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NEW YORK ? He's a cheerfully non-iconic rocker, with old-school cool oozing from every pore.
Over three decades of musical exploits, Willie Nile has earned a global cult following, including marquee-name admirers like Bono, Lou Reed, and Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band.
"I'm a longtime friend and fan of Willie," Springsteen sidekick Nils Lofgren tells the AP. "The last couple of E Street Band tours, Bruce has brought him onstage with us and had him sing and play. ... He's great at it."
The "musician's musician," who's repeatedly risen phoenix-like from personal and professional challenges, is back ? and doing some of his best work. Nile is enjoying enthusiastic audiences worldwide and rave reviews for his party-hearty yet socially conscious new album, "The Innocent Ones."
"It's the best; it's the best!" Nile says, marveling over his hard-won creative success. "It's the kind of thing that you dream about as a kid."
Dedicated to the struggling, downtrodden and forgotten everywhere, the album and its "One Guitar" ? a dance-inducing, gets-under-your-skin track anchoring a charity effort that includes Graham Parker ? advocates enjoying life while making a difference.
Don't be fooled by the lip that curls into the perfect flash of punk sneer; the hair that evokes full-blown Chia Pet; the onstage energy-bursts rivaling a Jack Russell Terrier.
Nile is a bonafide rock philosopher.
In fact, he has a university philosophy degree. He also was real-life-schooled in Greenwich Village's famously fertile music heyday.
Not surprisingly, his body of work references Plato, Sartre, and some very weighty matters: terrorism, death, ecological disaster ? all with a "celebrate life" underpinning.
"I've seen breaks out on the levee, in a world so far beyond strange," he sings in the hopeful "Give Me Tomorrow." ... "I've seen hunger in the garden. I've seen empty eyes, full of pain. ... But I have seen things change."
His story includes some rock history moments.
In December 1980, Nile and John Lennon were recording in adjacent studios. Lennon ran out of guitar strings, so Nile had someone take his extras to his famous neighbor.
"I was going to put a note to John ? `Thanks for all the music. I love you. Willie,'" recalled Nile. "Then I thought, ah, too corny. I'll tell him when I see him in person" in a couple of days.
"The last thing he played was my guitar strings," says Nile.
Years later, Nile's Beatle worship came full circle in a much happier way.
On a tour with Ringo Starr, "He comes walkin' right over and he gives me a big hug. I thought, `Beatle sweat! I'm covered with Beatle sweat!' It was a glorious moment," Nile says with a chuckle.
In the early days, he was wedged into the New Dylan pigeonhole that chafed Springsteen. Nile still occasionally employs the half-spoken, freight-train-in-the-distance vocals and folk-strident themes that evoke early Dylan.
That connection intensified a generation later when Bob Dylan's son, Jakob, appeared on a Nile album.
Recent critics have labeled Nile's work folk-punk; roots-rock; singer-songwriter; power-pop; classic rock; alternative rock, Pete Seeger channeled through Joey Ramone.
He uses the term "New Classic," denoting a "timeless quality." But his personal favorite is "one-man Clash."
Nile now has his own record company. He's had contracts with two major labels. Weary of "hustlers" and gripped with legal woes, he says he walked away from the business twice.
During a decade-long hiatus, he continued songwriting but primarily focused on family in his native Buffalo, N.Y. At a recent performance, he sang the new album's sweetly refreshing "Sideways Beautiful" in honor of a daughter.
"Some years were very thin" while trying to "raise four kids on fumes," he concedes, lamenting the effects on his loved ones. But "tell me ... who has not had a tough road?"
Despite years of relentless hype as "the next big thing," it was nearly impossible to get his foot back in the stage and studio doors. He's made his own way ? aiming simply to strike a chord in whatever heart is meant to receive it.
Now, "I'm having a great time," he declares. "I'm makin' music. I'm fightin' the fight. ... I've never felt more alive."
It's taken a village to get there.
"The Innocent Ones" was already a success in Europe, but its U.S. rollout hit a snag. The fans ? seizing on his premise that "One Guitar," or one voice, matters ? pumped nearly $20,000 into an artistic fundraising site to help hasten its American release.
"I got to tour with the Who across the U.S. I've sung with Bruce Springsteen at Giants Stadium in front of 70,000 people for half an hour," says Nile. But it's moments like this that leave him struggling for words.
"These are hard times economically. ... The fans totally ..." he says haltingly. "I was very, very ? I mean, how great is it?"
On both sides of the ocean, crowds are responding to Nile's call to action.
While his residence is Manhattan, he considers himself a citizen of "wherever my shoes are.'"
In January, he'll return to the Paramount Theater in Asbury Park, N.J., for Light of Day, a weekend-long musical blowout benefiting Parkinson's disease. Last time, Springsteen ? a frequent surprise headliner ? backed Nile's rousing performance of "Heaven Help the Lonely," dedicated to the people of Haiti.
