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Boehner Appoints a Woman to Lead the Administration Committee

With House Republican leadership under fire for installing 19 white men as committee chairmen, Speaker John A. Boehner said on Friday that he had named Representative Candice S. Miller of Michigan to head the Committee on House Administration in the 113th Congress.

The current chairman of the committee, Representative Daniel E. Lungren of California, was defeated in his campaign for re-election this month.

Ms. Miller said in a statement that she was “both humbled and honored by the confidence Speaker Boehner has shown in me” to take on the chairmanship of the committee, which oversees federal elections as well as the day-to-day operations of the House, including its cafeterias, personnel services and technology. Ms. Miller currently does not even sit on the committee.

“Most importantly,” she said, “this committee has jurisdiction over the federal election process, and I am absolutely committed to making certain that we enact rules to ensure thi s nation continues to have open, free and fair elections.”

While most committee chairmen are chosen by the House Republican Steering Committee, Mr. Boehner has personal discretion over four committees: House Administration, Intelligence, Rules and ethics. Only the last of these is still unfilled, and it is possible the speaker will seek a woman for that slot, as well.

“In her new post,” Mr. Boehner said in a statement, “Candice will provide the leadership needed to keep operating costs down, save taxpayer dollars and help lawmakers use new technology to better engage with their constituents. And her experience as Michigan secretary of state will be invaluable given the committee's oversight of campaign finance and election laws.”

In 2004, Ms. Miller received a rare admonishment from the House ethics committee, along with former Representative Tom DeLay, Republican of Texas, then the majority leader, relating to political favors in exchange for a m ember's vote on a difficult Medicare prescription drug bill.



Obama Hits the Road to Rally Support for His Tax Plan

HATFIELD, Pa. - President Obama made a campaign-style foray on Friday to a toy factory in this Philadelphia suburb to rally the public behind his plan to increase taxes on the wealthy while casting Republicans in Congress as modern-day Scrooges.

“I've been keeping my own naughty and nice list for Washington,” he told workers and others gathered at a plant that makes K'NEX toys. If Republicans hold middle-class tax cuts hostage to preserve them for the rich, he said, then everyone could end up paying more next year. “That's sort of like the lump of coal you get for Christmas. That's a Scrooge Christmas.”

Mr. Obama's trip here was his first return to the road during a high-stakes effort to outflank his opponents on Capitol Hill in the looming crisis over the nation's finances. Rather than just sit down and negotiate with Congressional leaders, as he tried in the past to his disappointment, the president is pursuing a dual-track strategy that involves conc entrating as much public pressure on lawmakers as possible even as his aides make the rounds on Capitol Hill.

So far, Mr. Obama has largely stuck to his past positions, gambling that the 51 percent of the popular vote he won in this month's election constitutes a mandate that will force Republicans to back down. While he repeated here on Friday that he was willing to compromise, the proposals his advisers laid out to Congressional leaders on Thursday reflected an opening bid in a four-week negotiation with little new compromise so far.

Among other things, the president's advisers told Congressional leaders that he wanted $1.6 trillion more in tax revenues over the next 10 years, $50 billion in short-term stimulus spending to bolster the economy and an end to Congressional control over statutory borrowing limits. In exchange, he agreed to $400 billion in savings from Medicare and other entitlements over 10 years, to be worked out next year with no guarantees.

< p>Republicans have called that proposal an insult and a sign that Mr. Obama is not serious about reining in spending after a first term when annual federal budget deficits topped $1 trillion for several years in a row. White House officials counter that while Republicans since the election have agreed to more tax revenue as part of a solution, they have not offered specific new proposals either.

If Mr. Obama and Congress do not reach agreement, then taxes will rise and spending will fall automatically at the end of the year. Mr. Obama, however, has focused his message almost entirely on taxes, narrowing the debate to the question of whether the Bush-era tax cuts should be extended for household income over $250,000 a year.

He called again on Congress to go ahead and extend the cuts now for income under that level. “The reason I'm here is because I want the American people to urge Congress soon in the next week the next two weeks to begin the work we have by doi ng what we all agree on,” he said. “Both parties agree we should extend the middle-class tax cuts.”

Doing so would in effect end the debate over extending tax cuts for higher income since Congress presumably would not pass such a bill separately and even if it did Mr. Obama would veto it.

The president tried to enlist supporters to engage in the fight directly. “I want you to call, I want you to send e-mail, post on your Facebook wall,” he said.

He spoke after touring a Rodon Group factory here that makes K'NEX Brands construction toys like Tinkertoy, Ninetendo and Angry Bird building sets. About 150 people work at the factory and the White House said Rodon brought back 95 percent of their packaging and promotion from China to Pennsylvania in recent years.

The trip here culminated a week in which the White House released a report warning that consumer demand would fall if middle-class tax cuts are not renewed, gathered ostensibly typical tax payers to stand behind the president during a speech and organized meetings between Mr. Obama and small-business owners and corporate leaders.



Q&A: Avoiding the Unwanted Beach Ball Party

Q.

Why does my Mac's cursor often turn into rotating color pinwheel that freezes up my screen until I restart the computer?

A.

The “rotating color pinwheel” goes by many names, both official and colloquial (Spinning Wait Cursor, Spinning Disc Pointer, Beach Ball of Doom, Rolling Rainbow of Death and so on). It usually appears temporarily when the Mac is busy with a task, like saving a large file. In most cases, the wait cursor should disappear after a few seconds. If it sticks around until you have to restart the Mac, it sounds like time to do some troubleshooting.

If you regularly get the wait cursor when working on the Mac, it could be because of a number of things, including lack of memory (the RAM kind) to efficiently complete the task on screen, not enough available hard-drive space or an overworked processor. If the cursor appears only when using a certain program, the issue may be with that piece of s oftware. If this turns out to be the case, check the program's online forums to see if this is a known issue, hopefully one with a workaround or solution.

Instead of restarting the entire computer, you may want forcibly close the program you have open when the wait cursor appears, to see if the problem is just with that one particular application. To force-quit an unresponsive program, press the Mac's Option, Command and Escape keys at the same time. In the box that appears, select the stalled program in the list and click the Force Quit button.

If more than one program keeps stalling out and the Mac is underpowered, adding more memory to the computer and deleting unneeded files from an overstuffed hard drive might help, as can downloading system and program updates. But before you dive into hardware upgrades, check out The X Lab's frequently asked questions page for a collection of suggested solutions to various problems regarding the Spinning Beach Ball of Deat h.



Q&A: Avoiding the Unwanted Beach Ball Party

Q.

Why does my Mac's cursor often turn into rotating color pinwheel that freezes up my screen until I restart the computer?

A.

The “rotating color pinwheel” goes by many names, both official and colloquial (Spinning Wait Cursor, Spinning Disc Pointer, Beach Ball of Doom, Rolling Rainbow of Death and so on). It usually appears temporarily when the Mac is busy with a task, like saving a large file. In most cases, the wait cursor should disappear after a few seconds. If it sticks around until you have to restart the Mac, it sounds like time to do some troubleshooting.

If you regularly get the wait cursor when working on the Mac, it could be because of a number of things, including lack of memory (the RAM kind) to efficiently complete the task on screen, not enough available hard-drive space or an overworked processor. If the cursor appears only when using a certain program, the issue may be with that piece of s oftware. If this turns out to be the case, check the program's online forums to see if this is a known issue, hopefully one with a workaround or solution.

Instead of restarting the entire computer, you may want forcibly close the program you have open when the wait cursor appears, to see if the problem is just with that one particular application. To force-quit an unresponsive program, press the Mac's Option, Command and Escape keys at the same time. In the box that appears, select the stalled program in the list and click the Force Quit button.

If more than one program keeps stalling out and the Mac is underpowered, adding more memory to the computer and deleting unneeded files from an overstuffed hard drive might help, as can downloading system and program updates. But before you dive into hardware upgrades, check out The X Lab's frequently asked questions page for a collection of suggested solutions to various problems regarding the Spinning Beach Ball of Deat h.



The Early Word: Paying Less

In Today's Times:

  • Many Americans are troubled by the conviction that they are paying more and more to finance the expansion of the federal government. But in 2010, most Americans actually paid less in taxes than they would have 30 years ago, Binyamin Appelbaum and Robert Gebeloff report.
  • Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner delivered a proposal to avert the potential fiscal crisis to the House speaker, John A. Boehner, on Thursday - but with the plan lacking detailed cuts and packed with Democratic priorities, Republicans offered strong resistance, Jonathan Weisman reports.
  • As Republicans take aim at Susan E. Rice, they seem to be amassing their support behind a familiar alternative: their colleague  Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, Jennifer Steinhauer reports. But their support adds a measure of intrigue, as Mr. Kerry's vacant seat could offer an opportunity for Senate Republicans to bolster their numbers.
    < li>Language slipped into a Coast Guard reauthorization bill to protect an old, ash-dumping ferry in Lake Michigan has raised questions about what exactly constitutes an earmark, Jonathan Weisman reports.

Washington Happenings:

  • President Obama will continue advocating for action to prevent the year-end fiscal crisis, on Friday at a toy factory in Hatfield, Pa.
  • Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. travels to Mexico, where he will attend a dinner given by President Felipe Calderón on Friday. Mr. Calderón will leave office on Saturday.


No \"Plan B\" for Pentagon in Case of Big Budget Cut

Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower famously said that plans are nothing, but planning is everything because no war plan survives first contact with the enemy. Therefore, the military should hone its ability for continuous planning.

In the decades since, the Pentagon has excelled at nothing as much as planning for every conceivable - and sometimes inconceivable - contingency.

So it is more than a little surprising that a range of Defense Department and military officials say there is no formal planning under way on how the Pentagon budget could or should be trimmed further.

