Thursday, March 14, 2013

Martian rock points to life-friendly conditions

According to NASA, powder from a rock found on Mars indicates the Red Planet may have been able to support microbes billions of years ago. NBC's Katie Wall reports.

By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

Powder drilled out of a rock on Mars contains the best evidence yet that the Red Planet could have supported living microbes billions of years ago, the team behind NASA's Curiosity rover said Tuesday.

"I think this is probably the only definitively habitable environment that we have described and recorded," said David Blake, a scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center who is the principal investigator for Curiosity's CheMin lab.

The findings are in line with what the scientists hoped to find when they sent the 1-ton, six-wheeled laboratory to Mars' Gale Crater. "It wasn't serendipity that got us here. It was the result of planning," Caltech's John Grotzinger, the $2.5 billion mission's project scientist, told reporters at NASA Headquarters in Washington on Tuesday.


Serendipity did, however, play a part in being able to find the evidence so soon, he said. Curiosity's handlers had planned to have the rover head for a 3-mile-high (5-kilometer-high) mountain in the middle of the crater. But when the rover landed, the science team decided to send Curiosity on a detour to a geologically interesting area in the opposite direction, nicknamed Yellowknife Bay. Preliminary readings showed that the area had been a riverbed or lake bed in ancient times.

Last month, the rover finally got a chance to drill into a Martian rock that was named John Klein, after a member of the mission team who died in 2011. Curiosity fed tablespoons of the ground-up gray powder into its two onboard chemical labs: CheMin (Chemistry and Mineralogy) and SAM (Sample Analysis at Mars). The results were announced at Tuesday's news briefing.

Scientists said the powder contained the elemental ingredients of life ? including sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen,?oxygen, phosphorus and carbon. More significantly, they found that clay minerals made up at least 20 percent of the sample. On Earth, these clays are produced when relatively fresh water reacts with igneous minerals such as olivine. The scientists also found calcium sulfate, which suggested that the water had a neutral or mildly alkaline balance.

Earlier NASA missions had found evidence that?salty, acidic water was once present on Mars, but that extreme environment would have been challenging for today's Earth-type organisms. Curiosity's chemical analysis produced a different result: The water that was available during the formation of the rock at Yellowknife Bay, billions of years ago, could have supported the kind of life commonly found on Earth.

"We have found a habitable environment which is so benign and supportive of life that probably if this water was around, and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it," Grotzinger said.

NASA / JPL-Caltech / Ames

A side-by-side comparison shows the X-ray diffraction patterns of two samples collected by Curiosity. The left side shows data from a sample collected from a drift of windblown dust, and the right side shows data from the powder drilled out of the John Klein rock. The John Klein readings show an abundance of phyllosilicate, a class of clay minerals called smectites that form by the action of relatively pure and neutral pH water on minerals.

NASA / JPL-Caltech / Cornell / MSSS

The left image shows Wopmay rock in Endurance Crater, as studied by NASA's Opportunity rover. The right image shows Sheepbed in Yellowknife Bay, as studied by Curiosity. Scientists say both rocks were formed in the presence of water, but the water at Wopnay was highly acidic and salty, while the water at Sheepbed had a more neutral pH and lower salinity.

The scientists said they were surprised to find a mixture of oxidized and non-oxidized chemicals, allowing for the type of chemistry that earthly microbes use to generate the energy they need for survival. This partial oxidation was first hinted at when the drill cuttings were revealed to be gray rather than red.

"The range of chemical ingredients we have identified in the sample is impressive, and it suggests pairings such as sulfates and sulfides that indicate a possible chemical energy source for microorganisms," SAM principal investigator Paul Mahaffy said in a NASA news release.

NASA said another drilled sample would be used to help confirm the chemical findings for several of the trace gases that were analyzed by the SAM instrument.

The current plan calls for Curiosity to conduct experiments in the Yellowknife Bay for weeks or months longer, and then begin a roughly 6-mile (10-kilometer) drive to the big mountain, known as Mount Sharp or Aeolis Mons. Scientists will look for further evidence of ancient organic chemistry hidden in the mountain's many layers of rock.

The primary aim of Curiosity's two-year primary mission is to find evidence of past habitability ? in particular,?organic carbon compounds that could have played a role in the chemistry of life billions of years ago. Grotzinger said Curiosity's scientists will focus on the systematic search for organic carbon now that they had "the issue of habitability in the bag."

