Saturday, December 31, 2011

California's high court kills redevelopment

Justices also kill bill that would have continued redevelopment, an option pursued by Santa Cruz County and local cities

SANTA CRUZ - Redevelopment, the program that lifted downtown Santa Cruz from the rubble of the Loma Prieta earthquake and across 25 years poured millions into Soquel and Live Oak, is over.

The California Supreme Court on Thursday delivered stunning twin blows, preserving a $1.7 billion Sacramento fiscal maneuver and avoiding punching a massive hole in the state's budget. But the court also foreclosed any hope local redevelopment officials had of pressing on, an option - though a pricey one - offered up by state lawmakers.

"It was," Santa Cruz City Manager Martin Bernal said, "the worst-case scenario for us."

That sentiment was echoed throughout California cities and counties, particularly those who hope to use redevelopment funds as originally intended - to scrub the urban core of blight and foster a brighter future for residents.

But redevelopment's legion of critics contend that redevelopment agencies have drifted far from their original mandate, putting taxpayers on the hook for billions of dollars with little oversight and with much of the money lining the pockets of well-connected developers.

"The court's decision was comprehensive, and it's a grand slam for those concerned about fiscal responsibility in California," said Aptos resident Doug Kaplan, a prominent redevelopment critic. "Redevelopment was ended for fiscal reasons, but it was like putting away Al Capone for income taxes. Redevelopment's real offenses were much more serious."

Redevelopment's impacts across the county are widespread. The program helped rebuild Pacific Avenue after the earthquake, turn Salz Tannery into an arts center, built Live Oak's Simpkins Family Swim Center and will build a state-of-the-art Mid-County home for the Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Office.

Redevelopment also built miles of storm sewers and sidewalks in Soquel and Live Oak, and contributed to the soon-to-be-opened National Marine Sanctuary Exploration Center in Santa Cruz. And it has helped house thousands too poor to afford the region's sky-high rents.

"Over 25 years, it managed to do what previous boards of supervisors failed to do, which is fund infrastructure in the most urbanized part of the county," said Supervisor John Leopold, who represents Live Oak and Soquel, areas targeted for redevelopment. "We weren't done, but we can be proud of 25 years of accomplishments. It fundamentally changed the community."

The Supreme Court's 7-0 decision affirms Gov. Jerry Brown's reliance on $1.7 billion in redevelopment funds to balance the state's books, a move resulting from twin bills hastily proposed and passed as the legislature's 2011 budget deliberations reached a crescendo. Brown argued redevelopment was being abused statewide, diverting money from schools, fire departments and more.

"Today's ruling by the California Supreme Court validates a key component of the state budget and guarantees more than a billion dollars of ongoing funding for schools and public safety," Brown said in a statement.

But by striking down a companion bill with a 6-1 vote, the court also disallowed the state's nearly 400 redevelopment agencies, including five in Santa Cruz County, from continuing. After the ruling, the California Redevelopment Association called on state lawmakers to revive redevelopment.

Under that bill, all local redevelopment agencies - the county's, as well as agencies in Santa Cruz, Watsonville, Scotts Valley and Capitola - hoped to continue operating by paying what many derisively referred to as a "ransom" as a condition of continued operation.

Local impacts weren't immediately clear. The county redevelopment agency had already moved to drain its coffers before the state could get its hands on the money, approving $75 million in projects, including the $44 million public safety center. It sought to further shelter those projects by inking deals on most, if not all, of them.

"It was just one of those situations where you hope for the best and prepare for the worst," County Administrator Susan Mauriello said. "We have every expectation that those projects that were encumbered in accordance with the requirements of the law will be able to be completed."

Perhaps more significant, affordable housing in California just lost its main source of funding. The county intended to pay the $8.4 million "ransom," along with an ongoing annual fee, mainly to preserve its affordable housing program.

"That was going to be one of the primary benefits of opting in, would have been affordable housing," said Betsey Lynberg, the county's former redevelopment administrator. "It raises a statewide question of what are we doing to support affordable housing, if not for redevelopment."

Locally, Assemblyman Luis Alejo, D-Salinas, criticized the decision, saying he was "extremely disappointed." Alejo voted against the twin bills that both ended redevelopment and threw agencies a lifeline, AB 26 and AB 27, and suggested the Legislature should take up the issue when it returns in January.

"I look forward to working with my colleagues this year to restore business' trust, renew efforts to spur economic growth, and regain lost ground with this setback," Alejo said.

Should the Legislature decline to rescue redevelopment, oversight bodies will be created for each of the five redevelopment agencies within the county. Eventually, those bodies would merge, but before then each must liquidate their agencies, distributing the assets according to the same formula used to divide property taxes.

Those liquidations could include the agencies' property assets, which can be substantial.

In the ruling, the Supreme Court disagreed with arguments that 2010's Proposition 22, a voter-approved initiative seeking to protect local tax dollars from a state grab, barred the state from ending redevelopment. That ruling left Scotts Valley Councilman Jim Reed flummoxed, since Prop. 22 specifically mentions redevelopment.

"You understand why people think they just don't have a voice in Sacramento," Reed said. "It's crazy."

WHAT IT MEANS

The California Supreme Court handed down a decision Thursday that redevelopment officials most feared, but one that left critics celebrating. Under the ruling, the court upheld a $1.7 billion state funding grab, but also killed a bill allowing redevelopment agencies to continue operations. Barring legislative intervention, redevelopment is over.

By May 1, oversight bodies will be appointed to oversee the liquidation of redevelopment assets, which will then be distributed to local governments, school districts, fire departments and more. One local official called it "the worst-case scenario."

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Source: http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/ci_19639149?source=rss_viewed

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Raytheon gets $69M missile order from US military

Raytheon Missile Systems?

The U.S. Navy and Air Force are ordering 115 air-to-air AIM-9X Block II missiles from Raytheon. The Air Force will get 66 of the missiles; the Navy, 49.

The U.S. Defense Department announced the order Thursday afternoon.

That announcement also said 41 percent of the work on the contract will be done in Tucson, with the rest to be performed at other Raytheon locations including Massachusetts, California, Connecticut and Ontario, Canada.

Raytheon Missile Systems?