"I want my life to mean something," says Nile, who fantasizes about joining the wealthy "1 percent" and spending it on charity.
"Be good to your neighbors, you know? ... Life is brief. Make the most of it."
He and Lofgren often share a kindred sentiment with fans:
? "Believe in your dreams."
___
Online: www.willienile.com
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MEXICO CITY ? The party that ruled Mexico for most of the 20th century has officially named the candidate it hopes can wrest back the presidency in 2012.
The Institutional Revolutionary Party gave Enrique Pena Nieto a document declaring him the party's candidate Saturday. All other hopefuls had already dropped out. Legal candidate registration takes place in February and the campaign starts in March.
The former Mexico State governor has a strong lead in most polls. His party ran Mexico from 1929 to 2000, when it lost to the National Action Party that still governs.
National Action is still choosing its candidate but the third major force has picked its contender. Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador will run for the leftist Democratic Revolution Party.
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CAIRO?? At least two people were killed in clashes on Friday between demonstrators and troops in the worst violence since the start of Egypt's first free election in six decades, medical sources said.
A worker at a makeshift field hospital said a third person had died from gunshot wounds. At least 99 people were also injured.
The violence started overnight and continued throughout Friday when military police tried to break up a sit-in by pro-democracy activists in front of the cabinet building.
Army troops fired shots late on Friday in an attempt to disperse protesters who had been throwing petrol bombs at a parliament building. It was not immediately clear if the shots being fired were live or rubber bullets.
Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.
Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45699137/ns/world_news-africa/
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Contact: Clare LaFond
clareh@uw.edu
206-685-1323
University of Washington - Health Sciences/UW News, Community Relations & Marketing
The University of Washington Medical Center was recently granted Magnet Recognition Program status from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) for its excellence in nursing practice and patient care. This is the fifth consecutive time that UWMC has achieved this status, making it the only hospital in the country to have achieved this historic level of recognition. The Magnet award is the highest level of recognition for hospital nursing awarded by the ANCC.
UWMC was the first hospital in the nation to achieve Magnet status in 1994. The honor is based on criteria related to key data, including patient outcomes, nurse satisfaction and key leadership objectives. After submitting data, a survey team completes a four-day site appraisal, after which the ANCC Commission on Magnet decides the outcome.
The Magnet program was begun 17 years ago to identify institutions across the nation who provide top quality nursing care for patients. In re-designating UWMC as a Magnet organization, the ANCC recognizes UWMC as an institution that supports the highest quality of professional nursing practice, exemplifies excellence in leadership and management philosophy, as well as in practices of nursing services, excelling in innovative strategies to improve the quality of patient and family care.
"This historic achievement represents the efforts and commitment to patient care and nursing practice that our nurses and clinicians demonstrate every day. The Magnet designation recognizes excellence in nursing and we share this award with all our dedicated staff and faculty," said Chief Nursing Office Lorie Wild.
US News & World Report considers Magnet designation as a key differentiating factor when selecting hospitals for its Best Hospital survey. Locally, UW Medical Center was rated No. 1 among hospitals in the Seattle-King County region and No. 14 nationally in 2011.
###
About UW Medicine
UW Medicine trains health professionals and medical scientists, conducts research to improve health and prevent disease worldwide, and provides primary and specialty care to patients throughout Seattle/King County and the WWAMI (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho) region. UW Medicine includes: Harborview Medical Center, Valley Medical Center , UW Medical Center, Northwest Hospital & Medical Center, UW Neighborhood Clinics, UW School of Medicine, UW Physicians, and Airlift Northwest. UW Medicine also shares in the ownership and governance of Children's University Medical Group and Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, a partnership among UW Medicine, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Seattle Children's.
UW Medicine has major academic and service affiliations with Seattle Children's, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, the Veteran's Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, and the VA Hospital in Boise, Idaho. The UW School of Medicine has been ranked #1 in the nation in primary-care training since 1994 by US News & World Report. It is the top public institution for receipt of biomedical research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and second among all institutions for NIH funding, public and private. UW Medicine's 2,000 full-time faculty and nearly 5,000 volunteer and part-time faculty include four Nobel Laureates, 32 members of the National Academy of Sciences, and 33 members of the Institute of Medicine. Visit UW Medicine. Follow us on Twitter - @UWMedicineNews
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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
Contact: Clare LaFond
clareh@uw.edu
206-685-1323
University of Washington - Health Sciences/UW News, Community Relations & Marketing
The University of Washington Medical Center was recently granted Magnet Recognition Program status from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) for its excellence in nursing practice and patient care. This is the fifth consecutive time that UWMC has achieved this status, making it the only hospital in the country to have achieved this historic level of recognition. The Magnet award is the highest level of recognition for hospital nursing awarded by the ANCC.
