CS5 Computer ------- bit.ly • Jogwheel Productions © 2010 • ~

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Fashion History - How Historical Events Influenced Fashion in the 1930's and 1940's

History and world events often create fashion trends. We can not always see it in the lives that we are leading now, in the present; but it is sometimes easier when we look into the past.

The 1930's was a time of frugality known as the Great Depression, a world wide economic downturn that put people out of work and effected every part of their lives. In the United States, nearly one quarter of the population was unemployed. Bank failures caused people to lose their life savings.The new austerity must have been a heavy blow for the people who had just lived through the Roaring Twenties, a time of heady spending and extravagance.

Women's fashions made a big change when the economy went south. The exotic frippery of the Jazz Age soon disappeared to be replaced by more simple styles of dress. Waistlines rose and hems fell, as they often do in bad economic times. While a sleek elegance gained popularity, it was a much more subdued look, classic and understated after the exaggerated styles of the 1920's.

Hollywood offered women a glimpse of glamor, but even the luxurious Hollywood styles had a quieter tone. Gone were the short skirts, long necklaces, and feathers of the 20's. Evening gowns of the Great Depression hugged the hips and widened at the hem, creating an elegant and graceful silhouette.

By the end of the 1930's, Adolph Hitler had risen to power in Germany. This worldwide threat, along with the ensuing war had an effect on fashion trends of the 1940's. As nations were invaded, or went off to war, supplies and materials that went into the creation of clothing fell short. When Germany invaded France, Paris lost its influence over the world of fashion. People in the Allied countries saw the fashion designers of Paris as working in cooperation with the Nazis.

The governments of both Britain and the United States placed restrictions on the production of clothing as cloth and other items needed for garment manufacture were needed by the military. Due to fabric rationing, dress and skirt hemlines rose. Buttons were used for functional purposes only, and lapels narrowed. Women who had lived through the austerity of the Great Depression made jackets and coats out of old blankets, remade dresses, and generally 'made do' with 'war wise' clothing styles.

It was not until after World War II ended that clothing styles became more extravagant. When Christian Dior unveiled his 'New Look' in 1947, people were shocked at the amount of fabric used to create the long, antebellum style skirts and wide brimmed hats.

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Star Wars 3D & New Nintendo 3DS Details - IGN Daily Fix, 9.29

Star Wars returns to theaters in 3D, Nintendo sets the 3DS price and release date, and a new Wii controller is confirmed, all on the Daily Fix.

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HD Nation - Low Budget Streaming HD Video Center, DIY Projector Re-Lamp? Silicon Image Explains Where PiP Went!

Full Episode: revision3.com Our friend Annie, Hulu+, Netflix, and her first HDTV... how cheap can we bring together a streaming HD video center? DIY re-lamp, or buy the expensive bulb: Robert explains why you might not want to go cheap on this one. PiP is missing? It's a hardware thing! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Watch the Full Episode here: revision3.com More on the full episode includes: *Goodbye, Steve. iPhone 4S, iOS5, Xbox 360 Will Crush Cable! *Can a Bad Power Supply Kill Your Hard Drive? *Low Budget Streaming Media Home Theater! *DIY Re-Lamp or Buy a New Projector Bulb? *More on the Missing Picture in Picture! *New Blu-ray Releases for October 4th, 2011 *Secure Your WiFi Router with WPA and AES! *DisplayPort Notebooks and HDMI Audio *The Real Reason to Turn Your Phone Off During Takeoff and Landing Like, Favorite, Comment, & Share Today's video!! www.youtube.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Subscribe for FREE! www.youtube.com Tekzilla Homepage revision3.com Twitter twitter.com Facebook www.facebook.com Patrick on Twitter twitter.com Robert on Twitter twitter.com ABOUT TEKZILLA Tekzilla feeds your tech hunger! Patrick Norton and Veronica Belmont bring you hands on reviews of the latest gear, tips and tricks that improve the tech you already own and conversations with the most informative experts around. Like, Comment, Share This Video!

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Poets of the Fall - Dreaming Wide Awake

Directed by Oskari Sipola. From the album Twilight Theater, out March 17.

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Saadat Hasan Manto: A Profile

Saadat Hasan Manto (1912-55) was a leading Urdu short-story writer of the twentieth century. He was a journalist, critic and film writer. He worked for All India Radio during World War II and was a successful screen-writer in Bombay before moving to Pakistan during Partition of India. During his controversial two-decade career, Manto published twenty-two collections of stories, seven collections of radio plays, three collections of essays, and a novel. He is best known for his short stories - over 250 in 2 decades, many of which have been enacted in plays and films.

He had once written about himself:

"Saadat Hasan will die one day,

But 'Manto' will never die".

Saadat was born in Ludhiana, Punjab on 11th May, 1912. His father, Ghulam Hasan Manto was a Sub-Judge. Saadat and his sister Nasira were the offsprings of their father's second wife, Sardar Begum, who was a widow but Hasan Manto had married her against his family's wishes. Saadat and his sister Nasira were always treated as "step-brother and step-sister" by the children of their father's first wife. Things got all the more difficult after Ghulam Hasan secured an early retirement in 1918. There was little motivation for Saadat to excel in studies so that the only books he ever touched were the ones categorically forbidden by his teachers.