NASA intends to follow up on Curiosity's findings with future Mars missions, including the $500 million MAVEN orbiter (due for launch this year), the $425 million InSight drill-equipped lander (set for 2016 launch) and another Curiosity-like rover that's scheduled to be sent out in 2020.?

Trace the Curiosity rover's journey to Mars and see the pictures that the six-wheeled robot has sent back from the Red Planet.

More about Mars:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's?Facebook page, following?@b0yle on Twitter?and adding the?Cosmic Log page?to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out?"The Case for Pluto,"?my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

This story was originally published on

Source: http://cosmiclog.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/12/17285137-nasa-says-mars-curiosity-rover-sees-traces-of-life-friendly-conditions-in-rock?lite

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Quality of Ovarian Cancer Treatment Varies Widely

The city of Los Angeles hosted the annual meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Oncology , held Saturday through Tuesday. A variety of topics was presented by clinicians and researchers in the field of gynecologic cancers, with one resonating not only among the conference's attendees, but also with the general public -- that of the varying degrees of the quality of treatment provided for ovarian cancer.

Study Results Presented on Quality, Outcome of Ovarian Cancer Treatment

Robert Bristow, M.B.A., M.D. , of the University of California, Irvine, presented the results of his research team's findings on Monday , explaining that of the more than 13,000 women with epithelial ovarian cancer listed on the California Cancer Registry from 1999 to 2006, only 37 percent received treatment that adhered to the guidelines of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network , NCCN, the gold standard for best treatment.

Responding to the study's findings, Deborah Armstrong, M.D. , of Johns Hopkins University and an oncology specialist, told the New York Times that if most women weren't receiving best care for survival in breast cancer treatment, there would be much public backlash. Ovarian cancer, Armstrong explained, has a smaller advocacy community, likely because many women diagnosed with ovarian cancer are a little older, a little sicker, and less likely to advocate for themselves and others.

What Affected the Treatment Quality for Ovarian Cancer Patients?

Bristow's study pointed to two major factors that determined whether patients with ovarian cancer received treatment according to NCCN protocols or something less: Surgeons who operated on 10 or more women a year for ovarian cancer, and hospitals that treated 20 or more women with ovarian cancer each year were more likely to adhere to the NCCN guidelines -- and more likely to live longer.

Why Are the NCCN Guidelines so Important in Ovarian Cancer Treatment?

Ovarian cancer is the fifth-leading cause of cancer deaths among women, and the most deadly of all the gynecologic cancers, according to the National Cancer Institute . Fortunately, the incidence of the disease is low, with a lifetime risk factor of 1.38 percent. Unfortunately, for the majority of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer -- approximately 85 percent -- the disease has already spread beyond the ovaries.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 90 percent of women diagnosed with ovarian cancer are over the age of 40, with most women first diagnosed at age 55 or older.

Combine the fact that by age 40 and over, some women also have other chronic conditions with the fact that ovarian cancer has such a high mortality rate and it becomes easy to see why prompt and correct treatment of the diagnosed disease is vital.

The NCCN guidelines are evidence-based guidelines developed by an alliance of 21 major cancer centers with an expert panel that comb through research and recommend treatments. In the case of ovarian cancer, the surgical procedures and chemotherapy regimen are given, based on the stage of the disease.

Bottom Line

Who you choose to provide treatment, both surgical and in chemotherapy, makes a big difference in the success of your ovarian cancer treatment. Ask prospective doctors and surgeons if they follow NCCN guidelines. If circumstances permit, choose a gynecologic oncologist and a hospital or treatment center that has regular experience with treating this disease. As Bristow's study results show, the quality of your life and its longevity depend on your wise choices.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/quality-ovarian-cancer-treatment-varies-widely-180600802.html

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Empire Co profit falls 6 percent on one-time charge

(Reuters) - Empire Co Ltd , parent of Canada's No. 2 grocer Sobeys, reported a 6 percent fall in quarterly profit after taking a one-time charge related to an equity accounted investment.

Net earnings fell to C$75.2 million ($73.2 million), or C$1.11 per share, in the third quarter from C$80 million, or C$1.17 per share, a year earlier.