UWMC was the first hospital in the nation to achieve Magnet status in 1994. The honor is based on criteria related to key data, including patient outcomes, nurse satisfaction and key leadership objectives. After submitting data, a survey team completes a four-day site appraisal, after which the ANCC Commission on Magnet decides the outcome.
The Magnet program was begun 17 years ago to identify institutions across the nation who provide top quality nursing care for patients. In re-designating UWMC as a Magnet organization, the ANCC recognizes UWMC as an institution that supports the highest quality of professional nursing practice, exemplifies excellence in leadership and management philosophy, as well as in practices of nursing services, excelling in innovative strategies to improve the quality of patient and family care.
"This historic achievement represents the efforts and commitment to patient care and nursing practice that our nurses and clinicians demonstrate every day. The Magnet designation recognizes excellence in nursing and we share this award with all our dedicated staff and faculty," said Chief Nursing Office Lorie Wild.
US News & World Report considers Magnet designation as a key differentiating factor when selecting hospitals for its Best Hospital survey. Locally, UW Medical Center was rated No. 1 among hospitals in the Seattle-King County region and No. 14 nationally in 2011.
###
About UW Medicine
UW Medicine trains health professionals and medical scientists, conducts research to improve health and prevent disease worldwide, and provides primary and specialty care to patients throughout Seattle/King County and the WWAMI (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho) region. UW Medicine includes: Harborview Medical Center, Valley Medical Center , UW Medical Center, Northwest Hospital & Medical Center, UW Neighborhood Clinics, UW School of Medicine, UW Physicians, and Airlift Northwest. UW Medicine also shares in the ownership and governance of Children's University Medical Group and Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, a partnership among UW Medicine, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center and Seattle Children's.
UW Medicine has major academic and service affiliations with Seattle Children's, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, the Veteran's Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle, and the VA Hospital in Boise, Idaho. The UW School of Medicine has been ranked #1 in the nation in primary-care training since 1994 by US News & World Report. It is the top public institution for receipt of biomedical research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and second among all institutions for NIH funding, public and private. UW Medicine's 2,000 full-time faculty and nearly 5,000 volunteer and part-time faculty include four Nobel Laureates, 32 members of the National Academy of Sciences, and 33 members of the Institute of Medicine. Visit UW Medicine. Follow us on Twitter - @UWMedicineNews
?
AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.
Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/uow--umc121511.php
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LANSING, Mich. ? More teens are turning to pot and see it as less of a risk at the same time alcohol use among the same age group has dipped to historic lows, according to an annual national survey of drug use released Wednesday.
The findings were based on a survey of 47,000 eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders conducted by the University of Michigan for the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
One of every 15 high school seniors reported smoking pot on a daily or near daily basis, the highest rate since 1981.
One of every nine high school seniors reported using synthetic marijuana, sometimes called Spice or K2, within the previous 12 months.
Marijuana use rose among 10th- and 12th-graders, the study said. None of the changes was large enough to be statistically significant, "but they all continue the pattern of a gradual rise," the study said. There was a "non-significant decrease" in the percentage of eighth-graders who reported using pot within the past year.
The percentage of teens saying they see "great risk" in using marijuana generally has dropped in recent years.
"One thing we've learned over the years is that when young people come to see a drug as dangerous, they're less likely to use it," Lloyd Johnston, the study's principal investigator, said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "That helps to explain why marijuana right now is rising, because the proportion of kids who see it as dangerous has been declining."
The study said marijuana use among teens rose in 2011 for the fourth straight year after considerable decline in the preceding decade.
The survey found 36.4 percent of 12th-graders reported using marijuana in the past year, compared to 31.7 percent in the 2007 survey. Usage was at 28.8 percent for 10th-graders and 12.5 percent for eighth-graders within the previous 12 months, according to the 2011 survey.
The synthetic drug survey question was asked for the first time this year. Fake marijuana, sometimes sold in drug paraphernalia shops and on the Internet as incense, contains organic leaves coated with chemicals that provide a marijuana-like high when smoked.
A Drug Enforcement Administration emergency order banning the sale of five chemicals used in herbal blends to make synthetic marijuana took effect March 1. The synthetics are among the many that would be banned under a bill passed in the U.S. House earlier this month. Many states also have their own laws banning the sale of synthetic marijuana.
Researchers say next year's survey will reveal more about the effectiveness of the control measures, since much of this year's survey covered a response period before the federal action took effect.
White House drug czar Gil Kerlikowske called on parents to get involved to help stop the use of synthetic marijuana.
"It's not in the vocabulary of parents, and they need to be aware of it so that when they have that conversation about substance abuse that they are knowledgeable and they talk about this," he told the AP.
