Tiny crooners: Male house mice sing songs to impress the girls

Thursday, January 26, 2012

It has been known for some time that house mice (Mus musculus) produce ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) during courtship but it has generally been assumed that these are no more than squeaks. However, recent spectrographic analyses have revealed that USVs are complex and show features of song. Although the vocalizations are inaudible to human ears, when playbacks of recorded songs are slowed down their similarity to bird song becomes striking. Frauke Hoffmann, Kerstin Musolf and Dustin Penn of the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna’s Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology aimed to learn what type of information is contained in males’ songs for the discerning ear of the female mouse to detect. Their initial studies, the first to study song in wild mice, confirmed that males emit songs when they encounter a females’ scent and that females are attracted to males’ songs. Additionally, the scientists discovered that females are able to distinguish siblings from unrelated males by their songs ? even though they had previously never heard their brothers sing.

In their recent studies, Penn’s group recorded and analysed the courtship calls of wild-caught male house mice for the first time, using digital audio software to examine parameters such as duration, pitch and frequency. They found that males’ songs contain “signatures” or “fingerprints” that differ from one individual to another. Moreover, they confirmed that the songs of siblings are very similar to one another compared to the songs of unrelated males, which helps explains how females can distinguish unrelated males. This finding could potentially lead us to understand how female mice avoid inbreeding.

Interestingly, in some species of birds the males with the most complex songs appear to be most successful at attracting females. Further studies are needed to determine whether the complexity of male mouse vocalizations has an effect on females that is similar to that of “sexy syllables” in birds.

The vocalizations of wild house mice differ significantly from those of inbred strains of laboratory mice. Wild male mice produce more syllables within high frequency ranges than laboratory mice, a result that is consistent with other studies that find genetic effects on mouse song. “It seems as though house mice might provide a new model organism for the study of song in animals,” says Dustin Penn. “Who would have thought that?”

###

The article “Spectrographic analyses reveal signals of individuality and kinship in the ultrasonic courtship vocalizations of wild house mice” by Frauke Hoffmann, Kerstin Musolf and Dustin J. Penn is published in the journal Physiology & Behavior (Volume 105, Issue 3, pp. 766-771).
Abstract of the article online (full text for a fee or with a subscription): http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.physbeh.2011.10.011

University of Veterinary Medicine — Vienna: http://www.vetmeduni.ac.at

Thanks to University of Veterinary Medicine — Vienna for this article.

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Source: http://www.labspaces.net/117093/Tiny_crooners__Male_house_mice_sing_songs_to_impress_the_girls

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Tim Cook Says Apple Cares About Its Supply Chain Workers, Honestly [Apple]

Yesterday the web was abuzz thanks to a New York Times story that claimed Apple’s Chinese factories were dangerous and exploitative. That made Tim Cook sad, so he sent a very long email to his employees to set the record straight. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/82ZOB5JEJTU/tim-cook-says-apple-cares-about-its-supply-chain-workers-honestly

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Oscars voting to go electronic (AP)

LOS ANGELES ? Potential Oscar winners will now be a click away from winning a trophy.

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced Wednesday that it has partnered with a company to develop an electronic voting system for next year’s 85th annual Academy Awards.

The motion picture academy says it entered into an agreement with Everyone Counts Inc. to exclusively to work with longtime accountants PricewaterhouseCoopers to create the new system.

Oscar voting in the past has been compiled through paper ballots sent through the mail.

Ric Robertson, the Academy’s chief operating officer, said in a statement that it’s the first step the Academy is taking “toward developing a secure and convenient electronic voting system.”

The 84th annual Academy Awards are set for Feb. 26.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/movies/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_en_mo/us_oscars_voting

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Analysis: Pension shortfalls a stark corporate challenge (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) ? With worries about the debt crisis in Europe and high unemployment in the United States drawing the public’s attention, the sliding value of corporate pension funds has largely gone unnoticed.

The problem came into stark relief on Wednesday, when Boeing Co joined a raft of U.S. companies that have announced hefty cash injections into underfunded pension plans, including General Electric Co, DuPont, Alcoa Inc, Honeywell International Inc and Raytheon Co.

Boeing said it would add $1.5 billion in cash to its pension plan in 2012, nearly triple the amount it injected in 2011. The huge jump caused the aircraft maker’s full-year earnings forecast to miss Wall Street estimates.