After failing consecutively for 3 years, Saadat managed to pass his matriculation in his 4th attempt by securing a Third Division from Muslim High School, Amritsar. Though surprisingly, he always failed in his Urdu Papers. He was very good in English, loved reading English Novels, and was nick-named 'Tommy' by his school-mates because he loved speaking in English and narrating the novel-plots of English stories to his friends. He was so much of an English-Novel Addict that he used to steal money from home and borrow money from his acquaintances to buy his Novels. Once he was even caught red-handed by the Police, stealing a Novel from a Book-Stall in Amritsar Railway Station.

By the time, Saadat reached college, he had recognized himself as a drop-out. The status was officially confirmed after he failed twice in the Intermediate. The next few years were spent roaming around in the company of other delinquents who reveled in night cinema, alcohol, drugs, gambling and small-time swindling.

Saadat did try to improve himself after his father died in 1930, may be he realized the loneliness of his mother, whom he had never given a cause to hold her head high in the family. But his attempt to resume education in Aligarh Muslim University was stopped short due to his medical condition of Pleurisy.

The real turning point in his life came when at the age of 21 years, he met Eminent Urdu Writer, Progressive Activist and Journalist Abdul Bari Alig in Amritsar. He was able to change the young man's imaginary dabbling with revolution into genuine interest in politics. Under his tutelage, Saadat discovered the works of such leading writers as Victor Hugo, Lord Layton, Gorky, Chekhov, Pushkin, Oscar Wilde, Maupassant and others. Bari encouraged Saadat to attempt a translation of Victor Hugo's The Last Days of Condemned, into Urdu. Manto completed the translation in just two weeks and sold it to the Urdu Book Stall, Lahore, which published it under the title Sarguzasht-e-Aseer (A Prisoner's Story). Having now become a published author, Saadat attempted a translation of Oscar Wilde's Vera, which was published in 1934 and brought him due recognition.

Now, Saadat joined the editorial staff of the Masawat, a weekly film publication. Before he was 24, he had four complete publications to his credit, including an anthology of original short stories. All these works were wrought with explicit socialist messages, and his short stories were outrageously polemical. The subtitle described the whole book as a collection of "some thought-provoking short stories".

In 1937, Saadat moved to Bombay to edit Musawwir, a monthly film magazine. There, in the hedonistic film industry - the incomprehensible galaxy of artists, whores and con-men, was all he needed to complete his study of the human nature. There was also promise of good money, something he had never really known before. The stories he wrote from Bombay spread his name, as the most original writer, when they were published in literary magazines. It was like an overnight reversal of fortune: he was a major celebrity still being in his twenties.

However, because of his spendthrift ways and over-spending habits, when he got married to Safia on 26th April, 1939 he had to borrow money to get his hair-cut done by the barber. His mother died soon afterwards. His step-brothers now finally embraced him, recognizing and owning him as their dear own flesh and blood. He sadly noticed that the recognition from the family had come too late, just when he was no longer in need of it.

Meanwhile, a lifetime of rejection and want of love and belongingness had driven him alarmingly restless at heart. There was ample evidence of a chronic abnormal anxiety. "As a human, I have several shortcomings", he wrote to his friend, Ahmed Nadeem Qasmi. "And I am always scared lest these give birth to hatred for me in others' hearts". Then he explained that he didn't just mean gambling or drinking, which he belittled as "mere physical flaws...I have spiritual shortcomings and mental flaws, of which I don't find enough peace in my heart to give you details". He lived under a perpetual fear that all who were close to him either hated him already or would begin to do that soon when they get to know him better.

Obviously he was a difficult person, always giving and taking offence over the smallest imaginable issues, and within a few years he secured and lost several jobs with the film companies of Bombay. His brief but formative period at All India Radio, Delhi (1941-1942) also ended upon a quibble with the poet N. M. Rashid, the director at that time. Incidentally, that turned out to be a blessing in disguise as his return to Bombay in 1942 marked the beginning of the days of his glory.

The film studios at last recognized his gift for story writing and he worked on several film scripts of Keechad, Apni Nagariya, Begum, Naukar, Chal Chal Re Naujawaan, Kisaan Kanya, Ghamandi, Beli, Mujhe Paapi Kaho, Doosri Kothi, Shikaar, Aath Din, Aagosh, Mirza Ghalib, etc. Those were the days he later recounted nostalgically as he said, "In Bombay I earned and spent not just thousands but hundreds of thousands of rupees". These may be exaggerated figures (he remained an unscrupulous liar till the end), but his capacity for indiscrete spending could hardly be exaggerated. An enormous intake of alcohol wasn't the only factor. Again, it was a perpetual anxiety that compelled him to burn his money under different alibis and excuses.

Manto was a popular but very controversial writer of his times, who faced many prosecutions because of his so called 'sex oriented' expressions. Many of his stories were banned by the then Government of India and Pakistan on the plea that they were too sex oriented, and were not palatable to the conservative society of that time. He was prosecuted and convicted, yet he continued writing in his own style.

