Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Showing Signs Of Age, Capitol Dome Gets A Face-Lift





  • The Capitol dome in Washington will undergo restoration this spring, a project that is estimated to take two years and cost nearly $60 million.



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    The Capitol dome in Washington will undergo restoration this spring, a project that is estimated to take two years and cost nearly $60 million.




    Jonathan Ernst/Reuters/Landov




  • A rendering of the scaffold system that will surround the Capitol dome during the restoration. Most of the work will be done at nights and on weekends.



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    A rendering of the scaffold system that will surround the Capitol dome during the restoration. Most of the work will be done at nights and on weekends.




    Architect of the Capitol




  • The west front view of the dome under construction in 1861.



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    The west front view of the dome under construction in 1861.




    Library of Congress




  • A view of the dome during the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln on March 4, 1861. By Lincoln's second inauguration, the dome was finished.



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    A view of the dome during the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln on March 4, 1861. By Lincoln's second inauguration, the dome was finished.




    Library of Congress




  • Workers renovating the Capitol in November 1958.



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    Workers renovating the Capitol in November 1958.




    Paul Schutzer/Time/Getty Images




  • In 1993, the Statue of Freedom was airlifted off the dome for restoration after almost 130 years atop the Capitol.



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    In 1993, the Statue of Freedom was airlifted off the dome for restoration after almost 130 years atop the Capitol.




    Library of Congress




  • A renovation worker climbs atop the dome in 2010.



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    A renovation worker climbs atop the dome in 2010.




    Michael Reynolds/EPA/Landov





When you think of Washington, D.C., what's the first image to pop up?


For many, it's likely the U.S. Capitol — or more specifically, the iconic white dome that crowns the Capitol.


"It is one of the most, if not the most, recognizable symbols across the globe," said Architect of the Capitol Stephen Ayers, whole job entails maintaining the Capitol dome.


As could be said of the Congress that meets below it, the century-and-a-half old dome has seen better days. It is literally cracking up — and Ayers is leading a project to restore it.


From a distance, the dome looks like a gleaming extension of the marble edifice from which it rises. But that's an illusion. It is in fact nearly 9 million pounds of cast iron slathered with at least 10 coats of lead-based paint.


The dome is the masterpiece of Thomas Walter — the architect in charge of widening the Capitol during the 1850s. The original did have a smaller dome. But according to Ayers, Walter thought the expanded building should be topped by something more grand.


"He designed this new dome and hung this drawing in his office, and members of Congress would come by and see it and were immediately enamored with it," Ayers said.


Without so much as holding a hearing on it, Congress approved $100,000 to top the Capitol with Walter's cast iron crown — though it ended up costing 10 times that much. In photos from Abraham Lincoln's first inauguration, the half-built dome looms in the background. Within a month, the nation plunged into the Civil War. But Ayers says work on the dome continued.


"President Lincoln picked up on that fact and made a great analogy, that if this construction of this great dome is going to continue, so will our union," he said.


The dome was finished by Lincoln's second inauguration. The following month, the war ended and Lincoln was assassinated. His body lay in state below the new dome in the Capitol rotunda. A century later, near the end of the Eisenhower administration, the rusting iron orb got a major face-lift. But Ayers says it has deteriorated a lot since then.



Damage caused by age and weather is visible on the Capitol dome.i i


hide captionDamage caused by age and weather is visible on the Capitol dome.



Reuters/Landov

Damage caused by age and weather is visible on the Capitol dome.



Damage caused by age and weather is visible on the Capitol dome.


Reuters/Landov


"A dozen years ago, there were 300 and some cracks, a few more years, there were 500 cracks, then 900 cracks and now 1,300. And we thought, you know, with 1,300 cracks, now is the time to intervene and make sure it's preserved for generations to come," Ayers said.


Late last year, some of the journalists who work below the dome got the rare opportunity to climb to the top of the nearly 300-foot-tall structure. It was a chance to see firsthand the toll the elements had taken on it.


Leading the way was Kevin Hildebrand, the restoration's head architect. We climbed a staircase that winds between an inner dome, which caps the rotunda, and the dome's exterior shell, perched on 36 enormous trusses. Hildebrand pointed to layered cast-iron plates that form the outer shell.


"A lot of the damage that we're addressing [is in] the shelves, and those are exposed to wide temperature swings, a lot of expansion, and when the rust develops between the plates, it binds the plates from moving, and that creates enormous pressures within the ironwork, which relieves itself by cracking," Hildebrand said.


We ascended through multiple levels of the dome to its cupola. When we got there, Hildebrand lifted a heavy hatch that opened to the dome's exterior.


"Be very mindful that the iron is very hard, and the last thing you want to do is to hit your head on this sharp edge, so please be very careful and duck as you go through the doorway," Hildebrand warned.


Outside, a narrow walkway surrounds the base of the dome's uppermost fixture — a 20-foot-tall female bronze known as the Statue of Freedom. The vista below of the nation's capital was spectacular. Hildebrand pointed out a big crack that's also in plain view.


