Sunday, December 18, 2011

Ethics panel extends contract for Waters inquiry (AP)

WASHINGTON ? The House Ethics Committee said Friday it has extended for seven months a contract with an outside counsel hired to investigate allegations against Rep. Maxine Waters and the committee handling of that investigation.

The ethics panel said the new contract with Washington attorney Billy Martin would continue through July 31, 2012. Martin was retained in July to investigate the Waters case, with the contract set to expire at the end of the year.

The investigation centers on whether Waters tried to aid a troubled bank, Boston-based OneUnited, where her husband owned stock. The focus is on a meeting the California Democrat requested between Treasury Department officials and representatives of an association representing minority-owned banks, including OneUnited.

OneUnited received $12 million in federal bailout money in December 2008, but Waters says she was trying to help all minority-owned banks that were in trouble because of their investments in collapsing mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

In 2009 the ethics committee issued charges that Waters' efforts were aimed at OneUnited in violation of House rules, but a trial scheduled for November of that year was postponed because of partisan divisions within the committee and questions about how two committee attorneys, who were later suspended, had handled the case.

She has demanded that the case be dismissed, saying partisanship has made it impossible to give her a fair proceeding.

Waters' spokesman issued a statement that "the House and the American people should be concerned, as we are, that the extent of the committee's misconduct and the erosion of Rep. Waters' due process rights may be so pervasive, that it may take special counsel more than a year to review the extent of the committee's wrongdoing.

Martin was hired both to look into committee conduct and the charges against Waters. The committee said he had received about $300,000 under the initial contract and that expenditures between $50,000 and $500,000 had been authorized for the new contract.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_go_co/us_waters_ethics

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Russia slams Kyoto Protocol (AP)

MOSCOW ? Russia supports Canada's decision to pull out of the Kyoto Protocol, says its foreign ministry, reaffirming Friday that Moscow will not take on new commitments.

Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich told Friday's briefing that the treaty does not cover all major polluters, and thus cannot help solve the climate crisis.

Canada on Monday pulled out of the agreement ? initially adopted in 1997 in Kyoto, Japan, to cut carbon emissions contributing to global warming. Its move dealt a blow to the treaty, which has not been formally renounced by any other country.

"This is yet another example that the 1997 Kyoto Protocol has lost its effectiveness in the context of the social and economic situation of the 21st century," Lukashevich said, adding that the document does not ensure the participation of all key emitters.

The protocol requires some industrialized countries to slash emissions, but doesn't cover the world's largest polluters, China and the United States.

Canada, Japan and Russia said last year they will not accept new Kyoto commitments.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/science/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_sc/eu_russia_climate_change

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Caterpillars mimic one another for survival

ScienceDaily (Dec. 16, 2011) ? In the world of insects, high risk of attack has led to the development of camouflage as a means for survival, especially in the larval stage. One caterpillar may look like a stick, while another disguises itself as bird droppings. Though crypsis may have its advantages, University of Florida researchers uncovered some of the most extensive evidence of caterpillars using another strategy previously best-known in adult butterflies: mimicry.

Insects use camouflage to protect themselves by looking like inanimate or inedible objects, while mimicry involves one species evolving similar warning color patterns to another.

The study in the current issue of The Annals of the Entomological Society of America helps scientists better understand how organisms depend upon one another, an important factor in predicting how disturbance of natural habitats may lead to species extinctions and loss of biodiversity.

"Mimicry in general is one of the best and earliest-studied examples of natural selection, and it can help us learn where evolutionary adaptations come from," said UF lepidopterist Keith Willmott, lead author of the study and an associate curator at the Florida Museum of Natural History on the UF campus.

Bright warning coloration has evolved in many insects with physical or chemical defenses and further research into how insects metabolize plant toxins for their own benefit has potential use in the medical field.

"It's very interesting how caterpillars can detoxify a plant's poisonous chemicals and resynthesize them for their own chemical defense or for pheromones," said Florida Museum collection coordinator and study co-author Andrei Sourakov. "We can look at the caterpillars' metabolic systems to understand how they deal with secondary plant compounds, the toxic plant substances used for centuries as tonics, spices, medicine and recreational drugs."

Based on the number of eggs laid by a single female butterfly, scientists estimate about 99 percent of caterpillars die before reaching the pupal stage. Survival tactics include sharp spines, toxic chemicals and hairs accompanied by bright warning coloration.

