Saturday, November 17, 2012

2K Sports Classic: Villanova Wildcats vs. Alabama Crimson Tide

One of these teams will be crowned champions of the 2012 2K Sports Classic on Friday night at Madison Square Garden.

After stunning the Purdue 89-81 in overtime in the 2K Sports Classic semifinals, the Villanova Wildcats will take on the Alabama Crimson Tide on Friday night at 7 pm ET for the title. Villanova once again got stellar play from Ryan Arcidiacono, James Bell and Darrun Hilliard (with a little help from the officials), and they'll need their big guns to step up again if they are to take home the championship and continue their unbeaten start.

Alabama, like 'Nova, enters the game 3-0 on the season with wins over South Dakota St., West Alabama and most recently Oregon St. last night.

Alabama Outlook

For more Alabama content, check out our friends at Roll Bama Roll.

Whereas Purdue's strength came from their frontcourt, 'Nova will get a different look on Friday night when they line up against a Tide team that relies primarily on its backcourt to get the job done. 'Bama sports a 3-headed monster in the backcourt with guards Trevor Lacey (19.3 ppg), Rodney Cooper (15 ppg) and Trevor Releford (15.3 ppg). Cooper is the biggest of the bunch at 6'6", but Lacey is the guy Villanova will have to be most aware of as he's currently hitting over 64% of his shots from behind the arc so far this season.

Alabama's guards can score, and they take care of the ball (something Villanova could do better). Moreover, they won the turnover battle against Oregon State with a +12 margin, so they can get after it on defense as well. Villanova will need to protect the rock much better than they have so far this season against the talented 'Bama backcourt.

Villanova should have a distinct advantage in the frontcourt as Alabama. The Tide do sort a 5-star freshman in Devonta Pollard, but past him, there isn't much there to worry about as Moussa Gueye, Nick Jacobs and Carl Engstrom aren't going to set the world on fire. Despite turning in a mixed bag so far this season, you would think Mouphtaou Yarou, Maurice Sutton and Daniel Ochefu would be up to the challenge in that area.

Keys To Victory

Turnovers - 'Nova turned the ball over 18 more times against Purdue, and it almost cost them the game as they coughed up a 10-point 2nd half lead. Ryan Arcidiacono has 7 of them. That number is nowhere close to acceptable. There are going to be growing pains for the freshman, but the 'Bama guards will eat his lunch if he remains careless with the ball.

Perimeter defense - The 'Bama guards are talented, and Villanova will need to be on top of it's game. 7 steals last night along with forcing Purdue into 16 turnovers was fantastic. They also got big stops when they needed it, the sign of a maturing team. Even better, they were all over the Purdue shooters, forcing the Boilermakers into a horrid 22% mark from behind the arc. Do that again, and Alabama may struggle to score.

Team approach - Before the season, we thought the go-to-guy would be JayVaughn Pinkston. He was absent in the first 2 games but showed up in last night's win with 16 points (including 8-8 from the FT line!). Ryan Arcidiacono, Darrun Hilliard, and James Bell have all showed the fortitude to take the big shot when needed as well. The ball-sharing and selfless attitudes throughout the team have led to this start - keep it going.

Final Word

Consecutive wins over Marshall and Purdue are huge for this team - it really can't be understated - and these W's now will help with our RPI later in the year. Grab another win over a solid team and take home an early season title. The team worked their tails off last night and may be a little gassed heading into another game, but they'll be able to push through behind the all of a sudden on-fire backcourt of Arcidiacono, Hilliard and Bell.

The game will be shown live on ESPNU and ESPN3 starting at 7:30 pm ET.

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Source: http://www.vuhoops.com/villanova-basketball/2012/11/16/3653674/2k-sports-classic-villanova-wildcats-vs-alabama-crimson-tide

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J.C. Penney CEO tries to change the way we shop

In this Friday, Oct. 12, 2012 photo, a customer passes merchandise at a JC Penney store in New York. J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson seems unfazed that the department store chain's mounting losses and sales declines have led to growing criticism of his plan to change the way we shop. Perhaps that's because this isn't the first time during Johnson's 30-year career that he's attempted what seemed impossible. For instance, no one thought the stores he designed for Apple would succeed, and now they're the most profitable in the nation. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