Analysts say pension top-ups will take a big bite out of corporate earnings this year, due to more rigorous funding requirements and an erosion of investment returns caused by weak stock markets and low interest rates.

Of the 341 companies in the S&P 500 index with defined benefit pension plans, 97 percent are underfunded, according to a Credit Suisse analysis. Despite generous contributions last year, Credit Suisse estimated the plans’ liabilities at $458 billion at the end of 2011, an 86 percent increase from a year earlier.

“This level of underfunding is something, at least in the time that we’ve been following the issue, that we haven’t seen,” said Credit Suisse analyst David Zion, noting that the 2011 estimate is nearly three times larger than underfunding in 2002, after another U.S. recession.

Large pension contributions are an immediate hit on cash flow, diverting money from shareholder dividends, stock buybacks and capital investments. (Click here to see a graphic that compares a selection of pension obligations against cash positions: http://r.reuters.com/zyd36s)

The brunt of the pain will be felt by manufacturers and other large industrial companies, which have legacy pension obligations and older workforces, analysts say. Many companies have done away with pension funds in recent years, moving to 401(k) retirement plans, which are funded by employee contributions and in many cases a company match.

Credit Suisse singled out seven companies whose estimated 2012 pension contributions likely will exceed 10 percent of trailing cash flow from operations. They include A.K. Steel Holding Corp, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co, Weyerhaeuser Co, Boeing, Northrop Grumman Corp, Lockheed Martin Corp and U.S. Steel Corp.

Like Boeing, AK Steel has disclosed a pension contribution for 2012. Lockheed said it is fully compliant with government funding standards. Northrop Grumman declined to comment. The other companies were not immediately available to comment.

IMPACT ON EMPLOYEES

The U.S. Pension Protection Act requires a company to notify its employees when their pension fund’s asset value dips below 80 percent of obligations. When that happens, companies can only make lump sum distributions equal to half the benefit owed to workers. The other half has to be in the form of an annuity.

Plans that are less than 60 percent-funded are frozen and prevented from making any lump sum payouts. They can only provide annuities, and workers no longer continue to accrue benefits until the funding status climbs higher.

While the Pension Protection Act was passed in 2006, corporate America persuaded lawmakers to delay implementing major aspects of the law during the recession. These kick in this year.

Many companies try to decrease the volatility of their pension plans by changing asset allocation or culling headcount through offering a lump sum payment.

More than half of plans are likely to offer lump sum distributions over the next two years, according to a recent survey of senior-level financial executives by Mercer and CFO Research Services.

“We’re likely to continue to see corporations attempting in one form or another to essentially buy out some employees from these defined benefit plans,” said Robert Strong, a business professor at the University of Maine.

OPERATION TWIST

The U.S. stock market ended last year virtually unchanged, after a volatile 12 months that produced monthly performances ranging from gains of nearly 11 percent and declines of more than 7 percent in the S&P 500 index.

Interest rates were pressured by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s stimulus program last summer, known as “Operation Twist.” The yield on U.S. 30-year Treasuries dropped 34 percent in 2011 to 4.39 percent, while the 10-year note fell 44 percent to 1.89 percent.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the U.S. central bank would likely keep interest rates near zero until at least late 2014.

Rock bottom interest rates force a company to have more cash on hand to meet payments since its money cannot earn as much in future interest.

“For years now, we haven’t had to make a contribution,” said Nick Fanadakis, DuPont’s chief financial officer, after the chemical giant announced a $500 million cash injection into its U.S. pension fund. “The return on assets was able to fund the pension plan.”

The interest rate DuPont uses to calculate returns, known as the discount rate, fell to 4.5 percent in 2011 from 5.5 percent in 2010, Fanadakis said.

THE UPSIDE

Besides meeting regulations that require companies to shore up underfunded pension plans, companies have other incentives to do so. For example, UBS analysts point to a peculiarity in accounting rules that let companies forecast pension performance using long-term rates of return, which are currently higher than actual market results. Any shortfall in the return can then be amortized over five years. (http://blogs.reuters.com/taxbreak/2012/01/19/pay-into-pension-get-boost-to-earnings/)

Nor is it necessarily true that a cash infusion into a pension fund is a bad thing. Pension funds invest in stocks, bonds and other assets that can help the economy, said Jeremy Bulow, a professor at Stanford Business School.