Cuts of $500 billion over the next 10 years, representing roughly 5 to 8 percent of the Pentagon's budget, would begin to take effect if the White House and Congress fail to reach an accord before the end of the year. The reductions would occur across the board. Even if there is a deal on taxes and spending to avoid the automatic cuts, it is a safe bet that the deal would impose additional budge t reductions on the Pentagon.

Pentagon officials and military officers do not say it out loud, but their public inaction reflects a fear that any planning on cuts would amount to an invitation to Congress to make them. The Pentagon could then face larger reductions than it otherwise might as part of any deficit deal.

What programs could be vulnerable? Experts offer varying proposals, of course, depending on what branch of the military they think is most important and what sort of world they predict America will face.

Gen. Ray Odierno, the Army chief of staff, noted in a recent talk at the Center for Strategic and International Studies that there are only three large baskets of spending from which savings can be found: personnel costs; equipment costs, both for repairs and new orders; and training costs, like how many bullets are available for firing on practice ranges and how many hours can be logged in jet fighter training flights.

A study released t his week by Todd Harrison and Mark Gunzinger of the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington research group, recommended protecting a series of military capabilities, which it called “the crown jewels,” necessary in a future combat environment. They included: Special Operations forces, cyberspace capabilities, underwater warfare systems and long-range surveillance and strike aircraft, both manned and unmanned.

Gordon Adams, a former Pentagon official in the Reagan administration and an advocate of further military cuts, has said there is unusual agreement among analysts across the political spectrum on the way ahead in military spending.

In an essay for the Web site of Foreign Policy magazine, Mr. Adams said that long-term wars of attrition and nation-building, like in Afghanistan and Iraq, were “over,” allowing the ground forces to shrink. Analysts, he wrote, also agree that the United States can reduce its strategic nuclear arsenal, but that research and development should be protected.

Any future reductions for the Pentagon would come on top of $487 billion in spending cuts the Obama administration plans to make over the next decade.

After a decade of sharply rising military spending and revenues diminished by two tax cuts and two recessions, Pentagon officials say that they are aware that a new period has begun. Their goal is to limit the cuts they face to the ones that have already been planned, and to certainly avoid the across-the-board cuts that will start to take effect if Congress does not reach a deal by year's end.



Senators Pay Tribute to Warren Rudman

WASHINGTON â€" There are few occasions these days that bring together Democrats and Republicans in bipartisan unity. But on Thursday evening, one of those rare displays occurred in a grand, gilded room near the Capitol.

Democratic and Republican senators gathered to celebrate the life of their former colleague, Warren B. Rudman, who died last month.

There was a healthy contingent from New Hampshire, Mr. Rudman's home state. David H. Souter, a former Supreme Court justice and a Republican, joined Jeanne Shaheen, the state's Democratic senator, in delivering introductory remarks. Kelly Ayotte, the state's Republican senator, delivered a tribute of her own.

Other Republicans there included John McCain of Arizona, and a host of former senators including Howard Baker, Bill Brock and Fred Thompson, all of Tennessee. Phil Gramm of Texas and William S. Cohen of Maine were on hand as well.

The top Democrat in the room was Vice President Joseph R. Biden J r. And his fellow Democrats included Patrick Leahy of Vermont, Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, and Daniel Inouye of Hawaii.

Mr. Souter characterized what his old friend Mr. Rudman might have made of his responsibility as the evening's emcee. “The old golden gloves boxer in him would say, ‘You're the referee,' ” Mr. Souter said. “But under any title, I'm very honored.”



What\'s the Plan? No Further Cuts Seen for Pentagon

It's more than a little surprising that a range of Defense Department and military officials say that there is no additional planning under way on how the Pentagon budget could or should be trimmed further.

Former President George H.W. Bush Is Hospitalized, but in Stable Condition

HOUSTON â€" Former President George H.W. Bush is being treated at a hospital here for complications related to bronchitis, but a spokesman said Thursday that he is in stable condition and expected to be released within the next 72 hours.

Mr. Bush, 88, was admitted to The Methodist Hospital the day after Thanksgiving. It was his second hospitalization there this month, said the spokesman, Jim McGrath.

“At age 88, bronchitis can be very serious, but in this case it was never life-threatening,” Mr. McGrath said. “If you asked him how he's doing, he would tell you he's getting out this afternoon, because he feels that good. But he does have a lingering cough, so the doctors are going to wait until he's better to their satisfaction before they discharge him.”

On Sunday, Mr. Bush's son and daughter-in-law, former President George W. Bush and former First Lady Laura Bush, visited him at the hospital. The elder Mr. Bush's wife, former First Lady Barbara B ush, has been a constant presence by his side, Mr. McGrath said.

Mr. Bush has had numerous health problems in recent years, including being diagnosed with a form of Parkinson's disease. Last year, he described his condition to Time magazine this way: “My legs don't move when my brain tells them to. It's very frustrating. But I am in no pain, and I have discovered the amazing scooters, which Barbara accuses me of driving like I drive my boat. But they help me get around.”

Yet Mr. Bush, the 41st president of the United States, has remained active. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney visited him last year at his Houston home and again in March at his Houston office. In January, he sat in his wheelchair shaking hands with runners during the Houston Marathon. Earlier this month, on Nov. 1, he met an old friend for lunch at a local club: Mikhail Gorbachev, the former president of the Soviet Union. “It was a very warm , very personal reunion,” Mr. McGrath said.



TimesCast Politics | Romney Visits the White House

A lunch meeting for two former rivals. | The stakes for same-sex marriage as it reaches the Supreme Court. | New York City's race for mayor gets under way.



Romney Arrives to Dine With Obama

Former Gov. Mitt Romney arrived at the White House on Thursday for a private lunch with President Obama, their first encounter since the presidential election as both men try to put the bitterness of a hard-fought and often nasty campaign behind them.

Mr. Romney, the 2012 Republican nominee, arrived in a dark sport utility vehicle that pulled up to the White House entrance on West Executive Avenue just before 12:30 p.m., far away from the reporters and photographers waiting for his visit. He exited on the passenger side and walked into the West Wing without pausing.

The two are breaking bread in the private dining room just off the Oval Office. White House officials said no aides would join them for the one-on-one meal, nor would the media be invited to record the moment at the start or finish, as it typically does when the president hosts high-profile guests.

Mr. Obama said in his victory speech on election night that he wa nted to sit down with Mr. Romney, and aides said this week that Mr. Romney offered some ideas during the campaign that the president would like to explore. Among other things, Jay Carney, the White House press secretary, credited Mr. Romney on Wednesday with being a “successful businessman” who “did a terrific job running the Olympics” in Salt Lake City.

Mr. Carney said Mr. Romney might have good ideas for how to reorganize the federal government but added that there was no specific agenda for the meal. “He does not have a specific ask,” Mr. Carney said. “I'm sure that the topics will be many in their lunch.”

Other presidents have gotten together with their vanquished foes. Bill Clinton invited Bob Dole to the White House after their 1996 contest to award him the Presidential Medal of Freedom. George W. Bush in his second term invited Al Gore to the White House to celebrate his winning the Nobel Peace Prize and the two had a private, 40-minute con versation in the Oval Office. Mr. Obama introduced his first opponent, Senator John McCain, at a dinner honoring him the night before his own inauguration in January 2009.

Few, though, have gone as far as Franklin D. Roosevelt, who sent his 1940 opponent, Wendell Willkie, to Britain, the Middle East, the Soviet Union and China as his personal representative. Asked if Mr. Obama planned to offer Mr. Romney a cabinet post like commerce secretary, Mr. Carney said flatly, “No,” then added: “The president does not have a specific assignment in mind for the governor.”



An Audio Dock That Welcomes All Androids

When you replace your Android phone, should you have to replace your music dock too?

Maybe not. The iLuv MobiAir iMM377 is a dock that will accommodate a variety of Android phones regardless of which side of the phone the micro USB plug is on, or which way it is facing.

The micro USB plug in the dock rotates so it can accommodate a device, no matter which direction its plug faces. A sliding set of gripping arms that can be adjusted to fit any number of different devices. It worked fine with the Galaxy Note 2, an oversized phone, and it can take a 7-inch tablet, but it won't fit a full-size 10-inch one.

It's a very compact little unit, roughly 5-by-10-by-2 inches, and it sounds bigger than it is - but that is still not so big. The sound was better than I expected for a unit of its size, but you won't fill your dorm room with pumping dance party sounds using the iMM377.

Even though it plugs in to a device, you still have to connect to the dock using B luetooth (which was easy to do). Of course, using Bluetooth, you could connect any device, whether it fits in the cradle or not. The advantage is you can avoid draining your batteries because the plug sends a charge to the battery.

The iMM377 is $120 online from iLuv.



As Fiscal Talks Begin, Obama and Boehner Engage

President Obama spoke for nearly a half-hour on Wednesday evening with House Speaker John A. Boehner in at least their second call this week, aides confirmed, but it was unclear whether they are making progress toward a deal that would avoid a fiscal crisis in January.

Biden Shops at Costco

Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. made a surprise stop at a newly opened Costco in Washington on Thursday. Mr. Biden flashed his Costco card as he walked through the doors to loud cheers before engaging in an extended shopping spree that included taking advantage of the store's free food samples.Doug Mills/The New York TimesVice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. made a surprise stop at a newly opened Costco in Washington on Thursday. Mr. Biden flashed his Costco card as he walked through the doors to loud cheers before engaging in an extended shopping spree that included taking advantage of the store's free food samples.

A time of austerity in the nation's capital? Not for Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who went on a holiday shopp ing spree at a new Costco store on Thursday.

Mr. Biden showed up for the grand opening of the discount chain's first store inside the Washington city limits, joining the co-founder, James D. Sinegal, a prominent campaign fund-raiser for President Obama and Mr. Biden, and the company's chief executive, Craig Jelinek, whom the president called this month to talk about the federal financial crisis.

Flashing his own Costco card, the vice president then made his way through the aisles, filling a shopping cart with all sorts of consumer goods. Among the items spotted by reporters traveling with him were at least a dozen children's books, a big apple pie, fire logs and a 32-inch Panasonic television.

