Saturday, 31 December 2011

University of California at Berkeley Bulldozes Trees and Other Vegetation in Peoples Park

THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY BULLDOZES TREES AND OTHER VEGETATION IN PEOPLES PARK, BERKELEY

By Mary Ann Uribe

This morning at about 7:30 a.m. the University of California at Berkeley brought in bulldozers and a work crew and tore down trees and other vegetation in a portion of Peoples Park on Haste St. This was done without notice to members of the community who use the park and, according to a University of California police officer who asked to remain anonymous, was done surreptitiously in order to avoid any confrontation or issue with the community.

A young woman from the University passed out fliers that were a sort of explanation of what was going on. The flier said ?In response to park users and neighbor concerns, we are doing maintenance work to address the rat infestation and safety issues of People?s Park.?

Being Chair of the Peoples Park Forever Committee and a frequent park user, I have never been approached or told by any ?park user(s) and/[(or)] neighbor(s)? who expressed ?concern? about ?safety issues? in this portion of the park. When I asked the woman what were the ?safety issues? referred to in the flier, she said she had no idea and had no knowledge of any ?safety issues? in the Park.

The police officer said no trees would be bull dozed and taken out yet I saw trees downed and was fortunate to be able to take a photo of one that had been cut down. It took many years for these trees to grow and flourish only to be cut down in one felled swoop by a bulldozer.

While there have been rats in the park, what park in California does not have some rats? They deserve a place to live in and a habitat too.

Again the University does things surreptitiously in a manner to deface Peoples Park without consulting the community. As was done in the 1960?s when the University tried to destroy the park after thousands of Berkeley residents worked to build it, these heavy handed tactics only work to undermine any trust any of us may have ever had in the University given its history. Actions speak louder than words.

Wasn?t the University?s Chancellor just in Sacramento to testify regarding the beating of students on campus by its own police force? Why would anyone believe a word the University says given their propensity for violence and reputation for lying.

Source: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/12/28/18703530.php

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Stanford archives offer window into Apple origins (AP)

PALO ALTO, Calf. ? In the interview, Steve Wozniak and the late Steve Jobs recall a seminal moment in Silicon Valley history ? how they named their upstart computer company some 35 years ago.

"I remember driving down Highway 85," Wozniak says. "We're on the freeway, and Steve mentions, `I've got a name: Apple Computer.' We kept thinking of other alternatives to that name, and we couldn't think of anything better."

Adds Jobs: "And also remember that I worked at Atari, and it got us ahead of Atari in the phonebook."

The interview, recorded for an in-house video for company employees in the mid-1980s, was among a storehouse of materials Apple had been collecting for a company museum. But in 1997, soon after Jobs returned to the company, Apple officials contacted Stanford University and offered to donate the collection to the school's Silicon Valley Archives.

Within a few days, Stanford curators were at Apple headquarters in nearby Cupertino, packing two moving trucks full of documents, books, software, videotapes and marketing materials that now make up the core of Stanford's Apple Collection.

The collection, the largest assembly of Apple historical materials, can help historians, entrepreneurs and policymakers understand how a startup launched in a Silicon Valley garage became a global technology giant.

"Through this one collection you can trace out the evolution of the personal computer," said Stanford historian Leslie Berlin. "These sorts of documents are as close as you get to the unmediated story of what really happened."

The collection is stored in hundreds of boxes taking up more than 600 feet of shelf space at the Stanford's off-campus storage facility. The Associated Press visited the climate-controlled warehouse on the outskirts of the San Francisco Bay area, but agreed not to disclose its location.

Interest in Apple and its founder has grown dramatically since Jobs died in October at age 56, just weeks after he stepped down as CEO and handed the reins to Tim Cook. Jobs' death sparked an international outpouring and marked the end of an era for Apple and Silicon Valley.

"Apple as a company is in a very, very select group," said Stanford curator Henry Lowood. "It survived through multiple generations of technology. To the credit of Steve Jobs, it meant reinventing the company at several points."

Apple scrapped its own plans for a corporate museum after Jobs returned as CEO and began restructuring the financially struggling firm, Lowood said.

Job's return, more than a decade after he was forced out of the company he co-founded, marked the beginning of one of the great comebacks in business history. It led to a long string of blockbuster products ? including the iPod, iPhone and iPad ? that have made Apple one of the world's most profitable brands.

After Stanford received the Apple donation, former company executives, early employees, business partners and Mac enthusiasts have come forward and added their own items to the archives.

The collection includes early photos of young Jobs and Wozniak, blueprints for the first Apple computer, user manuals, magazine ads, TV commercials, company t-shirts and drafts of Jobs' speeches.

In one company video, Wozniak talks about how he had always wanted his own computer, but couldn't get his hands on one at a time when few computers were found outside corporations or government agencies.

"All of a sudden I realized, `Hey microprocessors all of a sudden are affordable. I can actually build my own,'" Wozniak says. "And Steve went a little further. He saw it as a product you could actually deliver, sell and someone else could use."

The pair also talk about the company's first product, the Apple I computer, which went on sale in July 1976 for $666.66.

"Remember an Apple I was not particularly useable for too much, but it was so incredible to have your own computer," Jobs says. "It was kind of an embarkation point from the way computers had been going in these big steel boxes with switches and lights."

Among the other items in the Apple Collection:

? Thousands of photos by photographer Douglas Menuez, who documented Jobs' years at NeXT Computer, which he founded in 1985 after he was pushed out of Apple.

? A company video spoofing the 1984 movie "Ghost Busters," with Jobs and other executives playing "Blue Busters," a reference to rival IBM.

? Handwritten financial records showing early sales of Apple II, one of the first mass-market computers.

? An April 1976 agreement for a $5,000 loan to Apple Computer and its three co-founders: Jobs, Wozniak and Ronald Wayne, who pulled out of the company less than two weeks after its founding.

? A 1976 letter written by a printer who had just met Jobs and Wozniak and warns his colleagues about the young entrepreneurs: "This joker (Jobs) is going to be calling you ... They are two guys, they build kits, operate out of a garage."

The archive shows the Apple founders were far ahead of their time, Lowood said.

"What they were doing was spectacularly new," he said. "The idea of building computers out of your garage and marketing them and thereby creating a successful business ? it just didn't compute for a lot of people."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111229/ap_on_hi_te/us_apple_archives

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Friday, 30 December 2011

New York Times sends email to millions by mistake (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Some 8 million people received emails from the New York Times on Wednesday offering a special discount if they would reconsider their decision to cancel their subscriptions.

The trouble is, the offer was supposed to go to only about 300 people who had decided to stop taking home delivery of the newspaper -- it was erroneously sent by a New York Times employee to more than 8 million people on an email marketing list.

The debacle lit up social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook, sparking concerns that hackers might have broken into the newspaper's computer network to send out spam.

A spokeswoman for the newspaper blamed human error, saying hackers were not involved and security was not at fault.

"An email was sent earlier today from The New York Times in error. This email should have been sent to a very small number of subscribers, but instead was sent to a vast distribution list made up of people who had previously provided their email address to The New York Times," the paper said in a statement.

