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Jan 30 2012

EU leaders to discuss growth as Greece case looms (AP)

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BRUSSELS ? European leaders will try to come up with ways to boost growth despite steep budget cuts across the continent when they meet in Brussels on Monday.

The 27 heads of state and government will get a taste of the popular frustration with austerity and high unemployment as they try to get to the summit in a city paralyzed by strikes.

While the official theme of Monday’s meeting is boosting growth and jobs, the elephant in the room will be Greece.

Leaders aren’t expected to make any decisions on a new massive bailout for Greece until international debt inspectors have issued a new report on the country’s finances.

Athens’ euro partners have grown frustrated with its slack implementation of spending cuts and reforms almost two years after first receiving international aid.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120130/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_europe_financial_crisis

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Jan 21 2012

Official: EU open to Iran talks as embargo looms (AP)

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BRUSSELS ? The EU’s foreign policy chief said Monday that the international community remains open to talks with Iran, even as an EU embargo on Iranian oil seems set to be approved Monday.

Catherine Ashton said in a statement that the international community ? specifically, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, the U.S., Russia and China ? have “a continued willingness to engage” with Iran regarding that country’s nuclear program.

Ashton also released the text of a letter she sent in October to Saeed Jalili, Iran’s top nuclear negotiator. The letter said Ashton’s overall goal is a negotiated solution that “restores international confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program.”

The letter was dated Oct. 21. Ashton said she has received no reply. Officials in many other countries fear Iran is working to develop nuclear weapons ? something Iran denies.

Meanwhile, diplomats said Friday that EU foreign ministers meeting Monday in Brussels will likely approve a ban on buying Iranian oil, even though working out the details of the embargo will be left for later. The embargo would immediately prohibit the signing of any new oil contracts with Iran.

However, important details on the embargo would likely still remain to be negotiated. Those include the date by which existing contracts to buy Iranian oil would no longer be held to be valid, and the nature of a review of the effects so far of the embargo prior to that date.

The U.K., Germany and France are eager for a strong embargo on Iranian oil to be implemented quickly. But Greece, which has deep financial troubles, benefits from low prices it pays for Iranian oil, and it wants assurances that the embargo will not become a financial burden it cannot bear.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120120/ap_on_re_eu/eu_iran_embargo

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Dec 30 2011

Snowstorm halts travel in New Mexico, moves east (AP)

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ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. ? A powerful storm dumped heavy snow across sections of the Southwest and Great Plains Monday, stranding motorists in New Mexico in whiteout conditions and wreaking havoc on holiday travel just two days before the start of winter.

Blizzard warnings forecasting snowfalls of up to 18 inches stretched across the region as the storm barreled through New Mexico toward the Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles and parts of Kansas and Colorado. In southern Colorado, blizzard conditions were expected to drop between 8 and 16 inches of snow.

In northern New Mexico, all roads from Raton to the Texas and Oklahoma borders about 90 miles east were closed, and an unknown number of motorists were stuck in a blizzard along rural highways, Clayton police dispatcher Cindy Blackwell said. A portion of Interstate 25, the major route heading northeast of Santa Fe into Colorado, was among the roads closed, and even where highways remained open, some drivers were forced to pull off.

“The phones are ringing off the hook” with calls from stranded drivers, Blackwell said. “All I can do is answer the phones and call the state police.”

Snow and strong winds also created blizzard-like conditions in far western Kansas and the Oklahoma Panhandle as the storm moved east.

Vicki Roberts, the owner of the Black Mesa Bed and Breakfast in Kenton, said snow was falling rapidly and high winds had cut visibility in the Oklahoma Panhandle.

“I can’t even see the mesa,” Roberts said as she peered from the window of her establishment at the foot of Black Mesa, which at 4,973 feet is the highest point in Oklahoma. Forecasts called for the area to get up to 16 inches before the storm moves out Tuesday.

The storm follows a surprisingly mild Sunday across the region. In the Oklahoma Panhandle, residents enjoyed relatively balmy 60-degree temperatures. That changed quickly, and Roberts said Monday morning that she expected to be stuck inside at least through Wednesday if a blizzard was as bad as forecast.

