Sunday, December 4, 2011

Germany's Merkel fights for euro, Cameron for UK (Reuters)

PARIS/BERLIN (Reuters) ? British Prime Minister David Cameron threatened on Friday to obstruct a Franco-German drive for swift change to the European Union's treaty intended to help save the euro.

After talks with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Cameron said he was not convinced treaty change was needed to reinforce the single currency zone, which Britain has refused to join. If the 27-nation bloc's charter were reopened at a crunch summit next week, he would have his own agenda.

The British leader said euro zone institutions such as the European Central Bank needed to "get behind the currency" to convince markets that it had the required firepower, and member states had to make their economies more competitive.

"Neither of those things require treaty change, but if there is treaty change I will make sure that we further protect and enhance Britain's interests," he told reporters. There was no immediate comment from Sarkozy's office.

Cameron faces pressure from Eurosceptics in his Conservative party to loosen Britain's ties with the EU and secure guarantees that any move towards fiscal union on the continent does not harm the interests of the City of London financial centre.

Sarkozy tried to persuade him to allow stricter budget discipline procedures for the euro zone without insisting on returning powers over social and judicial affairs from Brussels to London or seeking a veto right over EU financial regulation.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel called earlier for rapid but limited treaty change to remedy what she sees as the root causes of Europe's raging sovereign debt crisis, warning that Europeans faced a "marathon" to regain lost credibility.

Outlining a long-term approach to tighter fiscal integration in the single currency area, with tougher budget discipline, she dismissed quick fixes such as massive U.S.-style money printing by the European Central Bank or issuing joint euro zone bonds.

"Resolving the sovereign debt crisis is a process, and this process will take years," Merkel told parliament, vowing to defend the euro, which she said was stronger than Germany's former deutschemark.

The chancellor will travel to Paris on Monday to outline joint proposals with Sarkozy for treaty changes to create coercive powers to reject national budgets and impose automatic sanctions on serial deficit sinners.

Next Friday's EU summit is seen by some as make-or-break for the euro zone after a string of half-measures agreed too late by European leaders over nearly two years have failed to stop bond market contagion spreading from Greece to Ireland, Portugal and now Italy and Spain.

Sources close to Merkel said she was willing to see the ECB step up buying of troubled euro zone countries' bonds, alongside smart use of the bloc's rescue fund, as a bridging measure until budget controls took hold, but she did not see it as a lasting solution.

Her speech set the agenda for a week of intense diplomacy to try to frame a new political deal to restore market confidence and give the ECB grounds to act more decisively to defend the euro and support teetering banks.

BREAKUP SCENARIOS

World stocks and European bonds continued to gain on hopes that euro zone leaders may be moving closer to a comprehensive solution to the debt crisis.

But in a sign that business leaders are beginning to doubt whether the currency will survive, the chief executive of Austrian energy group OMV said dozens of top European executives were working on post-euro contingency plans.

"I was recently in Paris with some other representatives of large companies and we discussed this question," Gerhard Roiss told reporters on Friday when asked if he had plans for a euro breakup. About half the 45 firms present had confirmed they were working on such scenarios.

ECB President Mario Draghi sent a crucial signal to markets on Thursday, opening the door to more aggressive action to help fight the euro zone's sovereign debt and banking crisis if governments adopted a new "fiscal compact."

Sarkozy embraced German calls for a new treaty tightening fiscal discipline in a policy speech in Toulon on Thursday, but in contrast to Merkel, he made no mention of greater powers for the European Commission and European Court of Justice.

Instead, the French leader, struggling to win re-election next May, called for an "intergovernmental" Europe in which the presidents and prime ministers of euro zone countries would be the ultimate arbiters over national budgets.

His socialist opponents denounced him for advocating an "austerity treaty" dictated by Germany. Merkel went out of her way to rebut such accusations, telling the Bundestag it was "misleading" to suggest Germans were trying to dominate Europe.

The president of the European Parliament, Jerzy Buzek of Poland, warned that treaty change could be "dangerous" because Europe's citizens were unlikely to warm to the idea in the near future.