The email offered a 50 percent reduced rate for 16 weeks on home delivery.

The New York Times is owned by New York Times Co.

(Reporting By Paul Thomasch in New York and Jim Finkle in Boston; Editing by Steve Orlofsky, Phil Berlowitz)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enindustry/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111229/media_nm/us_newyorktimes_subscribers

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Thursday, 29 December 2011

FARSI TROVARE SUI MOTORI DI RICERCA - Advertising su Google - Stefano Polastri

FARSI TROVARE SUI MOTORI DI RICERCA - strategie di web marketing, posizionamento e visibilit? del sito, sfruttamento dei media sociali
2? seminario tecnico del ciclo SOCIAL BUSINESS
Parma 3

FARSI TROVARE SUI MOTORI DI RICERCA - strategie di web marketing, posizionamento e visibilit? del sito, sfruttamento dei media sociali
2? seminario tecnico del ciclo SOCIAL BUSINESS
Parma 3 novembre 2011 - Palazzo Soragna

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Video: 2011's Winning Stocks

The Fast Money Halftime Report traders break down today's market moving headlines, including the S&P sitting on a 200-day moving average and the stocks that are poised for a breakout.

Related Links:

Business & financial news headlines from msnbc.com

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45806376/

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Wednesday, 28 December 2011

How to set up your new camera (Digital Trends)

new cameraThose of you lucky enough to unwrap a new DSLR or ICL camera this holiday season might be feeling a little overwhelmed. Between the included accessories and various instructions for best use that came with the packaging, you might not be sure where to get started. If this is your first foray with a high-end manual digital camera, this guide will help you get your feet wet.

Gear

gearThere are a few things you?ll need to grab if they weren?t included with your gift. Hopefully you?re prepared for this because it might get a little expensive if all you got was the camera body.
  • SD cards: You?ll want a couple to get started, and post-holidays you can put those gift cards and clearance sales to use.
  • Bag and strap: Securing your camera is a top priority. Since you?re new to this higher-end genre, you might not be prepared for the amount of care you should exercise with these devices. A bag or carrying case of some kind is necessary, preferably with room for additional lenses and a charger. Nearly every kit comes with a strap but if that?s not the case, make sure you get one of these as well. Gone are the days when you can just stuff the thing in your pocket, purse, or backpack.
  • Lenses: If you got your camera as a gift, chances are the basic lens kit was included. But if that?s not the case then you obviously need to take care of this before you start shooting. To get started, we suggest picking up a prime and a telephoto lens. This allows you some versatility without sinking too much money right off the bat. Strapped for cash? Grab a pancake lens for the time being.
Now there are a variety of fun camera accessories on the market, and we suggest you start keeping track of them in order for next year?s wish list. But these are some of the basics you?ll need to get set up and on your way to shooting ASAP.

Camera-ModesPushing buttons

It?s time to get acquainted with your camera. If you asked for or bought yourself a high-end manual shooter, you?ve likely had time to at least experiment with shooting in manual, whether via a loaner or a point-and-shoot. But things naturally get more complicated from here. Check out the mode dial and slowly work your way up to the ?M? (full manual) setting.

We?d suggest starting with shutter or aperture priority because you can pretty much surmise what you have control over from the label. After you feel like you have a good feel for adjusting the exposure and depth of field on your own, check out ?P? or program. Like the other two settings, it?s semi-automatic. Here you get to decide the ISO setting, among other things.

Don?t feel like you need to step things up to Manual right away. It?s better to feel entirely comfortable with these introductions than take a frustrating amount of throwaway images immediately. And if these semi-automatic settings are still a little too complicated, put it on full-auto and fiddle with features like white balance and light settings. The best way to improve here: trial and error.

Use raw

A raw image file is to digital cameras what a film negative was to analog cameras. It?s sort of a representative of what the final photo will look like?it?s what will create the image. You?ll have to convert these files on your computer before being able to view them. So why shoot in raw? When you playback these photos on your camera, you get a much more accurate look at the details of the photos. Exposure, saturation, and white balance are much truer, and you can adjust accordingly while shooting rather than have to deal with the inaccuracies in post-production.

Editing

Speaking of post-production, you?re going to need some editing software. If you?re able and willing to shell out for Photoshop, by all means go right ahead. You can also get a 30-day trial, which we suggest doing first.

But if you need something free there are a variety of free photo editors that you should get your hands dirty with before you commit though. Also be sure to troll Web app stores for browser-based versions if you prefer that format. You don?t need to get anything fancy, but there are a few minor tweaks you should at least experiment with now that you?ve upped your equipment.

Choose a platform

500pxNow that you?ve got yourself a fancy new camera, you need to decide where you?re going to show off all your professional-grade photos (and attach copyright to). While we?re not staying that some of them should make it to Facebook, flooding your friends with every single one of your images from shoots isn?t advised.

There are a variety of great photo-sharing platforms that welcome every out of your images, from weird experiments with exposure to mistakes that you want advice on how to improve. Trust us, no one on Facebook or Twitter wants to see five pictures of a bench taken at different aperture for comparison?s sake. For that, we?d advise getting a free membership (of course there are premium options as well) with one of the following.

  • 500px: This site has a very simple layout and a strong community. And users don?t skimp on the details of each shot. The site?s layout also makes it great to use as a portfolio.
  • Flickr: The most obvious place to store and share your photos is Flickr. You can easily copyright your images and keep the prying eyes of the Internet from taking them over, as well as use the site?s various and active discussion boards to ask for help and shooting advice.
  • Behance: Another great option for uploading and sharing your work is Behance, although most who use the site are on the more professional side.
  • Snapixel: You get 5GB of storage and there?s no maximum file size. You can share photos from the site with Twitter as well and grab site embed codes.?

Lock it up

camera securityThe most important thing you can do after getting a new camera is keeping it safe. You likely know this by now, but these things are expensive as well as breakable. If your new gadget came with any insurance policies or warranties, keep those in a safe and memorable place. Like in your wallet? or next to your passport. You can easily spend thousands of dollars repairing or replacing lost or stolen gear, so consider yourself warned.

If you camera didn?t come with any of the above mentioned items, consider taking precautions. CameraTrace is a service from GadgetTrak that makes sure your camera can be found if lost or stolen. Major manufacturers also sell policies for their devices, as do insurance companies. If you want to take matters into your own hands, be sure to keep a copy of you camera?s serial numbers safe.?

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

More from Digital Trends

GadgetTrak launches CameraTrace: Photo thieves beware

Kodak sells its sensor business ? what now?

What you need to know about micro four thirds: The cool kids of the camera world

Concept cameras: Digital photography?s craziest pipe dreams

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20111227/tc_digitaltrends/howtosetupyournewcamera

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India, Pakistan to explore fresh CBMs - Greater Kashmir

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewsXS_Pakistan/~3/HyrqllBJyOY/rss

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Tuesday, 27 December 2011

xatakamovil: Samsung GT-N8010 podr?a ser el futuro sustituto del Samsung Galaxy Note http://t.co/KJA9Xjk4

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Mens George Washington Costume

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Mens historic/patriotic costume features a mask and jacket with attached vest and jabot. George Washington was the father of our Nation. He was a brave military officer and a fearless leader. You can look like this great man in your Men?s George Washington Costume. This costume includes?