The U.S. Navy and Air Force are ordering 115 air-to-air AIM-9X Block II missiles from Raytheon. The Air Force will get 66 of the missiles; the Navy, 49.

The U.S. Defense Department announced the order Thursday afternoon.

That announcement also said 41 percent of the work on the contract will be done in Tucson, with the rest to be performed at other Raytheon locations including Massachusetts, California, Connecticut and Ontario, Canada.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_49/~3/fPZd7ukhBUs/raytheon-gets-69m-missile-order.html

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Friday, December 30, 2011

joyonlineghana: China seeks to combat hi-tech crimewave .... http://t.co/ksxNCfCf

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Cheryl Ladd Opens Up About Skin Cancer Battle - Starpulse.com

Cheryl LaddFormer Charlie's Angels star Cheryl Ladd has undergone minor surgery to remove skin cancer spots caused by her love of the beach.

The actress, who replaced Farrah Fawcett on the hit show, is a health nut who eats carefully and has regular check-ups - but her sun-worshiping past recently caught up with her.

She tells WellBella magazine, "I'm very careful in the sunshine. At this age I've had already - because of my love of the sun and beach - a few small skin cancers removed."

And she's also battling the onset of rheumatoid arthritis, which plagues her mom.

Ladd adds, "She's a strong woman and doing the best she can with that terrible disease. She still has this amazing spirit and joy... For myself, I try to do low-impacts (work-outs) as much as possible so I really take care of all of my joints. I get tested all the time to make sure that genetic trigger hasn't happened to me, which it could, I think, in my 60s."

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Cheryl Ladd

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Source: http://www.starpulse.com/news/index.php/2011/12/27/cheryl_ladd_opens_up_about_skin_cancer

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

'Dark Knight Rises' Trailer Records, New Photos Arrive

We knew the first theatrical trailer for Christopher Nolan's Batman finale would be a huge hit, but not 12.5 million huge! In the week after the trailer's massive debut, anticipation is still high for "The Dark Knight Rises." New high quality stills and renewed interest in an unused clip from "The Dark Knight" only added [...]

Source: http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2011/12/28/dark-knight-rises-trailer-photos/

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Seven hurt as bomb hits Arabic school in Nigeria (Reuters)

PORT HARCOURT (Reuters) ? Assailants threw a crude homemade bomb into an Arabic school in southern Nigeria's Delta state overnight, police said, wounding seven people and escalating tensions between Muslims and Christians after a spate of church bombings across the nation.

Six of the wounded were children younger than nine.

The attack around 10 p.m. on Tuesday came two days after Christmas Day bombings of churches and other targets by Islamist militant group Boko Haram claimed around 32 lives in a coordinated strike which seemed aimed at igniting sectarian strife.

"Some men driving in a Camry car threw a low capacity explosive into a building where an Arabic class was taking place," police spokesman Charles Muka said.

"Children aged between four and nine were taking a lesson. Six children were injured and one adult," he said.

He said police suspected a local vigilante group.

Boko Haram, a sect which aims to impose Islamic sharia law across Nigeria, claimed responsibility for the blasts, the second Christmas in a row it has caused carnage.

The worst attack killed at least 27 people in the St Theresa Catholic church in Madalla, a town on the edge of the capital Abuja, and devastated surrounding buildings and cars as worshippers poured out of the church after Christmas mass.

Analysts say the attacks risk reviving sectarian violence between the mostly Muslim north and Christian south, which has claimed thousands of lives in the past decade.

Northern Nigerian Christians fear the Christmas Day bombings could lead to a religious war in Africa's most populous country.

Separately, a family of four was killed in a machete attack on Wednesday in Nigeria's ethnically and religiously mixed Plateau state -- on the threshold of the country's largely Muslim north and its mostly Christian south.

There was no suggestion the killings had any link to Sunday's church bombings, as the victims were Christians.

Plateau is a tinderbox of ethnic and religious rivalries over land and power between local people and migrants from other areas.

These often take the form of sectarian strife between the state's Christian and Muslim communities, and it is thought likely to be the first place to blow up should a wider conflict start.

(Additional reporting by Buhari Bello and Tim Cocks in Jos; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111228/wl_nm/us_nigeria_school_bomb

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Monday, December 26, 2011

NFL preview: Giants at Jets

Giants (7-7)

at Jets (8-6)

Kickoff: Noon, MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, N.J.

TV, radio: Fox, DirecTV

(Ch. 709), KTKR-AM 760

Line: Jets by 3, O/U 451/2

Series: Giants lead 7-4.

Last meeting: Giants won 35-24 on Oct. 7, 2007.

Storyline: For all the local blather over the first Big Apple matchup that counts in four years, this game doesn't move the meter a whole lot outside the New York area. Both teams have disappointed, with the Giants losing five of their last six, including an inept showing against Washington last week after taking control of the NFC East. Eli Manning is having his best season, far superior to the Jets' Mark Sanchez, and that QB edge could be decisive.

Did you know? Giants have won last four regular-season meetings with Jets.

Source: http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/cowboys/article/NFL-preview-Giants-at-Jets-2422587.php

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Merger of Oshkosh, Green Bay mail facilities to continue despite union calls of a disaster

Merger of Oshkosh, Green Bay mail facilities to continue despite union calls of a 'disaster'

A moratorium on closures and consolidations of U.S. Postal Service mail-processing plants won't affect the Oshkosh and Green Bay facilities, which are currently in the process of merging, officials

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Source: http://www.thenorthwestern.com/article/20111225/OSH0101/112250340/1987&located=rss

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Study on the Status of the Communications Card Market ...