"As rust has developed and this railing has been pushed up by the pressure of the rust, the top plate has cracked, and that's relieving the stress that's in the ironwork. But what it also does is compromise the structural integrity of that particular piece," he said.


This spring, contractors will encase the dome with scaffolding and begin the restoration, working mostly at night and on weekends. They will remove the lead paint, seal the cracks, replace broken windows, and coat everything with polymer and urethane-based paint. The project's price tag is close to $60 million. Hildebrand says the money came through thanks to the budget deal Congress approved late last year.


"To me, it's symbolic of the joining of both parties in Congress to come together to fund an effort that's incredibly important to our country. Preserving the Capitol dome is not a question for discussion. It's something that has to happen," he said.


On that, the lawmakers who meet down below completely agree.


"We want to make sure the integrity of the dome is maintained," said Maryland Democratic Sen. Ben Cardin. As a former House member, he's served under the dome on both sides of the Capitol.


"I would hope that perhaps repairing the dome will also help us repair what's happening under the dome, maybe we can get together and do the people's business and resolve issues that have been long-standing. So maybe the cooperation we've seen in fixing the visible symbol of Congress will also help in regards of the product of Congress," Cardin said.


The dome's restoration should go relatively quickly, says Ayers.


"We're pretty confident that we can get it done in two years, and certainly done before the next presidential inauguration," he said.


Congress very likely won't have mended its own deep fissures by then, but it will have a dome above it that Ayers says should hold up well for at least another half-century.



House, Senate leaders agree on Medicare fees


House Speaker John Boehner said Wednesday that he and top Senate Democrat Harry Reid have reached agreement on legislation to forestall a looming 24 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors.


Boehner, R-Ohio, said the legislation would fix the problem for 12 months and the House will vote on it Thursday.


Because of a flawed formula dating to 1997, Medicare doctors are threatened with big fee cuts almost every year. Congress has always stepped in to prevent the cuts and must act by Monday to avoid them.


When Congress has blown the deadline in the past, Medicare has dealt with the problem by simply delaying processing payments until the formula had been raised.


Reid, D-Nev., is likely to seek to speed the measure through the Senate as early as Thursday, but it would take cooperation from all 100 senators to make that happen.


The move for yet another temporary fix to the problem comes as efforts for permanently solving the problem are foundering. There's widespread support for bipartisan legislation to repair, once and for all, the broken Medicare formula but there's no agreement on how to bear the 10-year, $140 billion cost.


"The permanent fix that's being talked about is a good fix, and there's an agreement — bipartisan, bicameral agreement on the long-term fix," Boehner said. "What there isn't agreement on is, 'how are we going to pay for it?'"


New Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, wants to keep working on a permanent solution to the problem. He proposes using savings from lower costs for operations in Afghanistan. Republicans are demanding savings from President Barack Obama's health care law. The resulting impasse left lawmakers little alternative than to move another temporary fix.


"If you just keep going with these temporary solutions, you waste time, you waste money, you threaten the access for seniors to their doctors, Wyden said, "and the reality is, the patches as they are called, they're not free either. You still have to come up with the money."


The temporary measure is financed by a variety of familiar cuts to health care providers, though some gamesmanship is being employed. For instance, the measure includes additional cuts to hospitals that treat a "disproportionate share" of uninsured and Medicaid patients — but delays planned implementation of existing cuts for a year. It front-loads a 2 percentage point cut to Medicare providers under automatic budget cuts known as sequestration into the first half of the 2024 budget year to claim credit for greater budget savings.


The measure would give Medicare doctors a 0.5 percent fee increase through the end of the year. It also creates two new mental health grant programs, including $60 million over four years for outpatient treatment for people with serious mental illness.



Biden: Raising minimum wage 'good for business'


Vice President Joe Biden said Wednesday that many restaurant owners support raising the tipped minimum wage for waiters and waitresses, calling the boost in pay "good for business overall."


Boosting the minimum wage has been at the centerpiece of President Barack Obama's attempt to address income inequality around the country and make higher wages a key issue for Democrats heading into the fall midterm elections. The president has frequently noted that women earn about 77 cents for every dollar men earn.


Biden stopped by the Florida Avenue Grill, a popular diner near Howard University, to make the case for increasing the federal minimum wage and the wage paid to tipped workers.


The federal tipped minimum wage is $2.13 an hour — an amount that hasn't been increased in more than two decades — and Democrats want to increase it to $4.90 by 2016. Biden noted that the diner's owner, Imar Hutchins, recently raised wages for tipped workers on his own by more than $1.


"I don't want it to go unnoticed that there's a lot of restaurant owners around the country that think that the wage being paid should be raised and that it's good for business overall," said Biden, who spoke to customers, workers and a group of waitresses before exiting with four slices of apple pie.


"When you raise the tip wage, the tip minimum, or the overall minimum wage, all that money comes back into the economy," the vice president said.