The company booked a one-time charge from an equity accounted investment of C$4.8 million.

On an adjusted basis, the company earned C$1.17 per share while Sobeys' contribution to adjusted earnings, excluding minority interests, rose 8 percent.

Sales rose 9 percent to C$4.34 billion. Sobeys same-store sales, a key measure for retailers, rose 1.2 percent.

Sobeys, which ranks behind Loblaw Cos Ltd's Loblaws chain, contributed almost 9 percent to sales at C$4.28 billion, up from C$3.94 billion a year earlier.

Gross margin at Sobeys fell to 22.93 percent from 24.11 percent a year earlier, the company said.

Analysts on average expected earnings of C$1.15 per share on revenue of C$4.30 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

No. 2 U.S. discount retailer Target Corp is opening its first Canadian stores in 2013. Grocery retailers in Canada, including Loblaw and Metro Inc , already compete with an expanding Wal-Mart Stores Inc .

Target's incursion may hurt Sobeys less than its rivals as the Empire chain has an agreement to supply the U.S. discount retailer with groceries.

Loblaw reported an 18 percent fall in fourth-quarter profit on a restructuring charge and said sales growth in 2013 would be affected by a new competitor.

Empire shares were little changed at C$65.48 in early trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Maneesha Tiwari in Bangalore; Editing by Joyjeet Das)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/empire-profit-falls-6-percent-one-time-charge-134845078--sector.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Fluoride in drinking water cuts tooth decay in adults

Fluoride in drinking water cuts tooth decay in adults [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Thania Benios
thania_benios@unc.edu
919-962-8596
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

A new study conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Adelaide, Australia, has produced the strongest evidence yet that fluoride in drinking water provides dental health benefits to adults, even those who had not received fluoridated drinking water as children.

In the first population-level study of its kind, the study shows that fluoridated drinking water prevents tooth decay for all adults regardless of age, and whether or not they consumed fluoridated water during childhood.

Led by UNC School of Dentistry faculty member Gary Slade, the study adds a new dimension to evidence regarding dental health benefits of fluoridation.

"It was once thought that fluoridated drinking water only benefited children who consumed it from birth," explained Slade, who is John W. Stamm Distinguished Professor and director of the oral epidemiology Ph.D. program at UNC. "Now we show that fluoridated water reduces tooth decay in adults, even if they start drinking it after childhood. In public health terms, it means that more people benefit from water fluoridation than previously thought."

The researchers analyzed national survey data from 3,779 adults aged 15 and older selected at random from the Australian population between 2004 and 2006. Survey examiners measured levels of decay and study participants reported where they lived since 1964. The residential histories of study participants were matched to information about fluoride levels in community water supplies. The researchers then determined the percentage of each participant's lifetime in which the public water supply was fluoridated.

The results, published online in the Journal of Dental Research, show that adults who spent more than 75 percent of their lifetime living in fluoridated communities had significantly less tooth decay (up to 30 percent less) when compared to adults who had lived less that 25 percent of their lifetime in such communities.

"At this time, when several Australian cities are considering fluoridation, we should point out that the evidence is stacked in favor of long-term exposure to fluoride in drinking water," said Kaye Roberts-Thomson, a co-author of the study. "It really does have a significant dental health benefit."

###


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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.


Fluoride in drinking water cuts tooth decay in adults [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 11-Mar-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Thania Benios
thania_benios@unc.edu
919-962-8596
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

A new study conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Adelaide, Australia, has produced the strongest evidence yet that fluoride in drinking water provides dental health benefits to adults, even those who had not received fluoridated drinking water as children.

In the first population-level study of its kind, the study shows that fluoridated drinking water prevents tooth decay for all adults regardless of age, and whether or not they consumed fluoridated water during childhood.

Led by UNC School of Dentistry faculty member Gary Slade, the study adds a new dimension to evidence regarding dental health benefits of fluoridation.

"It was once thought that fluoridated drinking water only benefited children who consumed it from birth," explained Slade, who is John W. Stamm Distinguished Professor and director of the oral epidemiology Ph.D. program at UNC. "Now we show that fluoridated water reduces tooth decay in adults, even if they start drinking it after childhood. In public health terms, it means that more people benefit from water fluoridation than previously thought."