Alcohol use continued a trend of decline dating to the 1980s and hit a historic low for the survey, which began in the 1970s for 12th-graders. Forty percent of 12th-graders reported drinking in the previous 30 days during the 2011 survey, compared to 54 percent in 1991. Drinking also declined significantly at lower grade levels.
Other drugs showing some evidence of decline in use this year include cocaine, crack cocaine and inhalants.
The Monitoring the Future survey also shows that a decline in teen cigarette smoking resumed this year. The number of those who reported smoking in the previous 30 days for the three grades combined was 11.7 percent, compared to 12.8 percent in 2010.
___
Online:
The survey can be found at http://www.monitoringthefuture.org
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Remember back in early 2010 when Apple launched iBookstore? The idea of selling electronic books wasn?t new ? the Kindle, Sony Reader, Barnes & Noble Nook, and other e-readers were already on the market, along with their associated book stores and third-party efforts like Google Books. But one thing that made consumers? jaws drop when Apple unveiled iBookstore was the price tags: New releases were initially priced at $12.99 to $14.99 each, compared to the $9.99 typically offered by Amazon and others. Now, the European Commission has launched a formal antitrust investigation looking into whether five major publishers ? perhaps with Apple?s help ? abused their market position to effectively raise the price of e-books in Europe.
The EC?s investigation follows on the heels of a similar probe by the UK?s Office of Fair Trading earlier this year, and mirrors a class action lawsuit filed against Apple and the same five publishers in the Northern District of California earlier this summer. Earlier this year, the EC carried out unannounced inspections at the locations of several e-book publishers.
This week, the UK?s OTF closed its investigation ?on the grounds of administrative priority,? but will be working closely with the EC as it conducts its own inquiry.
Under an agency model, publishers set the prices retailers can charge for books. Book sellers (like Apple?s iBookstore) are just agents of the publisher, and have to stick to the publisher?s prices. If a publisher decides a book should cost $19.99, then all retailers under that agency deal have to charge $19.99.
Publishers generally favor an agency model: it means prices for particular titles are consistent across a wide range of retailers,offering a better consumer experience, and publishers don?t have to get into complicated negotiations with individual booksellers, distributors, and partners, all of whom are angling for the best price possible. The agency model also makes it easier for publishers to manage their costs and revenue streams. However, retailers ? especially big retailers ? generally favor a wholesale model: Negotiate the lowest price possible, then sell as many units as they can at the highest price the market will bear. Big retailers benefit from wholesale models because they can leverage their buying power to make bulk purchases, lowering their per-unit costs and increasing their margins. Small, locally-owned bookstores might be able to match Walmart?s pricing on books, but they are almost certainly paying a higher price than Walmart for the same product, and making less money from selling it.
Since the introduction of iBookstore, a number of online booksellers have shifted to an agency pricing model. In most cases, they do it so they can continue to sell popular e-book titles from leading publishers ? like the five in the investigation. That includes Amazon.com, which was forced to convert over to an agency model in April of 2010. The question before the EC?s antitrust investigation is, essentially: Did Apple?s decision to go with an agency model in its iBookstore force the rest of the industry to convert to an agency model, effectively raising e-book prices for most consumers?
However, rather than make a deal with Amazon, Sony, Barnes & Noble, or other companies running e-book stores, Apple decided to chart its own course and integrate e-books into its existing digital goods infrastructure. After all, Apple was already handling music, movies, television shows, and apps. That meant Apple had to make its own deals with publishers; however, unlike selling all those other forms of content, which it helped pioneer, Apple came very late to the game on e-books.
Publishers had been chafing against Amazon?s discount wholesale model for some time. The wholesale pricing model was developed from the physical process of printing, shipping, and selling books. Publishers would sell to a retailer (like Amazon or the now-defunct Borders) or an distributor like Ingram, charging a price based on the suggested retail price and a discount schedule ? typically 50 percent off the retail price. But under this model, publishers who offered discounts on e-books that were the same as physical book discounts were effectively subsidizing e-book retailers, who were then able to cut e-book prices to consumers. That?s how Amazon started selling new titles at $9.99.
Publishers realized an agency model for e-books would be much more advantageous for them: Not only does it give them more control over e-book pricing and make for a more consistent customer experience across digital goods retailers, but it also brings in more revenue.
So when Apple knocked on publishers? doors and said ?Hey, we?d like to start selling e-books!? the major publishers may have realized they had Apple over a barrel, and replied with ?Sure. But we?re not going to make the same mistake with you we did with Amazon.? As long as enough of the major publishers held the line on only signing a deal with Apple if it used an agency model, Apple probably had a choice between agency pricing and a very thin selection of titles for the iBookstore. Publishers then used Apple compliance to force agency pricing on other e-book retailers, with Macmillan being the first to play hardball with Amazon over agency pricing.