?Abstract? With the rapid development of China?s telecommunications industry , communications card as a mature communication products, because of its flexibility and convenience is adored by consumers. But because of the same quality of the product in the market, intense competition, and the low profits, the card faces with gradually recession and the situation of abandonment by the operator. In this paper, breaking the past set thinking, to capture the business opportunities in market segments, to focus on consumers? differentiation, personalized communications needs of consumers and to study on the personality of consumer behavior, and on the basis of these targeted, from the consumers immediate desire new business opportunities are captured.Focus is on grasp of the real and stimulated potential demand of consumer communications business.Based on the research of operational status communications card market, I analyse the current communication features of the card products, marketing problems and propose ?three new strategy?: The characteristics of the crowd and issued with cards; development of e-cards, expanding channels, creating new Business model; development of derivative features, and promoting product innovation of this development ideas. I put forward a joint enterprise to develop cards for the orientation, development of Internet marketing solutions for e-cards, and the overall market capacity, market competition situation, consumer demand, technology and profitability in a more objective and rational judgement ?of three new Strategy, ? of the feasibility and market receipts,to help the communication card business development of the communications operators.This paper is divided into six parts. The first part of introduction is about the background to the study significance and research methods; second part is about the communications card market survey and research, as the full basis of the paper; the third part of communication Cards marketing problems facing the market, raises the issue of marketing on their own aggregate; fourth part finds the solution for the problem; the fifth part focuses and details communication card products innovation and the development of innovative channels; the sixth part, summed up the conclusions of the article and the inadequacy of the study.

Title: Study on the Status of the Communications Card Market
Category: Management economics
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coop615: I got a big ass mason jar of apple pie moonshine as a Xmas present...#lit http://t.co/OmpSQTOS

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

ECB's Visco hints at lower rates if economy worsens (Reuters)

MILAN (Reuters) ? European Central Bank Governing Council Member Ignazio Visco said in a newspaper interview on Saturday that the bank will be attentive to the economic cycle when setting monetary policy, suggesting rates could fall more if the euro zone economy worsens.

The ECB has cut interest rates for two months in a row and this month unveiled a raft of measures to support Europe's cash-starved banks to counter a forecast recession brought on by widespread austerity measures.

"Monetary policy will be attentive to the (economic) cycle. It is thus that we defend monetary stability in the medium-term," the governor of the Bank of Italy, said in the interview in Italian business daily Il Sole 24 Ore.

Visco also said the upward trend in Italian bond yields has been stopped and turned around, even if financial markets remain very volatile.

On Friday, the yield on the 10-year Italian government bond rose above 7 percent, the highest since December 16, and the spread over the equivalent German Bund was more than 500 basis points on worries about the euro zone in 2012.

"All the same the trend for higher yields is stopped and turned around, and today we are well below the highs registered in the last few months," Visco said in the interview in Italian business daily Il Sole 24 Ore.

"Certainly there is a lot of volatility, but we know that confidence on the markets is lost quickly and regained only slowly and with a constant and continuous commitment," said Visco, who is also governor of the Bank of Italy.

Visco said that the Italian government's 33 billion euro ($43 billion) austerity package, approved definitively by the Senate on Thursday, was "indispensable," but he added that structural measures to boost growth and create jobs and wealth should be accelerated.

"It is with policies that sustain growth in a credible way that it will be possible to convince the rest of the world that - as our analyses clearly confirm - our public debt is sustainable," he said.

In an interview on Friday, Standard & Poor's top executives said the first quarter of 2012 will be a test for Italy because of the huge amount of sovereign debt it has to refinance.

The record-high yields Italy has paid at recent sales have led to concerns the euro zone's third-largest economy may have trouble refinancing the more than 150 billion euros of debt coming due between February and April next year.

The spread between the 10-year Italian bond and the equivalent Bund can fall if the growth capacity of national economies is judged favourably, on prospects for political integration in the euro zone, and international cooperation, he said.

BANK FUNDING, CAPITAL

Asked about growth and the problem of the economic cycle, Visco said: "This is the reason for which, with the last decisions of the governing board, we have made monetary policy still more accommodating than it was already before."

He added that the ECB does not only respond to short-term inflation trends when setting policy.

A year of complete stagnation awaits the euro zone economy in 2012, according to a recent Reuters poll of economists, who said a recession has already started that will last until the second quarter of next year.

European banks gobbled up nearly 490 billion euros in three-year cut-price loans from the ECB on Wednesday, easing immediate fears of a credit crunch but leaving unresolved how much will flow to needy euro zone economies.

More than a dozen Italian banks, including top lenders UniCredit (CRDI.MI) and Intesa Sanpaolo (ISP.MI), tapped 116 billion euros ($143.5 billion) of the three-year loans - about a quarter of the total.

"Bank liquidity is suffering strong pressure because of the difficulty in renewing wholesale funding, which is determined by the strong increase in sovereign risks in the euro zone," Visco said in the paper.

Visco said the European Banking Authority's demand for higher capital buffers, which has come under fire in Italy, is a one-off exercise and is not aimed at deleveraging or reducing lending to the economy.

"I understand that (raising capital on the market) is not easy, but we are not talking about extraordinary figures," he said, adding that other options include cutting dividends and bonuses, and selling non-strategic assets.

(Writing by Nigel Tutt and Philip Pullella)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111224/bs_nm/us_ecb_visco

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Column: Buckeyes just have all the luck (AP)

What are the chances Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith was laughing out loud when he composed his response to the additional sanctions heaped on his school by the NCAA?

"We are surprised and disappointed by the NCAA's decision," his statement read. "However, we have decided not to appeal the decision because we need to move forward as an institution."

Based on the kid-gloves treatment afforded the Buckeyes, that shouldn't be a problem. Ohio State had already offered to vacate the 2010 season, return bowl money, go on two years of NCAA probation and use five fewer football scholarships over the next three years. On Tuesday, the NCAA tacked on a year of probation, took away four additional scholarships and imposed a one-year bowl ban. Even combined, those penalties are roughly half as severe as those the NCAA dropped on Southern California in June 2010.

A comparison of the cases is instructive. At USC, Heisman trophy-winning running back Reggie Bush and basketball star O.J. Mayo were found to have pocketed thousands of dollars in improper benefits from agents. The bigger sin, though, appears to have been the Trojans' decision to be less than cooperative when NCAA investigators began snooping around the program and downright defiant when the enforcement people issued veiled threats. As a result, the NCAA leveled the dreaded "lack of institutional control" against USC, banned the Trojans from postseason play for two years and docked them 30 scholarships for the next three.