“This money is going into the pension fund, which is being used to invest in corporate America, as opposed to going into whatever else the company might use it for,” he said. “It’s not really clear to me that takes away from investment in the economy.”

Regardless, large payouts will be the rule, not the exception, for many companies this year.

Mark Oline, an analyst with Fitch Ratings, said companies that have dangerously underfunded pensions could be at risk of a ratings downgrade.

“For us, a strategy of hoping for higher interest rates or higher asset returns is not a strategy,” said Oline. “Higher contributions are required.”

(Reporting By Ernest Scheyder and Jilian Mincer; Editing by Tiffany Wu and Steve Orlofsky)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/eurobiz/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120126/bs_nm/us_corporate_pensions

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Man brought to NY from Canada over fraud charges (AP)

NEW YORK ? A former operator of a New York-based immigration law firm has been extradited to the United States from Canada to face charges he led a massive immigration fraud ring that processed thousands of false immigration applications, earning millions of dollars in fees, authorities said Wednesday.

Earl Seth David, 47, was brought to New York on Tuesday to face charges including conspiracy to commit immigration fraud, conspiracy to make false statements to immigration authorities and conspiracy to commit money laundering. He was arrested in Canada on Oct. 11.

Federal prosecutors said David’s firm made millions of dollars by charging high fees to illegal immigrants to fraudulently get them legal immigration status before he fled to Canada in 2006. His law firm closed in 2009.

“When he fled to Canada to avoid prosecution, Earl Seth David left thousands of victims of his alleged fraud in his wake ? people who believed he was helping them secure legal status and paid him a lot of money to do so,” U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said.

Avi Moskowitz, a lawyer for David, declined to comment. His client was held without bail after an initial court appearance.

Prosecutors said David, a dual citizen of Canada and the United States, arranged for his law firm to submit at least 20,000 false immigration applications from 1996 until early 2009.

They said he charged exorbitant fees of up to $30,000 per application to submit false claims that U.S. employers had “sponsored” the illegal immigrants for employment.

Illegal immigrants can petition under U.S. law for legal status if the U.S. Department of Labor has certified that a U.S. employer wishes to employ or “sponsor” them. The immigrant can then use that sponsorship to petition the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services to obtain legal status in the United States.

Prosecutors said David’s firm fabricated documents, including fake pay stubs, fake tax returns and fake “experience letters,” to show that the sponsorships were real.

They said the sponsors had no intention of hiring the illegal immigrants, and the sponsor companies often did not exist other than as shell companies for use in the fraudulent scheme.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120125/ap_on_re_us/us_immigration_fraud

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Yahoo delivers another listless performance in 4Q (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO ? Yahoo slipped further behind in the online advertising race during the fourth quarter as the Internet company entered the fourth year of a revenue slump.

The results announced Tuesday marked the latest in a succession of disappointing performances. The persisting malaise led to the firing of Carol Bartz as CEO four months ago.

Yahoo Inc. recently replaced Bartz with PayPal executive Scott Thompson, anointing him as the fourth CEO in less than five years to try to snap the company out of a funk that has depressed its stock. Thompson, who was hired just three weeks ago, promised to move quickly to fix the problems.

“There is no question we need to do better and we will,” Thompson assured analysts in a Tuesday conference call.

The company earned $296 million, or 24 cents per share, in the October-to-December period. That is down 5 percent from $312 million, or 24 cents per share, a year earlier.

The earnings matched analysts’ estimates, but the company missed Wall Street’s revenue target.

Fourth-quarter revenue dropped 13 percent from the previous year to $1.32 billion. After subtracting advertising commissions, Yahoo’s revenue totaled $1.17 billion, or $20 million below analyst projections. It’s the 13th straight quarter that Yahoo’s net revenue has declined from the prior year.

Although Thompson said it was still too early to share precise details about his turnaround strategy, he said he will close some Yahoo services. That could mean layoffs among Yahoo’s workforce. The company added 300 employees in the fourth quarter to end the year with 14,000 workers.