“I have a mail route and I’m not going. You just don’t get out in this,” Roberts said. “We’ll be socked in here. If we lose power we’ll just read a book in front of the fireplace.”

There were no guests at her inn, so she wasn’t worried about them being stuck.

Kansas still had temperatures in the upper 40s on Monday, and thunderstorms moved across the state. Conditions were expected to deteriorate as the day progressed and temperatures fell. Snow was expected to start in the western part of the state overnight.

The Oklahoma Department of Transportation said Sunday that crews would work around the clock to keep roads clear, and that they have about 130,000 tons of a salt and sand mixture at their disposal.

The precipitation also could help ease a drought that has plagued Texas for more than year.

“You’re not going to find too many people who have to put in winter wheat in this area complaining,” said Tabatha Seymore, observing program leader for the National Weather Service in Amarillo, Texas. “It’s just wonderful to have this moisture to sit on top of the crop and melt. It’s fantastic for them.”

Amarillo had rain Monday morning, and snow was supposed to start in the afternoon with several inches of accumulation by Tuesday morning.

Long haul truck driver Frank Pringle stopped at a Love’s Travel Stop in Amarillo but said he intended to go as far west as road conditions would allow Monday. His biggest worry was with four-wheel-drive cars because “they will shoot past you and cut you off and you have to hit your brakes. And hitting brakes in the snow is not a good thing.”

Clayton, N.M., Police Chief Scott Julian said his town is expecting more than a foot of snow. He was worried drivers passing through town to Colorado or Texas might decide to take their chances with the storm only to find that “they get 10 miles out of town, they can’t see in front of them, and they get stranded out there.”

___

Hegeman reported from Wichita, Kan. Associated Press writers Tim Talley and Rochelle Hines in Oklahoma City; Tim Raths in Washington; Maria Sudekum Fisher in Kansas City, Mo.; and John Milburn in Topeka, Kan., contributed to this story.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111219/ap_on_re_us/us_winter_weather

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Nov 10 2011

Unease mounts over Cain accusations

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The National Restaurant Association building in Washington, Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Leaving little to the imagination, a Chicago-area woman on Monday accused Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain of making a crude sexual advance more than a decade ago when she was seeking his help finding a job. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

The National Restaurant Association building in Washington, Monday, Nov. 7, 2011. Leaving little to the imagination, a Chicago-area woman on Monday accused Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain of making a crude sexual advance more than a decade ago when she was seeking his help finding a job. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Sharon Bialek, a Chicago-area woman,waits to address a news conference at the Friars Club, Monday, Nov. 7, 2011, in New York. Bialek accused Republican presidential contender Herman Cain of making an unwanted sexual advance against her in 1997. She says she wants to provide “a face and a voice” to support other accusers who have so far remained anonymous. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

In this file photo taken Oct. 31, 2011, Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain answers questions at the National Press Club in Washington about sexual harassment allegations. Sharon Bialek, a Chicago-area woman, accused Cain on Monday, Nov. 7, 2011, of making an unwanted sexual advance against her in 1997. Cain’s campaign instantly issued a denial. “All allegations of harassment against Mr. Cain are completely false,” it said. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

ATLANTA (AP) ? Herman Cain sought to ride out the sexual harassment scandal engulfing his embattled presidential campaign by projecting a business-as-usual fa?ade.

But there were growing signs of unease in conservative circles as a fourth accuser ? Sharon Bialek ? provided a name and a face to what had been anonymous harassment allegations against the GOP front-runner. Bialek’s detailed and lurid accusations ? that Cain groped her in a car after she asked for his help finding a job ? spun his already embattled campaign into an uncertain new territory.

“He deserves a fair chance. But that doesn’t mean he gets a pass. These are not anonymous allegations anymore unfortunately,” said New Hampshire conservative activist Jennifer Hor, who last week had condemned media coverage of the allegations against Cain.

“I think he does need to take another step and answer a few more questions.”

Cain told late night host Jimmy Kimmel that’s exactly what he plans to do as he fights the claims head-on at a news conference slated for Tuesday afternoon in a Phoenix hotel.

“There is not an ounce of truth to all these allegations,” he said on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” ”I’m going to set the record straight.”

