Tuesday, 11 March 2014

EBay CEO Donahoe's total pay for 2013 sinks 53 pct


EBay CEO John Donahoe's compensation for 2013 sank 53 percent compared to 2012, when the e-commerce company gave its leader more than $23 million in stock awards.


EBay also chopped a performance-based bonus payment for Donahoe and other executives. It says the company's financial performance last year and its positioning at the start of 2014 missed expectations.


An Associated Press analysis of a company regulatory filing shows that Donahoe received compensation valued at $13.8 million in 2013. That includes a salary of nearly $1 million, a $1.6 million bonus and stock and option awards totaling more than $11 million.


The AP's calculation counts salary, bonuses, perks and stock and options awarded during the year.


Activist investor Carl Icahn has been criticizing Donahoe and sparring with eBay over the company's future.



Europe wants its Parmesan back, seeks name change


Would Parmesan by any other name be as tasty atop your pasta? A ripening trade battle might put that to the test.


As part of trade talks, the European Union wants to ban the use of European names like Parmesan, feta and Gorgonzola on cheese made in the United States.


The argument is that the American-made cheeses are shadows of the original European varieties and cut into sales and identity of the European cheeses. The Europeans say Parmesan should only come from Parma, Italy, not those familiar green cylinders that American companies sell. Feta should only be from Greece, even though feta isn't a place. The EU argues it "is so closely connected to Greece as to be identified as an inherently Greek product."


So, a little "hard-grated cheese" for your pasta? It doesn't have quite the same ring as Parmesan.


U.S. dairy producers, cheesemakers and food companies are all fighting the idea, which they say would hurt the $4 billion domestic cheese industry and endlessly confuse consumers.


"It's really stunning that the Europeans are trying to claw back products made popular in other countries," says Jim Mulhern, president of the National Milk Producers Federation, which represents U.S. dairy farmers.


The European Union would not say exactly what it is proposing or even whether it will be discussed this week as a new round of talks on an EU-United States free trade agreement opens in Brussels.


European Commission spokesman Roger Waite would only say that the question "is an important issue for the EU."


That's clear from recent agreements with Canada and Central America, where certain cheese names were restricted unless the cheese came from Europe. Under the Canadian agreement, for example, new feta products manufactured in Canada can only be marketed as feta-like or feta-style, and they can't use Greek letters or other symbols that evoke Greece.


Though they have not laid out a public proposal, the EU is expected to make similar attempts to restrict marketing of U.S.-made cheeses, possibly including Parmesan, Asiago, Gorgonzola, feta, fontina, grana, Muenster, Neufchatel and Romano.


And it may not be just cheese. Other products could include bologna, Black Forest ham, Greek yogurt, Valencia oranges and prosciutto, among other foods.


The trade negotiations are important for the EU as Europe has tried to protect its share of agricultural exports and pull itself out of recession. The ability to exclusively sell some of the continent's most famous and traditional products would prevent others from cutting into those markets.


Concerned about the possible impact of changing the label on those popular foods, a bipartisan group of 55 senators wrote U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack this week asking them not to agree to any such proposals by the EU.


Led by New York Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and Pennsylvania Sen. Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., the members wrote that in the states they represent, "many small- or medium-sized, family owned businesses could have their businesses unfairly restricted" and that export businesses could be gravely hurt.


Schumer said artisanal cheese production is a growing industry across New York.


"Muenster is Muenster, no matter how you slice it," he said.


Trevor Kinkaid, a spokesman for the U.S. trade representative, said conversations on the issue are in the early stages but that the U.S. and E.U. have "different points of view" on the topic.


The agency wouldn't disclose details of the negotiations, but Kinkaid said the U.S. government is "committed to increasing opportunity for U.S. businesses, farmers and workers through trade."


Large food companies that mass-produce the cheeses are also fighting the idea. Kraft, closely identified with its grated Parmesan cheese, says the cheese names have long been considered generic in the United States.


"Such restrictions could not only be costly to food makers, but also potentially confusing for consumers if the labels of their favorite products using these generic names were required to change," says Kraft spokesman Basil Maglaris.


Some producers say they are incensed because it was Europeans who originally brought the cheeses here, and the American companies have made them more popular and profitable in a huge market. Errico Auricchio, president of the Green Bay, Wis., company BelGioioso Cheese Inc., produced cheese with his family in Italy until he brought his trade to the United States in 1979.


"We have invested years and years making these cheeses," Auricchio says. "You cannot stop the spreading of culture, especially in the global economy."


He says that companies who make certain cheeses would have to come together and figure out new names for them, which would be almost impossible to do.


His suggestion for Parmesan? "I Can't Believe It's Not Parmesan," he jokes.


Jaime Castaneda works for the U.S. Dairy Export Council and is the director of a group formed to fight the EU changes, the Consortium for Common Food Names. He says the idea that only great cheese can come from Europe "is just not the case anymore."


He points out that artisanal and locally produced foods are more popular than ever here and says some consumers may actually prefer the American brands. European producers can still lay claim to more place-specific names, like Parmigiano-Reggiano, he says.


"This is about rural America and jobs," he said.



Caesars 4Q loss widens following impairment charge


Caesars Entertainment Corp. has posted a large quarterly loss after taking a hefty impairment charge.


The casino corporation said it took goodwill and asset-impairment charges because of the continuing slump in Atlantic City and expectations that some property holdings may not last as long as expected.


The company, which runs the Caesars, Harrah's, and Horseshoe brands, said it lost $1.76 billion in the last three months of 2013, or $12.83 per share. Caesars lost $480.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2012.


Its revenue rose 3 percent, to $2.08 billion from $2.01 billion, helped by a strong showing in Las Vegas


In after-hours trading, shares in Caesars slipped almost 5 percent after the release of the results.



US House committee investigating GM recall


A congressional committee is investigating the way General Motors and a federal safety agency handled a deadly ignition switch problem in compact cars.


House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton of Michigan says the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration received a large number of complaints about the problem during the past decade. But GM didn't recall the 1.6 million cars worldwide until last month.


Ignition switches on older-model Chevrolet Cobalts and five other GM models can shift from the "run" position to "accessory" or "off" without warning, shutting off the engine and turning off power-assisted steering and brakes. The problem also can stop the front air bags from inflating in a crash. GM says 13 deaths and 31 crashes have been linked to the problem.


Upton says the committee will seek information from the automaker and hold a hearing in the coming weeks. A Senate subcommittee hearing also is possible.


Congress passed legislation in 2000 requiring automakers to report safety problems quickly to NHTSA. The laws came after an investigation into a series of Ford-Firestone tire problems.


Upton said in a statement that the committee wants to know if GM or the agency missed something that could have flagged the problems sooner.


"If the answer is yes, we must learn how and why this happened, and then determine whether this system of reporting and analyzing complaints that Congress created to save lives is being implemented and working as the law intended," Upton said.


An Associated Press review of a NHTSA database found dozens of driver complaints about the problem, some as early as 2005. GM has admitted in documents filed with NHTSA that it knew of the problem in 2004.


NHTSA already has demanded information from GM about when it knew of the problem. The company could be fined up to $35 million if the agency finds it responded too slowly. Automakers are required to report safety problems to NHTSA within five days of learning about them.


GM, in a statement issued Monday night, said it is cooperating with NHTSA "and will do so with the committee, too. We welcome the opportunity to help both parties have a full understanding of the facts." GM already has admitted that its processes weren't effective enough when the problem first surfaced.


A spokesman for NHTSA said Tuesday morning that he was checking on a response.


On Feb. 13, GM announced the recall of more than 780,000 Chevrolet Cobalts and Pontiac G5s (model years 2005-2007). Two weeks later it added 842,000 Saturn Ion compacts (2003-2007), and Chevrolet HHR SUVs and Pontiac Solstice and Saturn Sky sports cars (2006-2007).


Facts surrounding the recall are embarrassing for GM and could scare away consumers. Since leaving a painful bankruptcy in 2009, GM has cut bureaucracy, improved vehicle quality and is quicker to recall cars when problems occur. However, its admission that recall procedures were lacking 10 years ago shows how the old culture can still haunt the automaker.



Okla. House OKs defined contribution pension bill


The Oklahoma House has passed legislation to replace traditional public employee pension plans with a 401(k)-style retirement plan for many new state workers.


The House passed the measure 57-42 Tuesday and sent it to the state Senate, which has already approved similar legislation.


Under the bill by Republican Rep. Randy McDaniel of Edmond, state workers hired after Nov. 1, 2015, would be shifted from the current defined-benefit pension plan to the 401(k)-style defined-contribution plan. The change would not apply to teachers or public safety employees like police officers and firefighters.