The White House released a report on Wednesday advocating a boost in the minimum wage to $10.10 and increasing tipped wages, arguing that it would help women and families. Thirty-two states and the District of Columbia currently require employers to pay tipped workers at an hourly wage that exceeds the national tipped minimum.


Republicans in Congress have opposed raising the minimum wage, saying it would place a burden on businesses and stifle hiring, including for women.


"The reality is that under Obama's watch, life for women has gotten harder as we face higher levels of poverty, lower incomes and ObamaCare continues to hold back economic growth," said Kirsten Kukowski, a spokeswoman for the Republican National Committee.


The report noted that women account for more than 70 percent of all workers in predominantly tipped occupations such as restaurant servers, bartenders and hairstylists.



Grain lower, cattle higher and pork lower


Grain futures were lower Wednesday in early trading on the Chicago Board f Trade.


Wheat for May delivery was unchanged at 7.0825 a bushel; May corn was 2.50 cents lower at 4.84 a bushel; May oats were unchanged at 4.0225 a bushel; while May soybeans was unchanged at at 14.28 a bushel.


Beef higher and pork was lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.


June live cattle was .83 cent higher at $1.3725 a pound; May feeder cattle was .90 cents higher at 1.79 a pound; June lean hogs loss 1.45 cent to $1.2375 a pound.



NYC police remove barricades from Wall Street bull


New York City's Wall Street bull has been freed from his corral.


The New York Post reports (http://bit.ly/1pysY3V ) that police removed the barricades surrounding the Charging Bull sculpture on Tuesday.


The bull had been penned in since September 2011, when police feared the sculpture would be targeted by Occupy Wall Street protesters.


The New York Police Department says security around the bull will be assessed on a day-to-day basis.


The bull has long been popular with tourists who like to snap photos with the 3½-ton bronze sculpture. On Wednesday morning, they were doing just that as uniformed officers stood by nonchalantly.


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Online:


Charging Bull webcam: http://bit.ly/QgBUkc



MDMR reopens oyster reefs to tonging


The Mississippi Department of Marine Resources says several oyster reefs reopened at sunrise Wednesday for tonging only.


The areas now open are:


Area II "A" Conditionally Approved Waters, including the northern portions of the Pass Christian and Henderson Point reefs and Hornets reef.


Area II "B" Conditionally Approved Waters, including Waveland and St. Stanislaus Reef.


Area II "D" Conditionally Approved Waters, including the public reefs in St. Louis Bay, between the U.S. Highway 90 Bridge and the CSX Railroad Bridge.



Florida overcomes GOP barriers to enroll uninsured


Florida's Republican leaders have fought the Affordable Care Act at every turn, banning navigators from county health departments, offering no state dollars to boost outreach efforts to 3.5 million uninsured and leading the fight to repeal the law. Yet the state has emerged as a tale of what went right with President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.


More than 440,000 Florida residents had been enrolled through the federal marketplace through the end of February, putting Florida on pace to exceed the federal government's initial projections by the time enrollment closes March 31.


The numbers are impressive for a state where Republicans control the governor's mansion and both houses of the Legislature. By comparison, Republican-leaning Texas has enrolled 295,000 through the federal site, even though its population is about a third larger than Florida's.


Florida's success is due partly to infrastructure created in the swing state by Democratic-affiliated groups during the last three presidential elections, along with continued investment by the Obama administration and nonprofit advocacy groups in the diverse state that will likely be competitive in November's midterm election.


Groups helping customers enroll in ACA-related health plans have used many of the same people who ran Obama's presidential campaigns, giving them five years of deeply-entrenched relationships in communities, data to pinpoint the uninsured and veteran volunteers to track them down. The state narrowly went for Obama in 2012.


The successes and failures of the Affordable Care Act also carry more political weight in a battleground state such as Florida where the new law will fuel election campaigns for both Republicans and Democrats, said Democratic strategist Screven Watson.


"(The Republicans) are going to use Obamacare as a hammer over the Democratic candidates in November," he said, adding that if Florida's enrollment numbers were dismal, it could have big implications in 2016.


"When you're talking presidential elections, if you have Florida you win," he said.


Florida's Republican leaders chose not to spend any state money marketing the new health plans to millions of uninsured, so the work was supported by $20.5 million in federal grants plus manpower from the nonprofit organization Enroll America.


Florida residents have also been reached by federally funded TV, radio and digital ads. About $52 million has been spent in the last three month on the ads in Florida and the other 28 states relying on the federal marketplace, said Julie Bataille, spokeswoman for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The agency has repeatedly declined to provide a state-by-state breakdown of how taxpayer dollars are being spent on ads.


Enroll America's Tony Penna began in 2008 as a volunteer neighborhood team leader for Obama's campaign in Jacksonville, manning three phone banks a night. By 2012, he was a paid organizer for the campaign, overseeing neighborhood leaders and volunteers as they canvassed apartment buildings, staffed tables at community events and made nightly cold calls.


Penna is using those same strategies in his role now as field director for Enroll America overseeing Jacksonville, Tallahassee and Gainesville.