“Now you know why my wife doesn't let me shop alone,” Mr. Biden told reporters cheerfully.

Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. made a surprise visit to a new Costco in Washington on Thursday.Doug Mills/The New York Times Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. made a surprise visit to a new Costco in Washington on Thursday.

Mr. Biden also appeared intrigued by the watches, studying a $1,200 timepiece for a while and even calling his daughter Ashley to “get some guidance.” It was not clear whether he ended up buying it.

But he resisted when Costco employees tried to lure him into the tire department. “Hey, man, I don't need tires,” he said. “I don't drive anymore.”

Mr. Biden's colleagues in the White House have expressed concern that the automatic tax increases set to take effect at the end of the year would depress consumer demand by as much as $200 billion next year. Evidently, Mr. Biden was trying to single-handedly prevent a “fiscal cliff” for the nation's retailers.

Some of the purchases, like the children's books, were bound for a charity founded by his wife, Jill. But others were clearly meant for presents. “I know you won't tell anybody what I bought for Christmas,” he told reporters.



Rice Engages in Nomination Ritual - Without the Nomination

The difficult Senate gantlet that Susan E. Rice is trying to navigate this week is a familiar one for cabinet and Supreme Court nominees, whose political fate often rests squarely on their ability to successfully woo key lawmakers.

Except Ms. Rice is not a nominee.

For two days, Ms. Rice, the United Nations ambassador, has engaged in an elaborate and very public process of courtesy calls to senators who will eventually play outsize roles in confirming President Obama's choice to succeed Hillary Rodham Clinton as secretary of state early next year.

But the visits by Ms. Rice - which have produced two days of scathing sound bites from her Republican detractors - are remarkable precisely because they are so premature. While he has repeatedly praised Ms. Rice, Mr. Obama has not yet nominated her to become his next secretary of state.

There is, officially, no nomination for the senators to debate.

“It seems highly unusual. I'm not sure if we can find an analogous situation,” said Jim Manley, a former top Democratic aide in the Senate who has had years of experience watching presidential nominees march through their confirmation battles.

A veteran Republican operative who has helped guide his party's presidential nominees through the Senate confirmation process also marveled on Wednesday at the unfolding spectacle between Ms. Rice and the lawmakers, saying he had never seen anything quite like it.

“It's remarkable to watch,” said the Republican, who asked not to be identified to avoid appearing to criticize Republican senators. “The only rationale for the meetings is through the prism of her being a prospective nominee. Why else would a U.N. ambassador be meeting with senators about an appearance on the Sunday talk shows unless it was for that?”

The succession of closed-door meetings on Capitol Hill have been followed by the traditional post-meeting gaggles of reporters clustered around the senators and - in the case of Ms. Rice - statements by several Republican senators expressing grave doubt as to her qualifications to succeed Mrs. Clinton as the nation's top diplomat.

“It's important that the secretary of state maintain credibility in the United States and around the world,” Susan Collins, the Republican senator from Maine, said on CNN Wednesday. Ms. Collins said she was concerned that Ms. Rice had damaged her credibility with her early appearances on Sunday morning talk shows five days after the attacks on the American Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

The fact that Mr. Obama has not yet said that he wants Ms. Rice to be his secretary of state - and may actually nominate someone else for the job - has done little to alter the sense that the confirmation process for Ms. Rice has all but begun.

That's not the way it usually works.

Presidents often float the names of potential nominees before officially making a selection. That gives senators the chance to express their opinions about the potential choices and gives the White House an idea of the difficulty that a potential nominee might have getting confirmed. Interest groups spend weeks or months gearing up their arguments for those on the shortlist.

By the time Mr. Obama officially announced in May of 2010 his choice of Elena Kagan, the solicitor general, for the Supreme Court, most people already thought she was a likely choice. Earlier, the president's choice of Timothy F. Geithner to run the Treasury Department did not come as a huge surprise to many in Washington.

But there appears to be little, if any, precedent for one of the people on a shortlist to begin the process of courting senators before a presidential announcement.

Jay Carney, the president's press secretary, was asked on Wednesday whether Ms. Rice's meetings on Capitol Hill should be seen as a “trial run” for a possible nomination. M r. Carney said that Ms. Rice saw the meetings as an opportunity to clarify her comments about the Benghazi attacks.

“I think she believed that it was entirely appropriate to meet with members who had been particularly interested in, and sometimes critical of, her appearances and what she said,” Mr. Carney told reporters. He said she was eager “to meet with them and discuss exactly what happened, where the information came from.”

If Ms. Rice had hoped that the meetings would tamp down the Republican criticism, the process seems to have failed. In several cases, the Republican senators she met with emerged from the meeting just as critical as they were before - if not more so.

Less clear is the political impact of the meetings on the president's decision about whom to nominate to replace Mrs. Clinton.

If he decides against Ms. Rice after such a public process, it would invite critics to say that he did so because of the negative assessments by R epublican senators.

If anything, the repeated criticism of Ms. Rice this week appears to have offended Mr. Obama, who repeated his faith in her after a cabinet meeting Wednesday afternoon, saying that “Susan Rice is extraordinary. I couldn't be prouder of the job she has done as ambassador.”

The remark suggests that Mr. Obama might forge ahead and nominate her for the post despite the criticism from key lawmakers, essentially betting that most senators - including many Republicans - will offer deference to a president's choice for a top cabinet post.

Mr. Manley said he believed the Republican criticism of Ms. Rice over the Benghazi attacks was “as phony an issue as a three-dollar bill.” He predicted that Republicans would not end up blocking her appointment if the president nominates her.

“The optics would look really bad if Republicans were to mount a filibuster,” Mr. Manley said. “I question how many Republicans would join in a filibus ter.”

But the Republican operative said the two days of meetings on Capitol Hill may have hurt Ms. Rice's chances of being confirmed. He said a well-orchestrated effort would have included meetings with friendly senators who could emerge from the meetings with words of praise for her potential nomination.

“Then you are at least having equilibrium in the coverage,” the Republican said. “This is an example of a political play that is trending in the wrong direction.”



A Tower Pleasing to the Ears and Eyes

The Zikmu Solo speaker tower from Parrot, which stands about 30 inches tall, was designed by Philippe Starck.The Zikmu Solo speaker tower from Parrot, which stands about 30 inches tall, was designed by Philippe Starck.

The Zikmu Solo, a stereo speaker tower from Parrot, a mobile-products maker based in Paris, has a sleek, monolithic look that is sure to turn heads at parties.

Designed by Philippe Starck, the French product designer and architect, the tower produces balanced stereo sound through an acoustic configuration that puts a speaker on each side, a third in the front and a woofer in the base. Atop the tower, which stands about 30 inches high, is a dock for an iPod or iPhone.

The tower also has Bluetooth and Wi-Fi capability for those who prefer to stream their music and maintain the aesthetic appeal of the obelisk, which comes in five colors and costs $1,000.

But the tower's simple design suggests an ease of use that is not necessarily the case. After several attempts to get the Bluetooth to work, I resorted to rebooting the speaker. When I finally got the tower paired with my iPhone 5, the connection was still sketchy, working with some apps but not others. I tried pairing other devices, but ran into similar problems.

Establishing a Wi-Fi connection required a bit of troubleshooting as well. In the end, I simply docked my iPod on top of the tower and hit “play.”

And then the sound emitting from the tower was amazing, filling the living room (and every other room in my apartment) with rich, luscious tones and a deep bass. It was akin to sitting in a concert hall.

Parrot created an app fo r iOS devices that allows users to adjust the audio settings of the Zikmu Solo. Unfortunately, the app was not ready when I tested the tower; Parrot said it would be updated soon.

The issues I had with the Zikmu were minor and would not normally be a problem. But this ultramodern speaker would be the centerpiece of any room. It looks and sounds impressive, and the last thing any owner wants when showing it off is to deal with technical problems.



Q&A: Preventing Unintended Mobile Purchases

Q.

Is there a way to keep children from buying stuff in the Google Play Store when they are entertaining themselves with my Android phone?

A.

Smartphones are great for temporarily distracting fidgety children. If you would rather not get a surprise in your credit card bill because little fingers wandered into the Google Play Store, you can set the phone to require a PIN (personal identification number) before apps and games can be purchased. You need version 3.1 or later of the Google Play Store on the phone.

To set up a PIN, open the phone's Google Play Store app. Press the Menu button and then Settings. Select the “Set or change PIN” option and enter the numeric code you want to use. Tap O.K. and re-enter the number to confirm it. Next, tap the box next to “Use PIN for purchases.”

The PIN will now be required to make a purchase from the Google Play Store. Google has instructions if you need to ch ange, remove or reset your PIN later.



The Early Word: Frustrations

In Today's Times:

  • As he travels the country trying to pressure Republicans on taxes, President Obama has been pretty quiet about what spending cuts he would support to resolve the fiscal impasse in Washington. Peter Baker notes that Mr. Obama's one-sided approach is causing consternation among Republicans and even some Democrats.
  • Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic majority leader, is going for the “nuclear option”â€" proposing to change Senate rules to make it harder for the Republican minority to use the filibuster to stall or kill legislation and nominations. Jennifer Steinhauer reports that the Republicans are loyally opposed to the move while feelings are mixed among Democrats, many of whom are frustrated by Republicans' frequent use of the tool but wary of not having it available when they are in the minority someday.
  • With Republicans' political emotions running high over the Sept. 11 Benghazi attacks, mis statements about the administration's response have jumbled the career trajectories of two senior administration officials, Scott Shane reports. Besides galvanizing Republican opposition to Ambassador Susan E. Rice's potential nomination to be the next secretary of state, the tangled talking points have also muddied the path of Michael J. Morell, the acting director of the Central Intelligence Agency, to securing the agency's top job.
  • The Obama administration is likely to make a decision as early as next week on whether and how to help topple President Bashar al-Assad's government in Syria, David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt report. They write that the administration is considering the risk to Americans and of setting off a larger conflict as it reviews its policy toward Syria.