In this Friday, Oct. 12, 2012 photo, a customer passes merchandise at a JC Penney store in New York. J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson seems unfazed that the department store chain's mounting losses and sales declines have led to growing criticism of his plan to change the way we shop. Perhaps that's because this isn't the first time during Johnson's 30-year career that he's attempted what seemed impossible. For instance, no one thought the stores he designed for Apple would succeed, and now they're the most profitable in the nation. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

In this Friday, Oct. 12, 2012 photo, lingerie is shown at a Cosmopolitan boutique at a JC Penney store in New York. J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson seems unfazed that the department store chain's mounting losses and sales declines have led to growing criticism of his plan to change the way we shop. Perhaps that's because this isn't the first time during Johnson's 30-year career that he's attempted what seemed impossible. For instance, no one thought the stores he designed for Apple would succeed, and now they're the most profitable in the nation. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

This undated photo provided by J.C. Penney, shows CEO Ron Johnson. Johnson seems unfazed that the department store chain's mounting losses and sales declines have led to growing criticism of his plan to change the way we shop. Perhaps that's because this isn't the first time during Johnson's 30-year career that he's attempted what seemed impossible. For instance, no one thought the stores he designed for Apple would succeed, and now they're the most profitable in the nation. (AP Photo/J.C. Penney, Barth Tillotson)

In this Friday, Oct. 12, 2012 photo, a customer looks at merchandise at a JC Penney's in New York. J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson seems unfazed that the department store chain's mounting losses and sales declines have led to growing criticism of his plan to change the way we shop. Perhaps that's because this isn't the first time during Johnson's 30-year career that he's attempted what seemed impossible. For instance, no one thought the stores he designed for Apple would succeed, and now they're the most profitable in the nation. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

(AP) ? J.C. Penney CEO Ron Johnson seems unfazed that the department store chain's mounting losses and sales declines have led to growing criticism of his plan to change the way we shop. Perhaps that's because this isn't the first time during Johnson's 30-year career that he's attempted what seemed impossible.

People predicted he'd fail at selling high-end housewares and designer dresses at discounter Target, but shoppers still flock there years later for cheap chic goods. Likewise, almost no one believed that the Apple stores he designed to sell the consumer electronics giant's gadgets would make money. Yet Apple's retail operations have become the most profitable in the industry.

At the time, both decisions seemed radical. Now, they each are viewed as strokes of genius.

But Johnson's latest gamble is shaping up to be his biggest. He's not only aiming to reverse the fortunes of Penney, a 110-year-old chain that has had sales declines in four of the past five years as it's struggled to adapt to changing consumer tastes and shopping habits. He's also attempting to do something no other retailer has before: reinvent the department store from the ground up.

Since leaving Apple to become Penney's CEO in November, Johnson has been overhauling everything from the retailer's pricing to its merchandise to its stores. He got rid of most sales. He's brought in hip brands. And he's replacing rows of clothing racks with small shops that make the stores feel like outdoor mini malls.

But since Penney started the changes, the chain has reported three consecutive quarters of big losses on steep sales declines. Its stock has lost more than half its value. Its credit rating is in junk status. And critics are beginning to doubt that Johnson has what it takes to make the chain cool.

"He's trying to start a retail revolution without an army of consumers behind him," says Burt Flickinger, III, president of a retail consultancy. "Penney will suffer dire financial and competitive circumstances as a result."

But Johnson, 53, a Midwest native who speaks about his vision for J.C. Penney Co. with boyish enthusiasm, is undeterred: "Lots of people think we're crazy. But that's what it takes to get ahead."

THE BEGINNINGS: 'NO MORE JUMPING THROUGH HOOPS'

Virtually no one questioned Johnson's savvy when it was announced in June 2011 that he was leaving his role as Apple Inc.'s senior vice president of retail to take over the top job at Penney, a chain that had gained a reputation in recent years of having un-hip, boring stores and merchandise. To the contrary there were lofty expectations for the man who had made Apple's stores hip places to shop and before that, pioneered Target Corp.'s successful "cheap chic" strategy.

Johnson, who says that his biggest inspirations in life are "sunrises" and "smiles," spent several months before becoming Penney's CEO traipsing across the globe to find ideas on how to transform the company. On the itinerary: meetings with executives at trendy retailers and designers such as Gap, J. Crew, Diane Von Furstenberg and Ralph Lauren.