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Source: http://www.scareyou.com/mens-george-washington-costume-2/

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Monday, 26 December 2011

Chinese activist sentenced to 10 years jail for inciting subversion

Another rights activist jailed in China for criticizing Communist Party
Herald Globe
Monday 26th December, 2011??

?????Activist Chen Xi jailed for writing 36 essays criticizing the Communist Party
?????Chen told the court he will not appeal verdict
?????Chen was involved in 1989 Tiananmen protest

BEIJING- A veteran Chinese activist who was involved in the 1989 Tiananmen uprising was sentenced Monday to 10 years prison for inciting subversion, his wife said. The sentencing comes three days after another activist was imprisoned for the same offence.

Chen Xi was found guilty of the charge of "incitement to subvert state power" by a court in the southern city of Guiyang for the 36 essays he had written and posted online criticizing the Communist Party.

The U.N. Human Rights office said it was alarmed by the sentence.

According to his wife Zhang Qunxuan, Chen told the court he was innocent and said he will not appeal the verdict.

Rights groups have accused Beijing of using the Christmas period as cover for a crackdown.

"It does work really well because there's no diplomatic activity around Christmas," said Nicholas Bequelin of Human Rights Watch.

Chen Xi has been jailed several times since being involved in the 1989 protests.

He was arrested Nov 29 and charged in the southern province of Guizhou.

Another activist, Chen Wei, a dissident in the southwestern city of Suining, was jailed last week for nine years for criticising the party.

Another veteran dissident to be jailed this year is Liu Xianbin, a democracy activist who has spent 10 years in prison and was given another 10 year sentence in March.

Liu was sentenced to 11 years in prison in 2009 for co-authoring Charter 08, which called for an end to single-party rule and advocates democratic political reforms.

Terming the sentence on Chen Xi "extremely harsh", UN human rights chief Navi Pillay said it "indicates a further tightening of the severe restrictions on the scope of freedom of expression in China that has been seen over the last two years".

"I call upon Chinese authorities to release any person detained for peacefully exercising his or her right to freedom of expression," she said in a statement released Monday.

Source: http://story.heraldglobe.com/index.php/ct/9/cid/b8de8e630faf3631/id/202153508/cs/1/

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Legal scholarship highlight: Analyzing the candor of Supreme Court ...

In the past two decades, criticism of Supreme Court confirmation hearings has intensified considerably. According to the prevailing wisdom, today?s nominees are more reluctant to answer questions during their Senate testimony, and the hearings have suffered as a result. Recent proceedings have been described as ?a vapid and hollow charade,? an ?exercise in obfuscation,?and even a carefully choreographed ?kabuki? dance. In short, the message from critics is clear: Nominees now say ?nothing of value? during their testimony, and the hearings are no longer what they used to be.

This trend toward nominee evasiveness allegedly began after Robert Bork?s 1987 confirmation hearings. According to that well-known account, Bork?s lengthy and candid answers doomed his nomination, and subsequent nominees, seeking to avoid a similar fate, have become much more cagey and unresponsive in their testimony. Along these lines, the approach taken by Ruth Bader Ginsburg during her 1993 confirmation proceedings is now generally regarded as paradigmatic. By declining to discuss any issue that might come before the Court, Ginsburg is thought to have charted a new course for post-Bork nominees. Indeed, the so-called ?Ginsburg Rule? ? according to which nominees invoke their right not to answer questions about potentially unsettled legal debates ? has become shorthand for the idea that contemporary nominees duck and dodge difficult questions in a way that their predecessors did not.

But how accurate is this widely accepted version of events? Have nominees really become less forthcoming in recent years? Previous studies of Supreme Court confirmation hearings have focused on changes in the topics of the questions that senators ask.? But to date, there has been no systematic analysis of how nominees respond to those questions. Therefore, while it is possible that things have gone rapidly downhill since Bork, as the conventional wisdom suggests, the evidence supporting this view has been largely anecdotal.

In our article, ?No Hints, No Forecasts, No Previews?: An Empirical Analysis of Supreme Court Nominee Candor from Harlan to Kagan, we seek to overcome this gap in our understanding of the Supreme Court confirmation process. To that end, we present the results of a content analysis of every Supreme Court confirmation hearing transcript since 1955, the year that the proceedings became a regular part of the confirmation process. For each hearing, we coded all of the exchanges between a senator and the nominee, recording things such as the type of question asked, the degree to which the answer was forthcoming, and the reasons nominees gave for not answering more fully. Using this original dataset ? nearly 11,000 exchanges in total ? we then tested a series of hypotheses about nominee responsiveness in the face of Senate questioning.

Our results show that the conventional wisdom about Supreme Court confirmation hearings needs to be rethought. First, we discovered that there has not been a dramatic decline in nominee responsiveness since the 1980s. Recent nominees, such as Samuel Alito and Elena Kagan, were just as forthcoming as many earlier nominees, and even more forthcoming than others. Second, the overall rate of responsiveness for all nominees, including those who came after Bork, is much better than generally assumed. Nominees generally answer between sixty and seventy percent of their questions in a fully forthcoming manner. By contrast, only about twenty percent of the questions get a qualified response, and outright refusal to answer rarely tops ten percent. Therefore, whether we are talking about hearings from the 1960s or the 1990s, the notion that nominees evade more questions than they answer is unfounded. Lastly, we find that there have been subtle but important changes in the types of questions that are being asked, the topics of those questions, and in the ways in which nominees answer them, and that these shifts have helped to fuel the perception that responsiveness has declined where in fact it has not.

Taken together, these findings suggest to us that Supreme Court confirmation hearings have been largely misunderstood and mischaracterized in recent years, and that whatever one may want to say about recent nominees, one should also say about many of their predecessors as well. To be sure, the hearings have changed over the past few decades: they are longer, there are more questions, and they are more partisan and ideological. But on balance, they are neither more ?vapid? nor more ?hollow? than they have always been ? a finding that we hope will generate a lively debate about the role that these hearings play in the confirmation process.

Dion Farganis is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Elon University; Justin Wedeking is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Kentucky.

Posted in Academic Round-up, Featured

Recommended Citation: Dion Farganis, Legal scholarship highlight: Analyzing the candor of Supreme Court nominees, SCOTUSblog (Dec. 23, 2011, 2:16 PM), http://www.scotusblog.com/2011/12/legal-scholarship-highlight-analyzing-the-candor-of-supreme-court-nominees/

Source: http://www.scotusblog.com/2011/12/legal-scholarship-highlight-analyzing-the-candor-of-supreme-court-nominees/

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Sunday, 25 December 2011

North Korea to be at center of Japan-China talks (AP)

BEIJING ? Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda arrives in Beijing on Sunday for talks focused on North Korea and promoting stability in the closed country after the death of Kim Jong Il.