Happening in Washington:

  • Economic data expected today include gross domestic product for the third quarter and weekly jobless claims at 8:30 a.m., followed at 1 0 by pending home sales for October and weekly mortgage rates.
  • At 10:30 a.m., Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will deliver remarks in recognition of World AIDS Day at the State Department.
  • At 12:30 p.m., President Obama and Mitt Romney, his former Republican rival for the presidency, will have lunch together at the White House.

  • At 2 p.m., a House Financial Services subcommittee with jurisdiction over monetary policy will hold a hearing on potential savings from changing the metallic content of certain coins and from replacing the $1 bill with a $1 coin.

  • Also at 2, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee will have a hearing to examine the rise in autism diagnoses.



Looking for Lessons In the 1990 Budget Deal

Thomas S. Foley, a Democrat, and John H. Sununu, a Republican, were two of the Big 8 who negotiated a bipartisan budget deal in 1990. They met Wednesday to discuss what lessons that showdown could offer those now trying to avoid a new fiscal crisis.

Explaining the Origin of the Fiscal Threat

The fiscal and economic threat created by the parties was part intentional, part coincidental.

The intentional: Since Ronald Reagan's administration, with mixed results, presidents and Congresses have occasionally mandated a self-imposed future crisis to force themselves to agree on unpopular tax and spending actions. In that spirit, the idea behind the August 2011 deal was that Republicans would so greatly fear the military cuts, and Democrats the domestic spending cuts, that they would negotiate a deficit-reduction alternative by the Jan. 1 deadline.

The coincidental: The measures from the 2011 deal are set to take effect at the same time as the changes to jobless benefits, the alternative minimum tax adjustment and the Medicare “doc fix,” and the expiration of the Bush tax cuts - a confluence that the two parties did not fully expect back in August 2011. The nation will also reach its debt ceiling in January, creating additional uncertainty. Accounting m aneuvers by the Treasury Department could push that deadline to March, but Mr. Obama wants a debt-limit increase as part of any deal, adding another item to the agenda.



Another Key Republican Senator Expresses Concern Over Rice

Senator Susan Collins, Republican of Maine, said she still harbors serious doubts about the Obama administration's explanation of its response to the deadly attack on an American mission in Benghazi, Libya, further clouding Susan E. Rice's prospects as secretary of state and dealing another serious blow to the White House.

Emerging from an hourlong meeting with Ms. Rice, the ambassador to the United Nations, Ms. Collins said on Wednesday that she remained deeply troubled that Ms. Rice did not seem to have a good answer for why the White House did not immediately classify the attack as an act of terror.

“I continue to be troubled by the fact that the United Nations ambassador decided to play what was essentially a political role at the height of a contentious presidential election campaign,” Ms. Collins told a throng of reporters after the meeting concluded.

Ms. Collins is the latest Republican senator to meet with Ms. Ri ce this week and express significant concerns about her ability to lead the State Department if nominated by President Obama.

In an effort to smooth over growing tensions with Senate Republicans, Ms. Rice met with Senators John McCain of Arizona, Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina on Tuesday. Yet all three senators said they were dismayed by what they had heard in the meeting. Ms. Ayotte and Mr. Graham went as far as to threaten to block Ms. Rice's nomination.

Ms. Collins said she would need additional information before she could support Ms. Rice's nomination. But in response to a question about support in the Senate for John Kerry of Massachusetts, who is Ms. Rice's main rival for the job, Ms. Collins said, “I think John Kerry would be an excellent appointment and would be easily confirmed by his colleagues.”

After she met wi th Ms. Collins, Ms. Rice was also scheduled to meet with Senator Bob Corker of Tennessee on Wednesday.

Congressional Republicans have accused the White House of playing down the possibility that the attack in Benghazi was terrorism because it occurred just weeks before the election and could have seriously undercut the president's contention that he has undermined Al Qaeda.

Ms. Collins echoed those concerns on Wednesday but said she was also troubled by another issue, which she described as an “eerie echo” of previous attacks on Americans in Africa.

Ms. Rice, as a senior American diplomat in Africa the late 1990s, should have known the dangers posed by terrorists there, Ms. Collins said, particularly because Americans were attacked while Ms. Rice was on the job.

“We seem not to have learned from the 1998 bombings of two of our embassies in Africa at the time when Ambassador Rice was the assistant secretary for African affairs,” Ms. Collins sai d. “These are issues I believe deserve further investing.”



What Happens if We Go Over the So-Called \'Fiscal Cliff\'?

Taxes would rise for nearly every taxpayer and many businesses. Financing for most federal programs, military and domestic, would be cut. Many economists say that while annual budget deficits are too high, these new taxes and spending cuts would be too much deficit reduction, too suddenly, for a weak economy. More than $500 billion equals roughly 3 percent to 4 percent of gross domestic product. The Congressional Budget Office has said the result would be a short recession, though some analysts say the measures could be managed so they do less damage. “Slope,” they argue, is a better metaphor than cliff.

What Tax Increases Are in Store at the End of 2012?

When a tax cut expires, the practical effect is a tax increase. And a slew of tax cuts - $400 billion for 2013 - expire on Dec. 31: All of the Bush-era rate reductions; smaller tax cuts that periodically expire for businesses and individuals; and the 2-percentage-point cut in payroll taxes that Mr. Obama pushed in 2010, which increased an average worker's take-home pay by about $1,000 a year.

Also, 28 million taxpayers - about one in five, all middle- to upper-income - would have to pay the alternative minimum tax in 2012, raising their taxes more. That is because Congress has failed to pass an inflation adjustment, as it usually does, to restrict the number of taxpayers subject to the alternative minimum largely to the affluent.



What Spending Would be Cut if a Debt Deal is Not Reached?

An emergency unemployment-compensation program is expiring, which would save $26 billion but end payments to millions of Americans who remain jobless and have exhausted state benefits. Medicare payments to doctors would be reduced 27 percent, or $11 billion, because this year Congress has not passed the usual so-called “doc fix” to block the cuts, which otherwise are required by a 1990s cost-control law.

The biggest cut would be $65 billion, enacted across the board for most federal programs over the last nine months of fiscal year 2013, from January through September. This cut, known as the sequester, was mandated by an August 2011 budget deal between Mr. Obama and Congress that ended their standoff over raising the nation's debt limit. In that deal, they agreed to reduce spending by $1 trillion over 10 years and to identify an additional $1.2 trillion in savings by January 2013. If they fail to agree on the second installment - as is the case so far - the autom atic cuts will kick in.



Explaining the \'Fiscal Cliff\'

The term refers to more than $500 billion in tax increases and across-the-board spending cuts scheduled to take effect after Jan. 1 - for fiscal year 2013 alone - unless Mr. Obama and Republicans reach an alternative deficit-reduction deal. Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, who is not known for catchy phrases, coined the metaphor “fiscal cliff” last winter to warn of the dangerous yet avoidable drop-off ahead in the nation's fiscal path. It stuck.

A version of this explainer was published on Nov. 15, 2012.



For Obama and Romney, Lunch at the White House

President Obama will have lunch with his one-time Republican rival, Mitt Romney, at the White House on Thursday, making good on an election-night pledge by the president to meet with Romney in the days ahead.

The White House announced the event in a statement released by Mr. Obama's press secretary on Wednesday.

“It will be the first opportunity they have had to visit since the election,” the statement says. “There will be no press coverage of the meeting.”

In fact, the meeting will be closely watched. The two men competed intensely against each other for the better part of a year. Mr. Romney, in private conversations with donors shortly after the election, blamed his loss in part on the president promising “gifts” to Democratic constituencies like minorities and students.

In his speech claiming victory on election night, Mr. Obama praised Mr. Romney's legacy of public service and said that he looked “for ward to sitting down with Governor Romney to talk about where we can work together to move this country forward.”

A week later, in his first post-election news conference, Mr. Obama elaborated on that promise, saying that he thought there were “certain aspects” of Mr. Romney's background that could help the country confront the fiscal challenges in the years ahead.

“I do think he did a terrific job running the Olympics,” Mr. Obama said. “And you know, that skill set of trying to figure out how do we make something work better applies to the federal government. There are a lot of ideas that I don't think are partisan ideas but are just smart ideas about how can we make the federal government more customer-friendly?”

The president added: “He presented some ideas during the course of the campaign that I actually agree with. And so it'd be interesting to talk to him about something like that.”

But it's unclear whether the lunch will lead to any long-term political partnership between the two men. Past pledges of cooperation between presidential rivals have sometimes faded amid the intense partisanship that grips Washington.

Four years ago, Senator John McCain of Arizona, who lost his presidential bid to Mr. Obama, pledged to work with the president in the weeks after the 2008 election. But Mr. McCain has become one of Mr. Obama's fiercest critics, not a bipartisan partner.



Bipartisan Group Recommends Middle Ground on Aid to Egypt

A bipartisan task force is recommending that President Obama rethink the country's approach to Egypt, and pursue a “quid pro quo” relationship that conditions American aid on the new Islamist government's cooperation on terrorism and other issues.

After decades of cooperation with Hosni Mubarak's government, the United States should build ties with President Mohamed Morsi based on mutual interests, the task force said in a report to be released on Wednesday. Rather than assume Washington can change the Islamists' ideology, the task force said, policy can leverage Egyptian behavior.

The report comes at a decisive moment in the evolving relationship between Washington and Cairo. Just last week, Mr. Morsi proved to be a critical player in working with Mr. Obama to broker a cease-fire in Gaza, leading the White House to think he could be a constructive partner in the region. But the next day, Mr. Morsi provoked an uproar at home with an edict temporarily exe mpting his decrees from judicial review.