During these trips, Johnson hatched an idea to make Penney stores appealing not only to its core of middle-income shoppers, but also to new groups of younger and higher-income customers. Johnson decided to focus on three areas: price, merchandise and the stores.

Johnson started as Penney's CEO in November 2011. In his first couple of months in the role, Johnson hired big-name executives that he trusted. Among them, Michael Francis, a top Target executive that he'd met while he worked there, was brought in as president to help redefine Penney's brand.

Johnson's boldest move came on Feb. 1 of this year when he rolled out new pricing in Penney's 1,100 stores. That's virtually unheard of in retail, where significant changes are typically tested in a few locations for several months before being rolled out nationally.

Johnson says that Penney didn't have several months to waste. Testing would've been "impossible," he says, because Penney needed quick results.

Johnson's plan was designed to wean customers off the markdowns they'd become accustomed to, but that eat into profits. He ditched the nearly 600 sales Penney offered throughout the year for a three-tiered strategy that permanently lowered prices on all items in the store by 40 percent, and offered monthlong sales on select items and periodic clearance events throughout the year.

Penney, based in Plano, Texas, also stopped giving out coupons and banished the words "sale" and "clearance" in its new "fair and square" advertising campaign. The ads were colorful and whimsical: In one spot, a dog jumped through a hula hoop that a little girl held. The text read: "No more jumping through hoops. No coupon clipping. No door busting. Just great prices from the start."

TEACHING SHOPPERS A 'NEW LANGUAGE'

Johnson's plan received a warm reception at first. Investors began pushing Penney's stock up after he announced the plan in late January: It rose nearly 25 percent to peak at $43 in the days after the plan was rolled out in February. Analysts used words like "visionary" and "revolutionary" to describe the plan.

The honeymoon didn't last. After most of Penney's coupons and sales disappeared, so did its customers. And the ads didn't help: They were praised for being entertaining, but criticized for not explaining the new pricing.

Walter Loeb, a New York-based retail consultant, says Johnson acted in haste and sprang the changes on customers too soon. "The customer isn't accustomed to such drastic change," he says.

The first sign that things were falling apart came in May when rival Macy's Inc. told analysts that sales were rising at its stores that share malls with Penney locations. A week later, Penney posted a $163 million quarterly loss. Revenue plunged 20 percent to $3.15 billion. The number of customers visiting stores fell 10 percent.

Wall Street didn't like the changes any more than Main Street did. A day after it posted the loss, Penney's stock fell nearly 20 percent ? its biggest one-day decline in four decades ? to $26.75. That same month, Standard & Poor's Ratings Services lowered its credit rating to junk status.

Johnson asked investors to be patient and reiterated his confidence in his plan. But a few weeks later, Johnson fired Francis, who'd been in charge of marketing the new pricing. Johnson, who wakes up at 4 a.m. without an alarm clock, took over that responsibility and brought back the word "sale" in ads. But things kept getting worse.

So six months after he rolled out Penney's plan, Johnson tweaked pricing. On Aug. 1 ? just days before Penney posted another big loss on a second consecutive quarter of disappointing revenue ? Johnson eliminated one tier of the pricing plan: the monthlong sales. He also brought back another taboo word: clearance.

Johnson says the original three-tier strategy was too confusing for customers. "We got too tricky," Johnson told the Associated Press in an interview.

Johnson also vowed to better communicate Penney's pricing to shoppers. As part of that, Penney rolled out ads that were in stark contrast to the spots it used to introduce the plan. For instance, a TV spot touted free haircuts for students during the back-to-school shopping period.

"We thought, 'Why are we trying to teach customers a new language to shop?" Johnson told The Associated Press. "We're just trying to be straightforward."

But Johnson's decision to get rid of monthlong sales hurt more than it helped. On Nov. 9, the company posted its third consecutive big quarterly loss and revenue decline. Johnson says one big factor that dragged sales down was the elimination of the monthlong sales, which he says confused shoppers who like to compare prices.

Johnson says Penney lost $20 million a week in sales associated with getting rid of the monthlong events for a total sales loss of $260 million for the quarter. Penney posted a net loss of 56 cents per share, or $123 million, in the quarter ended Oct. 27. Revenue dropped nearly 27 percent to $2.93 billion.