Supporters say the bill will help reduce the estimated $11.6 billion in unfunded liability in the state's public pension systems. Opponents say eliminating the pension will make saving for retirement riskier for state workers.


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Online:


House Bill 2630: http://bit.ly/1cNCyQv



Nielsen's top 20 television programs for March 3-9


Prime-time viewership numbers compiled by the Nielsen ratings company for March 3-9. Listings include the week's ranking and viewership.


1. "The Big Bang Theory," CBS, 18.09 million.


2. "NCIS," CBS, 17.85 million.


3. "The Voice" (Monday), NBC, 15.62 million.


4. "The Voice" (Tuesday), NBC, 14.53 million.


5. "NCIS: Los Angeles," CBS, 14.37 million.


6. "Resurrection," ABC, 13.9 million.


7. "The Walking Dead," AMC, 12.65 million.


8. "Blue Bloods," CBS, 12.03 million.


9. "The Millers," CBS, 11.58 million.


10. "Criminal Minds," CBS, 11.42 million.


11. "The Black List," NBC, 11.01 million.


12. "60 Minutes," CBS, 10.73 million.


13. "Person of Interest," CBS, 10.64 million.


14. "American Idol" (Wednesday), Fox, 10.53 million.


15. "Two and a Half Men," CBS, 10.38 million.


16. "Hawaii Five-0," CBS, 10.35 million.


17. "The Mentalist," CBS, 9.95 million.


18. "American Idol" (Thursday), Fox, 9.76 million.


19. "Survivor," CBS, 9.58 million.


20. "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation," CBS, 9.29 million.



ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co.; CBS is a division of CBS Corp.; Fox is owned by 21st Century Fox; NBC is owned by NBC Universal. AMC is owned by AMC Networks.


Obama expands protection for California coastline


President Barack Obama is fulfilling a State of the Union pledge to preserve more federal lands by adding more California coastline to a national monument.


Obama on Tuesday signed a proclamation permanently protecting some 1,665 acres in Northern California's Mendocino County, just north of Point Arena. He says he wants to make sure the land is cherished and preserved for future generations.


The action expands the California Coastal National Monument that President Bill Clinton created in 2000. The protected area includes coastal bluffs and shelves, onshore sand dunes, tide pools, coastal prairies, riverbanks and the mouth and estuary of the salmon-filled Garcia River. Obama noted it provides an economic boost to the region through tourism.


Markley Bavinger with the Trust for Public Land, one of the environmental and community groups working to protect the site, described the area in an interview with The San Francisco Chronicle.


"You get out on that landscape, and you are out there in a different world — and it's a magical world," Bavinger said. "You're surrounded by these vistas that extend all the way as far as the eye can see."


Many nearby residents hope Obama's proclamation will lure more tourists to Point Arena, a small city in Mendocino County.


The property's shoreline is home to a variety of creatures, including beavers, sea lions and the endangered Behren's silverspot butterfly. Chinook and coho salmon as well as steelhead trout can be found in the Garcia River, and whales migrate off the coast.


Obama's proclamation bypasses Congress, where many public lands bills have stalled.


The property is officially known as the Point Arena-Stornetta Public Lands. Clover Stornetta Farms was the original owner of some of the property but gave its title to the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in a complicated $8 million deal in 2005, according to the Chronicle.


A separate part of the property was owned by the Cypress Abbey Co. and was turned over for management by the BLM last year, the newspaper reported.


In the 1970s, the Cypress Abbey portion of the land was for a time the proposed site of a Pacific Gas and Electric nuclear power plant that faced strong opposition because of the area's proximity to the San Andreas Fault.


A number of Democratic politicians supported including the lands in the national monument, including California Sens. Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein and Reps. Jared Huffman and Mike Thompson.


"I am so pleased that President Obama is taking action to permanently protect this majestic piece of California's coast for future generations to enjoy," Boxer said in a statement Sunday.



SKorea, Canada reach free trade agreement


South Korea and Canada reached a free trade agreement Tuesday that the two governments hope will boost exports and investment.


After more than nine years of negotiations, the two countries said they would remove tariffs on most goods within a decade of the pact taking effect.


Canada agreed to eliminate tariffs on South Korean autos within two years of the deal being ratified. South Korea will reduce tariffs on Canadian beef over 15 years, according to South Korea's statement.


It is Canada's first free trade agreement with an Asian nation. Much of Canada's trade is with the United States due to a North American free trade area formed in 1994 with the U.S. and Mexico.


South Korea said the deal is expected to boost Hyundai, Kia and other South Korean auto brands in Canada, which is South Korea's fifth-largest market for exported vehicles.


Last year, South Korean automakers had a combined 12 percent share of the Canadian auto market compared with 34 percent for Japanese brands and 45 percent for American autos.


The deal will also eventually help Canadian farmers and ranchers that compete with the U.S. and Australia to woo consumers in South Korea, a major meat importer. The two countries agreed to phase out tariffs on most meat and agricultural products imported to South Korea. Seoul currently imposes 40 percent tariffs on Canadian beef.


South Korea has opened its meat market to the U.S. with a free trade agreement that went into effect about two years ago. The country, Asia's fourth-largest economy, also signed a free trade deal with Australia, a major meat exporter, last month and is in trade talks with New Zealand.


South Korean farmers and ranchers have been opposed to the pact with Canada since the beginning of the talks in 2005.


But the focus of domestic opposition to free trade has recently been on a possible deal between South Korea and China and South Korea's steps toward joining a U.S-led pact covering more than a dozen Pacific Rim nations, said Park Hyung-dae, a director at a national union of farmers.


South Korean President Park Geun-hye sees trade as crucial for boosting growth and employment.



Senate OKs bill to offer company incentives


A plan to offer cash incentives to companies who pay for their workers to get degrees or certification in certain high-needs areas has passed the Oklahoma Senate.


The Senate voted 45-1 on Tuesday for the Quality Workforce Act by Senate President Pro Tem Brian Bingman.


The bill sets up a rebate program administered through the Oklahoma Department of Commerce. Companies who pay tuition and material costs for current or potential employees to gain a certificate or degree in specified fields would qualify for the state rebate.


Bingman says only companies eligible for the state's Quality Jobs program would be eligible for the program. Rebates also would be limited to no more than 5 percent of the average annual wage of the company's employees.


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Online:


Senate Bill 1639: http://bit.ly/1i9g4bY



Feinstein's CIA Outrage Splits Senate



Sen. Dianne Feinstein accused the CIA publicly and at length of hacking Senate computers to spy on Senate aides and remove documents.i i


hide captionSen. Dianne Feinstein accused the CIA publicly and at length of hacking Senate computers to spy on Senate aides and remove documents.



Uncredited/AP

Sen. Dianne Feinstein accused the CIA publicly and at length of hacking Senate computers to spy on Senate aides and remove documents.



Sen. Dianne Feinstein accused the CIA publicly and at length of hacking Senate computers to spy on Senate aides and remove documents.


Uncredited/AP


The Senate was a chamber divided in reaction to Democrat Sen. Dianne Feinstein's diatribe against the CIA for allegedly hacking into Senate computers.


A no-nonsense Feinstein, the Senate Intelligence Committee chairman, took to the Senate floor Tuesday to speak at length and publicly for the first time about a dispute with the agency.


NPR's news blog, The Two-Way, provides much of the news and background on what happened Tuesday. The bottom line: Feinstein raises the prospect that the alleged actions of CIA employees violated the constitutional separation of powers and even criminal statutes.


She alleges that CIA employees illegally hacked into her committee's computers to remove documents related to her panel's CIA oversight duties and spy on the activities of Senate staffers. CIA Director John Brennan seemed to deny that, but said there was an internal investigation into the matter limiting what he could say.


Some Republican senators shared Feinstein's alarm, though they seemed to be willing to reserve ultimate judgment until a full investigation was concluded.


"If what they're saying is true about the CIA, this is Richard Nixon stuff," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. "This is dangerous to a democracy. Heads should roll. People should go to jail, if it's true. The legislative branch should declare war on the CIA, if it's true."


"It's very disturbing," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. "There needs to be a thorough and complete investigation."


But Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., the top Republican on the intelligence committee, indicated to reporters some disagreement with Feinstein assertions.


He called for a study to get to the truth. "Right now we don't know what the facts are." he said.


And Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., sounded more skeptical about Feinstein's charges. He told Bloomberg Television in an interview, "I think it's a bit more complicated than what's being put out there by Sen. Feinstein or others."