In many of his stories, Manto depicted woman as the main character. He brought to the reader how a woman is exploited and used by men for their individual satisfaction. In some of his stories, Manto referred to poor young girls who had horrifying experiences during partition of India in 1947, and as each one of such stories is a 'document' and not just fiction.

The trials of his stories that began from the early forties increased his anxiety. He had always been something of a split personality, and often saw a difference between Saadat Hasan, the hopeless drop-out, and Manto, the genius. Through this second personality he could experience everything he had missed in his earlier days: recognition, love and above all, respect.

His pride was seriously hurt when the very best samples of his craft, "Kali Shalwar," "Dhuan" (1941) and "Bu" (1945) were tried under Section 292 of the Indian Penal Court. Ironically, these stories were some of the best that Manto had written so far. Even though he was acquitted in the end in each of these cases, he could neither forgive nor forget the humiliation of being tried in the same category as exhibitionists who showed private parts to little girls on the street. His wit became shaded with an obvious cynicism as he became even more laid back in his personal life, endlessly eulogizing himself as the best fiction writer of India.

Manto would present his writings in literary meetings but would not tolerate any criticism. He had become extremely touchy and would shout back at his critics. There were days when he was welcome everywhere and literary organisations clamoured for his participation in their meetings. But then came the days when people started avoiding him because he would not hesitate in borrowing money from them.

In many respects, he identified himself with Ghalib, the subject of his greatest film. As the paperwork started sometime before the Partition, Manto became increasingly obsessed with the similarities between the great nineteenth century poet and himself. Like him, Ghalib too was a notorious alcoholic, gambler and spendthrift. And also, Ghalib was denied his well-deserved literary status for a long time, tried for petty crimes and sent to prison.

Manto could not see the completion of his film Mirza Ghalib, as he migrated to Lahore, Pakistan in early 1948. A producer from Lahore had already approached him with a generous offer. In Bombay, his friends had tried to stop him from migrating to Pakistan because he was quite popular as a film writer and was making reasonably good money. Among his friends there were top actors and directors, many of them Hindus, who were trying to prevail upon him to forget about migrating. They thought that he would be unhappy in Pakistan because the film industry of Lahore stood badly disrupted with the departure of Hindu film-makers and studio owners.

But the law and order situation in post-partition India was such that many Muslims felt insecure there. That was the reason that Manto had already sent his family to Lahore and was keen to join them. The same restlessness had made him walk out of opportunities all his life. But always he had found better ones waiting ahead. Not this time. Migrating to Pakistan was his last anxious mistake, and a fatal one.

Lahore, as he now discovered, was not the same city as he remembered from the pre-independence days. Incidentally his friends were right. Lahore turned out to be totally different from Bombay. Lahore was in a state of turmoil due to the influx of hundreds and thousands of refugees in a state of destitution. Those who had survived after wading through the rivers of fire and blood were clamouring for food and shelter.

The whole society was moving towards a hypocritical farce of religiosity, and some of the writings from his Pakistan period serve as the most lucid critique of that transition. What affected him most was the death of the Lahore film industry. The offer he had received earlier, turned out to be a hoax. Whereas, in India, his film Mirza Ghalib (1948) became a commercial blockbuster and even won the National Award. Independent India was opening up to vast opportunities in the film industry. Sadly, Manto had just left it at the wrong moment. Back there in Pakistan, the money he had brought from Bombay was all gone within a few months.

His problem now was how to cater for his family. Sadly for him, Lahore of that period did not have many job opportunities to offer. Manto now turned to fiction writing as the only means of livelihood. The Pakistan years of Manto were productive and creative in the sense that he wrote a lot of stories, including more masterpieces than before.

The only paper that published Manto's articles regularly for quite some time was "Daily Afaq", for which he wrote some of his well known sketches. These sketches were later collected in his book Ganjay Farishtay (Bald Angels). The sketches were of famous actors and actresses like Ashok Kumar, Shayam, Nargis, Noor Jehan and Naseem (mother of Saira Bano). He also wrote about some literary figures like Meera Ji, Hashar Kashmiri and Ismat Chughtai.

Manto created a new tell-all style of writing sketches. He would mince no words, writing whatever he saw. "I have no camera which could wash out the small pox marks from Hashar Kashmiri's face or change the obscene invectives uttered by him in his flowery style", he wrote.

Those days Manto was writing indiscriminately in order to provide for his family and be able to drink every evening. For everything he wrote, he would demand cash in advance. In later days, he started writing for magazines like Director. He would go to its office, ask for pen and paper, write his article, collect the remuneration and go away.

The first story he wrote after a long time was "Thanda Gosht" (1950), arguably the best piece of imaginative prose written about the communal violence of 1947. It is comparable only with Manto's own anthology Siyah Hashiyay, a light veined treatment of the psychology of communal violence through a series of small anecdotes. "Thanda Gosht" was published in a literary magazine in March 1950, and the magazine was immediately banned. This time the District Court sentenced Manto to three months of rigorous imprisonment and a penalty of Rs.300. The High Court revoked the sentence of imprisonment but retained the penalty.