On the news, Standard & Poor's dropped Penney's credit rating deeper into junk status. And its stock has fallen six straight days since the earnings report by a total of 25 percent for that period, to close at about $16 on Friday. The stock is down 62 percent since January? its lowest price since March 2009 when the U.S. was in a recession.

Johnson, who says the company will now show the suggested price of clothing and other manufacturers on price tags alongside Penney's price, doesn't seem to be panicking. In a meeting with analysts following the release of the company's results, he chalked Penney's poor performance up to a learning experience.

"This was another quarter of unbelievable learning for us at J.C. Penney," he says. "Each quarter, we learn a lot, we adapt, we try to move forward."

THE STORE OF THE FUTURE

Some critics say Johnson's plan is falling apart because he chose to overhaul pricing before working to improve Penney stores. Indeed, Penney stores have long been seen as unappealing and it's merchandise as dowdy.

But Johnson says the focus on pricing was no mistake. One of the men he has admired most in his life was Steve Jobs, co-founder of Apple and his former boss. He says Jobs taught him the importance of doing things well "one at a time" and "not getting ahead of yourself."

Johnson, who wears khakis and jeans to the office most days, says he knew he wanted to bring in hip names like Vivienne Tam and Joe Fresh to Penney. But those brands, Johnson reasoned, wouldn't put their wares in stores as long as Penney offered hundreds of sales each year.

"Nobody is going to put their brand in a place (where) they'll devalue it or take 50 percent or 60 percent off and sell it on coupons," he told investors in September.

With pricing in place, Johnson shifted his focus to Penney's stores and merchandise. This fall, Penney began replacing nearly half of its merchandise in stores with new lines like Betsey Johnson's Betseyville, which features trendy items such as $45 leopard print platform pumps and $24 lace rompers.

To showcase Penney's new merchandise, Johnson also reimagined its stores into mini malls of sorts. He plans to divide stores into 100 shops that highlight different brands or types of merchandise. Each shop will be like its own small store, with different merchandise and signage.

Surrounding the shops will be extra-wide aisles that Johnson calls "streets." Along those pathways will be ice cream and coffee bars and wood tables with built-in iPad tablet computers that shoppers can use to surf online. In the middle of it all, a Town Square will offer activities like Pilates.

Johnson says the stores, which will carry about 25 percent less merchandise, will be places where shoppers can hang out. The hope is that the longer they stay, the more they'll buy.

Penney already has started the remake of its stores. In recent weeks, ten shops have been launched for such brands as Liz Claiborne, Levi's and Penney's new JCP line of casual clothes in 700 of its 1,100 stores. Johnson aims to have 100 shops in those 700 stores by the end of 2015. The remaining 400 stores are in small towns and won't feature the full makeover.

In September, Johnson took 300 analysts and reporters on a tour of a 30,000-square-foot prototype of the complete Penney store of the future, which Johnson calls the "art studio." He says he likes to stop by the prototype, on the third floor of a Penney store in a Dallas mall minutes from Penney's headquarters, before he goes to work each day.

Penney is starting to see some positive results from the makeover it began. The company says so far that it has converted about 11 percent of the floor space to shops-within-stores. The shops' average sales are more than double the sales in the rest of the store.

And some customers are beginning to come back. Michael Pelaez, a 27-year-old who rarely shopped at Penney before the new shops opened, says he likes the retailer's new Levi's shop and its predictable pricing. "It's forcing me to browse," says the pharmaceutical supplier worker who lives in Hialeah, Fla. "What used to be an hour and a half at the mall has turned out to be an hour and a half at J.C. Penney."

That some customers are responding to the redo is no surprise to Johnson, who insists his plan will work. "It's really hard to transform things," he says. "But that's what we're going to do."

Not everyone believes that's possible. Michael Exstein, an analyst at Credit Suisse, recently downgraded Penney's stock to "underperform" from "neutral." Exstein wrote that Penney "must find a way to significantly slow the sales decline within the next six months."

But Johnson still has supporters. During an interview with CNBC after the company's last earnings report, William Ackman, an activist investor whose hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management has a 17.8 percent stake in Penney, said that he's giving the turnaround several more years to work. He also said, however, that there is a limit to how far the board and the CEO would let sales fall.