European anti-competition law has no caps, and can extend to up to 10 percent of the worldwide revenue of each company taking part in the infringement, although the commission has wiggle room for lesser and higher penalties.
So far, Apple and Hachette have had no comment on the investigation; Harper Collins and Simon & Schuster indicated only that they are cooperating with the investigation, and representatives of Penguin and Macmillan have denied any wrongdoing.
This article was originally posted on Digital Trends
More from Digital Trends
WSJ: Amazon tablet due in October
The Goldilocks tablet: Why Amazon?s 7-inch Kindle Fire is ?just right?
Penguin ebooks return to libraries
Will piracy kill e-book lending?
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The Business Finance Store discusses resources for small businesses owners, employers and employees to improve financial literacy.
Santa Ana, CA (PRWEB) December 03, 2011
A recent study distributed by the Employee Benefit Research Institute showed that Texans have the lowest financial literacy in the country. The survey revealed that Texans largely do not understand basic financial concepts like interest rates, mortgages, and investments. But this knowledge gap is not limited to Texas alone; it is issue throughout the United States. In the recent blog post, ?Make Every Month Financial Literacy Month,? the Business Finance Store discusses resources for small businesses owners, employers and employees to improve financial literacy.
Financial literacy is a broad subject, but for businesses, literacy can make a big difference in every aspect of work. Comparing and contrasting equipment costs, making estimates quickly and other tasks can definitely be improved with some financial literacy training. Small business owners and their employees could benefit from financial education by not only improving their knowledge but saving money as well. For more information and resources on financial education and financial literacy, visit the Business Finance Store blog.
The Business Finance Store is a business financing and consulting firm that offers customized Business Financial Solutions. Seasoned professionals offer assistance in a variety of financial solutions to help small businesses succeed such as: Business Financial Solutions, Legal Solutions, and Accounting Solutions.
The staff at The Business Finance Store understands that starting and growing a business is an exciting time. They keep it exciting by taking care of some of the most difficult aspects, by providing legal advice, helping with vital responsibilities like accounting & bookkeeping, and by obtaining business finance. They can quickly and easily guide entrepreneurs through many different complicated processes, and put them on the path to success.
For 10 years The Business Finance Store has been helping startups and other small businesses legally structure their companies, find the right franchises, get the funding they need, and to achieve the American Dream of owning their own successful business. Since expanding nationwide in 2007 they have helped thousands of companies and have funded over $60 Million in business credit lines, not including SBA loans. The Business Finance Store sees limitless potential in the current climate, and looks forward to many strong years of growth to come. Take some time to review their services, and give them a call.
For more information, or a free, no-obligation analysis of your business needs, visit The Business Finance Store, visit http://www.businessfinancestore.com. A member of their professional staff will contact you to discuss your business? short and long-term goals. Whatever you need, The Business Finance Store is there.
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For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2011/12/prweb9011908.htm
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PARIS (Reuters) ? Book publishers have survived the first stage of a digital revolution in better shape than the music industry and are now embracing the shift to e-books in their search for new revenue streams and lower costs.
The industry has been battered this year by a significant shift from physical books to e-books that has transferred power to Internet retailers led by Amazon and helped put some high-street chains like Borders out of business.
Publishers have fought and won for now a key battle to keep pricing control over their titles, unlike the music industry, which a decade ago allowed Apple to impose a flat rate of $0.99 on music tracks in its iTunes store.
Penguin and Hachette told Reuters this week they were quite optimistic that e-books would help them increase profitability and reach bigger audiences, although they had not yet figured out how to sell digital extras to readers.
"The consumer sort of slightly shrugs his shoulders and says: 'Well, that's marvelous but that's not something I'm going to pay for very much,'" Penguin Chief Executive John Makinson told the Reuters Global Media Summit.
As an example, he said Penguin had created an e-book of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice enhanced with clips from the Hollywood movie with Keira Knightley, as well as recipes and dance moves from the period, to no avail.
Children, he added, had taken more quickly to extra features, especially on touch screens like Apple's iPad. Many classic kids' books such as Alice in Wonderland and the Cat in the Hat have been rejuvenated in the digital form with added animation and games.
Hachette CEO Arnaud Nourry agreed that readers of e-books had proven conservative so far.
"Customers do not want these enriched things that we are talking about all day," he said. "I don't think we would have sold more Dan Brown books with recipes."
The shift to e-books, which is most advanced in the United States where Amazon catalyzed the market with its Kindle device and store four years ago, has already touched off changes to publishers' business models, distribution systems and costs.
While e-book prices are on average 20-30 percent lower than those of physical books, they save publishers the cost of storing and moving books around, and reduce the working capital tied up in inventory.