Noda's first official visit to Beijing would normally have focused on bilateral issues, such as squabbles over islands claimed by both countries, but the death of Kim a little more than a week ago and the announcement of his son Kim Jong Un as the country's "supreme leader" has shifted the focus away from bilateral issues.

Noda is the first foreign leader to meet China's leaders since Kim's death and he will emphasize the need to get stalled six-party talks on North Korea's nuclear program back on track.

"I would like exchange views and information in detail so as to avert a harmful effect on peace and stability on the Korean peninsula," Noda told reporters in Tokyo before he left for his trip.

Noda meets his counterpart Wen Jiabao on Sunday, and then President Hu Jintao on Monday before returning home. His visit to China was planned before Kim's death was announced Dec. 19.

He will tell Wen that China's role as chair of the six-party talks is "very important," Chief Cabinet Secretary Osamu Fujimura said Saturday.

The six-party talks, which include the two Koreas, the United States and Russia, are aimed at disarming North Korea of its nuclear capability. Pyongyang walked out on the talks in 2009 ? and exploded a second nuclear-test device ? but now wants to re-engage.

Last year, Pyongyang also was blamed for two military attacks on South Korea that heightened tensions on the peninsula.

Noda, who came to power in September, met Hu in November on the sidelines of an APEC meeting in Hawaii.

Japan does not have diplomatic relations with North Korea, while China is the impoverished country's most important supporter and supplies it with food aid and much of its energy resources.

Noda also is expected to discuss the possibility of renting pandas for a zoo in Sendai to cheer up the northern Japanese region as it recovers from the tsunami disaster in March.

Japan and China have a list of sensitive topics they are trying to make progress on, including fights over islands and energy disputes in the East China Sea, and recently the arrests of Chinese fishermen Japan says have been illegally fishing in its waters.

The countries also want to make sure relations are on an even keel in the run-up to the 40th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties in September.

___

Associated Press reporter Mari Yamaguichi in Tokyo contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/china/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111225/ap_on_re_as/as_china_japan

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PGA_com: Bettye 'Mighty Mite' Danoff, one of LPGA's 13 founding members, dies at 88. She was a Dallas-area legend http://t.co/OlDe397u #pga #golf

Twitter / PGA.COM: Bettye 'Mighty Mite' Danof ... Loader Bettye 'Mighty Mite' Danoff, one of LPGA's 13 founding members, dies at 88. She was a Dallas-area legend

Source: http://twitter.com/PGA_com/statuses/150100279931580416

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Saturday, 24 December 2011

Miami-Dade All-Stars top South Florida All-Stars, 31-21

Jackson?s De?Andre Jasper had six catches for 104 yards and a pair of touchdowns, including a 29-yard touchdown grab beating a double team with 3:30 to play leading the Miami-Dade All-Stars over the South Florida All-Stars 31-21 at Traz Powell Stadium Friday night in the Tournament of Champions Nike All-Star Game.

That performance earned Jasper the game MVP award edging out Booker T. Washington?s Kevon Caffey who was all over the field defensively and had a pair of blocked punts.

In the past, the game featured only players from Miami-Dade and Broward County, but event founder Wesley Frater wanted to open it up to players from all over the state to compete against the Miami-Dade All-Stars. This year, the South Florida All-Star team consisted of players from Broward, Palm Beach and the Treasure Coast. Frater plans on opening it up to the rest of the state next year.

??It was always my vision to open it up to the rest of the state to compete against Miami-Dade,? Frater said. ?We got kids from Broward to the Treasure Coast. I want it to be open to the entire state.?

?Even with more counties involved, it wasn?t enough for the South Florida All-Stars to knock off the Miami-Dade All-Stars.

?Miami-Dade opened up strong behind a blocked punt by Varela?s Jordan Armstrong a minute into the game. Miami-Dade converted off the blocked punt on a 20-yard touchdown pass from Northwestern?s E.J. Hilliard to Jasper for a 7-0 lead.

Then Caffey blocked a punt on the next possession. Miami-Dade took over at the South Florida All-Star?s one-yard line. South Dade?s Torry Clayton punched it in for 14-0 lead. Clayton stuck again on a 60-yard touchdown run, breaking a couple of tackles for the big score and a 21-0 lead with 6:15 to play in the first half. Clayton finished with six carries for 65 yards.

South Florida finally got on the board on a seven-yard touchdown run by Jupiter Christian?s Kedric Bostic. ?Things got interesting though in the final seven minutes. Ely?s Darren Allen hit University School?s Macgarrett Kings for a 21-yard touchdown on a wide receiver pass cutting the lead to 21-14. Miami-Dade came right back though with a 29-yard field goal following an onside kick attempt by South Florida.

However, South Florida scored again with 4:35 to play cutting the lead to 24-21 when Allen caught a 27-yard touchdown pass from Bostic. Jasper returned the ensuing kickoff 58 yards setting up his game clinching touchdown.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/12/24/2560136/miami-dade-all-stars-top-south.html

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US account of airstrikes that killed 24 Pakistanis (AP)

The U.S. account of what happened November 25-26, when U.S. airstrikes killed two dozen Pakistani troops in a cross-border skirmish riddled with mistakes. The U.S. has accepted partial blame for the incident, but says Pakistani troops fired first and the U.S. forces were acting in self-defense.

10:06 p.m.: U.S. troops land on the ground near Nawa village near the Pakistan border and begin hiking east, up through the rugged terrain.

11:09 p.m.: U.S. forces begin taking heavy machine-gun fire directly over their heads. Shortly afterward, mortar fire begins, landing within 50 meters of the helicopter landing zone.

The ground commander requests a show of force by aircraft in the area.

An F-15 fighter jet and an AC-130 gunship streak across the sky, firing flares to signal U.S./NATO presence.

Machine-gun and mortar fire continues.

U.S. forces are told that no Pakistani troops are in the area.

U.S. ground commander directs airstrikes by the AC-130 gunship, which lasts six minutes.

11:44 p.m.: AC-130 and Apache helicopters strike again because the firing has continued

Frantic telephone calls from Pakistanis to their liaison officers near the border say their forces are under fire.

U.S. forces check with border coordination center, where mix-up over the location and faulty maps further confuse the matter.

U.S. again told no Pakistani troops are in the area ? not realizing they were using inaccurate locations.

12:40 a.m.: U.S. troops fire on a second area, further to the north, in response to heavy machine-gun fire.

1 a.m.: Confirmation comes that Pakistani troops are in the area. U.S. assault stops.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/us_us_pakistan_airstrikes_glance

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Monday, 19 December 2011

Senate OKs short-term extension of payroll tax cut

Senators racing for the exits after a year of bitter battles passed legislation Saturday that would extend a Social Security payroll tax cut and jobless benefits for just two months, setting the stage for the next fight until February.

While a partial victory for President Barack Obama's year-end jobs agenda, the measure awaiting House approval next week contains a provision demanded by Republicans to pressure the White House into approving construction of a Canada-to-Texas oil pipeline that promises thousands of jobs.