The researchers analyzed national survey data from 3,779 adults aged 15 and older selected at random from the Australian population between 2004 and 2006. Survey examiners measured levels of decay and study participants reported where they lived since 1964. The residential histories of study participants were matched to information about fluoride levels in community water supplies. The researchers then determined the percentage of each participant's lifetime in which the public water supply was fluoridated.

The results, published online in the Journal of Dental Research, show that adults who spent more than 75 percent of their lifetime living in fluoridated communities had significantly less tooth decay (up to 30 percent less) when compared to adults who had lived less that 25 percent of their lifetime in such communities.

"At this time, when several Australian cities are considering fluoridation, we should point out that the evidence is stacked in favor of long-term exposure to fluoride in drinking water," said Kaye Roberts-Thomson, a co-author of the study. "It really does have a significant dental health benefit."

###


[ 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/2013-03/uonc-fid031113.php

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If Only, If Only

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Egyptian Soccer fans rampage over court verdicts

The sun sets during clashes between Egyptian protesters and riot police in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, March 9, 2013. Security officials say a protester has died during clashes between police and hundreds of stone-throwing demonstrators in central Cairo. The officials say the protester died Saturday on a Nile-side road where clashes have been taking place daily between anti-government protesters and police near two luxury hotels and the U.S. and British embassies. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

The sun sets during clashes between Egyptian protesters and riot police in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, March 9, 2013. Security officials say a protester has died during clashes between police and hundreds of stone-throwing demonstrators in central Cairo. The officials say the protester died Saturday on a Nile-side road where clashes have been taking place daily between anti-government protesters and police near two luxury hotels and the U.S. and British embassies. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

An Egyptian protester runs with a teargas canister during clashes with riot police in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, March 9, 2013. Security officials say a protester has died during clashes between police and hundreds of stone-throwing demonstrators in central Cairo. The officials say the protester died Saturday on a Nile-side road where clashes have been taking place daily between anti-government protesters and police near two luxury hotels and the U.S. and British embassies. (AP Photo/Nasser Nasser)

An injured security official is carried from a police officers club in the upscale neighborhood of Zamalek, after protesters set fires following a court verdict in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, March 9, 2013. Fans of Cairo?s Al-Ahly club have stormed Egypt?s soccer federation headquarters and a nearby police club, and set them ablaze after a court acquitted seven of nine police official on trial for their alleged part in deadly stadium melee. (AP Photo/Mohammed Asad )

Egyptian soccer fans of the Al-Ahly club celebrate in front of their club in Cairo, Egypt, after an Egyptian court confirmed death sentences against 21 people for their role in a deadly 2012 soccer riot that killed more than 70 people in the city of Port Said, Saturday, March 9, 2013. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

An Egyptian man walks on the grounds of a police officer's club as a fire set by protesters burns in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, March 9, 2013. An Egyptian court on Saturday confirmed the death sentences against 21 people for taking part in a deadly soccer riot but acquitted seven police officials for their alleged role in the violence, touching off furious protests in Cairo that torched the soccer federation headquarters and a nearby police club.(AP Photo/Ahmed Gomaa)

(AP) ? Egyptian soccer fans rampaged through the heart of Cairo on Saturday, furious about the acquittal of seven police officers while death sentences against 21 alleged rioters were confirmed in a trial over a stadium melee that left 74 people dead.

The case of the Feb. 1, 2012 stadium riot in the city of Port Said at the northern tip of the Suez Canal has taken on political undertones not just because police faced allegations of negligence in the tragedy but also because the verdicts were announced at a time when Egypt is in the grip of the latest and most serious bout of political turmoil in the two years since Hosni Mubarak's ouster.

Saturday's verdicts also were handed down against the backdrop of an unprecedented wave of strikes by the nation's police force over demands for better working conditions and anger over what many believe are attempts by President Mohammed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood to take control of the police force.

Tensions over the riot ? which began when supporters of Port Said's Al-Masry club set upon fans of Cairo's Al-Ahly club after the final whistle of a league game that the home team won ? have fueled some of the deadliest street violence in months. Police guarding the stadium, meanwhile, faced allegations ranging from not searching people entering the stadium to failing to intervene to stop the bloodshed.

