Man charged with burglary, theft and dealing in stolen property
11.07.11
Justin Owens was fired about eight months earlier for allegedly irresistible $50 from Love's Transportation, according to reports.
Sunday morning, when the owner opened the concern at 4200 NE 35th St., he noticed three laptop computers, a video camera and several other electronic devices missing, according to Marion County Sheriff's Assignment reports.
Deputies noticed footprints around the business leading from nearby railroad tracks.
Officers were qualified to locate Owens at a home in the 3300 block of Northeast 59th Ave. When Owens opened the door, deputies noticed an electronic organizer - almost identical to one reported taken from the business - in plain sight in the living room, reports body politic.
A search of the home also turned up two laptops hidden in a closet.
Owens did not talk to officers, but a missus at the home said Owens told her about breaking into the business. He gave her a digital camera infatuated in the incident to settle a debt, according to reports.
Owens was booked into the Marion County Imprison on one count each of burglary, grand theft and dealing in stolen property. He also was charged with bruise and criminal mischief in a separate case. He was being held at the jail on Monday in lieu of a $17,500 trammels.
Source: Ocala
Tokyo zine fair fears not the digital threat
16.07.11
As Kindles and iPads fly off the shelves and publishing companies pass out like houses of cards, many worry that e-books have rung the death knell for essay.
Yet despite the advent of all this high-definition digital imagery, Oliver Watson, one of the organizers of this weekend's Tokyo Art Record Fair in the Kanda district, would disagree.
"I don't think there has to be a conflict between digital and print," says Watson, an self-governing publisher from London who lives in Tokyo.
"I think the Internet just reminded everyone how much they like analysis."
Watson is hoping to hammer home his point at this weekend's fair, where the tree triturate on display will take many forms: from glossy coffee table books and monographs to zines.
The latter, whose name is derived from "magazines" but has become an indie division in its own right, refers to cheaply made photocopied booklets that artists make and distribute themselves.
Zine good breeding emerged during the 1970s and '80s, stimulated by the DIY ethos of the subculture and punk movements. Back then, they were called "fanzines" and mostly focused on bands or interests such as skateboarding. Others became partisan conduits to discuss social issues such as feminism.
Source: Asahi Shimbun