While pleased by the Senate vote, Obama said "it would be inexcusable for Congress not to further extend this middle class tax cut for the rest of the year. It should be a formality, and hopefully it's done with as little drama as possible when they get back in January."

He added, "This really isn't hard. There are plenty of ways to pay for these proposals."

Democratic and GOP leaders option for the short-term extension after failing to agree on big enough spending cuts to pay for a full-year renewal of the payroll tax cut. The 2 percentage point tax cut affects 160 million taxpayers. The weekly jobless payments average about $300 for millions of people who have been out of work for six months or more.

The measure was approved by an 89-10 vote during a Saturday session.

Votes were scheduled later Saturday on a $1 trillion-plus catchall spending measure setting the day-to-day budgets of 10 Cabinet agencies. The House cleared the spending bill Friday.

In a statement, White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer indicated Obama would sign the two-month extension measure, saying it had met his test of "preventing a tax increase on 160 million hardworking Americans" and avoiding damage to the economy recovery.

The statement made no mention of the pipeline.

The legislation, would require the president to grant a permit, but allows Obama to opt not to do so if he determines that the pipeline is "not in the national interest." One senior administration official said the president would almost certainly refuse to grant a permit. The official was not authorized to speak publicly.

Proposed Keystone pipeline
The developments came a few hours after the White House publicly backed away from Obama's threat to veto any bill that linked the payroll tax cut extension with a Republican demand for a speedy decision on the 1,700-mile Keystone XL oil pipeline proposed from Canada to Texas Gulf Coast refineries.

  1. Other political news of note

    1. GOP candidates for Congress bullish on Gingrich

      First Read: The hottest argument in Republican circles these days is whether nominating Newt Gingrich as the party standard-bearer would be disastrous or providential.

    2. Senate negotiators reach deal on payroll tax
    3. NYT: Health care law will let states tailor benefits
    4. House passes $1T budget bill, avoids shutdown
    5. The Iowa ad blitz is on

Obama said on Dec. 7 that "any effort to try to tie Keystone to the payroll tax cut I will reject. So everybody should be on notice."

Obama recently announced he was postponing a decision until after the 2012 elections on the much-studied proposal. Environmentalists oppose the project, but several unions support it, and the legislation puts the president in the uncomfortable position of having to choose between customary political allies.

Republican senators put the price of the two-month package at between $30 billion and $40 billion said the cost would be covered by raising fees on new mortgages backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The fees, drawn from a Treasury Department housing finance market reform plan, would add several thousand dollars to the 30-year cost of home loans guaranteed by mortgage giants Fannie Mae Freddie and Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration.

A worker making a $100,000 salary would reap a tax cut of about $330 through the short-term payroll tax extension.

A version of the fee that circulated overnight would effectively raise the interest rate on a mortgage by one-tenth of one percentage point, but the still-undetermined final version ? awaiting analysis from the Congressional Budget Office ? was expected to be lower.

The measure also provides a 60-day reprieve from a scheduled 27 percent cut in the fees paid to doctors who treat Medicare patients.

Officials said that in private talks, the two sides had hoped to reach agreement on the full one-year extension of the payroll tax cut and unemployment benefits that Obama had made the centerpiece of the jobs program he submitted to Congress last fall.

Those efforts failed when the two sides could not agree on enough offsetting cuts to blunt the measure's impact on the debt.

The failure tees up the issue again for early next year, but it won't get any easier to agree on spending cuts. The

"We'll be back discussing the same issues in a couple of months, but from our point of view, we think the keystone pipeline is a very important job-creating measure in the private sector that doesn't cost the government a penny," said Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader.

Another vote, another headache
Neither House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, nor his aides participated in the negotiations, although McConnell said he was optimistic about the measure's chances for final approval. The payroll tax cut is unpopular in GOP ranks and another vote in two month could present a headache for GOP leaders.

The State Department, in an analysis released this summer, said the pipeline project would create up to 6,000 jobs during construction, while developer TransCanada put the total at 20,000 in direct employment.

The 1,700-mile pipeline would carry oil from western Canada to Texas Gulf Coast refineries, passing through Montana, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma.

The spending bill would lock in cuts that conservative Republicans won from the White House and Democrats earlier in the year.

Republicans also won their fight to block new federal regulations for light bulb energy efficiency, coal dust in mines and clean water permits for construction of timber roads.

The White House turned back GOP attempts to block limits on greenhouse gases, mountaintop removal mining and hazardous emissions from utility plants, industrial boilers and cement kilns.

Associated Press writers David Espo, Alan Fram, Donna Cassata and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this report.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45707185/ns/politics/

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Saturday, 17 December 2011

Troops assault Egypt protesters, clashes kill 9 (Reuters)

CAIRO (Reuters) ? Soldiers beat demonstrators with batons in Cairo's Tahrir Square on Saturday in a second day of clashes that have killed nine people and wounded more than 300, marring the first free election most Egyptians can remember.

Protesters fled into side streets to escape the troops in riot gear, who grabbed people and battered them repeatedly even after they had been beaten to the ground, a Reuters journalist said. Shots were fired in the air.

Soldiers pulled down protester tents and set them on fire, local television footage showed.

In Reuters footage one soldier in a line of charging troops drew a pistol and fired a shot at retreating protesters. It was not clear whether he was using blanks or live ammunition.

The violence highlights tensions and divisions in Egypt 10 months after a popular revolt toppled President Hosni Mubarak.

The army generals who replaced him have angered some Egyptians by seeming reluctant to give up power. Others back the military as a force for badly needed stability during a difficult transition to democracy.

For a graphic: http://link.reuters.com/tax45s

The army assault on Saturday followed skirmishes between protesters and troops during which a fire destroyed archives, some more than 200 years old, in a building next to Tahrir.

An army official said troops targeted thugs, not protesters, after shots were fired at soldiers and petrol bombs set the archive building ablaze, the state news agency MENA reported.

The bloodshed follows unrest in which 42 people were killed in the week before November 28, the start of a phased parliamentary poll that is empowering Islamist parties repressed during the 30-year Mubarak era, when elections were routinely rigged.

Voting in the second round of a drawn-out election process seen as part of a promised transition from army to civilian rule by July passed off peacefully on Wednesday and Thursday.

Friday's clashes pitted thousands of demonstrators against soldiers and plainclothes men who were seen at one point hurling rocks from the roof of a parliament building.

Army vehicles and soldiers were deployed at roads leading into Tahrir Square, the hub of the anti-Mubarak uprising, on Saturday evening. Some protesters and troops threw rocks at each other. Protesters also lobbed petrol bombs at army lines.

Troops had set up a barrier blocking the road that leads from the square to the parliament building. But cars were passing through other roads entering Tahrir.

'ATTACK ON THE REVOLUTION'

The army-appointed prime minister, Kamal al-Ganzouri, blamed the violence on youths among the protesters. "What is happening in the streets today is not a revolution, rather it is an attack on the revolution," he said in a televised statement.

State media put the death toll at nine and said 200 of the 361 wounded were taken to hospital. Ganzouri, 78, earlier said 30 security guards outside parliament had been hurt and 18 people had gunshot wounds.