"If it's not working, we will make changes," says Ackman, who joined Penney's board in early 2011 and pushed other board members to choose Johnson as CEO last year. "He's not this doctrinaire guy."

THE RISKS AND REWARDS OF THE ROAD LESS TRAVELED

That Johnson is taking a risky approach with Penney is no surprise. After receiving an economics degree from Stanford University and an MBA from Harvard Business School in 1984, he turned down a lucrative offer from investment bank Goldman Sachs for a manager trainee job at the now-defunct Mervyns department store chain and then worked his way up to vice president of merchandise at Target.

In 1998, when he signed a deal with architect Michael Graves to develop a line of affordable housewares for Target, it was the first time that an upscale designer's products would be sold in a mass market discount store. Industry watchers predicted the strategy would fail. After all, people didn't shop at a discounter for designer brands.

"Back then, design was something for affluent people," Johnson told fashion executives recently.

But the partnership, which was followed by deals with other designers like Isaac Mizrahi, redefined discounting. Even discount king Wal-Mart followed a variation of the strategy.

Success at Apple wasn't much easier for Johnson. When Johnson and Jobs introduced the idea of opening retail locations, it was resisted by nearly everyone on Apple's board. Board members looked at Gateway, a competitor that was in the midst of closing stores, as proof that the strategy wouldn't work.

Even Johnson's now-popular Genius Bar, a place within Apple stores where customers can get hands-on technical support, was seen as radical. It ran counter to the retail industry's practice of hiding "repair" areas in the stores.

"No one thought it would work," Johnson told analysts earlier this year. "There wasn't one positive believer."

The first Apple store, which opened in 2001 in Tyson's Corner mall in Virginia, became a hit. Others across the nation followed. There are now 394 stores in 13 countries. "Apple has changed the way to buy a computer. And we did that by thinking completely differently about every aspect of the retail business," Johnson says.

It's his "go get 'em" attitude that serves Johnson well, say those who know him. "If he believes in something wholeheartedly, there is not a person on this planet that could sway him," says Francis, the former Penney president who now is marketing creative adviser for Gap Inc.

Francis says he doesn't resent Johnson because he fired him. "There are no reasons to have hard feelings," he told The Associated Press. "Life is too short."

Brian Sozzi, chief equities analyst at NBG Productions, says that the problems Johnson has had at Penney will only add to his creative genius. "He has learned the CEO job on the fly," he says. "He's still a visionary, but he's a bruised and more humbled visionary."

----

Follow Anne D'Innocenzio on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ADInnocenzio

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-11-17-JC%20Penney-CEO's%20Vision/id-9cdc2de5ce4d49839ade699a3df54ad7

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Panetta: US to boost military ties with ASEAN

(MENAFN - Arab News) US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta sought yesterday to promote Washington's strategic shift to the Asia-Pacific and a tentative rapprochement with Myanmar as he met counterparts in the region.

The US tilt to Asia reflects a concerted effort by President Barack Obama's administration to assert American influence in the face of China's growing economic and military might.

"The message I have conveyed on this visit is that the United States' rebalance to the Asia-Pacific is real, it is sustainable, and it will be ongoing for a long period of time," Panetta said.

The US is deepening its military engagement with allies in the region, he told reporters after talks with counterparts from the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) - including Myanmar - in Cambodia.

He said the Pentagon would increase the size and number of its defense exercises with its Southeast Asian partners.

Fresh from re-election victory, Obama will arrive in the region next week for a historic visit to Myanmar before joining his top diplomat Hillary Clinton in Cambodia for an Asia-Pacific summit.

Obama will be the first sitting US president ever to go to Myanmar, also known as Burma, following a series of dramatic political changes in the former pariah state, which is emerging from decades of military rule.

Pentagon officials are considering reviving military ties with Myanmar to cooperate on non-lethal programs focused on medicine, education and disaster relief exercises.

The activities would be "limited in scope" at the outset, said a senior US defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"We'll grow as appropriate over time. We need to see reform. We need to see continued progress," the official said.

Myanmar is also expected to be invited to observe Cobra Gold, the largest US multilateral exercise in the Asia-Pacific. It brings together thousands of troops from the US, Thailand and other countries for field training.