"It helped me build those relationships with volunteers and keep them constantly motivated," said Penna, who estimates about half the volunteers have campaign experience. "It's a longer-term goal because it's a longer term process ... they want to know what the effect of their work really is."


Elsewhere, enrollment results have been mixed in other states that were closely contested in the 2012 presidential election and now rely on the federal exchange. North Carolina has already beaten the initial federal projections for enrollment by the end of March, while Virginia and Wisconsin appear on track to meet the projection. Ohio is falling short of projections.


Enroll America is active in 11 states including Texas, Arizona and Georgia. But the group has claimed a stronghold in Florida, with 40 staff and nearly 5,000 volunteers compared to 38 staff and about 3,000 volunteers in Texas.


Florida's largest navigator grant, $4.2 million, went to the University of South Florida, which hired about 100 navigators, many of whom have years of experience enrolling people in Medicaid and a program that provides health insurance to children from low-income families.


"They have the relationships. They're already trusted as credible sources of information about health coverage," said Jodi Ray, who oversees the USF program. "That makes a big difference."


Instead of creating new programs, USF expanded their staff to help with marketplace enrollment, relying on 10 subcontractors, all with a track record of doing health care outreach, including Florida CHAIN, one of the state's largest health advocacy groups.


"This required constant evaluation of whether the strategies were effective and successful and adjustments were made in order to fully maximize resources and improve efficiency," said Leah Barber-Heinz, executive director of Florida CHAIN.


While Texas leaders say they struggled to navigate bureaucratic red tape to move funds or make quick, critical decisions to tailor outreach efforts, Florida's main contractors knew they needed to be flexible if they were going to meet the high demand and target it to various demographics.


If that meant finding a way to hire new navigators instead of having the same people travelling long distances for enrollment events, then USF found a way to make it work.


Coalitions in other states are often local or regional, said Anne Filipic, president of Enroll America.


"In Florida, it's statewide and they've been doing it for years," she added.


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Associated Press writer Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston contributed to this report.



Cummins plans new office in downtown Indianapolis


Engine maker Cummins Inc. announced plans Wednesday to build a $30 million headquarters for its global distribution business in downtown Indianapolis


The company said it expected about 400 people to eventually work in the new building at the site of the former Market Square Arena while keeping its corporate headquarters in the central Indiana city of Columbus.


Cummins now has about 100 employees at two Indianapolis office locations in areas such as communications, information technology and investor relations.


The new complex, expected to open in late 2016, will include ground-floor retail, public greenspace and a parking garage, according to the mayor's office.


Cummins officials said the new office will help employee collaboration and accommodate business growth and wasn't a sign of lessening its involvement in Columbus. It has some 8,000 headquarters and factory workers in that city and nearby communities.


"The majority of our employees are based here, and we're committed (to Columbus)," Cummins spokesman Jon Mills told The Republic. "It's been a great city for us; the city continues to be a great partner."


The new Indianapolis office will fill half of a two-block area that's been parking lots since Market Square Arena was demolished in 2001 after the construction of Bankers Life Fieldhouse.


Construction is expected to start in the coming months on a 28-story apartment tower on the other block after the City-County Council this month approved up to $23 million in city financing toward the estimated $81 million project.


The city has offered a 10-year property tax abatement to Cummins for its project and will give Cummins the half the land, valued at $5 million, said Deron Kintner, the city's deputy mayor for economic development.


Mayor Greg Ballard said both projects are important for downtown development.


"In the past few months we have announced plans to transform those lots into vibrant places to live and work, put them on the property tax rolls, change the city skyline, and expand the presence of a Fortune 500 company downtown," Ballard told The Indianapolis Star.


Several Cummins executives, including Chairman and Chief Executive Tom Linebarger, already split their time between offices in Indianapolis and about 40 miles south in Columbus.


"(Indianapolis) made great sense for us because of its proximity to a major airport," Mills said.


Cummins first established its Indianapolis operations in 2004. With about $17 billion in annual revenue, Cummins ranks as Indiana's third-largest public company, trailing only WellPoint Inc. and Eli Lilly and Co.



Lloyd's of London stands ready to pay on crash


Lloyd's of London, the world's oldest insurance market, says it stands ready to pay out claims for the loss of Malaysian Airlines Flight 370, even as searchers continue to scour the Indian Ocean for wreckage.


It's still far too early to speculate about the cost of the disaster, which will depend in part on what happened to the plane, said Lloyd's Chairman John Nelson. By way of example, he said it took two to three years to sort out what led to the crash of an Air France plane in 2009.


He said the tragedy was compounded by the unusual way in which the disaster unfolded.


"As regrettable as it is, we expect the occasional loss," he said.


Flight 370 was en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing when it vanished early March 8 with 239 people aboard. Although no wreckage has been found, the Malaysian government said this week that satellite data indicates the plane crashed into the Indian Ocean thousands of miles from land.