In Ohio State's case, five players swapped jerseys, rings and assorted memorabilia for thousands in cash and tattoos, former coach Jim Tressel learned of the exchanges in April 2010, and not only kept the news to himself, but lied about it to his superiors or the NCAA on four separate occasions. There is no better example of lack of institutional control than what Ohio State's clueless president, Gordon Gee, said in the middle of the unfolding scandal, when he and Smith tried to staunch the damage last March by suspending Tressel for two meaningless games and fining him $250,000: "I'm just hopeful the coach doesn't dismiss me."

But it got better. Barely 10 days later, Tressel's suspension was extended to five games and by the end of May, he was forced out. In July, Ohio State half-heartedly punished itself and in August appeared before the NCAA's Committee on Infractions. Then we learned that months after the original scandal made headlines, nine players got paid by a longtime booster for showing up at charity events and cozy summer jobs. By November, the NCAA upgraded the notice of allegations to include "failure to monitor" and Ohio State offered to cut five scholarships.

But it got even better. For reasons that have yet to be explained, the NCAA's enforcement staff stopped short of lack of institutional control charges, meaning the infractions committee can't whack Ohio State the way it did Southern Cal. In the end, the school's athletic department gave Tressel a hefty severance deal and nearly all of the blame and that was good enough for the NCAA. It slapped the once-beloved coach with a five-year "show-cause" order that likely means he'll never coach in college again. Tressel has been reduced to a job as a game-day consultant with the NFL's Indianapolis Colts.

And if the Buckeyes escaping the punishment they deserve because of a technicality sounds familiar, it should. The five players originally suspended last December after the tattoo-parlor portion of the story broke were allowed to play in the Sugar Bowl thanks to an NCAA ruling so favorable that it should have made everyone involved blush redder than one of Tressel's sweater vests. Together, Ohio State and the NCAA dusted off an obscure interpretation of the rules that allowed postponement of a suspension ? in the case of the so-called "Tat 5" it was supposed to be five games ? to preserve a "unique opportunity." Then, conveniently, they decided the Sugar Bowl presented just such an opportunity.

Maybe some schools just have all the luck. Or maybe by cooperating, even as incompetent as Ohio State has been from the beginning of the investigation to the bitter end, the Buckeyes bought themselves enough good will to avoid the scorched-earth treatment USC got. Whichever it is, based on the lack of guts the NCAA showed in this case, it might be the one outfit in America that would finish behind Congress in a popularity poll ? especially if the survey was conducted in the Los Angeles area.

In the coming months, North Carolina and Miami will face the infractions committee for scandals that are every bit as juicy. When committee member Greg Sankey was asked whether the additional penalties the NCAA levied against Ohio State meant things would be tougher for future violators, he replied, "I would not suggest this is necessarily a new day, but these penalties are significant."

Right. And North Carolina and Miami would sign on the dotted line for the same deal in a heartbeat. Ohio State, after all, is hoping to start recovering from its disappointment with a trip to the Gator Bowl, despite a 6-6 record.

"I'm disappointed on the one hand," Gee said when reporters caught up with him at halftime of a basketball game Tuesday night. "But on the other hand I'm very relieved because I feel closure. I think we can now move forward.

"I have been one of the most outspoken advocates for reform in the NCAA," he added a moment later. "My hope is that what the NCAA is signaling is a higher bar and a higher standard."

Easy for Gee to say ? right after he and his school slithered underneath it.

___

Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org. Follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111221/ap_on_sp_co_ne/fbc_jim_litke122111

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Analysis: GOP's struggle on taxes gives Dems hope

President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference in the South Court Auditorium at the White House complex, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Washington. The president was flanked at the White House by several people who commented on Twitter about how they would be impacted if the tax cuts were not extended. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

President Barack Obama speaks during a news conference in the South Court Auditorium at the White House complex, Thursday, Dec. 22, 2011, in Washington. The president was flanked at the White House by several people who commented on Twitter about how they would be impacted if the tax cuts were not extended. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? For all his problems with the economy, President Barack Obama is getting unexpected help from a Republican Party that seems incapable of capitalizing on its advantages.

Congressional Republicans' fumbling of the payroll tax extension issue is the latest example of party in-fighting and disarray that gives Democrats hope for the 2012 elections. GOP presidential contenders tried to distance themselves from the legislative mess. But they might be tarred nonetheless if swing voters decide the party is either inept at governing or too extreme.

The eventual GOP presidential nominee "will be somewhat shackled to the Republican brand," said Democratic strategist Erik Smith, even if it was Republicans in Congress who led the charge in an unpopular fight over the payroll tax. He said GOP House and Senate candidates will face even more problems.

The Wall Street Journal editorial page ? an important voice among conservatives ? berated Republican lawmakers for their handling of the payroll tax matter. Obama wanted to add another year to this year's reduction in the tax, which nearly all workers pay toward Social Security. Senate Republicans, after forcing Democrats to swallow several unrelated concessions, joined in an overwhelmingly bipartisan vote to approve only a two-month tax cut extension, with plans to revisit the issue next year.

House Republicans, who generally disliked the payroll tax cut from the start, refused to concur early this week. But House Speaker John Boehner on Thursday bowed to relentless criticism from conservative bloggers and several GOP senators and cleared a path for passing a bill Friday to renew the break for two months while congressional negotiators work on a longer-term measure.

If Congress doesn't act in the next 10 days, the payroll tax rate will return to 6.2 percent on Jan. 1, after one year at 4.2 percent. That would cost a family making $50,000 about $1,000.

Republican congressional leaders' actions "might end up re-electing the president before the 2012 campaign even begins in earnest," the Journal's editorial page said Wednesday.

Democrats point to episodes like the payroll tax fuss and say congressional Republicans are essentially controlled by tea party activists, whose tax and spending agendas are outside the political mainstream.

"Tea Party Republicans blocked a bipartisan bill to extend President Obama's payroll tax cut," the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee said in a fundraising email Tuesday, minutes after a key House vote. House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi told reporters, "The tea party tail is wagging the elephant."

Democratic strategists hope to remind voters of last summer's near-calamity over raising the limit on the federal debt ceiling. Then, as now, Boehner struggled to control his GOP caucus and to calculate which bills can and cannot pass. These Democrats want to paint the Republican Party as an out-of-touch institution that would rather stand for rigidly conservative principles than solve the nation's problems.