The task force, formed by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, was headed by Vin Weber, a former Republican congressman from Minnesota who advised Mitt Romney's campaign for president, and Gregory B. Craig, a former White House counsel under Mr. Obama and top State Department official under President Bill Clinton.

In essence, the task force recommended a middle ground between continuing aid to the new Egypt without conditions and cutting it off.

The United States should “confront Egyptian leaders with a set of stark choices that would give them a pathway to act as responsible national leaders rather than as religiously inspired ideologues,” the report said. It called for “an approach whereby the United States continues to provide substantial economic and military aid while linking both direct support and backing for international financial support to Egyptian cooperat ion on key U.S. interests.”

For example, the task force suggested devoting part of United States aid to Egypt, starting at $100 million and growing over time, to encourage the government to do more to fight terrorists in the Sinai Peninsula. Mr. Obama and Congressional leaders should also tell Cairo that human rights violations or a retreat from democratic reform would make it harder to maintain a beneficial relationship.

At the same time, the task force said Washington should expand its contacts with political opposition in Egypt and recommit to spending tens of millions of dollars to support the development of civil society. “Now is not the time to trim the sails of U.S. outreach,” the report said. “To the contrary, now is the time to redouble U.S. effort to talk with the broad array of actors in Egypt's fluid political environment.”

Follow Peter Baker on Twitter at @peterbakernyt.



Virginia Lieutenant Governor Won\'t Run for State\'s Top Job

Bill Bolling, Virginia's lieutenant governor, has decided not to seek the Republican nomination for governor next year, clearing the way for a high-profile battle between the state's conservative attorney general and an ally of former President Bill Clinton.

Sources familiar with Mr. Bolling's decision said he planned to announce it Wednesday morning. Mr. Bolling is in his second four-year term as lieutenant governor and had been widely expected to seek the state's top elected job.

His decision means Republicans will avoid a costly and potentially damaging nominating contest between Mr. Bolling and Kenneth T. Cuccinelli II, the attorney general. Last year the Republicans decided they would choose the nominee at a state party convention, rather than in a primary, a move that was seen as a victory for Mr. Cuccinelli, who is popular among conservative activists who are likely to attend.

Mr. Cuccinelli, a Tea Party favorite, has supported conservative social legislation, including limits on abortion clinics in the state. He was also a leading voice nationally in the fight against President Obama‘s health care legislation, filing the first legal challenge to the law.

He is likely to be challenged for the party's nomination by some less well known Republicans. But if he gets the nomination, Mr. Cuccinelli will probably face Terry McAuliffe, a former chairman of the Democratic National Committee and a fund-raiser and confidant of Mr. Clinton.

Mr. McAuliffe sought the Democratic nomination for governor four years ago, but lost in a primary campaign against Creigh Deeds, a Democratic state senator. Mr. Deeds went on to lose the governorship to Robert F. McDonnell, the state's current Republican governor.

Virginia is one of two states that elect governors a year before Congressional midterm elections (New Jersey is the other). The results of these races are sometimes viewed as an ear ly indicator of the country's political mood in the year after a presidential campaign.

In Virginia, the race for the executive mansion in Richmond is likely to be a costly one. Mr. McAuliffe was a prolific fund-raiser for Mr. Clinton and is likely to raise millions of dollars in his bid to win the office that Thomas Jefferson once held.

But Mr. Cuccinelli is sure to be the recipient of donations from national Tea Party and conservative organizations.

The clash between the two men would play out against the backdrop of a state that has been changing demographically and politically. Tim Kaine, the state's former Democratic governor, won a seat in the United States Senate earlier this month and Mr. Obama won Virginia for the second time.

Both Democrats won in part by tapping into a growing minority population in the state and by appealing to the state's populous Northern Virginia region.

But parts of the state remain very conservative, and Mr. Cuc cinelli is from Northern Virginia, where he hopes to perform better than some previous Republicans. Mitt Romney lost the state in his battle with Mr. Obama in part by underperforming in key suburban parts of the state.

Mr. Bolling was Mr. Romney's state chairman.

Follow Michael D. Shear on Twitter at @shearm.



Lobbying Efforts Continue Ahead of Fiscal Deadline

Summary for graphic goes here



Durbin to Stress Liberal Viewpoints in Speech

Richard J. Durbin of Illinois, the second ranking Democrat in the Senate, will make the liberal case for a major deficit reduction deal on Tuesday morning, arguing that it is in the left's interest to ensure the long-term viability of Medicare and Medicaid while using a "Grand Bargain" to win concessions on upfront spending to improve the economy.

Focus on Small in Race of Ideas

President Obama may have Air Force One to take him around as he tries to sell his ideas for deficit reductions, but that doesn't mean House Republicans won't be on the move as well.

The Early Word: No Satisfaction

Today's Times

  • Susan E. Rice, the ambassador to the United Nations, hoped to smooth over a festering dispute with Republican senators on Tuesday with a conciliatory meeting about the attacks in Libya, Mark Landler and Jeremy W. Peters report. But lawmakers were anything but satisfied, saying they would still oppose Ms. Rice if she were nominated for secretary of state.
  • Erskine B. Bowles, Democrat of North Carolina, and former Senator Alan K. Simpson, Republican of Wyoming, have perfected a wonks' version of a hit Off Broadway show, pushing the recommendations from their bipartisan fiscal commission in presentations around the nation, Jackie Calmes reports. That so many people talk about “Simpson-Bowles” as if it is shorthand for the solution to the nation's fiscal woes is a testament to the men's indefatigable efforts.
  • Tuesday was a day of mixed signals about whether progress is being made to avoid the “fiscal cliff.” Jon athan Weisman writes that senior Democrats took a stern posture, saying President Obama would not accept any deficit reduction deal that did not include an extension of the debt ceiling. But a senior House Republican on Tuesday urged his party's leadership to work with the president now, embracing the immediate extension of the Bush-era tax cuts for households earning less than $250,000, then fighting out the fate of higher-income tax breaks later.
  • Lizette Alvarez delves into the grass-roots operation that resulted in a high voter turnout among Latinos.

Around the Web

  • President Obama signed a bill that exempts United States airlines from European carbon emissions fees, despite objections from environmentalists, The Hill reports.

Happenings in Washington

  • President Obama will host a cabinet meeting in the White House, followed by a meeting with business leaders in the Roosevelt Room.
  • Vice Preside nt Joseph R. Biden Jr. will attend both gatherings with the president and meet with Martin Schulz, president of the European Parliament, as well.
  • Michelle Obama will welcome military families to the White House to view this year's holiday decorations.

     



    Mexico\'s President-Elect Discusses Immigration Policy With Obama

    The incoming president of Mexico visited President Obama in the White House on Tuesday and vowed to help him pass comprehensive legislation overhauling the American immigration system even as Republicans begin looking for a bill they can support too.

    Enrique Peña Nieto, who will be inaugurated as Mexico's president on Saturday, made the customary stop in Washington first to get acquainted with his northern counterpart. His arrival coincided with a postelection political shift in Washington that has given fresh momentum to long-stalled proposals to liberalize immigration policy.

    “We fully support your proposal, sir, for this migration reform,” Mr. Peña Nieto told Mr. Obama in the Oval Office. “More than demanding what you should do or shouldn't do, we do want to tell you that we want to contribute. We really want to participate with you. We want to contribute towards the accomplishment.”

    Mr. Peña Nieto's visit came on the same day that two re tiring Republican senators unveiled their own proposal to make it easier for immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children to stay, a sign of the rapidly evolving politics of immigration.

    Senators Jon Kyl of Arizona and Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas introduced what they called the Achieve Act as an alternative to the so-called Dream Act supported by Mr. Obama and most Democrats. The Kyl-Hutchison plan would give legal residency to many younger illegal immigrants, but not a path to citizenship as the Democratic version would.

    “Many young people in this country are here illegally through no fault of their own,” the two senators said in a joint written statement. “Relegating a potentially productive portion of the population to the shadows is neither humane nor good economic or social policy.”

    A number of prominent conservatives, including Speaker John A. Boehner of Ohio, former Gov. Haley Barbour of Mis sissippi and the Fox News host Sean Hannity, have embraced some moves toward easing immigration rules since this month's election. Latinos made up 10 percent of the electorate for the first time and overwhelmingly supported Mr. Obama's re-election.

    Unless they relax the party's traditional hard line on illegal immigration, some Republicans believe they risk long-term political damage. As a result, the White House, which had largely abandoned immigration legislation since Republicans took control of the House in the 2010 midterm elections in favor of less sweeping executive action, now sees a chance for early bipartisan consensus on the issue in the new year.

    The Kyl-Hutchison proposal would extend legal residency to illegal immigrants seeking college degrees or serving in the military who entered the country before the age of 14, have lived here for five years, have not committed a felony, can demonstrate knowledge of English and are still 28 or younger, or 32 if they have a degree from an American college. They would be denied access to public welfare benefits, federal student loans or other federal benefits.

    Immigration activists rejected the proposal. United We Dream, a network of young immigrants, called it “a cynical political gesture” because it does not provide a road map to citizenship. “We won't stop fighting until we win citizenship for every single new American,” Lorella Praeli, the group's advocacy and policy director, said in a statement.

    In addressing reporters in the Oval Office, Mr. Peña Nieto did not elaborate on how he hoped to help Mr. Obama pass immigration legislation. Before arriving at the White House, he visited Capitol Hill, where he had a photo opportunity with Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the House Democratic minority leader. “We hope to address the migration issue by having comprehensive immigration reform brought before the Congress when the president sends it to us,” she said.

    After several years in which security and drugs dominated the Mexican-American relationship, Mr. Peña Nieto stressed that he wanted to talk about a variety of other issues as well, including jobs, trade, North American integration and education.

    Mr. Obama announced that he would send Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to Mr. Peña Nieto's inauguration on Saturday and hinted that he would visit himself in 2013. “Any excuses to go to Mexico,” Mr. Obama said, “I'm always game.”