Rubio's skepticism was nothing compared to the hostility Feinstein's charges engendered beyond the Senate. Some compared her anger towards the CIA to her previous defense of the NSA. Feinstein was one of the NSA's more vocal supporters following revelations by Edward Snowden that the agency, as part of its counterterrorism efforts, collected telephone call information for virtually every American.


Smelling hypocrisy, Snowden said in a statement to NBC News that the situation was one "... where an elected official does not care at all that the rights of millions of ordinary citizens are violated by our spies, but suddenly it's a scandal when a politician finds out the same thing happens to them."


Similar concerns were expressed mainly by conservatives on social media. Feinstein may find herself in coming days being frequently asked to explain her very different reactions to the NSA and CIA.



Tripoli mufti missing as tensions with Salafists on the rise


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Suddenly, and without warning, the mufti of Tripoli and north Lebanon has disappeared. Sheikh Malek al-Shaar, a prominent moderate sheikh, has not been seen since mid-February, leaving an extensive agenda filled with appointments at his house, the place he had once resolved to take refuge in upon his return from trips abroad as a result of ongoing death threats.


Unlike during previous instances, however, this time there was no fuss about the mufti’s departure, with those closest to him completely silent about his travels and the possibility of his return, as well as the reasons that drove him to leave.


Yet a source close to Shaar told The Daily Star the mufti’s return was imminent and that his travels had merely been extended.


But while the source denied knowledge of any imminent threat to Shaar’s life, the mufti’s nearly monthlong absence strongly hints at him being in danger.


However, this is not a recent development, but is instead heavily tied to the ongoing conflict in Syria.


Shaar said in 2012 that members of the Internal Security Forces had told him to leave the country because his life was at risk.


His name has appeared more than once on a list of targets of assassinations, something that has in the past prompted him to leave the country for months at a time.


And given the deteriorating security situation in Tripoli, which has led to a rise in the number of assassinations and clashes in broad daylight, the city has become increasingly risky for Shaar.


For example, pro-Hezbollah Sunni Sheikh Saadeddine Ghiyyeh was murdered last November, while an official with the pro-Assad Arab Democratic Party, Abdel-Rahman Diab, was killed last month. Diab was the father of Youssef Diab, one of those detained over suspected involvement in last August’s deadly twin mosque bombings in Tripoli.


Retired Army intelligence officer Mohammad Mistou, who used to interrogate Islamists for the military, was shot to death just a week ago as he was leaving a mosque in Tripoli’s Souk al-Atarin. All of these murders, which are linked to the rise of hard-line Sunni groups, suggest that the mufti’s disappearance comes as a result of a very serious threat.


The background for all of this is the growing animosity toward Shaar from more extreme Islamist groups.


More than one Islamist activist has said that the large number of Lebanese fighters inside Syria, particularly in Qalaat al-Hosn in the Homs region, and those who sent them feel orphaned politically, believing that all sides have abandoned them following a campaign of regional and international condemnation of religious fundamentalism and fanaticism.


Saudi Arabia, for example, has taken a tough stance on fundamentalist groups, particularly the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria and the Nusra Front, while former Prime Minister Saad Hariri has said such radical groups are linked to the Syrian regime.


Islamist circles have suggested that it is possible that Shaar’s sudden, unexplained absence has to do with this.


This growing aversion toward extremist Islamist groups, however, has simply led to more radicalization, as the groups feel they are alone in fighting Syrian President Bashar Assad.


This sense of betrayal has also bred an intense hatred of moderate Islamic figures, the head of which is Shaar. The fact that he is mufti of Tripoli, which is considered a city that embraces Islamists and stands with the Syrian revolution, further irks some of these extremists.


Many worrying signs can be brought up regarding the mufti’s relationship with Islamist groups that support the Syrian opposition from within Lebanon. The most notable of these is that a large number of demonstrators attending a protest in Tripoli in November last year called out a number of slogans specifically citing him, including: “There is no God but God, and the mufti is the enemy of God.”


The comments got a lot of attention from Tripoli officials, who said it constituted a threat to high-ranking religious figures.


But a Salafist in Tripoli told The Daily Star that the mufti was not necessarily being threatened by fundamentalist groups.


“We all know that during security and military tensions, a third party enters and performs an assassination that serves its interests, therefore it is possible there is a plot to assassinate the mufti and there is a serious danger to his life, but not necessarily from extremist Islamist groups from Al-Qaeda and its affiliates,” the source said. “Even given the continuous resentment of the fundamentalists, the threats on Shaar’s life are serious but they definitely do not emanate from Salafist circles.”


When asked about the same issue, another Salafist sheikh chose to quote an old Lebanese saying that roughly translates to: “When nations change, watch out for yourself,” pointing out that the Syrian crisis had precipitated several regional and international changes, which in turn increases the danger of extremism.


The Salafist sheikh said that these complex geopolitical circumstances could lead to several assassinations of high-level figures, not just the mufti.


Dar al-Fatwa, Lebanon’s highest Sunni authority, refuses to give an answer over the mufti’s disappearance, and it is true that the sheikhs and employees have grown used to his regular travel.


Obtaining information as to why the mufti has disappeared is a complex mission, but a source close to Dar al-Fatwa said last week: “The mufti is in Saudi Arabia and he has answered his cellphone without telling us the reasons for his leaving or the date of his return.”



Berri top target on extremist hit list


Speaker Nabih Berri is one of the main targets placed on the hit list by Muslim fundamentalist groups in Lebanon, according to a list obtained by the Internal Security Forces’ Information Branch, security sources have told The Daily Star.


Berri’s assassination would incite Sunni-Shiite strife because all analyses indicate that if the speaker is targeted, members of his Amal Movement would take retaliatory action in areas in Beirut where both Sunnis and Shiites live, the sources added.


Security agencies have warned Berri of a suspected scheme to assassinate him orchestrated by the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Abdullah Azzam Brigades, the sources said.


Mahmoud Abu Aalfa, a member of the Abdullah Azzam Brigades who is currently in custody, has confessed to plotting to assassinate Berri either by placing a sniper with a view of the speaker’s Beirut residence in Ain al-Tineh, or by sending suicide bombers on motorbikes, who would attack Berri’s fake motorcade as a car bomb simultaneously targeted his real motorcade, the sources said.


An official security apparatus recently presented a report to Berri in which it said that, following the assassination of Hezbollah commander Hassan Houlo Lakkis in Beirut’s southern suburbs, suspicious activity around the speaker had increased. This included a number of people with binoculars monitoring his residence from the rooftops of neighboring buildings, while others in a grey Cherokee vehicle took photographs of the surrounding area.


This was in addition to the possibility of a fundamentalist cell monitoring his residence in the southern coastal town of Msaileh, the sources said.


Media reports said last month that Abu Aalfa told interrogators he had been assigned with carrying out a suicide attack targeting the speaker.


A local newspaper had quoted a senior Lebanese official as saying that Abu Aalfa claimed a number of individuals had been tasked with monitoring all the entrances to Berri’s headquarters in Ain al-Tineh, as well as places frequented by the speaker.


Abu Aalfa was detained in the wake of the Feb. 19 twin suicide bomb attack against the Iranian Cultural Center in Beirut.


The attack, claimed by the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, killed at least 11 people and wounded more than 100 others.


The latest in a spate of deadly car bombings and suicide attacks targeting areas in Beirut’s southern suburbs and the Bekaa region, where Hezbollah enjoys wide support, it was carried out by Al-Qaeda-linked groups in response to Hezbollah’s military intervention in Syria, where its troops are fighting alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces.


According to information obtained from sources close to Berri, the speaker received serious information from Hezbollah’s central security apparatus about a plot to target him.


The information was relayed to Berri by Wafic Safa, Hezbollah’s head of security, who told him that those seeking to incite strife and destabilize the country had put the speaker at the top of their list of priorities.


The elimination of Berri, a prominent Shiite leader, would have serious repercussions on the workings of Lebanon’s political life, the most important of which would be the absence of a speaker to run Parliament.


This would make it extremely difficult to call the legislature to meet and elect a new president, to consider a number of draft laws, or even to prepare for a new extension of Parliament’s mandate in Nov.


Hence, Berri’s security team has reinforced protection around his Ain al-Tineh residence, asked him to reduce his movements and to seek assistance from security experts in order to assist his security chief Ahmad Baalbaki.



Hezbollah security chief’s Sidon visit sparks attack fears


SIDON, Lebanon: A visit by a senior Hezbollah official has stoked fears that the party is worried about possible terror attacks in the south, political sources said Tuesday.


Such fears are linked to the political standoff engulfing the newly formed Cabinet and deteriorating relations between states in the region, they added.