Two other stories of Manto were also charged for obscenity by the federal government, namely "Khol Do", a masterpiece on violence against women, and "Oopar, Neechey Aur Darmiaan (1953)" a minor farcical essay about married couples' attitude towards sex. That brought the total of Manto's condemned stories to six, bringing him a name as a writer on sexuality. Thus, it hampered a comprehensive appreciation of his work both by his opponents and his supporters, as both sides kept their focus on proving or disproving the charges of obscenity.

The reality is that the collected works of Manto capture a far wider range of issues, and sexuality is just one of them. Manto focussed on the spark of life in the human being, the creative force of individuality that urges all kinds of people to break free of the exterior constraints at least once and respond to the unique inner voices of their souls.

"It doesn't touch my heart at all if a woman among my neighbors gets beaten by her husband everyday and still polishes his shoes", he once said. "But when a woman in the neighborhood quarrels with her husband, threatens him that she will commit suicide, and then goes out to watch a movie while I see her husband writhing in mental agony for two hours, then that is what makes me sympathetic to both of them".

But he was not sympathetic to himself. The twenty-five rupees he charged his publishers for each story was not a poor amount in those days, given the prolific talent of Manto (he could write a story almost every day). But his lifelong anxiety now flashed out to possess him completely until he began to find a masochistic pleasure in degrading himself. He would spend almost his entire daily income on alcohol and then borrow money from friends to buy more liquor. And such loans and borrowings kept piling up on him and were never returned. Safia, his wife, made a desperate attempt to get him off the intoxication.

Saadat was so addicted to Alcohol that though he used to give his day's hard-earned money to his wife for safe-keeping but he always observed where she kept the cash. And when she was not around, he used to steal part of the booty to buy his alcohol. His unsuspecting wife always kept scolding the servants for lost money. But the day she came to know the horrifying reality that it was Saadat who was always the actual thief, she lost all faith in him and branded him a perpetual liar.

She sent him to a mental hospital for treatment and Manto felt that it was the cruelest blow fate had ever dealt him. Though his mental asylum stay provided him material for the story that is now regarded by many as his magnum opus: "Toba Tek Singh." The story is set in a mental hospital where some patients believe themselves to be famous political leaders of the day. Some of the passages truly read like an early experiment in magical realism.

The mental hospital stay didn't help Manto in any way. All changes in his personal habits were towards the worse. He still had little to spare for his family of wife and three daughters and eventually he had to rely on the permanent support of his in-laws. By that time he had become a complete emotional wreck, whose standard autographs were his own obituaries, usually reading something like, "Here lies Saadat Hasan Manto, buried under tons of mud and still wondering whether he is a greater storywriter or God" ? Ghalib had also anticipated his own death by writing his own epitaphs, although that was in his old age. And just like Ghalib, Manto too remained a prophet of hope till the very end up till his death.

Manto lived in Lahore for seven years. For him those years were full of continuous struggle for his survival. In return, he gave some of his best writings to the literary world. It was in Lahore that he wrote his masterpieces like Thanda Gosht, Khol Do, Toba Tek Singh, Iss Manjdhar Mein, Mozalle, Babu Gopi Nath, etc. Some of his characters became legendary.

Simultaneously he had embarked on a journey of self-destruction. The sub-standard liquor that he consumed destroyed his liver and in the winter of 1955 he fell victim to the deadly disease of Liver Cirrhosis. During all these years in Lahore he waited for the good old days to return, never to find them again.

On a cold winter morning of 18 January 1955 in Lahore, Saadat Hasan Manto found himself bleeding through the nose. An ambulance was called to take him to the emergency. The onlookers later narrated that he asked for a drop of liquor just before his stretcher was loaded onto the van.

Maybe he didn't, but in any case it was difficult for others to believe that he could die without making that his last wish. The doctor who greeted him at the hospital turned to his companions and said, "You have brought him to the wrong place. You should have taken him to the graveyard". Establishing the cause of death wasn't a matter of medical expertise but simple common sense. Someone living on more than a full bottle of undiluted bootleg liquor and two slices of bread everyday for many years could hardly expire of anything but Liver Cirrhosis.

He was not even 43 when he died and yet by his own standard the moment had arrived rather too late. He had seen everything there was to be seen in the world and told others as well, in a manner that made him the greatest storyteller ever born in South Asia. Moreover, he had seen things he was hardly willing to share with anyone : unsurpassed popularity, unmatched hatred, undeserved humiliation, and a household lately turned into a living hell.

Saadat Hasan Manto was undoubtedly one of the best short story tellers of the 20th century, and one of the most controversial as well. He is often compared with D. H. Lawrence, and like Lawrence he also wrote about the topics considered social taboos in Indo-Pakistani Society. His topics range from the socio-economic injustice prevailing in pre- and post- colonial subcontinent, to the more controversial topics of love, sex, incest, prostitution and the typical hypocrisy of a traditional subcontinental male. In dealing with these topics, he doesn't take any pains to conceal the true state of the affair - although his short stories are often intricately structured, with vivid satire and a good sense of humour. In his own words, "If you find my stories dirty, the society you are living in is dirty. With my stories, I only expose the truth".