"I think the tea party-engendered dysfunction has the potential to really get the electorate's attention," said Jared Bernstein, a former Obama administration economist now with the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. "At this point, the system is crippled by them."

All of this, of course, may be wishful thinking by Democrats. Republicans crushed them in the 2010 elections, giving the GOP control of the House and many governorships. Unemployment and other economic indicators bode badly for Obama's re-election hopes, and the payroll tax dust-up may seem a musty memory by next November.

One other worry looms. Americans' taxes still might rise by billions of dollars in 2012 if a deal can't be struck on a longer, one-year extension. Economists say that would depress spending and slow job growth, at least somewhat. Even if more voters blame Republicans than Democrats, Obama could end up as a net loser politically, given that the economic climate already is deeply troublesome for him.

GOP leaders say income tax cuts do more to stimulate economic growth than payroll tax reductions but worry about independents thinking it was Republicans who sought to raise their payroll taxes. At the same time, they know that hard-core conservative voters who have a bigger voice in GOP primaries might blame them for a tax cut they dislike.

Republicans may yet claim one political victory out of the payroll tax imbroglio, assuming the two-month extension goes through. In House-Senate negotiations they forced Obama to agree to an expedited decision on a proposed transcontinental oil pipeline opposed by environmental groups as part of the two-month extension.

The GOP still has a perception problem, though. Americans hold Congress in extremely low regard, but they put more blame on Republicans than Democrats.

A recent poll by the Pew Research Center found that a record-high 50 percent of Americans say the current Congress is less effective than most. By nearly 2-to-1, "more blame Republican leaders than Democratic leaders for this," Pew found. "By wide margins, the GOP is seen as the party that is more extreme in its positions, less willing to work with the other side to get things done, and less honest and ethical in the way it governs. And for the first time in over two years, the Democratic Party has gained the edge as the party better able to manage the federal government."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-22-GOP%20Troubles-Analysis/id-4b2402f60858471696a74eab596404de

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Japan Mobile Carriers to Expand Mobile Touch Payment Beyond Sony Standard

Japan's three biggest mobile phone companies said Wednesday they will adopt international standards for touch payment systems, expanding beyond the current implementation by Sony.

NTT DoCoMo, KDDI and Softbank said they will work together in the newly formed "Japan Mobile NFC Consortium" to bring the country in line with oversea trends. The companies currently use the NFC, or near field communication, standard called FeliCa, developed and owned by Sony, but said they will incorporate two other standards that are more common abroad, known as "Type A" and "Type B."

As in other countries, the technology allows users to pay for train tickets, food and other purchases by placing a card near special readers. In Japan many phones also come with the technology built in, but foreign-made phones must be modified to work in the existing ecosystem, which is run by DoCoMo and called "Osaifu Keita," or "wallet phone."

The companies, which collectively have about 124 million contracts in a country with a total population of under 130 million, are eager to squeeze more income out of mobile devices, as price wars cut revenue and massive investments in next-generation networks weigh on their balance sheets.

Encouraged by the government, they are also moving to adopt more international standards after long years of developing Japan-only implementations, a trend that led analysts to dub the country's mobile industry "Galapagos," because technologies evolved cut off from the rest of the world.

The move away from a Sony-dependent technology should also lower costs for the mobile trio. A joint press release announcing the founding of the consortium said the companies want to free users from having to worry about different NFC standards as well as "create an environment where service providers can offer efficient, low-cost NFC services."

Source: http://feeds.pcworld.com/click.phdo?i=8f1225e76b20b80f45ba12238adb3966

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Spectrum reallocation enables unlocked iPhone to use T-Mobile 3G in a few locations

TmoNews is reporting that some unlocked iPhone users may be picking up T-Mobile’s 3G network in small areas of the Pacific Northwest — specifically limited pockets in Nevada, Utah and California — due to spectrum reallocation under the 1900MHz band. Most unlocked iPhone users are relegated to 2G...


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/d1ZjQHoYVAc/story01.htm

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Rights group: South African lesbians face abuse (AP)

JOHANNESBURG ? South African lesbians are abused by even those closest to them, a reality that contrasts with the high ideals of the country's constitution, Human Rights Watch said Monday.

"Lesbians and transgender men live in constant fear of harassment as well as physical and sexual violence," the watchdog group said in a report released Monday.

The report, "We'll Show You You're a Woman," was based on interviews with 121 lesbians, bisexual women and transgender men in the impoverished black townships where the majority of South Africans live.

Their lives contrast with those of urban, wealthy, often white gay South Africans who have turned parts of some cities into liberal havens. Gay pride parades are held annually in Johannesburg and Cape Town, which reaches out to gay tourists from around the world. Next year, an international pageant for gay men will be held in Johannesburg.

Same-sex marriage is legal in South Africa and the country has among the most liberal laws on sexual orientation on the continent. But cultural attitudes don't always match the constitution approved in 1996 by lawmakers determined to show they were more progressive then their apartheid predecessors.

One woman told Human Rights Watch of a series of rapes by her cousin, her coach and her pastor. Another said a female cousin spiked her drink so that the cousin's boyfriend could rape her. A third said that after a rape. "I really hated myself."

Raping a lesbian, HRW researchers found, can make a man a township hero. Attackers boast publicly of their crimes and declare to their victims, "We'll show you you're a woman," the report said. Such attacks are known as "corrective rapes" in South Africa.

Lesbians and others who don't fit the norm respond by avoiding being alone in public, trying not to attract men's attention, and hiding their sexual orientation, the report said.

Human Rights Watch called on South Africa's government to act against the attackers. At a news conference in Johannesburg on Monday, Dipika Nath, the lead researcher on the report, acknowledged that addressing the crimes would have a limited effect.

"What we really need is a sustained, large program" that embraces education in schools and engages with religious leaders, she said.

Corlia Kok, a high-ranking Department of Justice official said South Africans should rally to defend their constitution.

"I have my Bible and I have got the constitution in my handbag," she said, holding up a pocket-sized copy of national charter to demonstrate the importance she placed on the document. Kok participated in a panel discussion organized for the report by Human Rights Watch on Monday.