Shortly after the verdict was announced Saturday, angry fans of Cairo's Al-Ahly club who had gathered in the thousands outside the team's headquarters in central Cairo went on a rampage, torching a police club nearby and storming Egypt's soccer federation headquarters before setting it ablaze.

The twin fires sent plumes of thick black smoke billowing out over the Cairo skyline, prompting Defense Minister Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi to dispatch two army helicopters to extinguish the fires.

At least five people were injured in the protests over the verdict, a Health Ministry official told the MENA state news agency.

Some demonstrators in Port Said also burnt tires on the city's dock to prevent vessels from coming in and released speedboats into traffic lanes of the Suez Canal in attempts, foiled by the navy, to disrupt shipping in the vital waterway linking the Red Sea to the Mediterranean.

A spokesman for the Suez Canal Authority said shipping was not affected and 41 vessels transited the waterway on Saturday.

General unrest also continued elsewhere in the Egyptian capital, which has seen unrelenting demonstrations and clashes between security forces and an opposition that accuses Morsi of trying to monopolize power in the hands of his Islamist allies.

Two protesters also were killed and 19 injured in clashes elsewhere in the capital that appeared unrelated to the soccer violence, national ambulance service chief Mohammed Sultan said. The fighting occurred near two luxury hotels and the U.S. and British embassies.

The court's decision upheld the death sentences issued in late January against 21 people, most of them Port Said fans. The original verdict touched off violent riots in Port Said that left some 40 people dead, most shot by police.

On Saturday, the court announced its verdict for the other 52 defendants in the case, sentencing 45 of them to prison, including two senior police officers who got 15 years terms each. The two were charged with gross negligence and failure to stop the killings.

Twenty-eight people were acquitted, including seven police officials.

Defense lawyers claimed the case has been flawed from the start with prosecutors collecting evidence in an "unorthodox" fashion and overlooking key aspects of the tragedy such as the fact the floodlights were turned off during the attack on the Al-Ahly fans and the nearest exit gate was locked.

Many of the 74 victims died of suffocation or blows to the head.

Morsi's aides denounced Saturday's violence and sought to dismiss the notion of a country in chaos.

Ayman Ali, a senior presidential aide, called on the media not to provide a "political cover" to the violence sweeping the country and dismissed as exaggerated claims that the country's police force was in disarray.

Another presidential aide, Bakinam el-Sharqawy, lamented that the focus on protests and violence created an image of instability in Egypt that kept foreign investors away.

In anticipation of more violence, authorities beefed up security near the Interior Ministry, which is in charge of the police force, with riot police deploying in the streets around the complex in central Cairo.

The president of the international soccer governing body FIFA appealed for calm.

"I call on football fans in Egypt to remain peaceful. Violence is never a solution and is contrary to the spirit of sport," Sepp Blatter tweeted.

Earlier at the courthouse across town, Judge Sobhi Abdel-Maguid read out the verdict live on TV, sentencing five defendants to life in prison and nine others to 15 years in jail. Six defendants received 10-year jail terms, two more got five years and a single defendant received a 12-month sentence.

The court's decision on the nine Port Said security officers on trial was among the most highly anticipated ? and potentially explosive ? verdicts. In the end, the judges sentenced the city's former security chief, Maj. Gen. Essam Samak, and a colonel both to 15 years in prison, while the others were acquitted.

Al-Ahly's fans accuse the police of collusion in the killing of their fellow supporters, arguing that they had advance knowledge of plans by supporters of Port Said's Al-Masry to attack them. They also accuse them of standing by as the Al-Masry fans attacked the visiting Al-Ahly supporters.

The court rulings can be appealed before a higher court.

Many residents of Port Said say the trial is unjust and politicized, and soccer fans in the city have felt that authorities were biased in favor of Al-Ahly, Egypt's most powerful club.

In Port Said, a city that for weeks has been in open rebellion against Morsi, the Islamist leader, several hundred people, many of them relatives of the defendants, gathered outside the local security headquarters to vent their anger. They chanted slogans against Morsi's government and the verdicts. Police pulled out of the city on Friday after days of battling protesters in deadly clashes. The army has taken over security in the city, a move that was warmly welcomed by residents.

Some people in a cafe watching the verdict live on TV hit their heads in frustration, while others broke down and wept. Some said they can live with the verdict because an appeal leaves room for hope.