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Astrology - The Derivative House System - Another Layer of Reading

The field of astrology is huge with so many possibilities. In order to study it in a manageable proportion, we must look at it segment by segment. Once we have two astrological segments under reasonable control we can then merge them to develop a comprehensible narrative. Once we have studied an additional segment, we use the same merging process to enlarge our information while keeping it cohesive. We study segment by segment, adding to our previously storage until we have a whole, usable body of information from which we can draw at any time. This reminds me of the way we learn anything, step-by-step, adding as we go.

In order to individualize that body of astrological information we start with the natal wheel for any birth. We then draw from that information pool at will, weaving together the various segments that are appropriate to that wheel in order to read the life story of that person. In short, we learn the basics of astrology so we can tell the personal story for each individual sky map.

In other articles I have suggested that there are four cornerstones to astrology: planets, signs, houses and aspects. Further, it is my conclusion that the planets are the keystone of the four cornerstones. Each of these four segments should be studied in the early stages of astrology so they may be combined as described to begin the process of a reading. In this article we will look at two of the segments, planets and houses, in a particular combining technique called the derivative house system. This technique is usable for those students of astrology that have completed the beginner stage. In brief...


Houses are the division of the 360-degree wheel into 12 compartments. Each compartment contains approximately 1/12th of the life experience or issues for any person, so each compartment is chock full of issues. Since the entire house system is constructed with Earth in the center of each wheel, houses are the down-to-earth experience for that wheel and person.
Planets represent the various functions of the human, such as the ego and self identity urges, the nesting, family, and emotional urges, the function of communication and learning, the urge to relate, to name a few. Traditionally there are ten bodies: our star, our satellite the Moon, and our eight sibling planets.

Derivative House System To study a single planet deeply, we must go beyond the generic meaning of that planet to see it working in the sign in which it is positioned, the house it occupies, the house it rules, and the aspects in which it is involved. All of that is valuable and is usually as far as any reading goes. The derivative technique can give you another layer of house meaning simply by looking at the 12-fold process of any of the ten planets. How? You simply start with the position of a single planet in the house it occupies and mentally recognize it as that planet's first house expression. You then count consecutively counter-clockwise around the wheel from that first house. Each planet and what that planet represents in the individual will have contribution from all 12 houses and their issues. You do not lose the value of a regular reading of a wheel you are simply adding an additional layer of meaning. An example might make this explanation easier to understand.

Let us start with the Sun (ego urge) in Scorpio (sign) in the 5th house (occupation), ruling the 3rd (rulership), and then list the aspects and their meanings individually. That takes you through the usual method of reading the Sun. For another layer of meaning, put your finger on that Sun (ego and self identity) and recognize that its first house expression, regardless of which house the Sun occupies, is the way the world sees the Sun issues, how that Sun and its issues respond immediately to activations from your environment, personal self projection of that Sun, and the Sun's coping skills. Where does the Sun (ego, self-identity) begin? All that actually takes place in the 5th house of this example so you must also view this solar application as creativity, children of the mind and body, speculation, and family values (2nd of the natal 4th). The Sun has more than a self-identity, it also has a value system, communication, relating, and all the other usual traditional house meanings and that is determined by this method.


If the Sun is in the 5th and that is its point of personal projection (1st house for that person's Sun), the value systems for the Sun will be in the adjacent (next counter-clockwise) 6th house. The Sun's value system as the 6th house relates as work, service, and/or health issues.
Communication for the Sun issues (self-identity, ego, etc.) is the 3rd house from the Sun or the 7th house in this example. In this example the Sun's communication mechanism will operate through the partnership, networking function of the chart owner's partnership house.
One more... the home, hearth, roots (4th house issues) for the Sun actually occurs in the 8th (next house counter-clockwise) of joint values, joint finance, life and death issues, etc.

To make it easier for you to learn and to play with this technique, here are a few brief statements about basic planet and house meanings:

First planets...


The Sun represents self-identity, ego, basic character and general vitality.
The Moon represents the emotions, memory, maternal and instinctive urges.
Mercury represents communication, education and transportation issues.
Venus represents relationship skills and drives, social and financial value issues.
Mars represents our assertive, aggressive urges, courage or the lack of them.
Jupiter represents our expansive, philosophic, reaching for more of life urges.
Saturn represents structure, duty, responsibility, and organizational skills.
Uranus represents rebellion, futuristic, unique, individualization issues.
Neptune represents inspiration, aspiration, dreams, visions, delusional issues.
Pluto represents power, powerlessness, empowerment, and destiny at work.

Then houses...


The 1st house is self projection, coping skills, immediate response to the environment, the way the world sees you.
The 2nd house is social and financial values and resources, talents.
The 3rd house is communications, education, and transportation, siblings, cousins and neighbors.
The 4th house is home, hearth, family, roots, internal security parent, conclusions.
The 5th house is creations of the mind and body, love, speculation, values of the family.
The 6th house is your work-a-day issues, service to others and health.
The 7th house is all partnerships, business and personal, networking and alliances.
The 8th house is joint values and finance, insurance, taxes and death.
The 9th house is belief systems, higher education, legalities, multi-cultural activities.
The 10th house is goals, achievements, stature, reputation, career, success or lack of it
The 11th house is friends, groups, results of career, wishes, hopes and dreams.
The 12th house is hidden, recessive, and can be self-sabotaging, a blind spot,

Simply choose one planet and read it through the 12 houses starting with the house it occupies as number 1. You can do that for each of the 10 bodies. This is a study technique initially, but once you have the knack of it, you will find yourself including it in your readings quite easily.