Wafiq Safa, Hezbollah’s top security official, held several meetings with politicians and security officials in Sidon in the last couple of days, prompting questions about the impetus behind a visit by such a senior member of the party.


Sources in Sidon said that Safa’s visit comes at a “very sensitive moment” in order to prevent what they described as “major dangers” facing the city.


Political sources said Hezbollah was worried about attacks in south Lebanon, a concern that has risen with the increase in hostility between Saudi Arabia and Qatar over the latter’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood, and disagreements between the March 8 and 14 political blocs over the Cabinet’s policy statement.


Hezbollah accuses Saudi Arabia of backing militants in Lebanon. The Cabinet has been deadlocked over whether to acknowledge the party’s right to resist Israel’s occupation in its policy statement, which declares the government’s priorities during its tenure.


Both developments risk enflaming the situation in Lebanon, which is already reeling from the impact of the civil war in Syria.


The sources said Hezbollah disclosed intelligence related to possible security threats to officials in Sidon.


Safa met with Samir Shehadeh, a senior Internal Security Forces officer in charge of security in the south who survived an assassination attempt years ago.


Hezbollah’s relationship with the ISF has long been strained as the organization’s leaders have in recent years been close to the Future Movement.


The sources said engagement between the party and the ISF had increased in recent days due to the police force’s decision to go after networks of “vandals” working for Israel. Hezbollah routinely accuses militant groups of inadvertently aiding Israel.


The visit also aimed at resolving a dispute between the ISF and elements of the Resistance Brigades, a quasi-militia with links to Hezbollah, which threatened to boil over into widespread clashes in Sidon where the group is based.


Members of the group have in the past clashed with forces loyal to the radical preacher Ahmad Assir, whose supporters later fought pitched battles with the Lebanese Army.


The sources said that Safa also delivered information about “elements” in Sidon that aimed to strike at the city’s stability by targeting the Army and officials here.


Hezbollah believes that Israel may seek to exploit these elements to sow problems in the south. The intelligence was delivered to Brig. Gen. Ali Shahrour, the chief of military intelligence in the south.


Safa also met with Osama Saad, the secretary-general of the Popular Nasserite Organization in Sidon, to warn him that Lebanon, and Sidon in particular, is likely to face renewed security threats and bombings.


Lebanon has endured a spate of bombings and suicide attacks in recent months linked to the crisis in Syria. The attacks have mostly targeted areas traditionally associated with Hezbollah.


Army checkpoints in Sidon have also been attacked.


Sources told The Daily Star that Safa stressed the need for unity among the Lebanese to combat future terrorist attacks and said that terrorist organizations may seek refuge in the large Palestinian refugee camp of Ain al-Hilweh.


Accusations have long been leveled that the camp is a haven for extremists, but Palestinian officials have repeatedly said that the security of the refugee camps is under control and that most militants emerge outside them.



Striking students vow to keep fighting


BEIRUT: Students at the American University of Beirut held a strike Tuesday to protest a hike in tuition fees and to call for greater transparency over the college’s finances.


Many professors canceled classes in apparent support of the students, who held placards and shouted slogans defying senior management, and said they would keep up the pressure on the university to roll back the six percent fee rise.


“I don’t know if they’re going to budge but I still do think it’s a pretty big effort that we’re doing,” said Maya Ayache, a second-year student who took part in the protest.


“We’re not going to take it lying down. We’re doing our part to show that we’re strong.”


“We want a zero percent increase,” she added.


Between 300 and 400 students gathered around noon in front of College Hall, just inside AUB’s main gate.


They carried signs that said: “Do I look like I’m made out of money?” and “Will accept donations to pay next year’s tuition.”


Another sign read: “Raise costs, we raise hell.”


The fee hike is scheduled to go into effect next year. Hundreds of students attended the first demonstration in February, but there have been few indications that the university authorities intend to grant the students’ demands.


Students also shouted slogans calling for student unity in the face of the measure, and demanded that AUB President Peter Dorman accede to their demands to reverse it. Dorman’s Wikipedia page was edited in late February to include a claim that his salary was close to that earned by U.S. President Barack Obama.


Earlier in the day, students marched around campus and urged those who were attending lectures to leave their classrooms, chanting, “shame on you.”


The students hope they can influence the authorities ahead of a meeting between the board of trustees later this month in which the fee increase will be addressed.


“I think our movements are putting pressure on the administration and board of trustees,” said Weam Dalal, a final-year chemistry student and one of the strike’s organizers. “Our step today was just another message: We can boycott classes and we can stop AUB.”


Students said their demands were not limited to quashing the fee increase, but also included greater transparency with respect to the university’s budget and the provision of a seat at the table with the board of trustees, in order to vote on proposals that affect them academically and financially.


Dalal said the students had been encouraged by the results of the previous demonstration, which prompted AUB’s president to create committees tasked with evaluating the tuition fee increase.


Expressions of support were also voiced by faculty members. AUB’s dean of student affairs last week signed the petition demanding a reversal of the fee increase, and a quasi-union of professors called Faculty United added its backing to student demands.


A faculty member who attended the demonstration as a show of support said that many people backed the students’ demands and wanted to know how the university spends its money.


“Whenever they want to fund anything at AUB it’s on the back of the students,” said Dalal, who added that transparency would shield the university from financial corruption. He added that the protests would remain peaceful and non-obstructive.


Ayache, the second-year student, said it would be challenging to sustain the strikes, as students have to balance their academic commitments with the demands of the protest movement.


She said students who go on strike will continue to pay tuition fees and may have to retake classes if they miss too many of them.


But others said the protests would continue until the demands were met.


“Everyone deserves a good education,” said Tarek Shehab, a student and editor-in-chief of Outlook, AUB’s campus newspaper. “It’s not a privilege, it’s a right.”


Shehab said professors who dismissed classes were acknowledging that “students have the right to gather and to express their own opinions on the way the university is run.”


He warned that the students were prepared to continue the demonstrations if the university is unresponsive.


“We’ll see how they respond to this, and in case they don’t, we’re fully prepared to take the student demonstrations to the next level.”



Tripoli militia leader will not leave the business of vegetables and guns


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Upon his return from what he dubbed a “well-deserved” vacation in Turkey last October, Tripoli’s notorious militiaman Saad al-Masri received a hero’s welcome in the northern city.


“I will never leave the business of vegetables or guns,” Masri told supporters, denying rumors he had fled the country after amassing a fortune.


Oddly, his comments are an accurate reflection of the reality the man has been living since the death of his brother Khodor, also a militia leader, in one of the many rounds of fighting between Tripoli’s rival neighborhoods of Bab al-Tabbaneh and Jabal Mohsen.


The predominantly Sunni Bab al-Tabbaneh lies in the slums on the outskirts of Lebanon’s second biggest city and is notorious for two things: being separated from the Alawite enclave of Jabal Mohsen by (the aptly named) Syria Street, and Saad al-Masri.


Commanding with the mentality of a mafia don, Masri controls the fighters of the so-called vegetable market front, instilling fear and respect among residents and traders.


Syria Street and the nearby vegetable market are the most infamous of the neighborhoods’ front lines with Jabal Mohsen, but there are many others just as brutal and bloody. Masri, however, has bestowed a more romantic flavor on the scene, leading some in Bab al-Tabbaneh to view him as a modern-day Robin Hood, although others disagree.


A tour through the narrow, bazaarlike streets of Bab al-Tabbaneh’s vegetable market reveals a prosperous and lucrative business district. Lucrative to those who control it and the man who controls them: Masri.


Ahmad, a skinny, bearded shop owner in the market, told The Daily Star that Masri made the rules.


“He is the undisputed monarch,” the trader said with some hesitation. “Not even a bouquet of parsley can be sold at the market unless [it has been cleared] by Saad al-Masri”


It is believed that Masri has developed a form of monopoly on all incoming goods that earns him a few thousand dollars a day.


Masri is the son of a Sunni father and an Alawite mother and has relatives who serve in the army of Syrian President Bashar Assad, according to Sheikh Bilal al-Masri, a pro-Syrian-rebels Salafist from Bab al-Tabbaneh. Sheikh Masri, not related, said that Saad al-Masri inherited his status as a fighter and a businessman from his late brother Khodor.


Khodor al-Masri emerged as a fierce fighter during clashes with Jabal Mohsen in 2008 and took part in several rounds of fighting until he was killed by Lebanese Army fire in 2012.


The sheikh described Khodor al-Masri as charismatic and a “God-fearing man,” saying he was famous for having captured the hearts and souls of young Tripoli fighters and leading by example.


“Khodor, rest his soul, was killed by a Lebanese Army sniper because he wanted to leave [former Prime Minister Najib] Mikati who was financing him and his group,” the sheikh said.