The study focuses on two groups of Neotropical caterpillars: Danaini of the Caribbean Island of Hispaniola and Ithomiini of the upper Amazon in eastern Ecuador. Sourakov raised and observed danaine caterpillars, including the monarch butterfly and its relatives. These species apparently form M?llerian mimicry rings, in which toxic species adopt the same warning color patterns so a predator will more quickly learn which species to avoid.

In Ecuador, Willmott and study co-author Marianne Elias, from the Mus?um National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, found that 22 of 41 ithomiine caterpillars displayed some kind of warning coloration. Five exhibited a previously undocumented pattern with a bright yellow body and blue tips, and four were likely Batesian mimics, in which edible species adopt the coloration of an unpalatable model species for protection. These "freeloaders" only appear to have the defense mechanisms of the model species.

"They act almost like parasites, because the mimics are actually edible and therefore deceive predators without having to invest in costly resources to maintain toxicity," Willmott said. "Such a system can only be stable when the mimics are relatively rare, otherwise predators will learn the trick and attack more individuals of both mimics and models, driving models to evolve novel color patterns to escape the predators."

Mimicry may be relatively rare in caterpillars because it is more difficult for them to establish bright coloration, Willmott said. A brightly colored caterpillar has less chance of evading predators than a mobile adult butterfly.

"In adults, bright coloration may be favored by sexual selection for signaling to males and females," Willmott said. "Bright colors may be disadvantageous since they attract predators, but advantageous for attracting mates. Once established, bright colors might then be modified by natural selection for mimicry, another possible reason why mimicry seems to evolve much more frequently in adults than in caterpillars."

However, Sourakov believes mimicry is more common in caterpillars than scientists realize, but may receive less attention because larvae must be raised to adulthood to identify mimicry complexes, a process that takes weeks of lab work. Also, few collections of immature stages are maintained, and colors are not as well preserved in caterpillars.

"We know mimicry is an important ecological process for several species of animals, and I hope this study will give people incentive to further research immature stages of insects," said Andre Victor Lucci Freitas, a professor in the Instituto de Biologia at Universidade Estadual de Campinas. "We need to remember in most insects, immature stages are the most abundant."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Entomological Society of America.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Keith R. Willmott, Marianne Elias, Andrei Sourakov. Two Possible Caterpillar Mimicry Complexes in Neotropical Danaine Butterflies (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae). Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 2011; 104 (6): 1108 DOI: 10.1603/AN10086

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/EzUZj7xcvMs/111216174442.htm

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Column: Bonds sentencing doesn't end steroid era (AP)

Barry Bonds will find out Friday whether he will go to prison for his conviction in the BALCO steroids case. The feeling in legal circles is he won't, though prosecutors still hope a federal judge will see things their way and put him behind bars for up to 15 months.

That Bonds is a convicted felon should be victory enough for the investigators and attorneys who built the case against him. They finally got the biggest name in baseball, a slugger whose home run totals seemed to rise exponentially with the size of his head.

That they didn't get Bonds for actually using steroids doesn't really matter. His conviction on an obstruction of justice count wrapped a tidy bow on the entire BALCO investigation, nearly a decade after a determined investigator began digging into garbage cans outside of Victor Conte's Bay Area offices.

Now Bonds will stand before a federal judge in the same city where he hit so many of his massive home runs and get his punishment. Not for cheating the game of baseball but for playing games with a grand jury investigating his use of the "cream" and the "clear."

It's a good time to declare the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative case officially closed. An even better time to declare the steroid era in baseball finally over.

If only it were that easy.

The startling revelation that reigning National League MVP Ryan Braun tested positive for a banned substance isn't just evidence that baseball's toughened drug testing is working. It's evidence that ? assuming the test is accurate ? players are still trying to get better through modern science.

Hard to blame them. The payoffs for a few more home runs are so great that it has to be tempting for almost any player to take a chance on performance-enhancing drugs and hope testing doesn't nail them.

Yes, things have changed since Bonds testified before a federal grand jury investigating steroid distribution in 2003, when baseball had just announced the start of testing with penalties for steroid use.

But, more than two decades after players first started juicing, they're still at it. The threat of regular testing and lengthy suspensions hasn't eliminated the use of PEDs, even while anecdotal evidence seems to show steroid use is declining.

Braun's case is somewhat shocking if only because he was one of the few power hitters in recent times who hadn't come under suspicion. Though he has unusual bat speed, he's not particularly muscular or bloated like most of the cheating sluggers we have seen over the years. About the only thing he would seem to have in common with Bonds is an ability to hit long home runs and score big contracts ? $141.5 million over the next nine years for Braun from the Milwaukee Brewers.