"There's still an appeal process. God willing, our rights will be restored," said Islam Ezzeddin, a local soccer fan. "We are not thugs. I hope to God when there's an appeal, that we feel we live in a country of law and justice."

However, the national railways chief, Hussein Zakaria, ordered trains headed to Port Said to terminate their services at Ismailiya, another Suez Canal city south of Port Said. He said the measure was taken out of fear for the safety of passengers.

Late on Saturday, activists in the city declared the start of a new general strike, with bands of protesters moving around the city pleading with business owners to shutter down.

___

Batrawy reported from Port Said.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-09-ML-Egypt/id-09261b5a14fe4006ba3d83dff1c3a64a

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Friday, March 8, 2013

Let?s Not Tie Any President?s Hands

IN THE NEWS: Brennan confirmed after Rand Paul drops objection ? Senate committee approves gun bill ? Obama continues meal-time charm offensive with Paul Ryan ? OFA won?t take corporate cash ... Meteorological mea culpa on Snowquester?

THE TAKE

Let?s Not Tie Any President?s Hands

Pretend for a moment that you are president of the United States, responsible for the safety of the entire nation. Do you really want to rule out any means of preventing terrorist attacks?

Rand Paul?s drone filibuster, while admirable as an expression of principle, took place in a theoretical world of civil liberties. Presidents operate in the real world of Americans under continuing threat ? just ask President Obama or George W. Bush ? and their top priority is to avoid terrorist killings on their watch.

For as much heat as Obama is taking for his administration?s view that in an extraordinary circumstance, a drone could be used against an American inside the United States, imagine what would happen if he didn?t have the tool he needed to avert a nightmarish attack involving an American member of al-Qaida.

Sure, let?s put in place a legal and legislative framework. But hard as it is for partisans to trust chief executives of the opposite party, let?s not tie our presidents? hands.

Jill Lawrence
@jilldlawrence

TOP NEWS

BRENNAN CONFIRMED AFTER RAND PAUL DROPS OBJECTION. John Brennan, President Obama?s nominee for CIA Director, was confirmed Thursday in the Senate by a 63-34 vote, following a contentious nomination process over the use of drones and a talking filibuster by Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. Among those voting against were Paul, as well as Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., and Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga. Voting for were John McCain, R-Ariz., Tom Coburn, R-Okla., Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Ron Wyden, D-Ore. Read more

ADMINISTRATION: U.S. WON?T USE DRONES ON NONCOMBATANT AMERICANS. The Obama administration said Thursday that the U.S. ?would not use drone strikes on American citizens on U.S. soil,? according to press secretary Jay Carney, The Washington Post reports. The response came after Rand Paul?s filibuster over the drone question. Attorney General Eric Holder has written to Paul informing him of the opinion. ?Does the president have the authority to use a weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat on U.S. soil?? the letter reads. ?The answer to that is no.? Paul said Thursday that he?s ?quite happy? with the administration?s answer. Read more

McCAIN, GRAHAM BLAST PAUL'S FILIBUSTER. Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., criticized Paul for his filibuster, The Washington Post reports. The two foreign policy hawks denounced his effort on the Senate floor, saying they support the president's right to use deadly force, including drones, on U.S. soil if there aren't other options available. Graham called Paul's effort "ill-informed," and brought a chart comparing the number of Americans killed on U.S. soil by al-Qaeda (2,958) to the number killed by drones (0). Read more

  • The Washington Post rounds up the seven best moments from Paul?s filibuster?from Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., dropping a Jay-Z reference, to Paul saying ?Barack Obama of 2007 would be right down here with me.? See them all

OBAMA INVITES PAUL RYAN TO LUNCH. In the latest in a series of moves designed to bring Republicans around to a grand bargain on deficit reduction, Obama invited Rep. Paul Ryan, former Republican vice presidential candidate, for lunch at the White House Thursday, The Washington Post reported. Joining him was Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., who serves as the ranking member of the Budget Committee, which Ryan chairs. Van Hollen said Obama had a ?constructive discussion? with the two. "The idea for the chat-and-chew came during an extended phone conversation between Obama and Ryan earlier this week," Politico reported. Read more