Khodor prohibited any sort of transgression in the vegetable market and had many “honorable” stands in his days, the sheikh said.


“Saad is merely an heir to Khodor and is working on expanding his brother’s legacy and fortune,” the sheikh added. “The money he makes from the vegetable market, added to the financial and political support he gets from Mikati, has made him a very rich man.”


When contacted by The Daily Star, sources close to the former prime minister said the sheikh’s allegations were part of an ongoing slander campaign against Mikati.


“Everyone knows that premier Mikati does not finance the children of Tripoli with weapons but rather with education,” one source said.


Although the link has never been proven, it is well known that Tripoli’s major militia leaders, who in recent years have stolen the limelight from the long-neglected city’s politicians, thrive due to the financial and political backing they get from local parties and figures.


Whether he is getting help or not, Saad al-Masri has certainly come into money.


Hailing from a relatively modest family in Minyeh, the militia leader dropped out of school in the fifth grade to work at Bab al-Tabbaneh’s vegetable market with his father. He now lives in a villa in his home region estimated to be worth over $1 million and has recently purchased an apartment in Tripoli’s upmarket Damm and Farz district.


A senior political source from Tripoli told The Daily Star that Masri was at one point receiving $50,000 a month from Mikati as support for his fighters, “who are the best armed among all of Tripoli’s militias.”


But according to the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, the sum has since substantially diminished and has now been replaced by social and health benefits.


“This has lead Masri to devise a system whereby he forces the owners of 20 shops in the vegetable market to pay him what ranges between $200-$300 in protection money on a monthly basis,” the source said.


Masri’s newfound fortune has raised questions among his supporters and opponents.


“Who pays for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of ammunition?” asked Abu Rami, a veteran fighter in Jabal Mohsen.


Abu Rami argued that a regional compromise was about to take place that would render all of Tripoli’s fighting squads and their commanders useless and that Masri’s maneuverings were in preparation for this.


“Masri has understood that and is now polishing his social and political talents,” he said. “I think Masri wants nothing to do with fighting anymore, he wants to tend to his growing empire and send young men off to kill and get killed.”


For the political source from Tripoli, however, Masri’s goal is not to gather a fortune but to establish himself as a leader: “Masri believes he should be the next Sunni leader in Tripoli.”



Beirut mayor defends Fouad Boutros Highway project


BEIRUT: Beirut Mayor Bilal Hamad defended Tuesday the Fouad Boutros Highway project, saying it was consistent with the city’s urban and environmental fabric and would not demolish any heritage sites.


Speaking at a news conference, he said most of the property that would be affected by the road between Charles Malek Avenue and Armenia Street had already been expropriated and paid for by the municipality, and that anyone using those building was doing so illegally.


“There is no building listed as a heritage site that will be removed, contrary to what was reported by some media outlets,” he said.


He also pointed to the heavy traffic Beirut suffered from on a daily basis, as well as the severe need for parking lots and green spaces, saying that all these factors had turned Lebanon into a “large garage.”


The Fouad Boutros Highway project, which would see a 1.3-km four-lane highway built to link Ashrafieh’s Alfred Naccache Road with Charles Helou Avenue by the Beirut Port, was originally proposed in 1972 and later modified in 1983, 1996 and finally under Decree 8228 in May 2012.


“The final modification took into consideration a lot of input from experts and civil society [members], and the project is consistent with urban and environmental understandings,” the mayor said.


Deputy Mayor Nadim Abu Rizk said the project’s goals were to alleviate dense traffic on the Mar Mitr crossing and Charles Malek Avenue from all sides by providing an additional entrance and an exit to the city and would also alleviate traffic on Ashrafieh’s inner streets.


The highway would include an underpass at the intersection of the Mar Mitr Boulevard with Charles Malek Avenue; a 25-meter-long tunnel by the College de la Sagesse topped with trees and greenery; a bridge over Armenia Street reaching Charles Helou Avenue; and three underground parking lots.


The municipality has earmarked $75 million for the project.


According to Abu Rizk, the Earth Link & Advanced Resources Development company has been tasked with the preparation of the project’s study alongside TMS Consult, which specializes in transport and traffic.


“At the end of the study, expected by summer 2014, the company will present its report and its recommendations to the Environment Ministry. The Beirut Municipality and the Council for Development and Reconstruction will abide by the results,” Abu Rizk said.


But almost 3,000 people have signed an online petition against the development, arguing that it will increase traffic by facilitating access for cars to the neighborhood.


A civil coalition of non-governmental organizations, professionals and activists has proposed that the government instead construct a tunnel under Charles Malek Avenue to link Downtown with Emile Lahoud Avenue in the east, arguing that this would do more to reduce congestion and would cost less than the current plan. They also want the proposed Fouad Boutros Highway to be replaced by a Fouad Boutros park.


The coalition points to the immense damage that will be done to a historical quarter of Beirut, with 30 buildings scheduled to be demolished and 10,000 square meters of gardens and orchards to be paved over.


“We already warned them [the municipality] to engage in a give and take with us,” said Raja Noujeim, a member of the coalition and the Association for the Protection of Lebanese Heritage.


He said the promises of more green spaces were unfounded, calling the designs being handed out “disproportionate.”


Joana Hammour, coordinator at NGO Nahnoo, said Beirut “needed more public spaces” rather than roads and construction projects.


“We must create more alternatives to the car, and we must educate people on that.”



Health Care Enrollments Up, But Still Well Short Of Goal



The HealthCare.gov website has been a source of delays and confusion for those trying to sign up for health insurance under the ACA.i i


hide captionThe HealthCare.gov website has been a source of delays and confusion for those trying to sign up for health insurance under the ACA.



Jon Elswick/AP

The HealthCare.gov website has been a source of delays and confusion for those trying to sign up for health insurance under the ACA.



The HealthCare.gov website has been a source of delays and confusion for those trying to sign up for health insurance under the ACA.


Jon Elswick/AP


Another 940,000 people signed up for health insurance in February under the ACA, bringing the total to 4.2 million since the troubled HealthCare.gov website was launched, the Department of Health and Human Services reports. The number is still well short of the administration's goal for March 31, when open enrollment ends.


To reach 6 million sign ups under the Affordable Care Act, as the White House had hoped for, another 1.8 million people would need to enroll by the end of the month.


As The Associated Press reports:




"That's way above the daily averages for January and February, which have ranged between 33,000 and 34,000. The math seems to be going against the administration.


"Officials expect the pace to pick up. The big question is whether it will be enough to make up for the technical troubles that paralyzed HealthCare.gov much of last fall and the continuing challenges for several state-sponsored websites."




CNBC says:




"The new data reveals a significant fall-off from January, when about 1.1 million people enrolled during the month.


"Another highlight—or lowlight—of Tuesday's enrollment report was the disclosure that the percentage of young adults signing up for Obamacare had remained at 27 percent of total sign-ups in the past two months. That's well below the 40 percent level some health-care experts have said would ensure that premiums paid to insurance companies would more than offset benefits paid out to older, sicker enrollees."




But CNBC quotes Timothy Jost, a law professor and health-care reform expert at Washington and Lee University as saying that the 6 million is still possible.


"There's every reason to believe that they're right, that sign-ups are going to shoot up in March, and that they'll get to 6 million," Jost said.


However, 6 million is less than the original target of 7 million enrollments by the end of March.


And, the number of enrollees is just part of the overall equation – the mix is just as important. The administration wants to get enough young, relatively healthy people to enroll to offset the costs of the older, less healthy ones.


According to the report on Tuesday, cumulatively 30 percent of those who have signed up are between 55-64 years of age — the single largest group.



Delayed Safety Recall May Haunt GM As It Continues Its Makeover



The Chevrolet Cobalt is one of the GM models being recalled for faulty ignition switches.i i


hide captionThe Chevrolet Cobalt is one of the GM models being recalled for faulty ignition switches.



David Zalubowski/AP

The Chevrolet Cobalt is one of the GM models being recalled for faulty ignition switches.



The Chevrolet Cobalt is one of the GM models being recalled for faulty ignition switches.


David Zalubowski/AP


General Motors is coming under mounting criticism for its handling of a serious defect. Last month, the company recalled 1.6 million vehicles because of faulty ignition switches linked to 13 deaths. The cars, made from 2003-2007, could stall or fail to deploy their airbags.



It's an issue GM has known about for a while, and now Congress wants to know why it took the automaker almost a decade to warn the public about it.


When there is an accident with a car that could involve new technology or a defect, the government sends in a team: the special crash investigators.