Kok chairs a task force formed earlier this year to bring together prosecutors, police and others to address crimes against homosexuals and others who do not fit traditional sexual identities. Kok said the government was taking the problem seriously, but acknowledged her task force does not yet have its own budget and was diverting funds from other government projects and seeking help from foreign donors.

"It can't be government alone," she said. "We all need to say that this is a challenge that is facing every one of us."

Nomboniso Gasa, a South African women's rights activist, said the constitution was written by leaders who dared "to imagine a different society," and that South Africa today was in need of such leadership in the face of conservative traditional leaders and fundamentalist Christians.

"We are very far from the society we wanted to build," said Gasa, who spoke on Monday's panel. "Our society is trying to sanctify heterosexuality as the only form of sexual being. We are told that to be non-heterosexual is to be non-African."

Contempt for homosexuals has led to anti-gay legal measures elsewhere in Africa. Last week, Nigeria's Senate voted in favor of a bill that would criminalize gay marriage, gay advocacy groups and same-sex public displays of affection. Two years ago, Ugandan legislators introduced a bill that would impose the death penalty for some gays and lesbians, though it has yet to become law.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_re_af/af_south_africa_lesbians

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Senses of sophistication: Mosquitoes detect subtle cues finding food, spreading diseases

Senses of sophistication: Mosquitoes detect subtle cues finding food, spreading diseases

Monday, December 5, 2011

Fruit flies and mosquitoes share similar sensory receptors that allow them to distinguish among thousands of sensory cues ? particularly heat and chemical odors ? as they search for food or try to avoid danger, researchers from Boston College and Brandeis University report in the current electronic edition of the journal Nature.

Pinpointing a tiny portion of a protein found on the surfaces of neurons that give the fruit fly Drosophila and the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae the ability to distinguish different stimuli, the findings provide new clues that could be used to develop solutions to target disease-spreading mosquitoes.

"Heat is one element of an ensemble of cues we present that mosquitoes read as they search for their next blood meal," said Boston College Professor of Biology Marc A.T. Muskavitch, a co-author of the report. "These findings give us another chance to look at how we might try to reduce the ability of mosquitoes to sense us, and thereby protect ourselves from their bites and the diseases that they spread."

Receptors that sense heat and chemicals are among the ancient biological tools organisms first developed to find food or avoid harm. Over the ages, these receptors have evolved, allowing humans, animals and insects to detect and distinguish among thousands of stimuli. What's puzzled scientists is how animals distinguish between sensory inputs that are detected by the same sensors.

Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels in the brain, skin and other sensory organs play key roles in deciphering thermal, chemical and other sensory cues. But the mechanism a TRP channel uses to distinguish between signals sent by a heat source or by a noxious chemical has eluded researchers.

Building on earlier research into thermosensation in Drosophila by co-author and Brandeis University Professor of Biology Paul A. Garrity, the team found fruit flies possess slightly different versions, or isoforms, of the TRPA1 channel within their neurons. One version of the channel responds to warmth, while the other version responds only to chemicals. The same two TRPA1 isoforms are found in the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae, the team reports, giving mosquitoes the ability to distinguish between warmth given off from a potential host and the odor from a chemical repellent.

Muskavitch, whose prior research includes decoding the genes of mosquitoes that transmit human diseases, says finding ways to disrupt the abilities of mosquitoes to sense and bite humans has been a goal of researchers and public health services around the world for some time. Knowing more about the insect's basic responses to its warm-blooded targets and to chemical insecticides and repellents will help inform efforts to reduce the transmission of mosquito-borne illnesses that kill and sicken millions of people around the globe each year.

"If we could somehow make ourselves less 'visible' to the mosquito by reducing its ability to sense our warmth, or the carbon dioxide and other chemicals we emit, we could improve our ability to evade them," said Muskavitch. "The more veils we put between ourselves and mosquitoes, the less likely it is they will bite us and spread diseases among humans."

###

Boston College: http://www.bc.edu

Thanks to Boston College for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115711/Senses_of_sophistication__Mosquitoes_detect_subtle_cues_finding_food__spreading_diseases

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Former Brazil captain Socrates dies at 57 (AP)

SAO PAULO ? On and off the field, former Brazil star Socrates stood out above the rest.

His elegant style and his deep involvement with politics made him a unique figure in Brazilian soccer, setting him apart from the players of his time and even of today.

He was mostly known for captaining Brazil at the 1982 World Cup, regarded by many as the best team ever not to win football's showcase tournament.

But he was also widely known for his heavy drinking, which he publicly admitted caused the health problems which eventually helped lead to his death on Sunday.

The Albert Einstein hospital said in a statement that Socrates died of septic shock at 4:30 a.m. Brazilian time (0630 GMT). He was 57.

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said Brazil lost "one of its most cherished sons."

"On the field, with his talent and sophisticated touches, he was a genius," she said in a statement. "Off the field, ... he was active politically, concerned with his people and his country."

Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva also expressed his sadness for the loss.

"Socrates' generous contribution to Corinthians, to football and to the Brazilian society will never be forgotten," said Silva, an outspoken fan of Corinthians, the club where Socrates thrived in the 1980s.

Socrates had been rushed to the hospital a few days ago and had been in critical condition in an intensive care unit with an intestinal infection. He was breathing with the help of a ventilator.

It was the third time in four months that he was hospitalized and placed in intensive care, most recently in September. The first two times he was admitted for a hemorrhage caused by high pressure in the vein that carries blood from the digestive system to the liver.

Socrates never denied his fondness for drinking from the time he was a player in the 1980s, but said he stopped drinking earlier this year after his stints in the hospital.

"Socrates seemed like a player from another era," former Italy forward Paolo Rossi told the ANSA news agency. "You couldn't place him in any category ? on the pitch and even more so off it. Everyone knew about his degree in medicine and he had a lot of cultural and social interests as well. He was unique from every point of view."

Indeed, Socrates was like no other on and off the field. He became a doctor after retiring from football and later became a popular TV commentator and columnist, always with unique and controversial opinions.

Since his playing days, Socrates never kept his political ideas to himself and often wrote about the subject in his columns. Known as Dr. Socrates because of his practice of medicine, he was constantly in demand from local media for interviews on varied subjects.