Officials have in the past blamed third parties or thugs for shooting during protests in which people were hit by gunfire.

Tahrir protesters and some other Egyptians are infuriated by the army's perceived reluctance to quit power, focusing their wrath on Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, head of the army council, who was Mubarak's defense minister for two decades.

"This is happening because Tantawi is dirty and he is ruling the country the same way Hosni ruled it," said a taxi driver.

But other Egyptians, desperate for order, voiced frustration about the unrest that has battered the economy.

"We can't work, we can't live, and because of what? Because of some thugs who have taken control of the square and destroyed our lives. Those are no revolutionaries," said Mohamed Abdel Halim, a 21-year-old who runs a store near Tahrir.

MISKICKED FOOTBALL?

State media gave conflicting accounts of what sparked the violence. State media cited some people saying a man went into the parliament compound to retrieve a miskicked football, but was harassed and beaten by police and guards.

But they also cited others who said the man had prompted scuffles by trying to set up camp in the compound.

Among the dead was Emad Effat, a senior official of Egypt's Dar al-Ifta, a religious authority that issues Islamic fatwas (edicts). His wife, Nashwa Abdel-Fattah, told Reuters Effat died from a gunshot wound. At his funeral on Saturday, hundreds of mourners chanted "Down with military rule."

"The firing wasn't just from above, there were people on the ground. The bullet hit him under his shoulder in a diagonal way from right to left," she said, adding she did not know who fired the shot.

A new civilian advisory council set up to offer policy guidance to the generals said it would resign unless its recommendations on how to solve the crisis were heeded. One council member announced he was quitting.

The council said it would suspend its meetings until the violence stopped. It called for prosecution of those responsible and asked the army to release all those detained in the unrest.

Islamist and liberal politicians decried the army's tactics.

The Muslim Brotherhood, whose party list is leading the election, said in a statement the military must make "a clear and quick apology for the crime that has been committed."

Pro-democracy activists have accused the army of trying to clear a sit-in outside the cabinet office that a small number of protesters has maintained since the November violence.

The army council is in charge until a presidential election in June, but parliament will have a popular mandate that the military will find hard to ignore as it oversees the transition.

(Additional reporting by Ashraf Fahim, Marwa Awad and Dina Zayed; Writing by Edmund Blair; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111217/wl_nm/us_egypt

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The Clock Metaphor

Originally published on June 30, 2009.

Chad Orzel wrote a neat history of (or should we say ?evolution of?) clocks, as in ?timekeeping instruments?. He points out the biological clocks are ??sort of messy application, from the standpoint of physics?? and he is right ? for us biologists, messier the better. We wallow in mess, cherish ambiguity and relish complexity. Anyway, he is talking about real clocks ? things made by people to keep time. And he starts with a simple definition of what a clock is:

In order to really discuss the physics of timekeeping, you need to strip the idea of a clock down to the absolute bare essentials. At its core, a clock really has only one defining characteristic: A clock is a thing that ticks.

OK, I?m using a fairly broad definition of ?tick,? here, but if you?ll grant that leeway, ?ticking? is the essential property of clocks. In this context, ?ticking? just refers to some regular, repetitive behavior that takes place in a periodic fashion.

This reminds me that a ?biological clock? is a metaphor. A useful metaphor, but a metaphor nonetheless (and just like metaphors of cellular machinery are taken literally by Creationists, they have been known on occasion to talk about circadian clocks as if they had real wheels and cogs and gears!).

I want to stress that the clock metaphor has been very useful for the study of biological rhythms. Without Pittendrigh?s insight that cycles in nature can be modeled with the math of physical oscillators, we would be probably decades behind (unless someone else of authority in the field at the time had the same insight back then) in our understanding of the underlying biology. Just check how useful it was in the entire conceptualization of entrainment and photoperiodism. The Phase-Response Curve, based on the math of physical oscillators, is the Number One tool in the chronobiological repertoire.

But, just as most people in the field take the clock metaphor for granted and without much thinking, there have been a few people who questioned its utility for some areas of research. For instance, for the study of biological rhythms in nature within an ecological and evolutionary context, Jim Enright proposed a metaphor of an audio-tape set on continuous play (Enright, J.T. (1975). The circadian tape recorder and its entrainment. In Physiological Adaptation to the Environment (ed. F.J.Vernberg), pp. 465-476. Intext Educational Publishers, Ney York.). Only a dozen or so publications since then took him seriously and tried to apply this concept. Today, in the age of CDs and iPods, who even remembers audio tapes?

While fully utilizing the utility of the clock metaphor and applying it myself in my own work, I was always cautious about it. Aware that it is a metaphor, I always wondered if it constrains the way we think about the biological process and if we may miss important insights by not thinking in terms of other possible metaphors.

While far from mature, my thinking is that different metaphors apply best to different areas of research and different questions. While the clock metaphor is great for understanding the entrainment of the circadian system (including whole organism, tissues and individual cells) and photoperiodism, and Enright?s endless tape (or some modern substitute) may be useful for ecological studies (including temporal learning and memory), other angles of study may require other concepts.

For instance, I think that the study of what goes inside the cell can benefit from a different metaphor. Studying the molecular basis of circadian rhythms may best be done by utilizing a Rube-Goldberg Machine metaphor: event A triggers event B which starts process C which results in event D?.and so on until the event Z causes the event A to happen again. If that last step is missing, it is not a circadian rhythm ? it is more akin to an hourglass clock in which something outside of the system needs to start the process all over again.

For studying the outputs, i.e., how the circadian system orchestrates timing of all the other processes in the body, the metaphor may have to fit the organism. An ON-OFF switch is the best metaphorical description of the clock system in (Cyano)bacteria, where there are only two states of the system: the day state and the night state.

For something a little bit more eukaryotic, a relay may be a better metaphor (more than two, but not too many states). The metaphor of a camshaft in car engines that times the opening and closing of cylinders would be fine for fungi and plants and perhaps some invertebrates.

But I had a hard time coming up with a decent metaphor that could apply to complex animals, like us. So far, the best I could come up with is the barrel of a Player Piano. Many little knobs on its surface determine when each note will be played. If you make the barrel rotate slowly and the song lasts 24 hours, then outputs from circadian pacemakers are knobs and the target organs (and peripheral oscillators in them) are those long prongs that make music. Can you think of a better metaphor?

Related reading:

Basics: Biological Clock
Circadian clock without DNA?History and the power of metaphor
A Pacemaker Is A Network
Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Sleep (But Were Too Afraid To Ask)
Seasonal Affective Disorder ? The Basics
Sun Time is the Real Time
Lesson of the Day: Circadian Clocks are HARD to shift!
Lithium, Circadian Clocks and Bipolar Disorder
Are Zombies nocturnal?
Diversity of insect circadian clocks ? the story of the Monarch butterfly
Me and the copperheads?or why we still don?t know if snakes secrete melatonin at night
The Mighty Ant-Lion
City Of Light: Insomniac Urban Animals
Spring Forward, Fall Back ? should you watch out tomorrow morning?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=1ce582b67361da525eba9574dfffdc97

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Friday, 16 December 2011

Uncommitted newbies can foil forceful few

Decisions can be more democratic when individuals with no preset preference join a group

Web edition : Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Odd as it sounds, adding wishy-washy members to a group can wrest control from a strongly opinionated minority and make collective decisions more democratic.