Recommended reading:

Cornerstones of Astrology - Planets, Signs, Houses and Aspects

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[title of show] - A Way Back to Then

Heidi Blickenstaff singing "A Way Back to Then" on Broadway's [title of show] now playing in the Lyceum Theatre.

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Rachael Ray - Entrepreneur Extraordinaire in Chef Apparel

In her chef apron Food Network's mainstay Rachael Ray is not only a wildly popular television personality, but also is the author of bestselling cookbooks; and is editor in chief of her own magazine devoted to lifestyles. In 2007 she launched her immensely successful daytime syndicated TV program,Rachael Ray. A joint production of CBS Television and Harpo Productions (Oprah Winfrey's production company), Rachael Ray showcases Rachael's energy, warmth and enthusiasm for cooking and living the good life. Her simple and down-to-earth approach to cookery is credited with putting Americans back in the kitchen. But Rachael's philosophy of solving everyday problems in a simple, straightforward way goes beyond just cooking and inspires her viewers to enjoy their lives more fully.

Rachel grew up in a cooking family. Her maternal grandfather gardened and cooked in his black apron everything which his twelve-member family ate. Her father's family owned restaurants on Cape Cod before moving to upstate New York. There Rachael's mother worked for a restaurant chain as food supervisor. So from an early age Rachael was surrounded by many different culinary styles, and she worked in the restaurant industry in many different roles. She moved to New York city when she was in her early twenties and took a job at Macy's candy counter, and later in their Fresh Food Department. That is where she acquired her knowledge of gourmet food. She left Macy's to co-found and manage Agata & Valentina, New York's gourmet market. Returning to upstate New York after a few years, she managed restaurants and pubs at Lake George's Sagamore Resort; and then moved to Albany to work as food buyer and chef for Cowan & Lobel gourmet market. To stimulate grocery sales there, Rachael began a series of cooking lessons which included a course on "Thirty Minute Mediterranean Meals" which became hugely popular, and led to Albany's CBS affiliate signing her up for a weekly "Thirty Minute Meals" series on their evening news program. This program won her 2 Emmys its first year, and led her to write a cookbook which sold ten thousand copies in the Albany area.

Rachael began to include travel and lifestyle segments in her TV program work, and she also began to host shows on the Food Network including Thirty Minute Meals, Rachael's Vacation, Inside Dish, and Tasty Travels. She won an Emmy award in 2006 for Outstanding Service Show. Besides her television work, she has written a series of bestselling cookbooks based upon the Thirty Minute Meal idea; six of these books were New York Times bestsellers immediately upon publication.

Leaving her chef apparel aside, in 2005 Rachael started her full size, glossy lifestyle magazine Every Day with Rachael Ray. Although terrific food is its base, the magazine covers a great deal more than just food. It offers down-to-earth advice on entertaining and food destinations, and interviews with celebrity food-lovers and professional and topnotch amateur chefs. In 2007 editor-in-chief Rachael received the prestigious Launch of the Year award from Advertising Age. That same year she began her nationally syndicated daily talk show Rachael Ray, which immediately received the highest ratings of any talk show since Dr. Phil in 2002; and became the number one syndicated show launched that year. Time and Newsweek both heaped praise upon the show, and People magazine named it one of the ten top shows of the season.

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Merle Temple - Last of the Boy Scouts

Merle Temple...Last of the Boy Scouts, Part 1

"I never knew a man who had better motives for all the trouble he caused..." Graham Greene, The Quiet American

Merle Temple, quintessential choir boy, most courteous in high school, American Legion award winner, and boy scout, wandered in to the contentious political minefield of Atlanta in 2001 like some modern day Don Quixote looking for windmills to joust with to salve the ache of the missed adventure he passed up when President Ronald Reagan offered him a job in the White House all those years ago. But, it just didn't work out as he had planned--no, not at all.

Temple, the descendant of Puritans, was a pillar of the Augusta Georgia community and the leading fundraiser and chairman for non-profits in town. He also was an anti-establishment crusader and lone ranger always searching for new dragons to slay. He had grown tired of his cushy job as a successful BellSouth public relations director, where an executive said he lived "not on the cutting edge, but the bleeding edge." His search for the ultimate fight had already left him bleeding from managing what was called the "biggest upset in Georgia political history in fifty years."

State Rep. Robin Williams was a mover and shaker in Georgia politics. Despite threats from the local newspaper and incumbent politicians, Temple, with quiet help from Congressman Charlie Norwood, raised money and managed a newcomer's campaign against the heavily favored Williams who did not carry a single precinct when the dust settled. Temple earned some first class enemies including the Augusta Chronicle editorial staff, who supported Williams who brought home the bacon for their billionaire publisher, and Georgia Republican Congressmen, who hated to see any incumbent lose.