Allan Kam, a retired senior attorney for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, says when investigators for the government first heard rumblings of problems with the now-discontinued Chevrolet Cobalt and Pontiac G5, they filed a report.


The report, he says, "indicated loss of power and it was a kind of report which should have raised all kinds of red flags in the agency. It should have been referred to the Office of Defects Investigation to consider opening up a formal investigation."


It turns out the problem was the ignition. Essentially, a heavy keychain can put the ignition switch into the wrong position: Like when your car is sort of halfway on, and just the lights and radio are working but you can't drive.


Kam says NHTSA can only investigate problems that are brought to its attention. Carmakers are always hearing about potential defects from dealers, consumers and suppliers. GM had the first inklings of the problem 10 years ago.


"What you have is a failure, an apparent failure, of General Motors to make a defect determination which would result in a mandatory recall in a timely manner," Kam says. "And we're not talking here just about weeks and months — we're talking about years."


When a car company finds out about a defect, it's supposed to let authorities know within five days. NHTSA is asking GM what it knew and when.


The company has opened its own investigation and it hired a former U.S. attorney to lead the inquiry.


Now Congress has opened its own inquiry. Republican Tim Murphy of Pennsylvania is on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which is investigating. He says he wants to know what GM knew and what the government knew as well.


"It sounds like there was enough loose ends here, enough data taking place that at least in retrospect we see there were trends pointing to a deadly problem," Murphy says. "And I want to know what each side knew."


Jack Nerad, with Kelley Blue Book, says the auto industry and its regulators work closely together.


"Well, I think NHTSA is viewed now as a part of the industry," Nerad says. NHTSA walks the line that any agency must when it oversees an industry, he says. "Well, I think most often NHTSA and the industry work together quite well. I think there is good, healthy give and take. One can question occasionally how quickly they move."


By law it doesn't matter necessarily how quickly the government moves — carmakers have a responsibility to point out problems. How quickly GM moves, however, could have wider effects.


"GM is a really a very special case because there really is an old GM and a new GM," says Jake Fisher, with Consumer Reports. He says the Cobalt is a sign of how bad the old GM was.


"It wasn't pretty. We weren't fans of the Cobalt. It was [an] uncompetitive vehicle that wasn't reliable."


Fisher says the company has improved tremendously in the last several years, but that may not matter.


"The vehicles of the old GM, which is ... the majority of the fleet out there, those bad experiences are having with those vehicles is going to make them not want to give the new GM a chance," he says. "Forget about the recall. Even in the best situation [if it's] not a very good car, why would you want to come back to GM."


In addition to the Cobalt, the recall includes the Chevrolet HHR, the Pontiac G5 and Solstice and the Saturn Ion and Sky.



To Sell Health Care To Young People, Obama Steps 'Between Two Ferns'



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





President Obama's pitch for his health care law has brought him to an awkward place: "Between Two Ferns." In a bid to up the enrollment of young people, Obama visited Zach Galifianakis' Internet show.



Christie Aides Refuse To Comply With Subpoenas



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





Two key aides to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie are now trying to convince a judge not to force them to testify. They are citing their fifth amendment rights in order to avoid complying with subpoenas.



On Senate Floor, Rift Opens Between Lawmakers And CIA



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





Sen. Dianne Feinstein, head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, accused the CIA of interfering with her committee's efforts to oversee the agency. Feinstein made her comments in a speech Tuesday.



Outside Groups Lay Millions On Florida Special Election



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





The campaign for a congressional seat in St. Petersburg, Fla., will have seen some $10 million in spending by candidates and outside groups. Where did all of this money go?



March Marks A Crucible For Obamacare As Deadline Nears



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.





Facing a deadline, the Obama administration is desperate to boost enrollment in health care exchanges. Still millions from their goal, they're stepping up outreach and forgetting politics — for now.



Oil, natural gas well burns in northern Michigan


An official says a mechanical problem likely sparked a weekend fire at an oil and natural gas well in Michigan's northern Lower Peninsula.


No one was injured in Sunday's fire in Grand Traverse County near Kingsley, about 12 miles southeast of Traverse City.


Rick Henderson, a field operations supervisor for the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, tells the Traverse City Record-Eagle (http://bit.ly/PnxbwE ) that workers completed the well March 4 and began tests to see whether it would produce more oil or natural gas.


Henderson says oil went to a flare meant to burn natural gas, sparking the fire. The fire subsided after crews cut the flow of natural gas and oil.


Henderson says the company will handle cleanup, which is "pretty straightforward," and inspectors don't expect any lasting environmental damage.



UniCredit in stunning $21B loss, plans turnaround


UniCredit, Italy's largest bank, on Tuesday posted a record 15 billion-euro ($21 billion) loss in the fourth quarter as it cleaned up its balance sheet with write-downs and provisions, part of an attempt to turn the page on its troubled past.


The loss compares with a 553 million-euro shortfall in the fourth quarter a year earlier, and exceeded the bank's previous record loss of 10.6 billion euros posted for the third quarter of 2011 on bad Greek debt and other write-downs.


The balance sheet cleanup, which includes more than doubling provisions for bad loans to 9.3 billion euros, comes as the European Central Bank starts a big review of the region's banks. The review will identify weak spots in banks' finances and, if needed, ask them to fix them.


Despite the stunning loss, markets reacted favorably to UniCredit's aggressive balance sheet cleanup, sending shares up 7 percent to 6.48 euros.


The bank said its strategic plan through 2018 would foresee a net profit of 2 billion euros this year, tripling to 6.6 billion in 2018. It includes cutting 8,500 jobs, 5,700 of those in Italy, leading to savings of 700 million euros by 2018.


It also plans to publicly list its on-line bank Fineco, and look at selling its collections platform in Italy to a specialist in the field.


CEO Federico Ghizzoni called 2013 "a turning point," and said the bank was posed to increase lending "and support the real economy in Italy and in Europe."


Unicredit said that its underlying financials were improving. In the fourth quarter, it reported higher net interest income and improved fees and commissions, helping to boost revenues by 5.2 percent to 6 billion euros.



Disney TV exec Sweeney leaving to direct TV shows


Anne Sweeney, one of Disney's top television executives who helped bring TV shows to Apple's iTunes digital store, is leaving the company at the end of the year.


Sweeney, co-chair of Disney Media Networks and president of the Disney/ABC Television Group, said in a statement that she will pursue becoming a director of TV shows.


The Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Iger said in a statement he applauded Sweeney for knowing what she wants out of life and for having the courage to follow her dream.


An 18-year veteran of the company, Sweeney was repeatedly named the "most powerful woman in entertainment" by The Hollywood Reporter. She was also considered a possible successor to Iger, who is set to step down as CEO in June 2016.



Monday's Sports In Brief


HOCKEY


The game between Dallas and the Columbus Blue Jackets was postponed by the NHL after Stars forward Rich Peverley collapsed on the bench during the first period.


Play was halted 6:23 in as Peverley was quickly carried from the bench. A public address announcement was made several minutes later that the 31-year-old Peverley was conscious and taken to a hospital.


There was no immediate announcement of when the game would be made up. Columbus was leading 1-0.


The Stars conveyed the message to the Blue Jackets that they weren't up for finishing the game.


Peverley missed the preseason and the season opener because of a procedure to correct an irregular heartbeat, a condition diagnosed during a training camp physical. He made his Stars debut on Oct. 5 against Washington. He sat out last week's game at Columbus because of an irregular heartbeat.


BASEBALL


SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Barry Bonds certainly thinks he's worthy of election to the Hall of Fame.


"Without a doubt," baseball's home run king said at the San Francisco Giants' spring training camp, where he will serve as a hitting instructor for a week.


The 49-year-old Bonds spent his last 15 big league seasons with San Francisco, finishing in 2007 with 762 homers.


But his final years were clouded by suspicions of performance-enhancing drug use, and the seven-time NL MVP was convicted of one obstruction count in April 2011 by a jury that found an answer he gave was criminally evasive during 2003 testimony before a grand jury investigating the distribution of PEDs. And he didn't even come close to election to the Hall in his first two turns on the ballot.


PRO FOOTBALL


MIAMI (AP) — Dolphins owner Stephen Ross has offered to pay the entire tab for up to $400 million in stadium renovations in exchange for a property tax break.


The upgrades would help keep South Florida competitive in bidding for Super Bowls and college football's championship games.


Stymied last year in his efforts to secure public money, Ross has agreed to pay for the project himself, two people familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.


Ross seeks $2 million to $4 million a year in property tax reductions and would continue to pay some property taxes, one of the people said. Ross has discussed his proposal with Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez, who said obstacles to a deal remain.