Cain told Kimmel he got angry and disgusted as he watched Bialek and her attorney, Gloria Allred. He said Bialek’s graphic account was “totally fabricated.”

Bialek’s nationally broadcast appearance on cable television marked a new and ? for Cain ? dangerous turn in a controversy that he has struggled for more than a week to shed. An upstart in the presidential race, Cain shot to the top of public opinion polls in recent weeks and emerged, however temporarily, as the main conservative challenger to Mitt Romney.

Earlier Monday, the Cain camp flatly denied the charges.

“Mr. Cain has never harassed anyone,” spokesman J.D. Gordon said in a statement.

And they insisted that the newest allegation changed nothing and said they were still planning to attend a private speech in Phoenix Tuesday morning and a debate Wednesday night in Michigan.

“We are staying on message and talking about the issues,” Gordon told The Associated Press.

?Bialek, in a separate interview Monday, said she had hoped Cain would announce a press conference after her statement to apologize to her. But instead she learned he issued the stern denial.

“I know what happened, and he knows what happened,” Bialek said on CNN’s Piers Morgan Tonight. “One of my whole objectives was to give him the opportunity to come forward, to redeem himself, say, ‘Hey, I’m sorry. I did this. It happened. And let’s move forward.’ And it is unfortunate. I’m very disappointed that he didn’t take the lead in this.”

When asked if Cain should be president, Bialek said: “I don’t think we can have anyone in the White House who is unable to tell the truth.”

Soon after Bialek aired her accusations at a news conference in New York with Allred by her side, the Cain campaign released a new web video ? targeting voters in the lead-off caucus state of Iowa ? highlighting what they say are excessive federal regulations on farmers that are driving up costs for consumers.

But the campaign also appeared to hunker down in damage control mode. Voicemails for Gordon and campaign manager Mark Block were full by Monday afternoon.

Bialek said Cain made a sexual advance in mid-July 1997, when she had travelled to Washington to have dinner with him in hopes he could help her find work. Cain was the head of the National Restaurant Association at the time. Bialek had been fired from a job in the group’s education arm. She had met Cain previously at a convention and had asked if he would help her find work.

She said the two had finished dinner and were in a car for what she thought was a ride to an office building.

“Instead of going into the offices he suddenly reached over and he put his hand on my leg, under my skirt toward my genitals,” she said.

“He also pushed my head toward his crotch,” she added.

She said she asked Cain what he was doing and recalled he replied, “You said you want a job, right?”

Bialek is the fourth woman to say that Cain engaged in inappropriate behavior during his time at the helm of the restaurant group.

Two women who worked there filed sexual harassment complaints.

A third woman told The Associated Press last week that she considered filing a workplace complaint against Cain over what she deemed sexually suggestive remarks and gestures that included a private invitation to his corporate apartment.

Still, some remained solidly behind the former pizza executive, unmoved by Bialek’s account. They pointed to the presence of Allred ? a high-profile attorney with Democratic ties ? as proof the claim was a partisan smear.

“The fact that she’s involved removes all credibility,” Georgia Christian Coalition president Jerry Luquire said. “If he says he didn’t do anything than I believe him.”

For Cain’s core supporters ? tea party activists and evangelical voters ? distrust of the media is high. And the accusations against Cain only seemed to galvanize their support.

With that in mind, Cain’s leading Republican rivals for the White House steered clear of he scandal on Monday declining to comment.

But there was also evidence the latest allegation as well as the cumulative toll of multiple women making claims could erode Cain’s support.

“Oh,” exclaimed South Carolina GOP Chairman Chad Connelly said when told details from Bialek’s news conference.

Voters in his early primary state, Connelly said, will tune into character questions in a state where the last governor tearfully confessed an affair and the current governor faced unproven allegations from two men that she had affairs.

“Our voters in South Carolina care about character and if the allegation are proven out, our voters care about moral attitude,” Conley said. “Character does matter, despite what the Clinton folks tried to tell us years ago,” he said.

____

Associated Press writers Steve Peoples in New Hampshire and Jim Davenport in South Carolina contributed to this report

____

Follow Shannon McCaffrey at www.twitter.com/smccaffrey13

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-11-08-Cain/id-0722acb7028847b3a483f265da9d3297

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