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Perhaps there should be some consideration for those persons that contribute to the AERC in unnoticed form. While those persons writing articles for the AERC News get some recognition for their efforts by having a by-line and in some cases a free advertisement, you all should consider the faces behind the other aspects of running the organization. Your AERC Board of Directors contribute as much time and considerable more finances to the organization and they get nothing much more than abuse. Consider the group of persons working on the administration of the AERC systems. They have contributed tens of thousands of dollars in personal time and expertise with out the slightest bit of recognition. Then consider some of the AERC Officers and the time, expertise and personal finances they expend to attempt to keep the organization functioning smoothly. Have I ever heard any praise for their efforts? Seldom if ever! If we all do not work for the interests of the total organization then we will fail through the division. Bob Morris Morris Endurance Enterprises Boise, ID -----Original Message----- From: Rides 2 Far [mailto:rides2far@juno.com] Sent: Wednesday, November 22, 2000 9:01 AM To: ridecamp@endurance.net Subject: RC: Donna's column > I would like to clarify the situation with Donna's column in EN. But it has long been > a policy> of AERC that (with the exception of an occasional article) the > articles that > are submitted are "donated" for the benefit of the members of AERC. I think the board is making a mistake. A magazine that is 100% ads is useless to the advertiser. When I open an EN, I check for articles, and I see the ads as I go to the articles. If it just contains a president's message and a VP message, then standings, I've finished it by the time I make it into the house. It's tossed aside and I never see the ads again. HOWEVER, if there are good articles, especially the ones that I keep for reference, that EN will be in my house forever...and every time I open it again I have to look at that big ol' Sundowner ad and drool. They've GOT to provide that spoonfull of suger to make the medicine go down. Without good articles, the advertising is a waste of advertising dollars and they're much wiser to put them in a magazine that we'll continue to pick back up. When I was a kid I read some of the...how can I say it...beginner level mass market horse magazines. I'm past that now. I don't need to read those. I don't bother. I don't need milk at this point in my education I need meat. Most endurance riders I know fall into this catagory. I'd like to give my personal side of this policy. I am a member of the media committee, I write humor articles for Trail Blazer and do some free-lance for The Chronicle of the Horse, and a few other publications. Endurance News contacted me and asked if I would let them reprint some of my humor articles in EN. I told them that I would be interested, if, should I happen to get a collection of them published in book form that they would let me have a small footnote ad telling them where they could order my book. They said "No, we don't do that any more". We're not talking about a quarter of a page...just a footnote. By the way, Donna called me this week to ask me to do an illustration for an article she's writing for Arabian Horse World. We discussed the policy and she said she would have been willing to take a smaller ad than 1/4 page but that wasn't an option. The board may think that I should be willing to support AERC and donate my humor articles cost free. But, darn it, I work HARD to write those things. Sometimes it's like sweating blood. I've had one sitting on my computer for a week just waiting to come up with a decent ending. I doubt I make $3 an hour when I sell them after all the time I put in them, but at least it's *something*. I'm not rich and I've got a little girl who wants some Timberland hiking boots sooo bad she can't stand it, but she's ashamed to ask because she thinks we can't afford them. If some a web site on the internet has offered me enough money to buy those boots to reprint my story, and EN won't even let me add a sentence at the end of it saying where they can buy my book, who should I let have it? There's a big difference between having an article that you were inspired to write, and letting them print it...and having them sending you e-mails saying, "When are you going to contribute something, we need some work out of you" when you've got a job, a family, 7 basketball games a week to sit through, horses to care for, and PAYING articles to write. You really do want to help, but there are only so many hours in a day and at least ONCE a week you have to break down and wash all those pots and pans that are piling up. :-P The current policy of the board is not to pay us for anything we write (even if it was assigned to us) but to reimburse us for our expenses. That may work if you travel cross country to cover a ride, but how does that work for a humor writer. Do you think they'll reimburse me for all those trips I make to the refrigerator when I'm staring at the keyboard and can't think how to make someone laugh about the fact that I did something really stupid and almost killed myself? I need to stop now, (the article with no ending is officially a week late today) but I'd like to say that Donna Snyder Smith's column is one that I save...and refer back to. I read the technical medical ones, but suffer through every minute of it. ENDURANCE Shoeing, equitation, saddle fit, etc. is what I keep for reference...and I do check to see who wrote it. I know enough people now to know whose advice is worth keeping. Angie McGhee > offset the costs of EN is to sell advertising space. To exchange > advertising space for articles is the same thing as paying for > articles > since the space given for Donna's ads are not available to sell to > someone > else. It's just the board's position that financially it is not > good > business to trade valuable advertising space when there are a lot of > good > articles available without having to trade for advertising space. > > The fact that Donna's articles generate business for her is a plus > to her. > It would be great if Donna wanted to donate articles for a column. > We would > love to have them. > > Terry Woolley Howe > Pacific Southwest Regional Director > ________________________________________________________________ GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO! 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