    Obama Goes Back on the Trail Ahead of Debt Talks

    After weeks under fire, Susan E. Rice will face her accusers on Tuesday.

    Ms. Rice, the president's ambassador to the United Nations and a front-runner to be the next secretary of state, will meet with Senator John McCain of Arizona and two other Republican senators who have excoriated her, saying she provided a misleading account of the attack on the diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya.

    Ms. Rice asked for the meeting, according to a government official. Mr. McCain seemed to soften his opposition to her potential nomination on “Fox News Sunday” and said “she deserves the ability and the opportunity to explain herself.” Also attending the meeting will be Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, officials said. Ms. Rice will be accompanied by Michael J. Morell, the acting C.I.A. director.

    The White House welcomed Mr. McCain's shift in tone during a briefing Monday before news of the meeting was disclosed. “ I certainly saw those comments and appreciate them,” said Jay Carney, the White House press secretary. “As the president has said, and I and others have said, Ambassador Rice has done an excellent job at the United Nations and is highly qualified for any number of positions in the foreign policy arena.”

    Ms. Rice told a series of Sunday talk shows in the week after the Benghazi attack that it stemmed from a spontaneous protest that extremists then exploited, rather than being a premeditated terrorist attack. That characterization proved inaccurate, and Republicans seized on her interviews as evidence of an attempted cover-up by the administration. The White House has defended Ms. Rice by saying she was simply articulating talking points produced by intelligence agencies.

    Mr. Obama has not said whom he will nominate to replace outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, but Ms. Rice was seen as the favorite until the Be nghazi episode. Mr. Obama's sharp and aggressive defense of her at a postelection news conference led many in Washington to think he may yet go ahead with her nomination and dare Republicans to oppose her. Another top candidate, according to White House officials, is Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, the Foreign Relations Committee chairman and a former presidential candidate.



    Obama Goes Back on the Trail Ahead of Debt Talks

    President Obama plans to try to ratchet up public pressure on Congress to accept his ideas for resolving the looming tax-and-spending crisis with a series of events at the White House and on the road this week.

    TimesCast Politics: Strong Words After Susan Rice Visits Capitol Hill

    Today's Times

    • Some liberal lawmakers are resisting significant changes to entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare, but many Republicans say President Obama will have to acquiesce if he wants to strike a deal with Congress, Robert Pear reports.
    • With the retirement of Senator Joseph I. Lieberman in January, Senators John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina will lose a colleague who has contributed to the veneer of bipartisanship that helped advance their foreign policy goals for more than a decade, Jennifer Steinhauer writes.

    • A special primary election to replace Jesse L. Jackson Jr., who resigned his House seat last week, will be held in February in Illinois, and the line to succeed him is forming fast, Steven Yaccino and Monica Davey report.

       Around the Web

      • Politico wants to know how that whole “super PAC” thing is workin g out.
      • Former President Jimmy Carter is in Haiti building houses in a town still devastated by the 2010 earthquake, The Associated Press reports.

       Happenings in Washington

      • Enrique Peña Nieto, president-elect of Mexico, will meet with President Obama and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. in the White House. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will attend as well.


      TimesCast Politics: Strong Words After Susan Rice Visits Capitol Hill

      Senators McCain and Graham versus the potential secretary of state. | The prospects for filibuster reform. | Obama in campaign mode for the fiscal negotiations.



      Durbin to Stress Liberal Viewpoints in Speech

      Senators McCain and Graham versus the potential secretary of state. | The prospects for filibuster reform. | Obama in campaign mode for the fiscal negotiations.



      Mexico\'s President-Elect Discusses Immigration Policy With Obama

      The incoming president of Mexico visited President Obama in the White House on Tuesday and vowed to help him pass comprehensive legislation overhauling the American immigration system even as Republicans begin looking for a bill they can support too.

      Enrique Peña Nieto, who will be inaugurated as Mexico's president on Saturday, made the customary stop in Washington first to get acquainted with his northern counterpart. His arrival coincided with a postelection political shift in Washington that has given fresh momentum to long-stalled proposals to liberalize immigration policy.

      “We fully support your proposal, sir, for this migration reform,” Mr. Peña Nieto told Mr. Obama in the Oval Office. “More than demanding what you should do or shouldn't do, we do want to tell you that we want to contribute. We really want to participate with you. We want to contribute towards the accomplishment.”

      Mr. Peña Nieto's visit came on the same day that two re tiring Republican senators unveiled their own proposal to make it easier for immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children to stay, a sign of the rapidly evolving politics of immigration.

      Senators Jon Kyl of Arizona and Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas introduced what they called the Achieve Act as an alternative to the so-called Dream Act supported by Mr. Obama and most Democrats. The Kyl-Hutchison plan would give legal residency to many younger illegal immigrants, but not a path to citizenship as the Democratic version would.

      “Many young people in this country are here illegally through no fault of their own,” the two senators said in a joint written statement. “Relegating a potentially productive portion of the population to the shadows is neither humane nor good economic or social policy.”

      A number of prominent conservatives, including Speaker John A. Boehner of Ohio, former Gov. Haley Barbour of Mis sissippi and the Fox News host Sean Hannity, have embraced some moves toward easing immigration rules since this month's election. Latinos made up 10 percent of the electorate for the first time and overwhelmingly supported Mr. Obama's re-election.

      Unless they relax the party's traditional hard line on illegal immigration, some Republicans believe they risk long-term political damage. As a result, the White House, which had largely abandoned immigration legislation since Republicans took control of the House in the 2010 midterm elections in favor of less sweeping executive action, now sees a chance for early bipartisan consensus on the issue in the new year.

      The Kyl-Hutchison proposal would extend legal residency to illegal immigrants seeking college degrees or serving in the military who entered the country before the age of 14, have lived here for five years, have not committed a felony, can demonstrate knowledge of English and are still 28 or younger, or 32 if they have a degree from an American college. They would be denied access to public welfare benefits, federal student loans or other federal benefits.

      Immigration activists rejected the proposal. United We Dream, a network of young immigrants, called it “a cynical political gesture” because it does not provide a road map to citizenship. “We won't stop fighting until we win citizenship for every single new American,” Lorella Praeli, the group's advocacy and policy director, said in a statement.

      In addressing reporters in the Oval Office, Mr. Peña Nieto did not elaborate on how he hoped to help Mr. Obama pass immigration legislation. Before arriving at the White House, he visited Capitol Hill, where he had a photo opportunity with Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, the House Democratic minority leader. “We hope to address the migration issue by having comprehensive immigration reform brought before the Congress when the president sends it to us,” she said.

      After several years in which security and drugs dominated the Mexican-American relationship, Mr. Peña Nieto stressed that he wanted to talk about a variety of other issues as well, including jobs, trade, North American integration and education.

      Mr. Obama announced that he would send Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. to Mr. Peña Nieto's inauguration on Saturday and hinted that he would visit himself in 2013. “Any excuses to go to Mexico,” Mr. Obama said, “I'm always game.”



      Focus on Small in Race of Ideas

      Summary for graphic goes here



      In Protesting Cuts, AIDS Activists Bare All

      Summary for graphic goes here



      In Protesting Cuts, AIDS Activists Bare All

      AIDS activists on Tuesday took what they saw as the naked truth to the office of the House speaker, John A. Boehner of Ohio, stripping down to protest further spending cuts in any deal to head off a fiscal crisis in January.

      The Early Word: No Satisfaction

      Today's Times

      • Susan E. Rice, the ambassador to the United Nations, hoped to smooth over a festering dispute with Republican senators on Tuesday with a conciliatory meeting about the attacks in Libya, Mark Landler and Jeremy W. Peters report. But lawmakers were anything but satisfied, saying they would still oppose Ms. Rice if she were nominated for secretary of state.
      • Erskine B. Bowles, Democrat of North Carolina, and former Senator Alan K. Simpson, Republican of Wyoming, have perfected a wonks' version of a hit Off Broadway show, pushing the recommendations from their bipartisan fiscal commission in presentations around the nation, Jackie Calmes reports. That so many people talk about “Simpson-Bowles” as if it is shorthand for the solution to the nation's fiscal woes is a testament to the men's indefatigable efforts.
      • Tuesday was a day of mixed signals about whether progress is being made to avoid the “fiscal cliff.” Jon athan Weisman writes that senior Democrats took a stern posture, saying President Obama would not accept any deficit reduction deal that did not include an extension of the debt ceiling. But a senior House Republican on Tuesday urged his party's leadership to work with the president now, embracing the immediate extension of the Bush-era tax cuts for households earning less than $250,000, then fighting out the fate of higher-income tax breaks later.
      • Lizette Alvarez delves into the grass-roots operation that resulted in a high voter turnout among Latinos.

      Around the Web

      • President Obama signed a bill that exempts United States airlines from European carbon emissions fees, despite objections from environmentalists, The Hill reports.

      Happenings in Washington

      • President Obama will host a cabinet meeting in the White House, followed by a meeting with business leaders in the Roosevelt Room.
      • Vice Preside nt Joseph R. Biden Jr. will attend both gatherings with the president and meet with Martin Schulz, president of the European Parliament, as well.
      • Michelle Obama will welcome military families to the White House to view this year's holiday decorations.

         



        Tip of the Week: Screen Savers That Educate

        Screen saver programs, originally intended to help prevent damage to older computer monitors, are often used now for security or entertainment purposes when the computer is idle. Most operating systems include a few built-in screen savers that display animated geometric patterns or photos, but you do not have to go too far to find screen savers that educate as well.

        Windows users still trying to get the hang of Microsoft Office 2010, for example, can grab a free screen saver that shows tips for using the software. A trial version of the Universal Tutor screen saver from Cool Educational Software is available; an annual subscription costs $30.