Bartz had also closed or sold some of Yahoo’s less popular services while jettisoning jobs to cut costs and sharpen the company’s focus. Those moves, though, didn’t increase Yahoo’s revenue or stock price, leading Yahoo to fire her in September with more than 15 months left on her contract.

Besides closing services, Thompson said Yahoo will expand into some fields where he sees opportunities to make money. He didn’t elaborate on that or on which services to close.

Thompson also pledged to develop more innovative products to keep Yahoo’s audience of 700 million users on its websites for longer periods. Accomplishing that could make Yahoo more attractive to online advertisers. Thompson said he hopes to harness the data that Yahoo collects about its audience to help advertisers do a better job of putting their marketing messages in front of the people most likely to buy their products.

“I’ll always ask a lot of questions and I’ll immerse myself in the details but when it comes to making decisions, I make them quickly and then push to move fast, fast, fast,” Thompson said.

But Yahoo isn’t promising a quick start under Thompson’s leadership. Yahoo predicted its net revenue in the current quarter will range from $1.02 billion to $1.1 billion. The mid-point of that target works out to $1.06 billion, unchanged from last year’s first quarter.

Investors appear to be taking a wait-and-see attitude with Thompson. Yahoo’s stock shed 15 cents to $15.54 in extended trading after the report came out. The stock price has fallen by about 40 percent from five years ago.

Yahoo’s downturn in revenue has occurred as advertisers are shifting more of their budgets to the Internet as people spend more of their time on the Web. The biggest beneficiaries of this boom so far have been Internet search leader Google Inc. and Facebook, the owner of the largest online social network.

While Yahoo continued to struggle during the final three months of last year, Google’s revenue rose 25 percent from the same period in 2010. As a privately held company, Facebook doesn’t disclose its financial results, but data compiled by independent research firms show that its website has been luring advertisers away from Yahoo.

Google has become so dominant in Internet search that Yahoo teamed up with another rival, Microsoft Corp., in an effort to become more competitive and save money. Yahoo’s search engine now relies on Microsoft’s technology to handle most requests. The alliance, forged in mid-2009, hasn’t generated as much revenue so far as Yahoo had hoped, although there were signs of progress in the fourth quarter.

Net revenue from search totaled $376 million in the fourth quarter, a 3 percent decrease from a year earlier. The company, which is based in Sunnyvale, Calif., had been suffering year-over-year declines of more than 10 percent in previous quarters.

As it tries to boost its revenue and lift its stock price, Yahoo is considering selling its stakes in China’s Alibaba Group and Yahoo Japan. Yahoo is pursuing those negotiations with “great enthusiasm,” according to Tim Morse, the company’s chief financial officer. Neither Morse nor Thompson elaborated on when a deal might be reached.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120124/ap_on_hi_te/us_earns_yahoo

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Defense: Stanford’s empire “wasn’t a fraud”

(AP) ? Texas financier R. Allen Stanford’s financial empire was real, his attorney says, and not, as prosecutors contend, built on a foundation of lies, theft and bribes as part of an effort to rob investors of more than $7 billion through a vast Ponzi scheme that spanned more than 20 years.

“It wasn’t a fraud. It wasn’t a pie in the sky. It was an investment he hoped would make a real return,” Robert Scardino, one of Stanford’s attorneys, said as he prepares to defend the financier at his fraud trial in Houston federal court.

Prosecutors, who are set to present their first witness Wednesday, contend the financier ruined the dreams of people who deposited money in his Caribbean bank as part of efforts to save for retirement or for their children’s education. Stanford is on trial for 14 counts, including wire and mail fraud.

“He told them lie after lie after lie. He stole from them, taking their hard earned savings so he could live the lavish lifestyle of a billionaire,” federal prosecutor Gregg Costa told jurors Tuesday during his opening statement in Stanford’s trial.

Stanford faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted. The 61-year-old is expected to testify during the trial, which will likely last at least six weeks.

Costa told jurors that Stanford’s business empire was built on a scheme centered on sales of certificates of deposit from a bank Stanford owned on the Caribbean island of Antigua, which promised substantially higher rates of return on the CDs than U.S. banks and promised investors their money was safe.

The prosecutor said Stanford instead sank investors’ money in a variety of his own businesses, including two airlines, and that many of these businesses failed. Costa also accused Stanford of using up to $2 billion of investors’ money as personal loans to buy homes and yachts and fund cricket matches.