Lloyds, a specialist insurance market, on Wednedsay reported pretax profit of 3.2 billion pounds for last year as it benefited from the fact the world suffered fewer natural disasters.


But Nelson said the aviation segment remained a small portion of their overall business.


"We have been insuring airplanes since they were first invented," he said. "This is what we do."



Russia: Ukraine bars crews from leaving aircraft


Russia accused Ukrainian officials on Wednesday of barring Russian commercial airline crews from going outside their planes in Ukrainian airports. Ukraine denied the allegation.


Tensions between Moscow and Kiev have been rising since Russian forces occupied the Crimean Peninsula and stayed there throughout the referendum earlier this month where votes overwhelmingly supported Russia's annexation.


Russian authorities previously complained that Ukrainian border guards have singled out Russian men at the frontier and blocked their crossing, fearing that they may be activists coming to stir up unrest.


Russia's foreign ministry said in a statement that Ukrainian border guards have been forcing cabin crews of Aeroflot, the state-controlled Russian airline, to stay inside their planes. The ministry said the decision violates international law and ultimately "poses a threat to the safety of civil aviation" because the crews cannot rest properly.


The ministry said that it had sent protest notes twice to the Ukrainian embassy in Moscow.


Oleg Slobodian, spokesman for the Ukrainian border service, denied any policy to keep Aeroflot crews on their planes. The only time a crew member was prevented from entry was on March 24, he said, when a passport check revealed that the man had a travel ban. In solidarity, the remainder of the crew remained on board with him.


Ukrainian soldiers on Tuesday began their westward journey from Crimea after Ukraine's fledging government ordered the withdrawal of its troops from the Black Sea peninsula.



Peter Leonard contributed to this report from Kiev, Ukraine.


Fact sheet: 2014 Cadillac ELR


2014 Cadillac ELR


BASE PRICE: $75,995.


PRICE AS TESTED: $82,135.


TYPE: Front-engine, front-wheel drive, four-passenger, subcompact, plug-in, extended-range electric-gasoline coupe.


ENGINE: 162-kilowatt drive electric motors, 16.5-kilowatt lithium ion battery pack and 1.4-liter, double overhead cam four cylinder.


MILEAGE: 82 mpg equivalent (combined city/highway on all electric), 33 mpg (combined city/highway on gasoline engine).


ELECTRIC RANGE: Up to 37 miles from full battery charge after 5 hours at 240 volts.


TOP SPEED: 106 mph.


LENGTH: 186 inches.


WHEELBASE: 106.1 inches.


CURB WEIGHT: 4,050 pounds.


BUILT AT: Hamtramck, Mich.


OPTIONS: Leather seats in Kona Brown with jet black accents with 20-way adjustable front seats $2,450; full-speed range adaptive cruise control with automatic collision preparation $1,995; luxury package (includes 20-inch ultra bright, midnight silver wheels, Intellibeam headlights, side blind zone alert, rear cross traffic alert) $,1,695.


DESTINATION CHARGE: $995.



Stocks open higher on better manufacturing report


Stocks are opening higher on Wall Street as investors respond to an encouraging sign on U.S. manufacturing.


The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose nine points, or 0.5 percent, to 1,875 in the first few minutes of trading Wednesday. That's about three points below the latest all-time high for the index set on March 7.


The Dow Jones industrial average rose 79 points, or 0.5 percent, to 16,445. The Nasdaq composite rose 25 points, or 0.6 percent, to 4,259.


Traders were encouraged by news that orders to U.S. factories for long-lasting manufactured goods rose in February by the largest amount since November. That followed a drop in January.


Discount retailer Five Below shot up 15 percent after reporting that its income beat analysts' expectations in the latest quarter.



The President Wants You to Get Covered Today: "Don’t Just Think About It, Just Do It"

Watch on YouTube


There are only 5 days left to get health insurance coverage for 2014 at HealthCare.gov before open enrollment ends on March 31. If you haven’t signed up yet, the President wants you to get covered today.


As the President says, “No one’s invincible. We all get sick, or get into accidents. Life happens. But you should never have to worry you’ll lose everything to medical bills. That’s why health insurance is so important.”


If you’re not covered, don’t wait any longer — sign up today.


And if you already have health insurance, tell your friends, family, and co-workers that they need to get covered, too. Visit WH.gov/GetCovered for tips on how to spread the word.


read more


Three killed, including child, in Tripoli fighting


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Three people, including a young child, were killed in the northern city of Tripoli Wednesday in renewed clashes linked to the ongoing war in neighboring Syria.


Ahmed Khaled Sayyed, 11, died as a result of sniper fire in the largely Sunni Tripoli neighborhood of Bab al-Tabbaneh.


Mahmoud Fakhreddine, 19, was also critically injured by the sniper fire in the neighborhood and was transferred to the Islamic Hospital.


Hasan Saleh Mazloum and Wadad Nasser were identified as the victims of a new sectarian-related attack near the city’s Malouleh roundabout.