While with Corinthians, Socrates spearheaded a movement called the Corinthians Democracy, in which players protested against the long periods of confinement required by the club before matches. It quickly became a broader protest that coincided with Brazil's fight to overturn a military regime in the 1980s.

The clever, tall full-bearded playmaker also was a member of the Brazilian squad in 1986 in Mexico, but it was in 1982 in Spain that he made history with Brazil, which is known to have had one of the greatest teams in World Cup history but failed to win the trophy. With players like Zico and Falcao, it fell to Italy 3-2 in the second round despite needing only a draw to advance to the semifinals.

"He was a very dynamic player with a sublime foot but most of all great intelligence," added Rossi, who scored a memorable hat trick in that match against Brazil. "Along with Zico and Falcao he was the symbol of that Brazil squad.

Zico said he was honored to have been Socrates' friend and teammate.

"He was a spectacular guy," Zico told the website GloboEsporte.com. "As a player, there is not much to say, he was one of the best that I ever played with. His intelligence was unique, you always expected something good out of him."

Dozens of Brazilian footballers expressed their sadness on Twitter moments after Socrates' death was announced.

"Sad start to the day," retired Brazil striker Ronaldo wrote. "Rest in peace Dr. Socrates."

Former Brazil and Barcelona playmaker Rivaldo added on his Twitter page: "Sad to wake up and find out that Socrates has died."

Reaction came from those outside of football, too, including three-time French Open champion Gustavo Kuerten and three-time Indy 500 winner Helio Castroneves.

"Great guy," Castroneves tweeted. "A Brazilian who will be greatly missed."

NBA player Steve Nash called Socrates a "legend."

"RIP Socrates," the Phoenix Suns' point guard tweeted. "Fascinated by him as a kid. Brazilian World Cup Legend. Playmaker. Goal scorer. Doctor. Philosopher."

The Brazilian football federation said the final round of the Brazilian league on Sunday will be played in Socrates' honor. All matches will be preceded by a minute of silence. Corinthians, the team that featured Socrates at the height of his career, needs a draw against rival Palmeiras to win the title. Corinthians' main fan group said it will honor its former star throughout the day.

Fiorentina, another of Socrates' former clubs, held a minute of silence and players wore black armbands in his honor in Sunday's Italian league match with Roma.

Socrates wrote a series of columns for The Associated Press during the 2011 Copa America in Argentina, expressing his views on all aspects of the tournament, including economic and political issues in Latin America.

"It's not just about the game itself," Socrates said before the competition began. "Before anything, (football) is a psychological battle, the human aspect plays a significant role."

Socrates, whose full name is Socrates Brasileiro Sampaio de Souza Vieira de Oliveira, also played for Flamengo and Santos.

Socrates was included in FIFA's list of the best 125 living soccer players in the world, a list compiled by countryman Pele. Socrates played 63 matches with the national team, scoring 25 goals.

He was known for his great vision on the field. Always clever with the ball at his feet, his trademark move was the back-heel pass, and he set up and scored many goals with it throughout his career.

Socrates briefly coached and played for Garforth Town in England in 2004.

Socrates' younger brother Rai was another great Brazilian midfielder, and he helped Brazil win the 1994 World Cup in the United States.

Funeral services will take place in his home town of Ribeirao Preto, in the interior of Sao Paulo state.

He is survived by his wife and six children.

___

Associated Press sports writer Andrew Dampf in Rome contributed to this report.

___

Tales Azzoni can be followed at http://twitter.com/tazzoni

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111204/ap_on_sp_so_ne/soc_obit_brazil_socrates

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Monday, December 5, 2011

New Yorker Critic Breaks Embargo on The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo; Controversy Erupts

Leader image for Smug New Yorker Critic Somehow Manages to Compel Sympathy For Scott Rudin

This kind of silly public skirmish seems a little too convenient to just naturally occur in a week when The Artist and War Horse are dominating awards chatter, but either way, stroppy megaproducer Scott Rudin is furious with The New Yorker for breaking a review embargo on The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo. Who can blame him, especially since critic David Denby ? along with the rest of the members of the New York Film Critics Circle who saw the film before voting last week ? signed an agreement assenting to hold his review until Dec. 13 at the earliest? Or maybe the more important question is: Why should you care? I can think of a few reasons, chief among them being that Denby?s excuse for breaking his word is hilarious.

The Playlist got a hold of an e-mail exchange between Rudin and Denby, which really must be read to be believed ? particularly this passage from Denby (who, incidentally, gave the film a rave):

The system is destructive: Grown-ups are ignored for much of the year, cast out like downsized workers, and then given eight good movies all at once in the last five weeks of the year. A magazine like The New Yorker has to cope as best as it can with a nutty release schedule. It was not my intention to break the embargo, and I never would have done it with a negative review.

[T]he early [NYFCC] vote forced the early screening of Dragon Tattoo. So we had a dilemma: What to put in the magazine on December 5? Certainly not We Bought the Zoo, or whatever it?s called. If we held everything serious, we would be coming out on Christmas-season movies until mid-January. We had to get something serious in the magazine. So reluctantly, we went early with Dragon, which I called ?mesmerizing.? I apologize for the breach of the embargo. It won?t happen again. But this was a special case brought on by year-end madness.

In any case, congratulations for producing another good movie. I look forward to the Daldry.

Best, David Denby

?Best,? indeed! I never thought it could be done, but for once ? and again assuming this isn?t all some manufactured controversy (which The New Yorker historically would be above, but at this point who fucking knows) ? I actually feel pangs of sympathy for Scott Rudin. A few thoughts for the six or seven of you who cared enough to read this far:

1. Comparing sophisticated adult filmgoers who face a prestige glut in December to ?downsized workers? is one of Denby?s more hobbled (not to mention breathtakingly tasteless) metaphors of the year ? and this is a guy who regarded a film last winter ?like a butterfly half out of its cocoon, emerging with many fond looks back to the protective walls.? Congrats, I guess!

2. ?A magazine like The New Yorker has to cope as best as it can with a nutty release schedule,? Denby writes. Memo to Denby: Everyone has to cope with this schedule ? critics, editors, studios, theater owners? It?s a challenge that requires strategy and choices. That?s what professionals do, not pledge one thing and change direction to suit themselves. I have a feeling that to the extent they even care, readers will understand. But you tell me, readers.