        Recent versions of Mac OS X have included screen savers that display the Word of the Day from the New Oxford American Dictionary, or an RSS Visualizer that pulls down headlines from online news sources. To see what is available in your version of Mac OS X, click the System Preferences icon in the Dock, click on the Desktop and Screen Saver icon and click the Screen Saver tab in the box.

        Plenty of shareware sites offer free screen savers, but be careful when installing any third-party program, as malicious software may also be along for the ride. Screen savers can also sap resources from the computer, so go to your computer's settings and just set your monitor to turn off after a short period of inactivity if you would rather not lose processing power. But if your computer has power to spare, donating its idle time to a group-computing effort like SETI@Home or one from the Boinc project usually gets you an interesting screen saver - while helping scientific causes.



        Q&A: Blocking Game Invites on Facebook

        Q.

        I have a Facebook friend who constantly spams me with invitations for games. Can I discreetly block all these invites?

        A.

        Facebook includes tools to let you ignore invitations from friends asking to join them in apps and games. If you missed the “Ignore All Invites From This Friend” link on the latest invitation, you can set up a block before the next invite arrives.

        Just click the account menu on the top right side of your Facebook page and choose Privacy Settings. On the Privacy Settings page, scroll down to the “Blocked People and Apps” section and click on Manage Blocking. In the “Block app invites” area, enter the user name or the e-mail address of the friend who keeps sending you the invitations; that person will not get a notification that you have blocked the invites.



        Putting a 13-Year-Old Child Safely on Facebook

        Teens see joining Facebook as a passage into adulthood. Parents see it a little differently. Teens see joining Facebook as a passage into adulthood. Parents see it a little differently.

        An e-mail in my inbox Monday morning from my editor had a scary subject line: “Help!”

        When I opened the message, I read this: “My daughter is 13-years-old today and so, as promised, I let her sign up for Facebook. YIKES. Now I am freaking out over her privacy settings!”

        Even for an adult, Facebook's privacy settings are as daunting as trying to do your taxes with an abacus. For teenagers, unaware of the consequences of their online actions, using Facebook incorrectly could potentially leave a digital trail that might follow them a ll the way through high school, college and into the real world. What's more, there are also creepy people out there on social networks.

        Here's what I told my editor.

        First, you should sit down with children and explain that anything - stress the word anything â€"they post can and will be used against them on the Internet. This includes private messages and photos they believe are visible only to friends and comments they leave on people's pictures or status updates. Although all of these things can be set to private, a friend-turned-enemy could take a screenshot of something your teenager has shared, then send it around school for all to jeer at.

        screenshots via FacebookMake sure your child's pictures are visible only to their friends.

        Teenagers should assume that there is no such thing as private on Facebook. The company has repeatedly changed settings that were once private, to public, and there is nothing to say Facebook will not do this again. Even so, you will want to go through your child's Facebook settings to make them as private as possible.

        To begin, click on the arrow in the top right and then scroll down to Privacy Settings. Once inside, the first thing you will want to do is ensure that anything your child posts on Facebook is only visible to Friends, not the Public.

        Once you have done this, methodically go through every setting - be aware, there are dozens of them - and change your child's account to only be visible to Friends.

        I would recommend leaving the “Who can send you friend requests?” tab open to Everyone for the first week or so. Like a child's first few days in school, let him corral friends on the social network, then you can go back into this option and chan ge it to only allow Friends of Friends later.

        To prevent an excerpt from your child's Facebook page from showing up in public search engines, including Google and Bing, be sure to go to the Apps tab in the privacy settings and click on “Public search.” Then make sure you disable “Enable public search.”

        One of the most important privacy settings is how personal information is used in ads. This is where Facebook uses you, or your likes, in advertisements on the Web site. For example, if you like Coca-Cola, Facebook will show your friends ads for Coke using your name as part of the advertisement. (A bit creepy, I know.)

        You will want to change your child's ads settings to “No One.”

        To change this, click on the Facebook Ads tab. Then click on the two links that say “Edit third party ad settings” and “Edit social ads setting” and change these options to “No one.”

        When I talked to my editor later in the day, she mentioned that her child had logged into the new Facebook account on a friend's iPhone that day. This, you should stress, is a very bad idea. If your child forgets to log out, the person can now see everything on their Facebook page, including private chats and messages.

        Just like teaching a teenager how to park a car until they get it right, I would recommend sitting over a child's shoulder and watching them log in and then log out of his or her Facebook account in a way that doesn't save the password.

        You can see other tips from Facebook on the site's Teen Safety Area.

        Oh, and one last thing: Friend your teenager on Facebook.



        Senate Leaders Take to Floor Over Process Dispute

        So much for holiday cheer. Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, and his Republican counterpart, Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, had a legislative throwdown on the Senate floor Monday afternoon over the future of the filibuster, a sore issue for both parties.

        Mr. Reid has said that at the beginning of the next Congress, he will attempt to diminish the power of Republicans to slow or stop legislation by putting limits on the filibuster.

        Mr. McConnell, so frosted by proposed rules changes that he called “a mortal threat” to “one of the most cherished safeguards of our government,” took his umbrage to the floor Monday, warning of a “naked power grab” that would eventually “poison party relations even more,” he said.

        Senate Republicans have refused to let scores of bills go forward in recent years, often because Mr. Reid will not allow the party to put amendments on those bills. This practice i s deplored by the minority in both chambers, but only in the Senate can bills be stopped through the minority protest. Mr. Reid would like to limit what procedural motions are subject to filibusters, and to force senators to return to the practice of standing around forever, reading the phone book or what have you, if they choose to filibuster a bill before its final passage.

        “If a bare majority can proceed to any bill it chooses,” said Mr. McConnell, deeply angry, “and once on that bill the majority leader all by himself can shut out all the amendments that aren't to his liking, then those who elected us to advocate for their views will have lost their voices in this legislative process.”

        Mr. Reid countered that the filibuster was “not part of the Constitution.”

        “It's something we developed here to help get legislation passed,” he said. “Now it's being used to stop legislation from passing.”

        Should be an interesting rest of the year.



        Susan Rice to Discuss Benghazi With Republican Critics in Senate

        After weeks under fire, Susan E. Rice will face her accusers on Tuesday.

        Ms. Rice, the president's ambassador to the United Nations and a front-runner to be the next secretary of state, will meet with Senator John McCain of Arizona and two other Republican senators who have excoriated her, saying she provided a misleading account of the attack on the diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya.

        Ms. Rice asked for the meeting, according to a government official. Mr. McCain seemed to soften his opposition to her potential nomination on “Fox News Sunday” and said “she deserves the ability and the opportunity to explain herself.” Also attending the meeting will be Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, officials said. Ms. Rice will be accompanied by Michael J. Morell, the acting C.I.A. director.

        The White House welcomed Mr. McCain's shift in tone during a briefing Monday before news of the meeting was disclosed. “ I certainly saw those comments and appreciate them,” said Jay Carney, the White House press secretary. “As the president has said, and I and others have said, Ambassador Rice has done an excellent job at the United Nations and is highly qualified for any number of positions in the foreign policy arena.”

        Ms. Rice told a series of Sunday talk shows in the week after the Benghazi attack that it stemmed from a spontaneous protest that extremists then exploited, rather than being a premeditated terrorist attack. That characterization proved inaccurate, and Republicans seized on her interviews as evidence of an attempted cover-up by the administration. The White House has defended Ms. Rice by saying she was simply articulating talking points produced by intelligence agencies.

        Mr. Obama has not said whom he will nominate to replace outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, but Ms. Rice was seen as the favorite until the Be nghazi episode. Mr. Obama's sharp and aggressive defense of her at a postelection news conference led many in Washington to think he may yet go ahead with her nomination and dare Republicans to oppose her. Another top candidate, according to White House officials, is Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, the Foreign Relations Committee chairman and a former presidential candidate.



        The Early Word: Give and Take

        Today's Times

        • Some liberal lawmakers are resisting significant changes to entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicare, but many Republicans say President Obama will have to acquiesce if he wants to strike a deal with Congress, Robert Pear reports.
        • With the retirement of Senator Joseph I. Lieberman in January, Senators John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina will lose a colleague who has contributed to the veneer of bipartisanship that helped advance their foreign policy goals for more than a decade, Jennifer Steinhauer writes.
        • A special primary election to replace Jesse L. Jackson Jr., who resigned his House seat last week, will be held in February in Illinois, and the line to succeed him is forming fast, Steven Yaccino and Monica Davey report.

           Around the Web

          • Politico wants to know how that whole “super PAC” thing is working out.
          • Former Presid ent Jimmy Carter is in Haiti building houses in a town still devastated by the 2010 earthquake, The Associated Press reports.

           Happenings in Washington

          • Enrique Peña Nieto, president-elect of Mexico, will meet with President Obama and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. in the White House. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will attend as well.


          Norquist Says Some Republicans Having \'Impure Thoughts\' on Taxes

          Grover Norquist on Monday found a new way of dismissing the handful of Republican lawmakers - including the House majority leader - who are now publicly wavering about his pledge they signed not ever to raise taxes.

          Mr. Norquist, the anti-tax crusader who urges every new lawmaker to sign the pledge, joked on CNN's “Starting Point” that “we've got some people discussing impure thoughts on national television.” But he insisted that the vast majority of Republicans will pay them no mind.

          “They all said this two years ago, when we w ere arguing over the debt ceiling limit,” Mr. Norquist said in the interview. “We cut spending. We didn't raise taxes. So other Republicans did not listen.”

          Mr. Norquist's position as the chief enforcer of the Republican party's no-tax stance is under fire in Washington as President Obama pressures Republicans in Congress to reach a compromise that increases taxes on wealthy Americans.

          Not wanting to be boxed in by Mr. Norquist's pledge, some key lawmakers are saying publicly that they might be willing to raise taxes - in certain circumstances.

          The latest to express some doubt about the pledge is Representative Eric Cantor, the majority leader in the House and a staunch, anti-tax crusader himself.