Mazloum was driving near the roundabout when unidentified gunmen opened fire on his vehicle which spiraled out of control into a vegetable cart on the side of road. Mazloum was then dragged out of his car on to the street where he was brutally beaten.


Residents managed to get Mazloum to a local hospital after the assailants cleared the area but the man succumbed to his injuries.


Nasser, a passerby, was shot and killed in the shooting.


Two people were also wounded in the incident.


Attacks on members of Tripoli’s Alawite sect have been on the rise after members of the Arab Democratic Party, based in Jabal Mohsen, were implicated in the August explosions targeting the city’s Al-Salam and Al-Taqwa mosques.


Fighters in Jabal Mohsen, a predominantly Alawite neighborhood, have also frequently clashed with rival gunmen in the mainly Sunni neighborhood of Bab Al-Tabbaneh, in fighting linked to the ongoing conflict in neighboring Syria.


Following the shooting Wednesday, most shops in Bab al-Tabbaneh closed and streets vacated with residents fearing renewed clashes between rival neighborhoods.


Sniper fire was ongoing by Wednesday night in the Al-Zahiriya neighborhood all the way up to the Abu Ali roundabout and Malloula.


A shell also landed by the Rahman Mosque on Syria Street.


This is the 20th round of fighting between the rival neighborhoods since the uprising began in March 2011.


In a bid to curb the cycle of violence in the city, the government decided in December to place Tripoli under the command of the Army for a period of six months, but the plan has been undermined by two rounds of fighting this year.



Child killed, teenager injured in Tripoli fighting


BEIRUT: A child died and another was critically injured as clashes broke out again Wednesday in the northern city of Tripoli, security sources told The Daily Star.


Ahmed Khaled Sayyed, 11, died as a result of sniper fire in the largely Sunni Tripoli neighborhood of Bab al-Tabbaneh.


Mahmoud Fakhreddine, 19, was also critically injured by sniper fire in the neighborhood and was transferred to the Islamic Hospital, the sources said.


Sniper fire was ongoing in the Al-Zahiriya neighborhood all the way up to the Abu Ali roundabout and Malloula.


A shell also landed by the Rahman Mosque on Syria Street.


This is the 20th round of fighting between the rival neighborhoods of Bab al-Tabbaneh, which supports the Syrian uprising, and the mainly Alawite Jabal Mohsen, which supports President Bashar Assad, since the uprising began in March 2011.


In a bid to curb the cycle of violence in the city, the government decided in December to place Tripoli under the command of the Army for a period of six months, but the plan has been undermined by two rounds of fighting this year.



Goodell: Expanded playoffs in 2014 possible


NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell says it's possible the playoffs could expand next season.


Goodell said Wednesday at the spring meetings that "it's not out of the question." He says he "wouldn't rule it out, but I wouldn't say that's the direction we're heading."


The owners discussed adding two playoff teams to the current 12, one in each conference. The topic is certain to come up when Goodell meets with the players union April 8, and again at the owners' May meeting in Atlanta.


Goodell adds that there was a "tremendous amount of interest in this, possibly even to the point of support." He believes it will make the late-season division and wild-card races even more compelling.


Adding two postseason games also would increase TV revenues.



Obama highlights need for US-EU energy cooperation


President Barack Obama says the European Union and the United States should push ahead with negotiations to create what would be the world's largest free-trade zone.


Obama said Wednesday concluding the free trade deal would also facilitate exports of natural gas from the U.S. to the 28-nation EU.


The EU relies heavily on Russia for gas supplies but the crisis following Moscow's annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula opened the prospect of Russia limiting gas shipments in retaliation against economic sanctions imposed by the West.


Obama said during a visit to the EU headquarters a free trade agreement would mean shipments of liquefied gas to Europe "would actually be much easier."


The U.S. and the EU combined account for almost half of the world's GDP and a third of world trade.



WTO rules China violates 'rare earth' trade rules


The World Trade Organization ruled Wednesday that China has violated international trade rules with its restrictions on the export of 17 "rare earths" and two other minerals that have key industrial and high-tech uses.


Responding to complaints filed by the United States, the European Union and Japan, the WTO dispute settlement panel found that China's restrictions "breach" its obligations to the world trade body because the country could not properly justify them.


"China's decision to promote its own industry and discriminate against U.S. companies has caused U.S. manufacturers to pay as much as three times more than what their Chinese competitors pay for the exact same rare earths," said U.S. Trade Rep. Michael Froman.


The case applies to 17 rare earth minerals which, despite their name, are for the most part relatively abundant, and are commonly used to make goods including hybrid cars, weapons, flat-screen TVs, mobile phones, mercury-vapor lights and camera lenses.


China accounts for more than 90 percent of production of rare earth minerals, though it has only about 30 percent of the deposits of rare earths in the Earth's crust. In 2009, it alarmed foreign companies by limiting exports of the rare earths in an attempt to boost its domestic manufacturing base. Chinese officials had also expressed the hope that foreign companies which use rare earths would shift production to China and give technology to local partners.