3. Moreover, since when does ?a magazine like The New Yorker? sign NDAs prohibiting it from covering something? I?d love to see the White House try that with Seymour Hersh.

4. ?What to put in the magazine on December 5? Certainly not We Bought the Zoo, or whatever it?s called.? LOLOL.

5. For Christ?s sake, people, stop calling films ?the Daldry? or ?the Fincher? or whatever. It?s such an obvious, pretentious affectation ? like an annoying auteurist equivalent to being addressed as ?bro? ? and everyone who practices it knows it. The title of the film is Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close; just use it.

Either way, there will be no ?the Daldry? for Denby, at least if Rudin upholds his own vow, also obtained by The Playlist:

I could not in good conscience invite you to see another movie of mine again, Daldry or otherwise. I can?t ignore this, and I expect that you wouldn?t either if the situation were reversed. I?m really not interested in why you did this except that you did ? and you must at least own that, purely and simply, you broke your word to us and that that is a deeply lousy and immoral thing to have done. ? You will now cause ALL of the other reviews to run a month before the release of the movie, and that is a deeply destructive thing to have done simply because you?re disdainful of We Bought a Zoo. Why am I meant to care about that???

For the record, this is not the crisis that Rudin claims it is ? there will not likely be a torrent of other reviews a month before Dragon Tattoo, and even if there were, ?deeply destructive? implies strong dislike across the board ? which, as word gets around, apparently couldn?t be further from the reality of many reviewers and other insiders? perspectives. Nevertheless, Denby?s smug entitlement is of a rare variety that outsizes even Rudin?s own. Pretty impressive, I have to say.

And in any case, as much as we hate to make you ?downsized workers? out there wait, Movieline will wait to publish its review closer to the release of the film. Hang in there!

? ?Dragon Tattoo? Producer Scott Rudin Replies To David Denby?s Upcoming New Yorker Review Embargo Break [The Playlist]

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1924076/news/1924076/

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Video: Gingrich shocks with child labor stance

NYT: Sandusky tells his side, denies charges

In a four-hour interview, Jerry Sandusky, in addition to denying charges that he molested young boys, shed light on several key aspects of the investigation and the actions, or inaction, of officials at Penn State University and the Second Mile charity.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/45529593#45529593

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Stock market closes out its best week since 2009 (AP)

NEW YORK ? An early rally fizzled on the stock market Friday but still left the Standard & Poor's 500 index up 7.4 percent for the week, its biggest gain since March 2009.

A surprise drop in the U.S. unemployment rate sent stocks higher in early trading, but the gains faded during the afternoon.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 0.61 of a point to close at 12,019.42. The Dow ended the week up 7 percent, the largest weekly gain since July 2009.

Bank stocks rose sharply, continuing a weeklong rally. JPMorgan Chase & Co. jumped 6.1 percent, the most among the 30 stocks in the Dow average. Morgan Stanley leapt 6.9 percent, the second-biggest gain of any stock in the S&P 500 index.

European stock indexes and the euro rose after German Chancellor Angela Merkel made a speech pushing for tighter rules on government spending. Merkel said the 17 countries that use the euro must quickly restore market confidence by making financial controls stricter.

Bond yields for Spain and Italy fell, a sign that investors are becoming more confident in the ability of those countries to pay their debt. France's CAC-40 and Britain's FT-SE each rose 1.1 percent.

Markets could be in for more volatility next week as European leaders prepare for a summit to propose new measures for containing the crisis.

The Labor Department reported before the market opened that the unemployment rate fell to 8.6 percent last month, the lowest level in 2 1/2 years. Economists had expected the rate to stay at 9 percent. But a key reason the unemployment rate fell so much was that more than 300,000 people gave up looking for work and were no longer counted as unemployed.

The Nasdaq composite index inched up 0.73 to 2,626.93. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 0.31 of a point to 1,244.28. The S&P surged 7.4 percent over the week, the most since March 2009.

Decisive steps by world leaders to right Europe's teetering economy sent stocks soaring on Wednesday. The Dow jumped 490 points, its biggest gain since March 2009 and its seventh-largest one-day point gain in history. The weekly point gain of 787 in the Dow was the second-biggest in its history, following a 946-point gain in October 2008.

"This market has been gripped with fear for a long time," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital. "And I think some of these fear factors are beginning to dissipate."

This week's strong stock performance is partially a reflection of the market's increased volatility since August, when concerns that Europe's debt was spinning out of control made dramatic stock price swings the norm. On Monday the S&P 500 broke a 7-day slide that had taken the index down 7.9 percent.

The improvements in the U.S. job market are "another illustration that the US economy is, for now at least, shrugging off the global economic downturn and fears about the collapse of the euro-zone," Capital Economics Chief U.S. Economist Paul Ashworth said in a note to clients.

Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy will meet Monday to discuss changes to European Union treaties. The talks will culminate in a Dec. 9 summit of EU leaders, where the proposals are expected to be debated and detailed. Analysts say stricter controls on spending could encourage the European Central Bank to offer more short-term help for governments struggling with their debts.

If the European Central Bank takes a larger role in buying government debt, "it will certainly be a relief to markets," Cardillo said, "and maybe even mean Europe avoids falling into a deep recession. Not that it's going to cure all the problems of Europe."

In corporate news:

? Western Digital Corp. soared 7.5 percent, the most in the S&P. The data storage provider raised its revenue estimate for the current quarter and said that recovery efforts at its facility in Thailand following massive flooding there were proceeding faster than had been expected.

? Big Lots Inc. slumped 8.7 percent, after the retailer reported a 76 percent plunge in income because of lower margins and a loss related to a newly acquired Canadian business. The company buys overstocked items including food and housewares and sells them at a discount.

? H&R Block Inc. fell 6.4 percent. The country's largest tax-preparation company reported a wider quarterly loss late Thursday. H&R Block also said there was a jump in claims tied to bad loans made by its former subprime mortgage unit.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111202/ap_on_bi_st_ma_re/us_wall_street

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