“He treated depositors’ savings like it was his own personal piggy bank,” he told the jury.

Once considered one of the United States’ wealthiest people, with an estimated net worth of more than $2 billion, Stanford became so prominent in his adopted country of Antigua, where he took on dual citizenship, that he was knighted by the Caribbean island’s government and became known as “Sir Allen.” His financial empire spanned the U.S., the Caribbean and Latin America.

Stanford’s business empire was run through the Houston-based Stanford Financial Group, but at its heart was Antiguan-based Stanford International Bank.

Prosecutors say Stanford used money from the sale of the CDs, which were sold to clients from more than 100 countries, to pay off those purchased earlier once they matured and to support his other businesses.

Costa said more than $300 million of depositors’ savings was funneled to two airlines Stanford ran in the Caribbean, $20 million to an entity whose purpose was to pay expenses related to Stanford’s yacht and $37 million to a company whose purpose was to promote cricket tournaments in which Stanford gave out million-dollar prizes.

The prosecutor said Stanford and three former executives at his companies covered up their misdeeds by fabricating the bank’s records and bribing Antiguan regulators and auditors with more than $3 million and with perks such as Super Bowl tickets.

Stanford’s scheme fell apart in 2008 when his bank was running out of money and investors couldn’t be paid back, Costa said.

But Scardino told jurors the financier was a clever businessman who for 22 years paid investors every penny he promised them. Scardino said Stanford didn’t need to steal depositors’ money and use it as personal loans.

Scardino suggested that the ex-chief financial officer for Stanford’s company, James Davis, is the real culprit behind the financial fraud alleged by prosecutors. Davis has pleaded guilty and is expected to testify on behalf of prosecutors during the trial.

Scardino said Stanford had been paying back his investors but that stopped when authorities seized his companies and began selling them off.

Stanford has been in jail since his arrest 2? years ago. His trial was delayed after he was declared incompetent due to an addiction he developed in jail to an anti-anxiety drug and he underwent treatment. He was also evaluated for any long-term effects from being injured in a September 2009 jail fight. Stanford was declared fit for trial last month.

Once Antigua’s richest citizen, primary banker and its largest private employer, Stanford had his assets seized and now has court-appointed attorneys.

The three other indicted former executives are to be tried in June. A former Antiguan financial regulator was also indicted, and he awaits extradition to the U.S.

Stanford and the former executives are also fighting a Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit filed in Dallas that makes similar allegations.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-25-Stanford%20Trial/id-0e7b06dab2f949c0969924ba8868ae2f

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What will be will be, but what will we be?

Jamie Condliffe, contributor

25-things.jpgFUTURE-GAZING is a risky business. Cautious predictions may often come true, but a futurist stating the obvious lacks punch. On the flip side, bold forecasts may generate more buzz, but they are likely to go the same way as the predictions of flying cars and the household robots we are still waiting for.

Fortunately, in 25 Things You Need to Know About the Future, Christopher Barnatt treads a fine line between these two extremes with skill and balance. All the known quantities are here: from the realities of peak oil, to the burgeoning fields of synthetic biology and ubiquitous computing. But he is also unafraid of exploring ideas that may yet flop, including tantalising technologies such as space elevators and bioprinting.

Perhaps most importantly, Barnatt also carefully considers the ethical issues we will face. Most notably in the final section he focuses not on the way advancing technology will impact how we will live in the future, but rather how it will change what we ourselves will become. That’s not to say that the tone is downbeat: in fact, Barnatt remains optimistic throughout.

Admittedly, with many of the ideas which Barnatt presents drawing on current, cutting-edge research, regular readers of New Scientist‘s news pages will find few of his predictions surprising. But the neat way in which he ties together the key themes worth worrying about over the next few decades makes this a worthwhile read for anyone curious to know what may await us.

Book Information
25 Things You Need to Know About the Future
by Christopher Barnatt
Published by: Constable
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Mailing it in: In South Carolina, a trip to the post box says everything about the GOP campaign (The Ticket)

CampaignMail1_2

ELGIN, S.C.–It can take my mail-lady more than the average 10 seconds to fill my box these days. Earlier this week, she even had to roll back, because she thought she might have missed something. I was able to walk out to greet her before she got through cramming everything in.