At least that?s what happened in an experiment with schooling fish and three kinds of computer simulations described in the Dec. 16 Science. ?Quite counter-intuitive,? says study coauthor Iain Couzin of Princeton University. ?What we?re trying to do with this paper is put out a new idea.?

Couzin is not arguing that there?s a benefit to a poorly informed electorate. But he does call for experiments to clarify the role that uninformed people with no opinion on a choice play in human consensus building.

The study ?supports a growing body of evidence that larger groups are better decision makers than smaller groups,? says applied mathematician David Sumpter at the University of Uppsala in Sweden who studies collective behavior.

It also echoes economic research showing that having some fraction of uninformed traders in a market can reduce volatility, says Michael Kearns, a computer scientist at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia who is interested in collective behavior.

The fish study grew out of computer simulations Couzin created that demonstrated the considerable power of opinionated minorities in otherwise indifferent groups, flocks or herds. When he mixed factions with different strengths of opinion in this simulation, as well as in two very different analyses of group behavior, he found hints of peculiar effects of uninformed parties.

For an experimental test of the odd effects, study coauthor Christos Ioannou, now at the University of Bristol in England, worked with small freshwater fish called golden shiners, which have a very strong tendency to stick together in schools. Like other animals such as bees, these fish can learn to associate food with some colors (yellow for the fish) much more readily than with other colors. Ioannu, who was kept in the dark about the predictions of the computer simulations, trained shiners to swim toward either yellow or blue marks in a tank for a treat. Even after the same training, those aimed toward yellow were more committed to their color. So these became the fish version of individuals with stronger opinions.

When the researchers mixed a minority (five) of these strongly yellow-seeking fish with a majority (six) of less passionate, blue-seeking fish, the whole group swam toward the minority yellow mark in more than 80 percent of the trials. When the researchers added five uninformed fish ? with no training toward yellow or blue or any apparent tendency to swim toward either mark ? the whole group ended up at the minority yellow target only half the time. Adding another five fish reduced the minority victories to below 40 percent.

But human groups have significantly different dynamics than laboratory fish, says Carl Bergstrom of the University of Washington in Seattle. The fish are just influencing each other locally instead of proselytizing intensely and sharing information globally, the way people do in modern democracies.

In his laboratory experiments with real people pushed to reach consensus, Kearns says, ?when the minority wins, it tends to happen fast ? it?s almost shock and awe,? he says. So he can imagine that adding neutral, perhaps vacillating parties could give a majority a chance to recognize and exert its force.

?Maybe the optimum state isn?t everybody being highly informed and having very, very strong political opinions,? Kearns speculates. Perhaps an ideal world would still need a little ignorance. ?Maybe the role of these ignorant individuals, whether they be fish or American voters, is to provide a stabilizing, mediating effect,? he says. But whatever the ideal dose of ignorance may be, current levels clearly exceed it, he says. ?I think we?re very, very far from the optimum.?


Found in: Life and Science & Society

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/336953/title/Uncommitted_newbies_can_foil_forceful_few

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A spoonful of sugar helps your skin age prematurely

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116038/A_spoonful_of_sugar_helps_your_skin_age_prematurely

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Tuesday, 6 December 2011

Too promiscuous to donate an organ? Maybe

Link Information - Click to View

Too promiscuous to donate an organ? Maybe
If you've had two or more sex partners in the last year, you could be a risky organ donor, at least according to a proposed federal health guideline that has drawn sharp protests from transplant experts who say it's far too broad.

Source: MSNBC
Posted on: Tuesday, Dec 06, 2011, 8:00am
Views: 12

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115762/Too_promiscuous_to_donate_an_organ__Maybe

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EU seeks to save the euro, but S&P isn't convinced

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, smiles as he greets German Chancellor Angela Merkel prior to their meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Monday Dec. 5, 2011. The leaders of Germany and France will try to agree Monday on a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets. Financial markets signaled optimism that French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will unveil a unified plan that tightens political and economic cooperation among the 17 European Union countries that use the euro and sets the stage for more aggressive aid from the European Central Bank. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, smiles as he greets German Chancellor Angela Merkel prior to their meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Monday Dec. 5, 2011. The leaders of Germany and France will try to agree Monday on a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets. Financial markets signaled optimism that French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will unveil a unified plan that tightens political and economic cooperation among the 17 European Union countries that use the euro and sets the stage for more aggressive aid from the European Central Bank. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

France's President Nicolas Sarkozy awaits German Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss Europe's financial crisis at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Monday , Dec. 5, 2011. The leaders of Germany and France will try to agree on Monday on a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)

France's President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, welcomes German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, to discuss Europe's financial crisis at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. The leaders of Germany and France will try to agree on Monday on a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets.(AP Photo/Michel Euler)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy greets German Chancellor Angela Merkel prior to their meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Monday Dec. 5, 2011.The leaders of Germany and France will try to agree on Monday on a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets.(AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, right, smiles as he shakes hands with German Chancellor Angela Merkel prior to their meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Monday Dec. 5, 2011. The leaders of Germany and France will try to agree Monday on a cohesive plan to help save the euro through stricter oversight of government budgets. Financial markets signaled optimism that French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will unveil a unified plan that tightens political and economic cooperation among the 17 European Union countries that use the euro and sets the stage for more aggressive aid from the European Central Bank. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

(AP) ? Seeking to restore confidence in the euro, the leaders of France and Germany jointly have called for changes to the European Union treaty so that countries using the euro would face automatic penalties if budget deficits ran too high.

But not everyone on Wall Street was reassured that Europe would get control of its 2-year-old debt crisis.

Stock prices rose and borrowing costs for European governments dropped sharply in response to the changes proposed on Monday by French President Nikolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel. But some of the optimism faded late in the day when Standard and Poor's threatened to cut its credit ratings on 15 eurozone countries, including the likes of Germany, France and Austria which have been considered Europe's safest government debt issuers.

The announcement came only hours after Sarkozy and Merkel revealed sweeping plans to change the EU treaty in an effort to keep tighter checks on overspending nations. The proposal is set to form the basis of discussions at a summit of EU leaders on Thursday and Friday that is expected to provide a blueprint for an exit from the crisis.

While the Franco-German plan would tie the 17-eurozone nations closer together, a tighter union would likely also result in heavier financial burdens for the region's stronger economies, which have already put up billions of euros to rescue Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

Analysts noted that the proposals did not foresee a clear roadmap on how to get the eurozone economies growing again and to reduce funding costs for struggling nations in the longterm.

"If this is all we get it's really very bad news for the future of the euro," said Simon Tilford, chief economist at London's Centre for European Reform.

Many analysts have called on the European Central Bank to intervene in debt markets to lower struggling countries' borrowing costs or the creation of eurobonds ? debt backed by all 17 euro countries.