Though Major League Baseball does not confirm initial positive tests until the arbitration process is complete, ESPN cited two sources as saying he tested positive for elevated levels of testosterone. A later test by the World Anti-Doping Agency lab in Montreal determined that the testosterone was synthetic, the network reported.

A spokesman for Braun denies it all and says the slugger was outraged by what he believes is a false positive test. The player's union also weighed in on his behalf, cautioning against a "rush to judgment" until the process plays out. And Brewers owner Mark Attanasio praised Braun as "a model citizen in every sense of the word" and "a person of character and integrity."

Whatever. A lot of people supported Bonds, too, even when logic told them it was impossible to hit 73 home runs in a season while playing in a pitcher's ballpark.

Braun's positive test had to be particularly embarrassing to baseball, even if commissioner Bud Selig no longer owns the Brewers. It came just a few weeks after Braun was voted National League MVP and after a season in which just two players ? Manny Ramirez and Colorado catcher Eliezer Alfonzo ? were suspended for using performance-enhancing substances.

Still, a sport that had to be dragged kicking and screaming into any kind of testing is now leading the way in trying to keep players clean. There are harsh penalties for getting caught ? Braun will be suspended 50 games if his test is upheld ? and there soon will be blood testing for HGH in spring training and the offseason.

That doesn't mean players won't keep trying to cheat. They will, because the rewards are still greater than the risks.

Credit Jeff Novitzky and his fellow BALCO investigators for at least trying to stem the tide. At a time when baseball and its union were paralyzed by the issue of steroids, they attacked from the legal front and ultimately may have saved the game from itself.

Surely, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston will take that into consideration when the BALCO era comes to an end with the sentencing of its poster child. But there's something else she should be thinking about, too.

Watching Bonds hit mammoth home runs undoubtedly led others to use steroids.

Watching him get sent to prison might lead a new generation of players to think twice.

____

Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at tdahlberg(at)ap.org or http://twitter.com/timdahlberg

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_sp_ba_ne/bbo_tim_dahlberg121411

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Friday, December 16, 2011

SC governor Nikki Haley endorses Mitt Romney (AP)

SIOUX CITY, Iowa ? South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley is endorsing Mitt Romney for president.

Haley said Friday on Fox News she is throwing all of her support behind Romney in the Republican primaries. She says jobs, the economy and spending are most important and the former Massachusetts governor is the best candidate to address those issues.

Haley also says President Barack Obama seems most afraid to face Romney.

Haley is a rising star in the GOP, and her endorsement means a lot in South Carolina, the first Southern state to hold a primary election.

Romney will appear with Haley Friday afternoon in South Carolina. Haley says they will campaign together Saturday.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_el_pr/us_romney_haley

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Greek civil servants walk off job (AP)

ATHENS, Greece ? Greek civil servants walked off the job for three hours on Thursday to protest austerity measures that include pension and salary cuts and the suspension of tens of thousands of workers on partial pay.

The work stoppage was to leave hospitals with emergency staff and shut down other public services from noon to 3 p.m. About 1,000 pensioners marched through central Athens to protest outside Parliament.

Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, meanwhile, was meeting with Greece's debt inspectors from the International Monetary Fund, European Central Bank and European Commission, collectively known as the troika. The country is negotiating the terms of a second massive rescue package, worth euro130 billion ($169 billion), with the eurozone and private bondholders.

On Wednesday, the IMF's top official in Greece urged the country to fire excess public servants and impose further cuts on workers' pay rights to reduce the size of the public sector and make the economy more competitive. Poul Thomsen warned the government it would not be able to reduce its high budget deficits unless it focused on spending cuts, arguing that the country's taxpayers had reached the limit.

"There are no more low-hanging fruits," he told a financial conference in Athens. "We have clearly reached the limit of what can be achieved through raising taxes ... Lesson: We have to move the expenditure side."

He urged the government to "move aggressively" to reduce the size of the public sector.

The IMF and eurozone countries have been propping up Greece's economy with a euro110 billion package of rescue loans since May 2010. In return, the country has imposed harsh austerity measures including slashing pensions and salaries and introducing several waves of tax hikes that have driven the country into recession.

Greece has admitted it will miss its deficit targets this year, with revenues still weak despite draconian tax hikes. Papademos promised Wednesday to speed up painful reforms if needed to meet budget targets.

The prime minister was also to meet later in the day with the European Commission's task force chief for Greece, Horst Reichenbach.

Papademos, a former central bank governor who was appointed last month to lead an interim coalition government after a political crisis caused his predecessor to resign, was then to convene his Cabinet Tuesday afternoon.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111215/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_greece_financial_crisis

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