DETROIT (AP) — Martha Ford will take over her late husband's controlling interest in the Detroit Lions, keeping the team within the family after a half-century under the leadership of William Clay Ford.


William Clay Ford died Sunday. The 88-year-old Ford was the last surviving grandchild of automotive pioneer Henry Ford.


William Clay Ford Jr. remains in his role as vice chairman of the Lions.


RENTON, Wash. (AP) — Michael Bennett gambled last offseason that playing on a one-year deal in Seattle would pay off in the future with the long-term contract he always wanted.


He was proven to be correct. Bennett now has a Super Bowl title and a new four-year contract that will keep him with the Seahawks.


Bennett was considered one of the top free agents in the NFL after a breakout season with the Seahawks where he led the team in sacks and proved a versatile option as a defensive end and defensive tackle. But he never made it all the way to the start of free agency after the Seahawks came up with a satisfactory deal.


Terms were not announced by the team. Pro Football Talk reported Bennett's deal was worth about $28.5 million with $16 guaranteed.


NEW YORK (AP) — Tone Time is over for the New York Jets.


The Jets parted ways with wide receiver Santonio Holmes, cutting the talented but injury-plagued playmaker after four seasons.


The move, which had been expected, saves the Jets $8.25 million, which Holmes was due to make as his base salary this season. He was also scheduled to have a $10.75 million cap number, a lofty total for a one-time Super Bowl MVP who has struggled with injuries and inconsistency the last two seasons.


The Jets also released cornerback Antonio Cromartie on Sunday, clearing $17.75 million of salary cap space before the NFL's free agency period starts Tuesday.


PRO BASKETBALL


ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — A Minnesota lawmaker apologized for his tweet about NBA players that some saw as racist, saying he was rightly held accountable for inaccurate stereotyping.


State Rep. Pat Garofalo, a fifth-term Republican from the St. Paul suburb of Farmington, tweeted Sunday night: "Let's be honest, 70% of teams in NBA could fold tomorrow + nobody would notice a difference w/ possible exception of increase in streetcrime."


Garofalo initially stuck by his words even after they drew hundreds of negative comments and more than 1,000 retweets, insisting they were misinterpreted.


But in his statement the next day, he said he'd reconsidered.


AMERICA'S CUP


SAN DIEGO (AP) — Software billionaire Larry Ellison says in a book excerpt that he'd like to have the next America's Cup in Hawaii, although his sailing team CEO says officials are still in the process of picking a venue.


According to an edited excerpt posted on the San Francisco Chronicle's website, Ellison's vision is for the 35th America's Cup match to be sailed off Honolulu following a series of eliminations around the world.


The excerpt said Ellison detailed his vision for the next America's Cup in a series of exclusive interviews with the book's author, Chronicle writer Julian Guthrie, over several months.


SOCCER


NEW YORK (AP) — The organization that manages game officials for Major League Soccer has filed an unfair labor practice charge against the union it locked out, accusing the referees of attempting to intimidate replacements.


The Professional Referee Organization made the filing with the National Labor Relations Board three days after the lockout began. The Professional Soccer Referees Association previously filed a pair of unfair labor practice charges against PRO, which also are pending.



Poland moves to reduce dependence on Russian gas


Poland's government has adopted a draft law designed to speed up shale gas exploration and reduce dependence on Russian supplies, the prime minister said Tuesday.


Poland, which imports about 70 percent of its gas from Russia, is seeking to exploit its shale gas deposits, but complicated legislation has been an obstacle and discouraged some foreign energy firms.


Donald Tusk said that Ukraine's conflict with gas supplier Russia adds to the importance of the legislation. Put on fast track, it could take effect this year.


"The idea behind the draft law is to make possible intensive exploration and extraction of shale gas," Tusk said.


Tusk said the draft law will simplify and accelerate license procedures for companies. Taxes on exploration will begin in 2020 and should not be higher than 40 percent.


A number of major international exploring firms have given up on shale gas in Poland in the past due to tough licensing terms and lack of sufficient data on deposits. Because of the country's geological make-up, exploring in Poland is also more technically demanding than in the United States, where shale gas industry boomed in the 1990s, bringing gas prices down.


Early estimates by the U.S. Energy Information Administration that put Poland's shale gas reserves at 5.3 trillion cubic meters were revised down sharply by Poland's geology experts to below 800 billion cubic meters.


Shale gas is natural gas trapped in porous shale rock. It is extracted though hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, a technique that involves pumping huge amounts of water — laced with sand and small amounts of chemicals — into horizontal wells drilled in the rock. That crushes the rock, releasing the gas.


Poland and Britain are the only countries in Europe actively exploring for shale gas.



Council Bluffs hires firm to oversee levee work


Council Bluffs has hired an engineering firm to oversee improvements to the city's levee system.


The City Council on Monday night approved the hiring of JEO Consulting Group, of Lincoln, Neb., to oversee improvements, according to the Daily Nonpareil (http://bit.ly/1i9Dhe7 ).


City Engineer Matt Cox estimated it will cost $50 million to make improvements to Council Bluffs' river and creek levees needed to abide by federal standards.


"We need to move forward," City Engineer Matt Cox said. "I'm suggesting we start tonight by hiring a program manager."


If Council Bluffs doesn't make improvements, Cox said the Federal Emergency Management Agency could change its flood designation for the city and deem much of it to be flood prone. That would lead to higher flood insurance rates for property owners.


Council Bluffs, which is on the Missouri River, has 28½ miles of levees.


Some sections are in good shape, but others aren't high enough to meet federal standards, Cox said. Pipes within levees need replacing in some spots, and the 2011 Missouri River flooding caused damage in other areas where water seeped beneath the structures.


The city could pay the $50 million over a period of years, with the money coming from various sources, including a state program that lets cities use a portion of their sales tax revenue to defray costs. The city also could establish a stormwater utility fee, Cox said.


Officials will try to limit diverting funds from the city's capital improvement program, which would delay street and sewer projects.


The Lincoln engineering company's fees will total up to about 3 percent of the $50 million cost.



NC gov: Panel should decide who foots pond bill

The Associated Press



Gov. Pat McCrory said Tuesday he's going to stay out of the debate whether his former employer Duke Energy should be allowed to pass to consumers the costs of closing North Carolina's coal ash ponds.


Duke Energy is expected to give McCrory's administration more information this week about plans to ultimately dispose of the coal ash at more than 30 ponds statewide, as well as the costs associated with any environmental cleanup. The request from McCrory and state environmental Secretary John Skvarla came in response to last month's massive coal ash spill into the Dan River.


Last week, Company CEO Lynn Good said Duke Energy will pay for the spill cleanup but suggested customers shoulder the cost of disposing what's in other ponds at 14 of the plants. Such a plan, which could include hauling the ash away for recycling or transferring the ash into lined landfills away from water sources, could easily cost several hundred million dollars.


McCrory, who worked at Duke for nearly 30 years until 2008, said financial decisions on the cleanup are best left to the state Utilities Commission, which sets electric rates and can agree to let Duke pass along one-time costs to customers.


"I think it's inappropriate to have politics involved in this process," McCrory said after a Council of State meeting. "You've got to have this process work out free of politics, especially ... as we try to get the facts exactly about what has happened and what the potential solutions are to this very serious issue."


Still, environmental regulators within McCrory's Cabinet-level agency or the General Assembly may demand the cleanup and use of a certain method.


Rep. Ruth Samuelson, R-Mecklenburg and co-chairwoman of the legislature's Environmental Review Commission said it made sense to her for both shareholders and ratepayers to pay for any pond closings, although she didn't know how the burden should be distributed.


"All of those years both sides were benefiting from the way coal ash was being handled" in the form of ready energy for customers and less expensive operating expenses, Samuelson said. Today, she added, "both sides should have something to pay" for the extra cost of cleaning up the ash.


The legislature in recent years have allowed utilities to pay for energy-related environmental directives it approved by passing along costs to ratepayers.


A 2002 law demanding sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emission reductions from coal-fired plants was financed by postponing rate cuts for consumers. Five years later, the legislature agreed utilities could assess a rider upon customers to pay for a requirement that a set power of their power come through efficiencies and alternative sources.


Attorney General Roy Cooper, a Democrat, has said he will oppose any effort to pass coal ash pond clean up to consumers. His office has previously challenged rate increases by the Utilities Commission he's labeled as too high.



Kansas City club district facing 2nd lawsuit


Two black men who say they were harassed and denied entrance into a downtown Kansas City entertainment district nightclub because of their race have filed a lawsuit against the district's owners.


Dante A.R. Combs and Adam Williams' filed their federal lawsuit Monday, a week after a former Power & Light Entertainment District employee, Glen Cusimano, filed a state lawsuit alleging that the district's owners paid white men, known as "rabbits," to create disturbances that would get black patrons ejected or arrested.