MARKETS RECOVER

EU diplomats said Paris and Berlin hoped to find agreement among all 27 member states for limited treaty amendments rather than having to take the more divisive route of drafting a separate blueprint for the 17 euro zone states or fewer.

German officials praised the conservative Sarkozy's courage in telling voters, in what the business daily Handelsblatt called a "blood, sweat and tears speech," that France would have to overhaul its social model and cut public spending.

Peter Altmaier, chief whip of Merkel's conservatives in the Bundestag, told German radio: "We have so far managed to fix a German-French position on all the important decisions on Europe in recent months. I am very confident that we will be able to reach a common position with our French friends by the summit next week. There is much more uniting us than dividing us."

On the markets, German 10-year Bunds outperformed safe-haven U.S. Treasuries and British gilts as investors saw prospects of an EU summit deal and ECB action to ease funding for cash-starved banks and to counter a looming recession in Europe.

Italy's 10-year bond yield was down to 6.65 percent, well below the danger levels close to 8 percent they hit last week, which analysts said could make it impossible for Rome to refinance its debt next year. Spain's 10-year borrowing cost tumbled to 5.68 percent.

Sentiment has turned more positive since the world's major central banks took emergency joint action on Wednesday to provide cheaper dollar funding for European banks, a move which suggested they feared a funding crunch was imminent.

A key measure of dollar funding stress felt by euro zone banks, the three-month euro/dollar cross currency basis swap, which shows the rate charged when swapping euro interest rate payments on an underlying asset into dollars, has narrowed by 30 basis points since the coordinated central bank move to around minus 130 bps.

The basis swap was at its widest since end-2008 -- at the height of the global financial crisis -- before the central banks' move.

(Additional reporting by Noah Barkin in Berlin, Kirsten Donovan in London, Emmanuel Jarry in Toulon, Michael Martina in Beijing; Writing by Paul Taylor; editing by Janet McBride/Mike Peacock)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111202/bs_nm/us_eurozone

vincent brown willow smith tom bradley tom bradley penn state riot penn state riot state college pa

Friday, December 2, 2011

Wis. office wants to suspend former DA's license (AP)

MADISON, Wis. ? The Wisconsin office that regulates attorney conduct asked the state Supreme Court on Wednesday to suspend a former prosecutor's law license for trying to spark an affair with a domestic abuse victim through a barrage of racy text messages and allegedly making sexual remarks to a number of other women.

The Office of Lawyer Regulation filed a complaint with the court alleging former Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz violated multiple attorney conduct rules. The office recommended the justices suspend his law license for six months.

Kratz resigned in October 2010 after The Associated Press reported that he sent 30 texts over three days to a then-25-year-old domestic abuse victim in 2009. The Republican district attorney was prosecuting the woman's ex-boyfriend at the time.

Kratz, then 50, called the woman a "tall, young, hot nymph," told her he wanted her to "be so hot" and touted himself as "the prize" with a $350,000 house.

He has since set up a private practice that handles criminal defense, drunken driving, divorce and injury cases, according to the firm's website. Kratz didn't respond to an email or phone message left Wednesday at his office, and his attorney, Robert Bellin, also didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The woman went to Kaukauna police, who forwarded the allegations to the state Justice Department. That agency concluded Kratz committed no criminal wrongdoing, but urged him to get someone else to prosecute the woman's case and recommended he step down as chairman of the crime victims board. Kratz complied with both recommendations.

He was ordered to self-report the text messages to the OLR, which declined to discipline him and closed its case against him in March 2010. The office concluded he acted inappropriately but didn't commit any ethical violations. The office reopened its investigation in September 2010, bowing to public pressure following the AP's stories.

More women started coming forward with allegations against Kratz. The state Justice Department again concluded Kratz didn't commit any criminal offenses, but forwarded the files to the OLR to supplement its new investigation.

Now the office says Kratz committed multiple violations of Supreme Court rules governing lawyers' conduct.

The office's complaint said the text messages to the domestic abuse victim violated rules against engaging in sexual harassment and offensive behavior.