In markets where book prices are not regulated by law, including the United States and Britain, this has already made e-books more profitable for publishers than print books.
In regulated markets like France and Germany where laws prevent book stores and supermarkets from discounting in an effort to protect local culture and prevent the book from being a commodity like any other, print books are still more profitable.
In the United States, e-books account for about 25 percent of book sales by volume and 20 percent by revenue. In Britain, the figure is about 10 percent by volume, while the rest of Europe and Asia excluding Japan are just getting off the ground.
Germany, the world's second-biggest book market after the United States, was the first in continental Europe to get the Kindle and local language titles in April. Amazon launched the Kindle in France in October, and in Spain and Italy this week.
"We're just at the beginning of the curve," Nourry said.
Publishers have reached a kind of peace for now in their often stormy relationships with Internet giants like Amazon and Google, who were largely responsible for bringing the digital revolution to the world of books.
Google enraged publishers and authors in 2004 with a controversial book-scanning project it billed as an effort to make the content of the world's libraries available to all but was seen by opponents as intellectual property theft.
U.S. publishers and authors took Google to court over the matter in 2005. The parties have since tried to settle the case but the issue has meantime escalated and a U.S. judge rejected it in March.
Google has meanwhile scanned more than 13 million books and reached a pragmatic compromise with publishers and authors in many countries.
With Amazon, publishers fought an intense battle over how e-book prices would be set, opposing the Internet retailer's effort to impose $9.99 as a standard for new titles on the Kindle, Apple iTunes-style.
Ironically, it was only the emergence last year of Apple with its iPad as a counterweight to Amazon that allowed the so-called "Big Six" publishers to win back control of pricing.
In what was a major shift for the industry, the publishers, determined to avoid the mistakes made by the music industry, imposed an "agency model" in which they set their own prices.
In the traditional "wholesale model" prevalent in non-regulated book markets like the United States, publishers set a recommended retail price but the seller is then free to offer deep discounts.
With these fights behind them, Penguin and Hachette seemed to have mellowed in their attitude to their one-time foes.
"We had to bring Amazon into line and eventually we did," said Makinson. "The results have been good."
He said there was now a very competitive market in the U.S. with Google's eBookstore, Apple's iBookstore and Barnes & Noble's Nook -- to the advantage of publishers.
Hachette's Nourry, once one of Google's fiercest opponents during the book scanning row, is today rooting for the search engine company to sell more books: "I would love to see Google be a stronger animal," he said.
The evolution of the book market is still in its early days, however, and issues like piracy are re-emerging as digital booksellers try to replicate features popular with book-lovers, such as lending, in the digital world.
A new front has recently opened over Amazon's new Kindle lending library, which allows members of the website's loyalty program known as Prime to borrow a book every month for free.
The Big Six -- Hachette, HarperCollins, MacMillan, Penguin, Random House and Simon & Schuster -- have all refused to join the lending library, arguing that it devalues books in the eyes of customers.
Nourry said Hachette would not join the program even if Amazon offered it a slice of revenue from the lending.
"It's not that I am against libraries, or a book being sold and then read by 10 different people, but it's clearly a way invented by retailers to change the balance of power."
Makinson said Penguin would continue to talk with Amazon about the lending library concept, but that the issue was as much about the risk of piracy as pricing.
"Amazon is embarking on new initiatives that could put file security at risk and that would be not good for anyone."
Nourry said he would like to one day find a way for readers to lend each other e-books, but said copyright protection was currently more important as the industry's new business models were still fragile.
"My business consists of selling books," he said. "People who buy Kindles every 18 months and iPads for $600 -- they don't need our help."
(Reporting by Gwenaelle Barzic, Kate Holton, and Marie Mawad; Editing by Erica Billingham)
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STATE COLLEGE, Pa (Reuters) ? Penn State officials on Wednesday said applications to attend the university that has been rocked by a sex abuse scandal are ahead of last year and reassured students worried about the school's reputation.
"Prospective students are saying, 'I really want to come to Penn State. I understand this isn't something that represents the whole university,'" Penn State President Rodney Ericksontold more than 400 students in a packed university auditorium who gathered for an evening question and answer session.
Of the 40,000 undergraduate applications received, only eight have withdrawn their applications, Erickson said, adding that applications are about 4 percent ahead of "last year's record rate."
Student questions were polite but often anxious following the shock news on November 5 that Jerry Sandusky, longtime former assistant to legendary Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, had been charged with sexually abusing eight boys over more than a decade.
The allegations forced the firing of Paterno and dismissal of university President Graham Spanier. Athletic Director Tim Curley and finance official Gary Schultz were also charged with perjury by the grand jury, with investigations continuing.
Paterno has not been charged and lawyers for all three accused have said they are innocent of the charges.