“Make sure all my campaign stuff is there,” I said.

“Oh absolutely,” she said. “We have to suffer to put it in, and you have to suffer to take it out.”

That day’s mess of campaign pottage brought the usual: two flyers from Mitt Romney, one from Ron Paul and, bless his heart, a flyer from Rick Perry–who had already dropped out of the race and endorsed Newt Gingrich.

His flyer had a different message. It urged me not to waste my vote on Newt Gingrich, or Rick Santorum.

After resigning from Congress, the flyer said, Gingrich made $1.6 million from Freddie Mac, a lending institution that “helped create the housing crisis.” Gingrich advised both lenders, “in his capacity as a ‘historian,’” the flyer added. “But Americans have had enough history with insiders who use their previous service to make a quick buck.”

Also, Santorum “sold out his conservative principles” when he backed Sen. Arlen Specter, who turned Democrat and helped pass Obamacare.

It was, obviously, too little and way too late, but the bad timing of this missive offers some insight into just how nervous campaigns become in the final clinch.

Looking at that sad little flyer from Perry, I could sense the sheer sweaty anxiety as his campaign finally crumbled. Surely a flurry of phone calls went back and forth: Have you sent out that Perry flyer? No? Well hold off, let me call headquarters … Yes, they’re saying don’t send it ?no, they’re saying do send it, yes, go, get to the P.O. by five ? Hi, me again, you didn’t already send it, did you? You did? Damn?

If you let your campaign mail pile up for a week instead of throwing it away, and stop clicking the channel when attack ads come on–both of which I did for the sole purpose of writing this article–the daily barrage serves as a barometer of who’s leading, who is closing in, who has the most cash, and who is desperate.

The flyer was the first piece of mail I’d seen from Perry in weeks. Newt Gingrich, who at this writing is either threatening Romney’s lead or has overtaken it, hasn’t been much of a mail guy either: two flyers, both hitting Romney, one for his “Pro-Abortion Record” and one for his deficit-reduction plan. Not only that, Romney is the “second most dangerous man in America.”

Yes, it’s that time in the campaign. If you have red meat, please throw it to the crowd.

I haven’t received squat from Santorum (but you can’t miss him on TV, either boosting himself in his own ads or being attacked in someone else’s). The only real players in the mailbox battle, so far as I can tell, are Mitt Romney and Ron Paul?the leading candidate and the man in third.

The Romney flyers are confident. They are the work of someone shoring up his base. Although the former Massachusetts governor is trying to remind everyone that he is not a so-called “Washington insider,” he is also letting people know that he has the approval of the establishment. He has the endorsement of South Carolina’s governor, Nikki Haley, and he kinda sorta has the blessing of Jim DeMint, South Carolina’s U.S. senator from the tea party. (Actually, DeMint hasn’t endorsed anyone, but he did say something Romneyish in 2007, and again in 2012. Both quotes are on one of the flyers.)

Romney’s attack mail focuses squarely on Gingrich and Santorum, easily and effectively using images to make his case: Newt’s scowling, porcine head versus? Romney’s tall, Lincolnesque bearing; ?Santorum biting his lip in frustration versus smiling, confident Romney, backed by an American flag and an applauding Nikki Haley.

Romney doesn’t, so far as I can tell, even acknowledge Ron Paul, although Paul obviously can’t afford not to notice Romney. The other day I got a letter from Paul: “Do you believe Palmetto State workers should be forced to pay a union boss just to have a job and feed their families?”

Although Paul lets his libertarian freak flag fly during debates, on the home front he knows that you can’t really win my state without appealing to the hard right: against unions, against abortion, against Obamacare. A few days ago, he sent a long letter detailing his anti-abortion stance. Just after that, he sent a DVD.? He says everything pro-lifing, climate change-denying, immigrant-loathing voters want to hear: Romney “said abortion should be legal”; Gingrich “wants to give illegal aliens citizenship”; Perry “endorsed environmental fraud Al Gore for President.” He’s a 76-year- old man with a one-time title shot, and it shows.

By its nature, the TV campaign is louder and more relentless, as every commercial break on the Today show and the local evening news is filled with voices cancelling each other out, as each candidate proclaims he’s the only one who can beat Obama.