Temple's employer summoned him to Atlanta to tell him that he had angered powerful allies in the legislature, and local media pals of Williams--a local newspaper editor and radio talk show host. Temple, who had won every BellSouth award in his department, was told by Georgia President Phil Jacobs that he must surrender his first amendment rights. Rather than dare them to enforce that edict as he should have, he was disheartened, demanded a severance package, and retired.

Norwood came to his rescue and tried to secure the Southern District U.S. Marshall slot for him. Temple had a Masters in Criminal Justice from Ole Miss, had been a state police captain in his youth, and the State Criminal Justice Chairman for the Reagan campaign in Ms. His close friend, U.S. Senator Paul Coverdell would have made all the appointments for the new George W. Bush administration, but Coverdell died suddenly with an aneurism at 62. That left appointments and political spoils to the Georgia republican congressmen. Not good--not good at all. Meetings with federal judges ensued and trips to Washington, but the infighting proved more than Norwood could overcome, and Temple threw in the towel.

Out of the shadows of fate came Georgia State Superintendent of Schools, Linda Schrenko. Temple, a chamber of commerce education chairman and well known reform advocate, was her East Georgia Business Chairman. He had helped manage her reelection campaign in 1998 when she won in a three-way race with a democrat and libertarian. Schrenko said that Bush's loss was "her gain," and offered Temple an appointment as one of her four deputy superintendents of schools.

In a move that would change his whole life, destroy his public image, and land him in prison, Temple accepted her offer, and rode in to conquer Atlanta just as he had every other foe on the field of battle before...but this time, the dragons were bigger and nastier, and his worst enemy...turned out to be just down the hall from his new office.

Merle Temple...Last of the Boy Scouts, Part 2

"In the middle of life's journey, I found myself in a dark wood. I had wandered from the straight path...it was such a thick, wild, and rough forest that when I think of it my fear returns...I can't offer any good explanation of how I entered it..."--Dante's Inferno.

Linda Schrenko was Merle Temple's political hero when he entered the nest of vipers at the Georgia Department of Education in 2001. They were political associates, not personal friends, and he had no knowledge of the libertine past that haunted the highest elected republican woman in Georgia history, or the true depth of the animus toward her from the Atlanta establishment, both political parties, the Atlanta Journal Constitution, and the State Board of Education.

Schrenko had been named the top female republican in the country, but was under siege. Temple thought he could bring his business acumen, political skills, and his tireless perfectionism and idealism to the leviathan that awaited him, and it would only be a matter of time before all surrendered, and he could go back home to care for his ailing wife as he always had.

However, he was no General Sherman on a march through the old South. His Hollywood script did not play in Atlanta where the last bastion of the all democrat controlled state would be gone within two years, but was then in an angry and ruthless survival mode. Schrenko was thought to be running for governor, and the State Board of Education, appointed by her enemy, Governor Roy Barnes, was at her throat and those of her staff every day, holding monthly meetings that were partisan blood lettings and torture of education employees. Barnes, who became known as "King Roy," began to push his political appointees to secure federal education funds for the shadow government he was building.

The Assistant U.S. Secretary of Education told Temple to hold firm against any diversion and promised prosecution of misused funds. She repeated this to Temple and Schrenko in front of U.S. Secretary Rod Paige. A mole for Barnes in the Georgia Department was escorted from the building and promptly appointed as Barnes' education czar. Temple's phone rang off the hook almost daily with pleas for help from other agencies who said that Barnes was seizing control of everything in Georgia--appointing super directors to bypass agency heads, the legislature, and constitutionally elected officials. State police--roads and bridges--the port authority-- the department of transportation---it was empire building on a massive scale. State troopers warned Schrenko to be careful on the road lest she be jailed by troopers who were in the enemy camp.

Then, a dozen or so White House and U.S. Education officials told Temple on a conference call that they had "reconsidered." They would allow Barnes to divert all the funds he wanted. Absent were the administrators who told Temple to hold firm and enforce the law. These politicos said that to make it easier for the Barnes machine, they would send the money not to the Georgia Department of Education, but to the State Board of Education which was not an agency and had no lawful standing or structural apparatus to receive or disburse money. This was surreal to Temple and the moment he really knew how alone they were and that no help was coming from fellow republicans.

Temple was shaken and compared it to Wells Fargo calling the local bank to tell them that there were bank robbers in town, and to hold down trouble, their armored trucks would now just deliver the money directly to the bank robbers. Schrenko told Temple that a conservative in the White House said that she was being thrown under the bus by the Bush administration who wanted a Barnes endorsement of Bush's No Child Left Behind education bill...the only democratic governor to do so then.

Temple wondered what he had gotten into, but it was about to get worse...much worse.

Merle Temple...Last of the Boy Scouts, Part 3

"...She caused him to shave off the seven locks of his head and she began to afflict him, and his strength went from him. Samson, Samson, the Philistines be upon you...and the Philistines took him..." (Judges 16:19-21)

Merle Temple arrived in Atlanta in the spring of 2001 to save the day for the embattled Georgia Superintendent of Education. By the winter of despair in early 2002, abandoned by the press--shunned by U.S. Ed--rejected by the President of the United States and republicans--he should have gone home to Augusta. It was not to be.