Source: http://www.menafn.com/menafn/1093579906/Panetta-US-to-boost-military-ties-with-ASEAN?src=RSS

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How to Fix Windows XP's Slow Shutdown

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Source: http://compexplorer.com/?p=89

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Analysis: Only ritual talk on fiscal cliff so far

WASHINGTON (AP) ? When President Barack Obama greets congressional leaders at the White House on Friday, an elaborate set of postelection rituals will be complete. Yet divided government's ability to attack the nation's economic woes is no clearer now than it has been for months.

Eventually, something's got to give in a country where voters are weary of gridlock and wearier still of high unemployment.

Or does it?

"I'm open to compromise and I'm open to new ideas," Obama said at his White House news conference on Wednesday. He stressed the importance of avoiding the "fiscal cliff," a double whammy of tax increases and spending cuts at the turn of the year.

Up to a point.

He referred more than once to his defeat of Republican Mitt Romney, saying, "I argued for a balanced, responsible approach, and part of that included making sure that the wealthiest Americans pay a little bit more."

"By the way, more voters agreed with me on this issue than voted for me," he added, a reminder to Republicans that some of their supporters, too, disagree with the party's position.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, also regularly stresses a willingness to reach across the aisle, citing the emergence of a "spirit of cooperation" since the election that he says bodes well for an agreement.

Like Obama, he avoids definitive answers to hypothetical questions. "I don't want to box myself in. I don't want to box anyone else in," he said recently.

Yet also like the president, Boehner has laid down a marker for the talks ahead. "Raising tax rates is unacceptable," he said referring to Obama's campaign-long call to allow rates to rise on incomes over $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for couples.

Both sides take credit for concessions, none of them particularly new.

In talks that came close to a deal in 2011, Obama said he was willing to make significant cuts in the growth of benefit programs like Medicare and Medicaid, infuriating liberals. Boehner spoke of as much as $800 billion in new revenue, angering conservatives.

The talks eventually collapsed.

Now White House Press Secretary Jay Carney says Obama will ask for $1.6 trillion in new taxes over a decade when the talks resume after Friday morning's meeting at the White House.

It's an opening bid, not a demand, part of the standard ritual for such occasions as is the rhetoric from both sides.

Barring legislation, taxes will rise on nearly everyone on Jan. 1, and a series of across-the-board spending cuts will take effect, a combination known as the "fiscal cliff" that many economists say could send the economy back into recession.

That sounds ominous, and if nothing else, neither party wants to bear the responsibility if it happens.

Yet government, particularly divided government, has a curious relationship with deadlines.

On the one hand, they focus compromise efforts, and can result in an agreement.

Yet just as often, they lead to interim half-measures that set a new deadline for the final day of reckoning.

The fiscal cliff itself is an example.

Republicans used the threat of an unprecedented federal default to win about $1 trillion in spending cuts over 10 years from Obama and Democrats in 2011. The same agreement set up a deficit "super committee" to seek more and bigger deficit savings. That effort ignominiously failed a year ago, leaving in place a series of automatic across-the-board spending cuts timed to coincide with the scheduled expiration of tax cuts at the turn of the year.

As always in the run-up to negotiations, the two sides vie for leverage.

Hence, Boehner is fond of pointing out that while the president may have a mandate, so, too, the House Republicans, who renewed their majority in last week's elections.

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is more pointed. "Most people may focus on the White House, but the fact is the government is organized no differently today than it was after the Republican wave of 2010," he said earlier in the week.

Not exactly.

In other areas, numerous Republicans have made it clear they are ready to talk compromise ? from a position of electoral weakness.

Despite the claim of a dual mandate, Boehner has signaled the end of efforts to repeal Obama's health care legislation, a cause that animated the tea party and united Republicans who swept to power in the House two years ago.

Numerous Republicans in Congress and among the nation's governors say the party must appeal more effectively to Hispanic voters, who account for an ever-increasing share of the electorate and gave Obama more than 70 percent of their votes this fall. Already there are the first stirrings of compromise talks on an overhaul of immigration law, to include a pathway to legal status if not citizenship for millions who are in the country illegally.

The "tone and rhetoric" employed by Republicans in recent debates over immigration have "built a wall between the Republican Party and Hispanic community," Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. conceded a few days after the election.