The complaint noted that during that same period Kratz made lewd remarks about oral sex to a social worker worried about testifying in a parental rights case. He also told her he wanted to go to Las Vegas and have large-chested women serve him drinks.

The complaint went on to say Kratz made comments to another social worker about a court reporter's breasts.

The complaint noted, too, that a woman Kratz prosecuted for theft in 2006 accused him of sexually assaulting her at her apartment in late 2009. Kratz insisted the sex was consensual, according to the complaint, but the OLR still said he engaged in offensive behavior and harassment based on sex.

Finally, the complaint said Kratz made sexual comments to a woman who wanted him to help her win a gubernatorial pardon for a drug conviction he had prosecuted. During a meeting in his office he asked the woman about sexual scenarios and followed up with text messages asking the woman to impress him.

Kratz has 20 days to file a formal response with the OLR. The Supreme Court will appoint a referee to preside over the case, hold a hearing if necessary and issue a report to the justices with a recommendation on discipline. The justices will ultimately decide what misconduct, if any, took place and decide what punishment to impose.

The 2009 domestic abuse victim has filed a civil lawsuit against Kratz in federal court alleging sexual harassment. That case is still pending. The woman's attorney, Michael Fox, said he hadn't seen the OLR's complaint.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_on_re_us/us_wisconsin_prosecutor_sexting

meteor shower kathy griffin playstation network down martin scorsese kim zolciak kim zolciak jerry sandusky interview

Senate GOP fights union vote (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/168815488?client_source=feed&format=rss

adriana lima victoria secret angels fox 4 fox 4 adam levine vs fashion show 2011 victoria secret fashion show

Thursday, December 1, 2011

NASA's Mars Rover Curiosity Had Planetary Protection Slip-Up (SPACE.com)

All NASA spacecraft sent to other planets must undergo meticulous procedures to make sure they don't carry biological contamination from Earth to their destinations.

However, a step in these planetary protection measures wasn't adhered to for NASA's Mars Science Laboratory rover Curiosity, now en route to the Red Planet, SPACE.com has learned.

The incident has become a lessons-learned example of miscommunication in assuring that planetary protection procedures are strictly adhered to.

The issue involves a set of drill bits carried by the Curiosity rover, which launched Nov. 26 to Mars. When project developers made an internal decision not to send the equipment through a final ultra-cleanliness step, it marked a deviation from the planetary protection plans scripted for the Mars Science Laboratory mission. [Photos: Watching the Mars Rover Curiosity Blast Off?]

That judgment, however, didn't reach NASA's chief protector of the planets until "very late in the game," said Catharine "Cassie" Conley, NASA's planetary protection officer. "They didn't submit the request for the deviation not to comply with their planetary protection plan until several months ago," she emphasized.

Conley told SPACE.com that the initial plan called for placing all three of the drill bits inside a sterile box. Then, after Curiosity landed, the box would be opened for access to the sterilized bits via the rover's robot arm, extracted one by one and fit onto a drill head as the mission progressed.

But in readying the rover for departure to Mars, the box was opened, with one drill bit affixed to the drill head, Conley said. Also, all of the bits were tested pre-launch to assess their level of organic contamination. While done within a very clean environment, that work strayed from earlier agreed-to protocols, she said.

"That's where the miscommunication happened," Conley said. "I will certainly expect to have a lessons-learned report that will indicate how future projects will not have this same process issue. I'm sure that the Mars exploration program doesn't want to have a similar process issue in the future. We need to make sure we do it right."

Equatorial target

Conley said the deviation from protocol was reinforced by science and project officials concluding that Curiosity's target landing spot, Gale Crater, is free of potentially life-harboring ice ? at least at depths that the drill bits would penetrate.

"That reinforced the reasonableness of not having the drill bits sterilized, because there's unlikely to be 'special regions' in the Gale Crater landing site," Conley said.

The $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory mission was designed to comply with a requirement to avoid going to any site on the Red Planet known to have water or water-ice within 3.3 feet (1 meter) of the surface.