Ron Paul goes after Gingrich and Santorum as “serial hypocrites” who “can’t be trusted.” Gingrich likewise attacks Romney as a pro-abortion governor who “can’t be trusted.” Romney’s Restore America’s Future Super PAC, in an ad of perhaps questionable effectiveness, hits Gingrich because he keeps on admitting to making mistakes– a bad thing, apparently. More to the point, Paul outlines Gingrich’s contradictions, using clips of Rush Limbaugh, Megyn Kelly and Ed Schultz, while a creepy Phillip Glass-like score plays ominously in the background.

“This is the cauldron,” Henry McMaster, the state attorney general, told me last week at the University of South Carolina’s Moore School of Business, where his candidate Jon Huntsman was fielding questions. “We’re out of the frying-pan and into the fire, because South Carolina, historically, beginning in 1980, is the one who picked the president.”

Last weekend, his man had picked up the endorsement of The State newspaper. He dropped out mere hours later.

That’s how fast it goes in this ongoing battle for the vote of Current Resident, set to conclude today. The mail lady and I are looking forward to it.

Rodney Welch is a writer in South Carolina. He reviews books for the Free-Times in Columbia, S.C..

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? The evangelical dilemma in South Carolina: adulterer or Mormon?

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Rep. Giffords to resign from Congress this week (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona announced Sunday she intends to resign from Congress this week to concentrate on recovering from wounds suffered in an assassination attempt a little more than a year ago that shook the country.

“I don’t remember much from that horrible day, but I will never forget the trust you placed in me to be your voice,” the Democratic lawmaker said on a video posted without prior notice on her Facebook page.

“I’m getting better. Every day my spirit is high,” she said. “I have more work to do on my recovery. So to do what’s best for Arizona, I will step down this week.”

Giffords was shot in the head and grievously wounded last January as she was meeting with constituents outside a supermarket in Tucson, Ariz. Her progress had seemed remarkable, to the point that she was able to walk dramatically into the House chamber last August to cast a vote.

Her shooting prompted an agonizing national debate about super-charged rhetoric in political campaigns, although the man charged in the shooting later turned out to be mentally ill.

In Washington, members of Congress were told to pay more attention to their physical security. Legislation was introduced to ban high-capacity ammunition clips, although it never advanced.

Under state law, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer must call a special election to fill out the remainder of Giffords’ term, which ends at the end of 2012.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said he saluted Giffords “for her service and for the courage and perseverance she has shown in the face of tragedy. She will be missed.”

In a statement, House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California said that “since the tragic events one year ago, Gabby has been an inspiring symbol of determination and courage to millions of Americans.”

Democratic officials had held out hope for months that the congresswoman might recover sufficiently to run for re-election or even become a candidate to replace retiring Republican Sen. Jon Kyl.

The shooting on Jan. 8, 2011, left six people dead, a federal judge and a Giffords aide among them. Twelve others were wounded.

A 23-year-old man, Jared Lee Loughner, has pleaded not guilty to 49 charges in the shooting. He has been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, and is being forcibly medicated at a Missouri prison facility in an effort by authorities to make him mentally ready for trial.

In the months since she was shot, Giffords, 41, has been treated in Houston as well as Arizona as she re-learned how to walk and speak.

She made a dramatic appearance on the House floor Aug. 2, when she unexpectedly walked in to vote for an increase in the debt limit. Lawmakers from both parties cheered her presence, and she was enveloped in hugs.

More recently, she participated in an observance of the anniversary of the shooting in Arizona.

In “Gabby: A Story of Courage and Hope,” a book released last year that she wrote with her husband, the astronaut Mark Kelly, she spoke of how much she wanted to get better, regain what she lost and return to Congress.

She delivers the last chapter in her own voice, saying in a single page of short sentences and phrases that everything she does reminds her of that horrible day and that she was grateful to survive.

“I will get stronger. I will return,” she wrote.

Giffords was shot in the left side of the brain, the part that controls speech and communication.

Kelly commanded the space shuttle Endeavour on its last mission in May. She watched the launch from Cape Canaveral, Fla.

Kelly, who became a NASA astronaut in 1996 and made four trips into space aboard the space shuttle, retired in October.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120122/ap_on_go_co/us_giffords_resign

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