In the wake of the Bush sellout, Superintendent Linda Schrenko began a strategy to spend as much as possible before the State Board of Education could divert it to Barnes. She claimed her legal 5% of federal funds for administrative costs, and awarded grants to local schools. A million dollars or so went to schools--not Roy Barnes. The Board was furious, and tensions grew even worse. Amidst threats and phone sweeps for bugs--leaks and paranoia grew by leaps and bounds.

The fight with Barnes and Washington only exacerbated an already fractured and dysfunctional organization rife with infighting and jockeying for power. Temple's Don Quixote idealism intensified to rescue the damsel in distress, and dispatch the villains violating the law. Amidst the carnage, Temple began to take increasing amounts of drugs prescribed to manage fibromyalgia pain, and panic attacks. His doctors gave him testosterone to boost his strength and injections for pain. His house was burning down, but he couldn't walk away from the woman who told him of abuse throughout her life, and had black eyes when he picked her up for trips--tugging at the heart of the Boy Scout. She increasingly came to visit him to tell of the loss of her soul to the devil in an ill advised incantation as a young woman--later telling him that she knew what she was doing in these visits. He was the only one who didn't get it. Thrown together on the campaign trail, he found himself violating an unshakable moral code. He lost his center in her darkness. He lost himself. He never knew what hit him.

Republican leaders did not want Schrenko as their candidate for governor because they feared she would cut the pork that they wanted when they gained power. So, they blessed Sonny Perdue, a lifelong democrat who had switched parties. Schrenko awarded vendor contracts for the State Schools for the blind and deaf in a bit of flawed "Iran-Contra"--kill two birds with the same stone--strategy to benefit the schools as well as her campaign. Around $200,000 came to her campaign, none of which Temple benefited from. The media said the money came from funds meant for blind children, but no money was allotted them except in contracts that Schrenko used to end run the board before they could divert the money to Barnes.

When the feds pursued indictments after Schrenko lost in the republican primary, Temple was mystified that, despite mistakes, no one acknowledged their efforts to deny theft and defend the constitution, but he looked at the laws the feds had, and urged her to plead. Schrenko said no--she had done nothing wrong. He was barred from talking to her, but she emailed constantly to play on his protective nature and sympathy, and influence his testimony as she again led him down the path to destruction.

In an argument with prosecutors, Temple became angry over perceived pressure to tow the government line in a way he was not prepared to do. He told her that he would tell the truth on the stand about Barnes and Bush. When he refused to abandon his wife as Schrenko demanded, she mocked his wife and told him coldly, "You've made your choice." She notified the prosecutors that he called her, and he was arrested, shackled, and jailed in Atlanta where he nearly died from forced drug withdrawal. While he was near death, Schrenko, the master of the victim opera, appeared on television to blame everything on him, and testify for the prosecutor who changed all the facts to paint his former witness as the mastermind. When Temple almost died, Schrenko wrote him--"I'm sorry for any harm...thought they would just yell at you..."

Temple, the figure in this Shakespearean style tragedy whose story has not been told, reimbursed the amount of the money that came to Schrenko's campaign though he benefited from none of it. He would have received little or no time if he had not contacted Schrenko, but he remains in prison in 2011, having served over four and a half years, longer than many violent, repeat offenders. The prosecutor, Russell Vineyard, who did not recuse himself although awaiting a Bush appointment, is now a federal magistrate--all of his rants to the federal judge regarding releasing Temple on bail were edited out of sanitized court transcripts erasing evidence of how personal Temple's rebellion was to a man awaiting an appointment from the man Temple wanted to expose. Schrenko netted no time off for her betrayal of the most loyal aide she had, only public exposure of her darkness--a metaphor for a kind of murder-suicide of two lives that gained her nothing but exposure as a woman scorned. No one was ever prosecuted for the diversion of many millions in federal money, or had to pay any of the money back.

Temple's wife of 37 years, Susan, whose heart was hidden in Christ, never abandoned him, and viewed Schrenko as her husband's Delilah. Susan died from a long illness in 2007. The prison defied the order of a judge, and refused to let him attend her funeral. Her last note to Temple was, "Be good until we meet again."

Even Temple's enemies could not deny that he was a tireless worker for the disenfranchised in his life for no gain--always the naive idealist fighting the machine. He was given eight years--more than politicians who bribed judges and pocketed millions, but he was subdued by God as he lay near death in the Atlanta jail and found new birth and eternal life in brokenness. He ministers to the broken in prison, and leads weekly Christian movie nights that have exposed over two thousand men to the gospel and saving grace of Jesus Christ. Ordained a minister and married to a childhood friend in 2010, he has long since forgiven Schrenko and all involved, and finally himself. He has filed in Birmingham federal district court to have the honest services counts dismissed, and to tell what God has done for him in prison.

He only says, "It is here that I learned as C.S. Lewis once wrote, that I am not just some soldier of fortune, a body with a soul--but a soul with a body, and that God works His will through me as a spiritual being. I searched for peace and found the only peace there is through the Prince of Peace. Here in this awful pain and grief, He gave me eternal life. How can I then say that it has not all been worth it? "

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