Adhering to cleanliness standards is a way to make sure the mission does not transport Earth life to Mars. Doing so preserves the ability to study that world in its natural state and also avoids contamination that would obscure an ability to find native life on that planet, if it exists.

Conley emphasized that the Curiosity assembly team and technicians did an excellent job of keeping Curiosity cleaner than any robot that NASA' s sent to Mars since the Viking lander in the 1970s.

Still, the decision to not keep the drill bits ultra-clean shows the process needs to be fixed, Conley said.

"It would have been better for them to check with me before they opened the box of bits to confirm that it was okay ? rather than trying to ask for it afterwards," she said. "In this case it was fine. But for future missions we want to make sure that they ask beforehand."

Habitable environments

The Mars Science Laboratory is not a life-detection mission. Rather, it will study whether the Gale Crater area of Mars has evidence of past and present habitable environments.

"Direct life detection is inherently difficult, some would argue currently impossible, because there is no uniform agreement on life," said Scott Hubbard, the former "Mars Czar" for NASA Headquarters in Washington.

Hubbard is now a professor in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Stanford University, Stanford, Calif., and author of the new book "Exploring Mars ? Chronicles from a Decade of Discovery," published by the University of Arizona Press.

"There is no mathematical expression for life as there is gravity ? only a series of attributes such as complexity, reproduction, metabolism, responsiveness and so on," Hubbard told SPACE.com. "We don't have a 'Star Trek' tricorder that says 'It's alive, Jim'."

Mars sample return

On-the-spot detection of life is difficult, underscoring the need to return to Earth well-selected samples from the Red Planet for analysis in a lab, Hubbard noted.

There are three reasons for pushing forward on a Mars return sample effort, he said: The best laboratory equipment can be employed, much of which cannot be reduced to spacecraft size; many labs and many scientists can be utilized to cross-check each other with alternate techniques; and discoveries can be followed and rechecked years later with new tools and techniques and hypotheses.

"The treaty-type agreements on planetary protection specify very rigorous levels of cleanliness to prevent forward and backward contamination," Hubbard said. "Spacecraft going to potential habitable zones on Mars must be cleaned to an amazing degree, even sterilized. Samples returned to Earth will be treated as if they were highly infectious until demonstrated otherwise."

Price tag estimates for a "Sample Receiving Facility" here on Earth have ranged as high as $300 million, Hubbard said. "Nevertheless, I think it is all worth it to find out 'Are we alone?'? 'Did life ever arise on Mars?'" he said.

Leonard David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. He is a winner of this year's National Space Club Press Award and a past editor-in-chief of the National Space Society's Ad Astra and Space World magazines. He has written for SPACE.com since 1999.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111201/sc_space/nasasmarsrovercuriosityhadplanetaryprotectionslipup

nextdoor premier fitness dan uggla kryptos student loan forgiveness amy winehouse cause of death amy winehouse cause of death

The implications of disease coexistence

The implications of disease coexistence [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Joan Robinson
joan.robinson@springer.com
49-622-148-78130
Springer

Study highlights importance of diagnosing 'overlap syndrome' in sufferers of muscle weakness disease and early-onset dementia

In order to better counsel patients, it is key for clinicians of different disciplines to be aware of, and diagnose, the 'overlap syndrome' between two medical disorders - ALS and FTD - since it significantly affects patient survival. In her new study, Catherine Lomen-Hoerth, from the University of California San Francisco in the US, also highlights that from a research perspective, identifying the syndrome early is an opportunity to study damaged nerve cells and understand more about the early stages of both ALS and FTD. Her work is published in Springer's Journal of Molecular Neuroscience, in a special issue entitled Frontotemporal Dementias, which contains 56 studies on this topic.

ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, is a progressive, fatal disease causing weakness of the voluntary muscles of the body. FTD, or frontotemporal dementia, is the second most common early-onset dementia after Alzheimer's disease, caused by the degeneration of the front part of the brain which may also extend to the back of the brain; it is characterized by behavioral changes and language difficulties. Up to 15 percent of FTD patients and 30 percent of ALS patients experience the overlap syndrome (ALS-FTD). However, it may be difficult to identify because patients either attend a neuromuscular clinic or a memory disorder center, each with limited expertise in the other's specialty.