But the WTO panel decided that trade in a country's natural resources, once extracted from the ground and put onto the market for sale, is subject to WTO rules. The U.S., EU and Japan argued that the export restraints artificially increased world prices for the minerals, while artificially lowering prices for Chinese producers.


In a statement on the panel's ruling, the EU's mission to the WTO said the ruling affects minerals used as essential components by a wide range of European industries. And while no one contests China's right to impose environmental and conservation policies, EU officials said the panel's ruling affirms that "the sovereign right of a country over its natural resources does not allow it to control international markets or the global distribution of raw materials."


The panel's report on China's export restraints, which include export duties and quotas, may be adopted or appealed within 60 days. If adopted, the U.S., EU and Japan would be entitled to retaliate trade-wise if China did not comply with WTO rules.


China's WTO mission in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment.



Polygamy May Seem Like A Man's Dream, But Kenyan Women Are Not Happy



Audio for this story from Tell Me More will be available at approximately 3:00 p.m. ET.





Kenyan lawmakers recently passed a bill that legalizes polygamy without a wife's consent. Member of Parliament Annah Nyokabi Gathecha explains why she walked out of the voting session.



The First Lady’s Travel Journal: Pandas!

Note: This post is part of a series authored by First Lady Michelle Obama to share her visit to China with young people in the U.S. You can read all of the First Lady's posts at http://1.usa.gov/OHxkKo.


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Sectarian attack claims two in north Lebanon


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Two people, including a Lebanese Alawite, were killed in the northern city of Tripoli Wednesday in a new sectarian-related attack linked to the ongoing war in neighboring Syria.


Hasan Saleh Mazloum and Wadad Nasser were identified as the victims of the attack near the city’s Malouleh roundabout.


Mazloum was driving near the roundabout when unidentified gunmen opened fire on his vehicle which spiraled out of control into a vegetable cart on the side of road. Mazloum was then dragged out of his car on to the street where he was brutally beaten.


Residents managed to get Mazloum to a local hospital after the assailants cleared the area but the man succumbed to his injuries.


Nasser, a passerby, was shot and killed in the shooting.


Two people were also wounded in the incident.


Tripoli, a city torn by intermittent rounds of clashes linked to Syria crisis between the Sunni-predominated Bab al-Tabbaneh neighborhood and Jabal Mohsen where the majoity are Alawites, has seen a string of sectarian-related violence.


Following the shooting, most shops in Bab al-Tabbaneh closed and streets vacated with residents fearing new clashes.



Czechs, US start nuclear energy research center


The United States and Czech Republic are increasing cooperation in civilian nuclear energy, opening a joint research center in Prague for nuclear scientists and engineers from both countries.


About one-third of the Czech Republic's energy comes from nuclear power, and U.S. Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz said Wednesday that the center would be "a catalyst" in the field.


The center is based at the Czech Technical University in Prague. The U.S. government is contributing $500,000 for the first two years.


Former Czech Prime Minister Petr Necas and President Barack Obama agreed on the project in 2011. The Czech Republic has two nuclear power plants, and U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Co. and a consortium led by Russia's Atomstroyexport are bidding to build two more reactors.



Myanmar awards 20 oil exploration blocks


Major oil companies including Total, Chevron, Woodside Energy and Shell have won bids for offshore oil and gas exploration blocks off Myanmar's western coast.


An announcement posted Wednesday on the Energy Ministry's website said 13 oil companies won bids to explore in 10 shallow water blocks and 10 deep water blocks in the Gulf of Martaban and Tanintharyi, off the western state of Rakhine.


Multinational oil companies such as Dutch Shell, Total E&P, Norwegian Statoil and ConocoPhillips won deep water blocks, Chevron a shallow water block and Australia's Woodside Energy won both shallow and deep water blocks, it said.


Most of Myanmar's current hydrocarbon production is natural gas. According to official statistics, the country exported $3.7 billion worth of gas in fiscal year 2012-2013.



IMF raises Philippine growth forecast to 6.5 pct


The International Monetary Fund has raised its 2014 economic growth forecast for the Philippines to 6.5 percent, up from its January projection of 6.3 percent, with typhoon reconstruction expected to boost the economy.


It forecasts 2015 growth at 6.5 percent, slightly lower than its 6.6 percent estimate in January. The economy grew 7.2 percent last year despite a string of calamities including Typhoon Haiyan in November, and government has targeted growth of 6.5 to 7.5 percent this year and 7 to 8 percent next year.


An IMF statement at the conclusion of regular consultation with economic managers also says the need for easy monetary policies in the Philippines has waned because of a stronger global outlook.


Monetary authorities have kept interest rates at record lows to spur credit and spending.



Murdoch companies name son Lachlan co-chairman


Rupert Murdoch's son Lachlan will become nonexecutive co-chairman of both 21st Century Fox and News Corp., two companies controlled by the father.


Murdoch's other son, James, also is being named co-chief operating officer of 21st Century Fox, a TV and movie company that was separated from the publishing company News Corp. last June.