Combs and Williams, who work in professional sales for the pharmaceutical and medical industries, say that on three occasions in 2010 and 2011, one of them was denied entry to a nightclub or singled out for harassment — in one case leading to a fight — despite their acting calm and being professionally dressed, The Kansas City Star reported (http://bit.ly/PoiSZ0 ).


They are seeking $5 million in damages and class-action status for their lawsuit, saying that hundreds or even thousands of other black patrons could have been discriminated against.


They allege that there was a pattern of "harassment, fraud, targeting, ejecting, exclusion, humiliation" and more for "the purpose of controlling and/or reducing/limiting the number of African-American patrons."


Zed Smith, director of Asset Management, one of several businesses tied to the defendant, Cordish Cos., called the latest lawsuit baseless.


"We all work collaboratively to ensure that the guest experience is excellent for all of our customers," said Smith. "We take pride in our customer service and the customer service of our tenants, and we vigorously deny this trumped-up and meritless claim."


Cordish officials also denied Cusimano's allegations.


The plaintiffs in both cases have the same attorney, Linda Dickens.



Watch President Obama on "Between Two Ferns with Zach Galifianakis"


President Barack Obama participates in an interview with Zach Galifianakis for "Between Two Ferns with Zach Galifianakis"

President Barack Obama participates in an interview with Zach Galifianakis for "Between Two Ferns with Zach Galifianakis," in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House, Feb. 24, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)




President Obama sat down between two ferns to talk health care, Bradley Cooper, and basketball with Zach Galifianakis. Watch it here now -- all your friends have probably seen it already, don't be "that guy" who hasn't.


US investment firm builds up stake in Man United


A U.S. investment firm has bought nearly a quarter of all the shares available to buy in New York-listed English soccer club Manchester United PLC.


The Glazer family in 2012 put 10 percent of Manchester United for sale in a stock listing. A filing on the Securities and Exchange Commission shows Baron Capital now owns 24 percent of those shares. That leaves Baron with an overall stake of 2.5 percent.


On its website, Baron says it "remains positive" on Manchester United's prospects.


Manchester United is one of the most lucrative brands in the world of sport even though it's struggling this season following the departure of long-time manager Alex Ferguson.


Manchester United shares will open for trading later Tuesday, having closed Monday at $15.84, their highest level since November.



NTSB Chairman Hersman to head safety council


The chairman of the nation's transportation accident investigations board is leaving to become the president and CEO of the National Safety Council.


Deborah Hersman said in a blog Tuesday that her nearly 10 years at the National Transportation Safety Board have been "a great ride," but she is moving on to the second "dream job" of her career.


The 43-year-old Hersman was on-scene for more than 20 accident investigations, including the crash of an Asiana Airlines jet in San Francisco last July. She is particularly known for championing protections for children, including on planes.


Hersman said she came to Washington two decades ago believing "government can do important work on behalf of the citizens of this great country."



British transit union leader Bob Crow dies at 52


British transit union leader Bob Crow — a hero to many of his members but a scourge to London commuters — has died at the age of 52.


The Rail, Maritime and Transport Union said Crow, its general secretary since 2002, died early Tuesday. It did not disclose the cause.


One of the few British union leaders to be a household name and recognizable face, Crow led his union through a series of disruptive strikes on London's busy subway system.


He was a villain to right-wing newspapers — and to many a frustrated commuter — but many union members saw him as a leader who got results.


London Mayor Boris Johnson, with whom Crow often clashed, praised him as "a fighter and a man of character."


"Whatever our political differences, and there were many, this is tragic news," Johnson said.


"There can be absolutely no doubt that he played a big part in the success of the Tube, and he shared my goal to make transport in London an even greater success."


With his bald head and cloth cap, Crow affected an old-fashioned, working-class demeanor, but he faced criticism for his six-figure salary and subsidized home.


At a time when most people thought the era of militant trade unionism long over, he was unafraid to confront management and stage walkouts.


Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, a politician broadly sympathetic to Crow's left-wing views, said that "with the passage of time people will come to see that people like Bob Crow did a very good job."


"The only working-class people who still have well-paid jobs in London are his members," Livingstone said.



Medical groups question price of new hep C drug


An innovative hepatitis C drug that was only recently hailed as a breakthrough treatment is facing skepticism from some health care providers, as they consider whether it is worth the $1,000-a-pill price set by manufacturer Gilead Sciences Inc.


A panel of California medical experts voted Monday that Gilead's Sovaldi represents a "low value" treatment, considering its cost compared with older drugs for the blood-borne virus.


The vote was part of a broader review of new hepatitis C drugs by the California Technology Assessment Forum, an insurance industry-affiliated group that assesses the costs and effectiveness of new medical treatments. The group is expected to issue a final report next month on Sovaldi and another new hepatitis C drug, Olysio from Johnson & Johnson.


Doctors have long sought more effective, palatable treatments for hepatitis C, the liver-destroying virus carried by an estimated 3 million to 4 million Americans. Until late last year, the standard treatments required taking up to 12 pills a day, alongside antiviral drug injections that can cause flu-like symptoms, an approach that cured only about 75 percent of patients.


Gilead Sciences' drug, approved by U.S. regulators in December, was quickly embraced by physicians based on its once-a-day pill regimen and increased effectiveness, curing between 80 and 90 percent of patients.


But some patient groups and health providers are beginning to question the cost of that benefit.


"The combination of the huge patient population and the price of the pills is creating real tension in the system about the potential affordability of these drugs," said Dr. Steve Pearson, who is leading the California group's hepatitis drug assessment.


Foster City, Calif.-based Gilead Sciences Inc. has priced Sovaldi at $84,000 for one 12-week course of treatment. Some patients may need to take a second course, raising the price to $168,000. And those costs come on top of the traditional drug cocktail, including the injectable drug interferon-alpha, which still serves as the backbone of therapy for most patients.


In Janaury, the AIDS Healthcare Foundation urged state Medicaid providers to deny coverage for the drug until Gilead agrees to lower the price. The group, which provides HIV testing and prevention services, argues that Sovaldi's price "will unnecessarily drive up health care costs and limit access to potentially lifesaving care."


"AHF believes that the price Gilead is charging for Sovaldi is not remotely justified. For one, it is exponentially more expensive than medications for other severe chronic conditions." The group notes that Sovaldi costs 1,100 percent more than Gilead's most expensive HIV drug, Stribild, which costs $80 per pill.


About 25 percent of people with HIV infection are also infected with hepatitis C. And patients with both viruses are more likely to be enrolled in Medicaid, the state-federal health plan for the poor.


In a review released ahead of Monday's meeting, the California Technology Assessment Forum estimated that replacing currently used hepatitis C drugs with Gilead's Sovaldi would raise California drug costs between $18 billion and $29 billion per year, including both government and private insurer costs.


Gilead Sciences has said that the drug's costs will be recouped over the long term as fewer patients suffer liver failure and transplant complications. But the California group's assessment concludes that even after 20 years, reduced health care spending on hepatitis complications would still only cover about two-thirds of the Sovaldi's upfront costs.


At Monday's meeting the panel of experts from California universities and hospitals voted that Sovaldi and J&J's Olysio are superior medical treatments to older therapies from Merck & Co Inc. and Vertex Pharmaceuticals. But considering their costs and benefits, a majority of panelists said that both of the new drugs deliver a "low value." Olysio costs about $66,000 for one course of treatment.


The experts recommended the drugs should be used only for patients with severe hepatitis complications, such as liver cirrhosis.


The California Technology Assessment Forum was founded more than 50 years ago by the non-profit insurance provider Blue Shield of California. Recently the group was incorporated into the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, a Boston-based research group funded by insurers, drugmakers and academic institutions. The group's board of directors includes executives from Blue Shield of California, Avalere Health, UnitedHealth Group and the Pacific Business Group on Health.


Gilead Sciences did not send a representative to Monday's meeting, but a company spokeswoman noted that it offers financial assistance to patients who cannot afford the drug and related insurance costs.


"Over time, we expect that treatment guidelines and the medical science will be what guides the discussion around treatment for a very serious liver disease — not the potential short-term budget impact," said Cara Miller, in a statement. The company has noted that many private insurers are already covering the drug under their formularies.


Wall Street analysts estimate Sovaldi could garner sales of up to $8 billion this year alone, which would make it among the best-selling pharmaceutical products in the world.


A spokesman for J&J's Janssen Pharmaceuticals said the panel's vote and conversation recognized Olysio "as an important treatment option for patients living with chronic hepatitis C."