So much for Romney's statement in last winter's primaries that illegal immigrants can self-deport.

Immigration legislation will wait until 2013 at least.

By then, Obama and Congress will show whether the election produced a government more inclined to compromise, or to more gridlock.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE ? David Espo covers politics and Congress for The Associated Press

An AP News Analysis

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-only-ritual-talk-fiscal-cliff-far-210106542--politics.html

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WSU President Floyd on Gov.-Elect Inslee transition

by KING 5 News

KING5.com

Posted on November 16, 2012 at 2:27 PM

Updated today at 3:19 PM

Washington State University President Elson S. Floyd talks with KING 5's Chris Daniels about his appointment this week to serve as one of three co-chairs of Gov.-Elect Jay Inslee's transition team.

Source: http://www.king5.com/news/politics/WSU-President-Floyd-on-Gov-Elect-Inslee-transition-179728231.html

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The US mounting its military presence in China's "soft belly": Voice ...

The diplomatic offensive begins with the American triumvirate ? President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta ? visiting Cambodia. The agenda includes both bilateral talks with the respective counterparts and the participation in the East Asia summit in Cambodia's capital Phnom Penh.

Later, the US President and his men (as well as the woman) will also visit Thailand and Myanmar.

What makes the tour historic is not just the fact that never before had any US President visit Cambodia or Myanmar (formerly, Burma), but the attempt to establish substantial presence in what has for a long time been regarded as China's domain. Both Myanmar and Cambodia are looked upon as China's allies in the region, and both countries have been in a kind of international isolation for decades which allowed China to dominate their economies as well as politics.

But times are changing, and the "strategic pivot" announced late last year presupposes that the US is going to exert efforts in order to not only limit China's expansion in the fields it is aiming to conquer, but also to press China out of the areas which it has long regarded as its backyard.

On Thursday, The Washington Post published a lengthy article by its staff writer on national security and the Pentagon Craig Whitlock dealing with the issues of the US cooperation with Cambodia in the field of counterterrorism.

The story says that, "The Pentagon is expanding counterterrorism assistance to unlikely corners of the globe as part of a strategy to deploy elite Special Operations forces as advisers to countries far from al-Qaeda?s strongholds in the Middle East and North Africa."

These countries include the Philippines, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Cambodia, and the Pentagon officials seem little concerned that all those countries are not on the list of those which respect human rights.

More so, not all of them seem to be facing the terrorist threat. "In Cambodia, for example," writes Craig Whitlock, "the Defense Department is training a counterterrorism battalion even though the nation has not faced a serious militant threat in nearly a decade."

It should also be noted that Cambodia's today's ruler Hun Sen is a former Khmer Rouge commander, and Khmer Rouge was a communist movement universally known for the genocide of Cambodian people which exterminated up to one fifth of the population.

This fact not only has not prevented the US triumvirate from travelling to Cambodia now, but even in the past, while Washington apparently distanced itself from Cambodian leadership, it did not prevent Hun Sen's three sons from getting education in US universities. His eldest son and heir apparent Hun Manet, for example, receive a degree from the US Military Academy at West Point, and presently serves as deputy commander of Cambodian Army.

Various human right bodies have expressed concerns about President Obama's visit to Cambodia citing gross human rights violations in that country. One of the latest incidents in the row occurred just a couple of days before Obama's arrival in Phnom Penh. Eight villagers living close to the international airport were arrested for placing Obama's portraits and SOS signs on the roofs of their houses trying to attract the US President's attention to their problems.

Despite the criticism from the human rights activists the administration's top brass have not altered their plans and the visit is going ahead.

Too much is at stake both for Washington and Phnom Penh. Washington's aims have been outlined above and are too clear.

"This is a hook," said Carlyle A. Thayer, an expert on Southeast Asian militaries and a professor at the Australian Defense Force Academy. "It?s something you don?t want to give up. It gives you access, it gives you influence."

As for Hun Sen, American assistance in training a counterterrorist unit is also of grave importance ? it allows him to have at hand a loyal tool to suppress an attempted coup or any other challenge to his supremacy.

When the two are combined together, forget about human rights!

Source: http://english.ruvr.ru/2012_11_16/The-US-mounting-its-military-presence-in-Chinas-soft-belly/

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