  • The lunch comes on the heels of another meet-and-eat with 12 ?Republicans senators Wednesday night. Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Tom Coburn, R-Okla., flashed a thumbs-up after dinner with Obama Wednesday night, perhaps because Obama paid the check. Read more

SENATE COMMITTEE APPROVES GUN-TRAFFICKING BILL. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved a bill Thursday that would make gun trafficking a federal crime, the Associated Press reports. The votes were the first taken in Congress since the shootings at a Connecticut elementary school in December. Just one Republican on the panel, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, voted for the legislation. The committee is also marking up bills banning assault weapons and high capacity magazines, and requiring background checks for nearly all gun purchases. Read more

  • A new Quinnipiac University poll showed 88 percent of American voters supported background checks for all gun buyers. Fifty-four percent support an assault-weapons ban.

CLINTON WOULD WIN IF 2016 WERE TODAY. A new poll showed that Hillary Rodham Clinton would defeat three potential Republican candidates if the 2016 presidential election were held today. The Quinnipiac University poll posed a hypothetical election between three Democrats and three Republicans, including Vice President Joe Biden, Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D-N.Y., Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J., Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. Clinton easily bests the Republicans, beating Christie 45-37 percent, Rubio 50-34 percent, and Ryan 50-38 percent. Christie, however, tops both Biden and Cuomo in potential matches. Read more

OBAMA GROUP WON'T TAKE CORPORATE CASH. The advocacy group Organizing for Action announced today it won't accept corporate money, Roll Call reports. The group, made up of former Obama campaign officials, also announced it would more fully disclose its donors. ?We believe in being open and transparent. That?s why every donor who gives $250 or more to this organization will be disclosed on the website with the exact amount they give on a quarterly basis," OFA?s national chairman, Jim Messina, wrote in a CNN.com op-ed. Critics had claimed the group gave donors and bundlers special access to the president. Read more

NORTH KOREA THREATENS PREEMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKE ON U.S. For the first time, North Korea threatened to launch a preemptive nuclear strike against the United States and South Korea, The New York Times reports. The warning came just as the United Nations issued tough new sanctions to punish North Korea for its latest nuclear test, the Associated Press reports. Read more

  • The U.S. responded to the threat, saying it will take the necessary steps to defend itself and its allies from a North Korean strike, the Associated Press reports. Glyn Davies, the top envoy for North Korea, testified before a Senate foreign relations panel Thursday and called on the North not to miscalculate. Read more

A FORECASTER?S MEA CULPA. The Washington Post?s widely read Capital Weather Gang blog dissects its wildly wrong forecast of Wednesday?s piddling storm. Read more

TOMORROW

IMPROVEMENT EXPECTED IN JOBS NUMBERS. The Labor Department will release its closely watched February employment survey Friday, and most expect good news after the payroll processor ADP said Wednesday that the private sector had added 198,000 jobs last month. Unemployment is expected to dip slightly, from 7.9 percent to 7.8 percent. Read more

QUOTABLE

"I would go another 12 hours, but I've discovered there are some limits to filibustering, and I have to take care of one those in just a few minutes here." -- Paul, yielding the floor to Sen. Dick Durbin just before 1 a.m. Thursday (Roll Call).

BEDTIME READING

SHOULD EVERY POLITICIAN HAVE TO PASS THE ?SIM CITY? TEST? SimCity, the 24-year-old urban planning computer game franchise, has always transcended typical video game frivolity. Yes, aliens can randomly attack your city, but the game did inspire ?many a dilettante?s interest in urban policy,? Adam Sneed writes in Slate. Indeed, former presidential candidate Herman Cain might have even borrowed his ?9-9-9? tax plan from the game. The new SimCity will be released next week, and it comes at a perfect time, as an urban renaissance is under way and most of the world?s population now lives in cities. So it?s worth asking, what can we learn from the new, data-rich SimCity about the future of urban planning? Read more

OVERLOOKED

WEDNESDAY?S OTHER FILIBUSTER. For all the attention, and considerable praise, lavished on Sen. Rand Paul for his old-school, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington-style filibuster, a far more quiet and commonplace filibuster was also filed Wednesday with less fanfare. The Republicans?for the second time in three years?blocked Caitlin Halligan, Obama?s pick for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. That filibuster went largely unnoticed. Read more

TOP TWEETS

@frankthorpNBC: Pelosi on if she watched filibuster last night: "There are certain things that fall into the category of life is too short."
@ajjaffe: I can't wait for the filibusters of the future when humans have evolved beyond urination.
@StephenAtHome: An unmanned drone was spotted over Brooklyn. Apparently, it couldn't afford to fly over Manhattan.
@chucktodd: Yesterday, Washington was oddly at its best. Worked way it is supposed to work. Talking across aisle. Obstruction that sparks real debate.
@StephenAtHome: The record Dow numbers show once again that a rising tide lifts all boats of people who can afford boats.