          In an appearance on MSNBC's “Morning Joe” program Monday, Mr. Cantor repeated his insistence that Republicans in the House “weren't elected to raise taxes.” But he also downplayed the pledge as something that would n't necessarily bind his caucus in the House.

          “A lot has been said about this pledge and I will tell you when I go to the constituents that re-elected me, it is not about that pledge, it really is about trying to solve problems,” Mr. Cantor said.

          That's not quite as far some other lawmakers have been willing to go. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said flat out that he'd break the pledge if Democrats agree to cuts in entitlement programs. And Representative Peter King of New York said he doesn't feel bound by the pledge any more than he'd insist on attacking Japan now because of a pledge to do so made during World War II.

          “The world has changed,” Mr King said on NBC's “Meet the Press” program on Sunday.

          A smiling Mr. Norquist dismissed the comments by Mr. King, Mr. Graham and others as not reflective of the broader Republican party. And he said that lawmakers who break the tax pledge do so at the risk of angering the voters who sen t them to Washington.

          “You can either reform government so that it spends less and works better, or you can raise taxes to keep doing all the things we have been doing that haven't worked very well,” Mr. Norquist said on CNN.

          If Mr. Norquist seemed confident, the numbers are so far on his side. His Web site lists 258 members of the 213th Congress who have signed his pledge, including 219 in the House and 39 in the Senate.

          So far, only about a half-dozen have said expressed doubts about the pledge, and none have yet proved that they are willing to break the pledge with a vote to increase taxes. That test could come in the next six weeks.

          The pressure to reach a compromise may work on them - and on others. But the Republican lawmakers also face real risks that voters in their states will be angry. And many could face serious challenges from a conservative, Tea Party activist if they vote for a compromise that includes a tax hike.

          Mr. Norquist offered his own warning to those members.

          “If you want to go to your voters and say I promised you this, and I'm breaking my promise, you can have that conversation,” he said. “You're not having an argument with me. You've made a commitment to your voters.”

          Follow Michael D. Shear on Twitter at @shearm.



          Debt Reckoning: Updates on the Fiscal Deadline

          About Debt Reckoning

          The New York Times is starting a new online feature to follow the talks between President Obama and Congressional leaders over the so-called fiscal cliff. In the weeks ahead we will use this space to track developments from the White House and Capitol Hill, explain the major economic and fiscal issues, examine public opinion and analyze the options that the parties are considering, among other things.



          A Phone Cradle for More GPS Power

          The Magellan Car Kit improves the GPS of an iPhone or iPod Touch. The Magellan Car Kit improves the GPS of an iPhone or iPod Touch.

          Magellan may be best known for its dashboard GPS navigation products, particularly its oversize offerings like the Magellan RoadMate 9250Tâ€"LMB with its 7-inch screen.

          But now it is making a product that helps bring a small screen to your dashboard, a GPS car kit that adds a more powerful antenna, speaker and charging for an iPhone 3GS, 4 and 4S, as well as the third- and fourth-generation iPod Touch.

          The $100 cradle has a 30-pin connector at the bottom and a secure ratcheting clamp at the top. There is even an  adjustable bumper to push up against the back of the phone so it won't rattle around. The whole assembly attaches to a suction cup mount that sticks on your windshield.

          In a test using the car kit and a stand-alone iPhone, the car kit produced directions a little bit faster than the unmounted iPhone â€" and this was in an area with strong reception.

          Of course, Magellan would like you to use it with its $50 navigation app - which happens to be quite good. But you are not limited to its app. The cradle will work with any navigation software you care to put on screen.

          One thing that's a bit quirky: Although the device plugs in, you still have to connect the audio wirelessly using Bluetooth, which appears to interfere with my car's hands-free Bluetooth system.



          British Soft Drink Companies Agree $2.3 Billion Merger

          LONDON - The British beverage company Britvic agreed on Wednesday to an all-share merger with a rival British maker of soft drink A.G. Barr in a deal worth around $2.3 billion.

          Under the terms of the deal, shareholders in Britvic will own a 63 percent stake in the combined company, while A.G. Barr's investors will retain a 37 percent holding.

          The merged company, whose brands include Robinsons fruit drinks and the license to distribute several Pepsi products in Britain, will have annual revenue of £1.5 billion, or $2.4 billion, making it one of Europe's largest soft drink makers.

          Britvic and A.G. Barr, which had been in discussions since September, said the deal would help them to increase their market share in the British beverage market, while allowing them to expand internationally, particularly in the United States and France.

          “The merger of A.G. Barr and Britvic will create a world class soft drink company,” Britvic's chairman, Gerald Corbett, said in a statement. “The combination makes huge commercial and industrial sense.”

          Shares in Britvic rose 2.6 percent in morning trading in London, while stock in A.G. Barr increased 3.5 percent. The companies have a combined market capitalization of £1.4 billion.

          As part of the deal, the companies said they would hoped to achieve up to £40 million of yearly cost savings by 2016.

          Roger White, A.G. Barr's chief executive, will lead the merged company and Britvic's chief financial officer, John Gibney, will continue that role in the expanded drink maker, according to a company statement.

          Citigroup and Nomura advised Britvic on the deal, while Rothschild advised A.G. Barr.



          Defense Opens Insider Trade Case With Attack on Witnesses

          Jurors were presented with a stark choice in the insider trading trial of two former hedge fund managers. The defendants were either the senior links in a “corrupt chain” of Wall Street traders, or were scapegoats for the criminal conduct of their subordinates.

          On Tuesday, a jury heard opening arguments in the trial of Anthony Chiasson, a co-founder of the now-defunct Level Global Investors, and Todd Newman, a former portfolio manager of Diamondback Capital Management. They are accused of conspiring with six others to earn roughly $70 million from illegal trading in technology stocks.

          The other six defendants have pleaded guilty and are cooperating with the prosecution. Two of the six, Jesse Tortora, a former Diamondback analyst, and Spyridon Adondakis, who goes by Sam, a former analyst at LevelGlobal, are expected to be the government's main witnesses.

          They “will paint a picture of a corrupt network of professionals who chose to break the rules an d to trade on inside information all in order to make a quick buck,” said Richard C. Tarlowe, a prosecutor.

          Yet the defense spent much of Tuesday attacking the credibility of the government witnesses. “The biggest mistake Todd Newman ever made, and the reason he's sitting here today, is because he hired Jesse Tortora,” Stephen Fishbein, a lawyer representing Mr. Newman, said in his opening statement.

          “Sam Adondakis is an easy, practiced liar,” said Reid H. Weingarten, a lawyer for Mr. Chiasson. “His word cannot be trusted.”

          Early this year, federal prosecutors in Manhattan charged the eight Wall Street traders with participating in a “tight-knit circle of greed” that relied on secret financial information provided to them by corporate insiders at the computer company Dell and the chip maker Nvidia.

          The trial, in Federal District Court in Manhattan before Judge Richard J. Sullivan, is expected to last six weeks. If convicted, the defe ndants could be sentenced to at least 25 years in prison, though they probably would receive far less time.

          On Tuesday, prosecutors described how confidential information moved “across a corrupt chain of people” and ultimately into the hands of Mr. Chiasson, 39, and Mr. Newman, 47. That information, Mr. Tarlowe said, gave the defendants “an unfair advantage over honest investors who were playing by the rules.”

          The prosecution previewed several pieces of evidence, including e-mails and instant messages among the defendants and their analysts. The communications, according to the government, suggest that in 2008 the managers had secret information about Dell's gross margin numbers, crucial figures in its earnings release. With access to those inside numbers, Level Global made $50 million and Diamondback about $2.8 million by betting against Dell stock before the company released its earnings, the prosecution said.

          Lawyers for the defense spent much of their opening statements trying to distance their clients from those accused of being their co-conspirators.

          Mr. Tortora and Mr. Adondakis, with a few of the other defendants, worked together earlier in their careers as technology industry analysts at Prudential Equity Group in San Francisco. Mr. Weingarten, a lawyer for Mr. Chiasson, said that the group referred to themselves as “the clique” and likened themselves to “Fight Club,” a 1999 cult film about a secret, underground fight club.

          “The first rule of the fight club is that there is no fight club,” Mr. Weingarten said, paraphrasing a famous line from the movie.

          The clique “traveled together, partied together, drank together, vacationed in the Hamptons together,” he said. “They were very close, and they shared information as well.”

          But neither Mr. Chiasson nor Mr. Newman was part of this clique, and they were far removed from the original sources of inside information, their l awyers insisted. Instead, the two defendants were depicted as upstanding, hardworking portfolio managers whose investments were grounded in legitimate research.

          Both defendants processed so much data over the course of a trading day, their lawyers said, that they would not have been aware of improperly obtained data. To underscore that point, lawyers for Mr. Newman showed the jury a slide highlighting how in a given year, Mr. Newman made 32,222 trades, or roughly 128 trades a day, in the stocks of 366 companies.

          The defense lawyers said that Mr. Tortora and Mr. Adondakis had falsely accused their clients to protect themselves. In November 2010, Mr. Tortora had lost his job at Diamondback and was living in Florida. When F.B.I. agents knocked on his door and presented him with evidence of insider trading, his only way out was to help the government, Mr. Fishbein, Mr. Newman's lawyer, said.

          “Make Todd Newman a scapegoat so Jesse Tortora does not have to face the consequences of crossing the line,” said he said.

          Mr. Weingarten urged the jury, which includes a dog walker and a retired postal worker, not to resent the extraordinary wealth of Mr. Chiasson, who is worth tens of millions of dollars.

          “It's crazy how we pay people in our society,” Mr. Weingarten said. He noted that his “beloved” New York Yankees paid Alex Rodriguez many millions of dollars a year, only to pinch-hit for him this year in the bottom of the ninth inning of a playoff game.

          “In 2007, he made A-Rod kind of money,” Mr. Weingarten said, referring to Mr. Chiasson. “I know you will not hold his economic success against him.”