On Wednesday none of the students, who were joined by students watching via satellite at Penn State's many branch campuses, mentioned Sandusky, Curley or Schultz by name.
One student asked if there was a "rush to judgment" by the Penn State Board of Administrators in firing Paterno, while another student asked if the school was planning to take down the bronze Paterno statue outside of Beaver Stadium and to rename the library that now bears his name.
Erickson simply said "no" when a student asked if the university was bullied by national media into firing Paterno. There were no plans to remove the statue or change the library name, he said.
But students wondered how the scandal might affect tuition next school year and some worried that state lawmakers would punish Penn State by slashing its state aid.
"A lot of us are worried how the scandal is going to affect us after graduation," one student, a junior, asked Erickson and the seven other school administrators who joined him to answer questions during the two-hour forum.
Damon Sims, Penn State's vice president for student affairs, said students "don't have to worry about that" because many of the school's alumni are "re-emphasizing their commitment" for new graduates.
"Alumni want to open doors for you," Commonwealth Campuses Vice President Madlyn Hanes said. "Employers are still very, very interested in our students. I hope you have solace with that," she said.
"Perhaps this experience will make you a better person; a better employee," said Terrell Jones, PSU's vice provost for educational equity.
Henry Foley, Penn State's dean of graduate school, said the immediate task at hand for the university is to regain student trust and prepare them for the end of the fall semester.
"None of you are guilty," Foley told the students. "You may feel shame, but none of you are guilty of anything."
(Editing by Peter Bohan)
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Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, left, with Yoko Ono, right, during her visit to the Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. With 8,000 meters of public space, the recently opened museum looks at Britain and the world through the eyes of Liverpool, with 6,000 objects showcasing the city's unique contribution to the world. Woman at center is unidentified. (AP Photo/Tim Hales-Pool)
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, left, with Yoko Ono, right, during her visit to the Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. With 8,000 meters of public space, the recently opened museum looks at Britain and the world through the eyes of Liverpool, with 6,000 objects showcasing the city's unique contribution to the world. Woman at center is unidentified. (AP Photo/Tim Hales-Pool)
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, left, meets Yoko Ono, right, during their visit to the Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. With 8,000 meters of public space, the recently opened museum looks at Britain and the world through the eyes of Liverpool, with 6,000 objects showcasing the city's unique contribution to the world. (AP Photo/Tim Hales-Pool)
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, second left, meets Yoko Ono, right, during their visit to the Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. With 8,000 meters of public space, the recently opened museum looks at Britain and the world through the eyes of Liverpool, with 6,000 objects showcasing the city's unique contribution to the world. (AP Photo/Tim Hales-Pool)
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, left, meets Yoko Ono, right, during her visit to the Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. With 8,000 meters of public space, the recently opened museum looks at Britain and the world through the eyes of Liverpool, with 6,000 objects showcasing the city's unique contribution to the world. (AP Photo/Tim Hales-Pool)
Yoko Ono waits to meet Britain's Queen Elizabeth II during her visit to the Museum of Liverpool in Liverpool, England, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. With 8,000 meters of public space, the recently opened museum looks at Britain and the world through the eyes of Liverpool, with 6,000 objects showcasing the city's unique contribution to the world. (AP Photo/Tim Hales-Pool)
LONDON (AP) ? Queen Elizabeth II has met Yoko Ono on a visit to the birthplace of The Beatles.
The British monarch chatted with Ono, widow of John Lennon, on a visit to the Museum of Liverpool in the northwest England port city where the Fab Four formed.
Ono said she was impressed by the queen's burgundy coat, dress and matching hat, saying it "made her look so young, so elegant. She is always elegant. It's always nice to meet her."
In honor of the queen's trip to Liverpool on Thursday, the band of the Coldstream Guards played a medley of Beatles songs during the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace in London.
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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) ? Oscar Wesley McKinney doesn't carry a placard, and he doesn't chant slogans. He's not even sure he agrees with the message of the Occupy Wall Street movement.
But a month ago he left a ballpark where he had been sleeping outdoors and moved into a protest camp in San Francisco's Financial District for one simple reason: "I know my stuff is going to be here when I get home from work."
Such practical considerations have drawn hundreds of homeless people from the "skid row" areas of their cities to relatively safer shelter with more amenities in the encampments of anti-Wall Street activists around the country.
The presence of homeless contingents in the camps has highlighted the very economic disparities in American society that the Occupy movement is protesting against. But with them has come the squalor, drug abuse and mental illness often associated with life on the street.
Political leaders in some major cities have cited those same issues as reasons for evicting the camps, usually after first trying to lure protesters away with incentives that have included assurances of providing shelter for the homeless.