The euro fell after the S&P announcement, trading down 0.1 percent at $1.339, and trading in futures on the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average turned negative.

After the New York markets closed, S&P confirmed that it had placed 15 nations on notice for possible downgrades. Only two countries that use the euro weren't affected: Cyprus already had that designation and Greece already has ratings low enough to suggest that it's likely to default soon anyway.

France and Germany, the eurozone's two largest economies which currently both have an AAA-rating, quickly came out against the S&P move.

"Germany and France reaffirm that the proposals they made jointly today will reinforce the governance of the euro area in order to foster stability, competitiveness and growth," they said in a joint statement. "France and Germany, in full solidarity, confirm their determination to take all the necessary measures, in liaison with their partners and the European institutions to ensure the stability of the euro area."

Stocks had risen after the leaders of France and Germany called for a new treaty to impose greater fiscal discipline on European countries. Yields on Italian government bonds receded sharply after the new premier Mario Monti introduced sweeping austerity measures over the weekend. That suggests traders believe Italy is less likely to default.

Investors are hoping that the summit of European leaders on Thursday and Friday will produce concrete measures to prevent a messy breakup of the euro currency, which is shared by 17 nations. Markets have been jittery because of fears that the euro might disintegrate, causing a sharp recession in Europe that would spread through the world economy.

"Our wish is to go on a forced march toward re-establishing confidence in the eurozone," Sarkozy said at a news conference in Paris on Monday, with Merkel at his side. "We are conscious of the gravity of the situation and of the responsibility that rests on our shoulders."

EU treaty changes could take months, if not years, to implement and don't wipe away the mountains of government debt dragging down Europe's economy. But preliminary buy-in Friday from the 17 countries that use the euro could set the stage for further emergency aid from the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund or some combination.

"The onus is still on the ECB to print money to make huge loans or bond purchases and draw a line under the crisis," said Jennifer McKeown, senior European economist at Capital Economics. "Perhaps if other member states sign up to Merkel's and Sarkozy's proposals this week the (ECB) will step in."

Sarkozy pledged to have a revised EU treaty ready for signing by March. It would then need to be ratified in each country, which could mean lengthy parliamentary debates or national referendums in some cases.

"A lot depends on the specifics and how these are going to be framed by lawyers," said Piotr Maciej Kaczynski, an expert on EU constitutional issues at the Center for European Policy Studies in Brussels.

At the very least, it could take at least 18 months to ratify a new treaty once it has been signed by all heads of state, said Kaczynski. "That is a much longer timeline than what markets might want," he said.

Bond-market analysts said they remain skeptical of Europe's ability to prevent future profligacy. "If you say it strong enough and often enough maybe people will believe it," said Guy LeBas, chief fixed income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott. "But I don't think the markets believe 'Merkozy' at this point."

EU governments reacted with caution.

No other EU leaders came out against the Franco-German proposals, but no strong statements in favor were immediately forthcoming. The reaction from Austrian Finance Minister Harald Waiglein was fairly typical: "There is nothing here that contradicts our position," although more details are needed, he said.

The modern EU is based on a set of treaties, dating as far back as the 1950s, when the project of consolidating the continent began. The treaties detail the rules that countries must follow and outline the mandates of institutions like the ECB. The most recent was the Lisbon Treaty, which was ratified in 2009, giving additional powers to the European Commission and European Parliament.

Sarkozy said he and Merkel would prefer that the treaty changes they're proposing be agreed to by all 27 members of the EU. But he left the door open to an agreement only among the 17 euro countries and anyone else "who wants to join us."

Sarkozy and Merkel discussed several broad changes for the EU treaty, but failed to provide much detail. The changes they outlined included:

? Introducing an automatic penalty for any government that allows its deficit to exceed 3 percent of GDP. A majority of nations would need to oppose automatic sanctions for a country to avoid them.

Governments are supposed to abide by the deficit limit under existing rules, but many, including France, have flouted it. Further, punishment only occurs after a majority of euro countries votes to impose them.

? Requiring countries to enshrine in law a promise to balance their budgets.

A key issue for the proposal's final approval will be how much flexibility countries can have to run temporary deficits during economic downturns.

? Pledging that any future bailouts would not require private bond investors to absorb a part of the costs, as was the case for the Greek bailout.

Germany had earlier insisted that Europe's permanent bailout fund would demand private investors take losses if a country in the future needs rescuing.

? Promising to not criticize or otherwise comment on the work of the ECB.

This is intended to ensure the bank's independence and its ability to act without pressure from European leaders.

Sarkozy said more details would be included in a letter sent Wednesday to European Council President Herman Van Rompuy.

After Sarkozy and Merkel spoke, stocks rose and borrowing rates for governments across Europe plunged, indicating a sharp rise in investor confidence in the continent's ability to resolve the crisis.

France's CAC-40 index climbed 1.2 percent, Germany's DAX rose 0.4 percent and markets outside of Europe also pushed higher, with the Dow Jones industrial average up 1.2 percent.

French banks, which have been hit hard this year over fears about their large exposure to the government bonds of financially weak countries like Greece, saw some of the biggest gains.

Societe Generale's stock price climbed 6.2 percent while BNP Paribas rose 4.9 percent. In Italy, shares of Unicredit rose 5.4 percent while Spain's Santander rose 3.6 percent.

Worries about the stability of the euro reached a fever pitch in recent weeks as the yields on Italy's bonds ? in a nutshell, its borrowing costs ? jumped above 7 percent. That is the level that eventually forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to require bailouts. By comparison, bond yields in Germany, Europe's largest and most stable economy, are roughly 2 percent.

Italian and Spanish bond yields fell sharply on Monday, an indication of growing investor confidence in their financial future. The yield on Italy's benchmark 10-year bond fell from 6.65 percent to 5.93 percent.

Italy, whose government debt is equivalent to 120 percent of the country's annual economic output, needs to refinance $270 billion of its $2.6 trillion of outstanding debt by the end of April.

The size of the problems facing Italy and Spain are considered too large for the existing funds available to the European Financial Stability Facility ($590 billion) and the IMF ($389 billion.) To boost the firepower of the IMF, several economists have proposed that the ECB lend to it.

The big threat to the global financial system is that Europe's debt crisis could spiral out of control.

If governments default on their bonds, banks that own them could take a significant hit. It could become very difficult for these banks to borrow and nervous depositors could flee with their cash. In the worst case, a global financial panic could be triggered, in which banks all over are too skittish to lend to each other. That would cause a credit crunch that deprives businesses of the short-term financing they depend on for day-to-day operations.

With such fears in the air, the United States is ratcheting up its involvement.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner Geithner will meet Tuesday in Germany with ECB President Mario Draghi and German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble. On Wednesday, he travels to France for talks with Sarkozy and the prime minister-elect of Spain, Mariano Rajoy Brey.

___

Pan Pylas in London, Sarah DiLorenzo in Paris and Raf Casert in Brussels also contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-05-EU-Europe-Financial-Crisis/id-fd392935056c472dabc126db64ee3f64

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