Lomen-Hoerth's paper argues that early detection of this syndrome is critical since it greatly impacts survival, and requires adequate patient counseling. It presents the clinical characteristics of the overlap syndrome with new diagnostic criteria. It also looks at screening strategies and techniques to manage the condition.

The author concludes: "There are many important clinical and research implications for ALS-FTD. Identifying FTD patients as they are just developing motor neuron problems, even before they become clinically weak, provides a window into very early motor neuron disease. Conversely, the ALS patient with very subtle impairments can be followed as the dementia progresses. The research implications are tremendous to be able to evaluate 'sick neurons' pathologically and understand more about the pathophysiology of both ALS and FTD."

###

References
1. Lomen-Hoerth C (2011). Clinical phenomenology and neuroimaging correlates in ALS-FTD. Journal of Molecular Neuroscience. DOI 10.1007/s12031-011-9655-7
2. Special issue of the Journal of Molecular Neuroscience: Frontotemporal Dementias. Vol. 45, No. 3, November 2011. Guest Editor: Bernardino Ghetti. Visit: http://www.springerlink.com/content/0895-8696/45/3/

The full-text article is available to journalists on request.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


The implications of disease coexistence [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 29-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Joan Robinson
joan.robinson@springer.com
49-622-148-78130
Springer

Study highlights importance of diagnosing 'overlap syndrome' in sufferers of muscle weakness disease and early-onset dementia

In order to better counsel patients, it is key for clinicians of different disciplines to be aware of, and diagnose, the 'overlap syndrome' between two medical disorders - ALS and FTD - since it significantly affects patient survival. In her new study, Catherine Lomen-Hoerth, from the University of California San Francisco in the US, also highlights that from a research perspective, identifying the syndrome early is an opportunity to study damaged nerve cells and understand more about the early stages of both ALS and FTD. Her work is published in Springer's Journal of Molecular Neuroscience, in a special issue entitled Frontotemporal Dementias, which contains 56 studies on this topic.

ALS, or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, is a progressive, fatal disease causing weakness of the voluntary muscles of the body. FTD, or frontotemporal dementia, is the second most common early-onset dementia after Alzheimer's disease, caused by the degeneration of the front part of the brain which may also extend to the back of the brain; it is characterized by behavioral changes and language difficulties. Up to 15 percent of FTD patients and 30 percent of ALS patients experience the overlap syndrome (ALS-FTD). However, it may be difficult to identify because patients either attend a neuromuscular clinic or a memory disorder center, each with limited expertise in the other's specialty.

Lomen-Hoerth's paper argues that early detection of this syndrome is critical since it greatly impacts survival, and requires adequate patient counseling. It presents the clinical characteristics of the overlap syndrome with new diagnostic criteria. It also looks at screening strategies and techniques to manage the condition.

The author concludes: "There are many important clinical and research implications for ALS-FTD. Identifying FTD patients as they are just developing motor neuron problems, even before they become clinically weak, provides a window into very early motor neuron disease. Conversely, the ALS patient with very subtle impairments can be followed as the dementia progresses. The research implications are tremendous to be able to evaluate 'sick neurons' pathologically and understand more about the pathophysiology of both ALS and FTD."

###

References
1. Lomen-Hoerth C (2011). Clinical phenomenology and neuroimaging correlates in ALS-FTD. Journal of Molecular Neuroscience. DOI 10.1007/s12031-011-9655-7
2. Special issue of the Journal of Molecular Neuroscience: Frontotemporal Dementias. Vol. 45, No. 3, November 2011. Guest Editor: Bernardino Ghetti. Visit: http://www.springerlink.com/content/0895-8696/45/3/

The full-text article is available to journalists on request.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/s-tio112911.php

la auto show oregon usc powerball winning numbers powerball winning numbers uc davis pepper spray ">uc davis pepper spray usc oregon