Police swept away a large camp in Los Angeles this week, arresting hundreds of protesters as the city joined the ranks of other municipalities that lost tolerance for camps aligned with the 2-month-old Occupy movement. Philadelphia protesters vacated a similar site under threat of a raid.
Even liberal San Francisco, home to one of the largest remaining Occupy settlements, is trying to persuade campers to trade the downtown Justin Herman Plaza for a new site 2.5 miles away, pointing to substance abuse and sanitation problems.
No one has counted how many of the roughly 300 people who eat at the San Francisco camp every night are homeless, but it is clear that it has become a beacon for the down and out.
In Los Angeles, the homeless accounted for around a third of the roughly 800 people who camped outside City Hall, and homeless contingents were also noted in New York and Philadelphia.
"We're happy to accept responsibility for San Francisco's illegitimate children," said Chance Martin, a homeless advocate who volunteers at the camp.
AN UNCOMFORTABLE ISSUE
Organizers say the problems of the homeless plagued the city long before the Occupy movement came along, and that the camps have simply forced the mainstream public to confront an uncomfortable issue long overlooked or hidden from sight.
Ryan Landis, who arrived this week in the San Francisco camp, said Justin Herman Plaza was simply his most recent stop in a sorry path that began when the recession destroyed his landscaping business in Grass Valley.
Struggling with drug addiction, Landis lost his house and went through a divorce. After a drug treatment clinic in the northern California town of Redding turned him away, Landis stumbled across a small Occupy camp setting up in that town. Activists there referred him to San Francisco, 200 miles away.
"San Francisco has more opportunities for growth," he said, as he pulled a black rolling suitcase into the Occupy camp, a stone's throw from posh restaurants and the Federal Reserve building. "This city is famous."
Occupy protesters have largely welcomed the homeless in their makeshift communities, touting them as a legitimate part of the 99 percent and sharing food and medical assistance.
Those factors helped attract Gary Boatwright from skid row in Los Angeles -- a 50-block area believed to harbor the highest concentration of homeless in the nation -- to the now dismantled Occupy camp in that city in early October.
"The 24-hour Porta Potties is a big one," Boatwright said. "Toilet paper is another big one, and you don't have to take your tent down."
The camps have also offered homeless people a reprieve from city ordinances aimed at rousting them from public spaces, including one passed this year in San Francisco that bans sitting and lying on sidewalks during the daytime.
Maria Foscarinis, executive director of the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, said it could be harder legally and politically for cities to use such laws against Occupy campers because "they are making a public statement."
About half of U.S. cities prohibit loitering or camping in public places, according to a survey by the center released in November, and that number is rising. San Francisco officials bill that city's ordinance as humanitarian.
"The sit-lie ordinance was designed to help the homeless," San Francisco police spokesman Officer Carlos Manfredi said, adding that officers who find people sleeping on sidewalks give them information about city services, including shelters. Only repeat offenders face punishment.
INCENTIVES
As cities have sought to remove the Occupy camps from often prime downtown locations, they have often focused their efforts on incentives that could also appeal to the homeless.
Los Angeles and other cities, including Philadelphia and Oakland, offered shelter beds to homeless campers before shutting down their settlements.
David Snow, a University of California at Irvine sociologist who studies homelessness, said it was only natural to find a connection between Occupy protests and homelessness given the protesters' focus on economic inequality issues.
"The rise of homelessness in the 1980s could be seen as the canary in the coal mine signaling a rise in inequality that started in the 1970s, continued in the 1980s, accelerated in the 1990s, and is now reaching a crescendo," he said.
Counting the homeless has always been difficult. But the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development tallied 643,067 people nationwide living without permanent shelter on a single night last January, about the same number it has documented each year since 2007. However, the agency found that more of those on the streets were families.
San Francisco officials say they regularly offer shelter services to people in the Occupy camp. The city also has offered campers a site 2-1/2 miles away from Justin Herman Plaza in a former school. City negotiator Mohammed Nuru said protesters could still pitch tents there because, as he put it, "tents are part of your culture."
But that site was not specifically geared to the homeless. The proposed agreement also prohibits cooking, children and pets, and would allow city officials to inspect the inside of the tents, all of which could be deal-breakers.
In nearby Oakland, about 18 people from the Occupy camp there accepted that city's offer to move into shelters, four of whom health workers had been trying to lure indoors for years, said Susan Shelton, the city's community housing manager.
After Oakland's camp was shut down last month, activists continued a focus on charity, including a plan to serve turkey in front of City Hall on Thanksgiving that police interrupted.
"That was the main thing we were doing, feeding the homeless," organizer Julion Lewis-Tatman said. "And they came and shut us down."
(Additional reporting by Jason Kandel and Steve Gorman in Los Angeles and Dave Warner in Philadelphia; Editing by Cynthia Johnston)
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