?

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/let-not-tie-president-hands-162517827--politics.html

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Lion Mauls Intern in California

(KSEE) ?A woman is dead following a lion attack at the Project Rescue Cat Haven in Dunlap, California.

The employee, a female intern, was injured by the lion while inside its cage Wednesday afternoon.

Another employee tried but failed to distract the lion after the attack in an attempt to get him away the victim.?

When deputies arrived, they felt it necessary to shoot and kill the animal, named Cous Cous, in order to help the injured woman.?

She died at the scene.

The park was closed to the public at the time of the attack and remains closed at this time.

To read more:?

Source: http://texomashomepage.com/fulltext?nxd_id=255082

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Wednesday, March 6, 2013

No more big banker bonuses? Europe set to crack down.

Europe's financial ministers are expected to approve new rules today that would cap bankers' bonuses at two years' salary ? a move unthinkable in the years before the Lehman collapse.

By Michael Steininger,?Correspondent / March 5, 2013

EU Commissioner Michel Barnier (r.) and experts talk with Germany Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble (r, sitting down) during an ecofin meeting at the European Union Council in Brussels today.

Eric Vidal/Reuters

Enlarge

When European finance ministers meet today in Brussels, they will discuss a limit on bonus payments for bankers. And here is the surprise: They might actually agree on such a cap.

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Europe is undergoing a shift on executive pay that seemed unthinkable in the years before the Lehman collapse and the eurozone debt crisis, and the so-called Ecofin meeting in Brussels is another important step in that development.

Last week the European Parliament and the European Union Commission agreed on rules which would see bankers? bonuses capped at a year?s salary, only with explicit approval from shareholders this amount can rise to two years? pay. It is this deal the finance ministers now have to vote on.

In a separate development, Switzerland, which is not part of the EU, held a referendum on March 3?which brought a resounding approval for limiting executive pay and banning payouts to new and departing managers.

There was praise for both decisions, but particularly for the Swiss vote, across the continent.

?Long live the Swiss!? applauded Harlem Desir, leader of the French Socialists, on radio France Info. "This should be seen as part of our campaign against a financial sector that is out of control.?

And in Germany, Julia Kloeckner, the deputy chairwoman of the conservative CDU party, said, ?I am very surprised about the Swiss result and well done, hats off! I think it is a strong step, because Switzerland has set different priorities in other finance political issues compared to Germany.?

In France, President Fran?ois Hollande, a Socialist, has been trying for some time now to introduce a 75 percent tax on annual incomes of more than one million euros, so far without success. And in Germany, which has general elections in the fall, parties across the political spectrum are looking favorably at a campaign that aims to narrow the income gap.

There is one notable exception to the chorus of praise: Britain. The City of London is one of the world?s leading centers of finance, and London?s mayor, the Conservative Boris Johnson, vehemently defended its independence from political regulation.

"This is possibly the most deluded measure to come from Europe since Diocletian tried to fix the price of groceries across the Roman Empire,? Mr. Johnson told reporters after last week?s decision to cap bankers? bonuses. Such interventions were likely to benefit Europe?s competitors, he added. "The most this measure can hope to achieve is a boost for Zurich and Singapore and New York at the expense of a struggling EU."

However, British Finance Minister George Osborne will have little support among his European colleagues. Since decisions at the Ecofin level are taken by qualified majority voting, it is widely assumed that the ministers will approve the deal by European Parliament and EU Commission, which also includes higher capital requirements for banks to protect them against a repeat of the financial crash of 2008.

If approved, the new regulations will come into force at the beginning of 2014.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/UDHwOoGrRSY/No-more-big-banker-bonuses-Europe-set-to-crack-down

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