Rupert Murdoch is chairman and CEO of 21st Century Fox and executive chairman of News Corp.


The 42-year-old Lachlan Murdoch and 41-year-old James serve as directors of News Corp. and 21st Century Fox.


21st Century Fox also says that Fox Networks Group Chairman and CEO Peter Rice is extending his employment agreement.



NH forum addresses small business health plans


The Greater Concord Chamber of Commerce is hosting a small business roundtable to help company owners understand the federal health care overhaul law.


The Wednesday morning forum in Concord will include an overview of the law and the Small Business Health Options Program, also known as SHOP. Under the program, businesses with 25 or fewer employees may be eligible for tax credits to help cover the cost of insurance premiums.


The event is among the consumer education efforts organized by Covering New Hampshire.



'Candy Crush' maker's stock falls in public debut


Shares of King Digital, the company behind the popular mobile game "Candy Crush Saga," are down in the company's public trading debut.


King's stock priced at $22.50 on Tuesday and opened on Wednesday at $20.50, almost 9 percent lower.


King Digital Entertainment PLC, based in Ireland, had $1.88 billion in revenue last year.


Its other top games include "Pet Rescue Saga" and "Farm Heroes Saga." Some analysts have questioned whether King would be able to repeat the success of "Candy Crush," which has been far more successful than any of its other games.


King is trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol "KING."



Bank of Spain sees growth but high joblessness


The Bank of Spain predicts the economy will grow by 1.2 percent in 2014, slightly above government and EU forecasts, though unemployment is expected to dip only slightly from its near-record levels.


In its monthly report released Wednesday, the bank said that despite the economic recovery, the unemployment rate of 26 percent should edge down to 25 percent this year and to 23.8 percent in 2015.


It said gross domestic product should increase by 1.7 percent in 2015.


Spain emerged from a double-dip recession in the third quarter of 2013.



Turkish court orders halt to Twitter ban


A Turkish court ordered the telecommunications authority to restore access to Twitter on Wednesday, issuing a temporary injunction five days after the government blocked the social network in Turkey.


Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc told reporters the telecommunications authority would obey the court decision when it received official notice, but reserved the right to appeal. The ban came shortly after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan threatened to "rip out the roots" of the social network that has been a conduit for links to recordings suggesting government corruption.


The telecommunications authority had closed off access to Twitter, accusing it of disobeying Turkish court orders to remove content. The move drew international criticism and many Turkish users flouted the ban, finding immediate ways to circumvent it. Even Turkish President Abdullah Gul tweeted his opposition to the blockage.


Lawyers, opposition parties and journalists groups asked courts to overturn the ban, arguing it was illegal and unconstitutional.



Orders for US manufactured goods up 2.2 percent


Orders to U.S. factories for long-lasting manufactured goods rose in February by the largest amount in three months, helped by solid gains in demand for airplanes and autos.


Orders for durable goods increased 2.2 percent last month following a 1.3 percent drop in January, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. The February rebound was led by a 13.6 percent surge in orders for commercial aircraft. Orders for motor vehicles and parts rose 3.6 percent, recovering from a January decline.


But a category that serves as a proxy for business investment plans fell 1.3 percent in February, the biggest drop since a 1.6 percent December decline. Orders in this category had been up 0.8 percent in January.


Economists are looking for a sustained rebound in manufacturing as the economy improves this year.


The big rise in demand for commercial aircraft followed a 22.1 percent plunge in the previous month in this traditionally volatile category.


Demand rose for primary metals such as steel by 1.6 percent but orders for machinery fell 1.5 percent. Demand for computers was down 0.5 percent and orders for communications equipment dropped 2.7 percent.


Economists expect manufacturing output to strengthen in coming months reflecting better weather after a series of winter storms which disrupted production at some factories.


The Institute for Supply Management said that its gauge of manufacturing activity expanded more quickly in February as companies received more orders and boosted their stockpiles.


The institute's manufacturing index rose to 53.2 in February, up from 51.3 in January. That only partially reversed a five-point drop in January. Any reading above 50 indicates that manufacturing is expanding.


The ISM index had risen for six straight months until falling slightly in December and taking a big tumble in January as heavy snow caused factories to close.


The bad weather depressed purchases of homes and autos, causing factories to trim their production schedules for autos, furniture and appliances in January. However, the Federal Reserve reported that factory output rebounded strongly in February. The February gain was the largest in six months.


Economists hope that manufacturing and the broader economy are emerging from a winter slump. They expect the overall economy slowed to growth of less than 2 percent in the January-March period. But they are forecasting growth will rebound to around 3 percent for the rest of the year. If that occurs, it would be the fastest annual economic growth since 2005.



Bodyguard: Berezovsky seemed 'broken' before death


Boris Berezovsky's bodyguard says the Russian oligarch seemed to be a broken man and had discussed killing himself before his apparent suicide last year.


Avi Navama told a coroner's inquest Wednesday that Berezovsky's mood plummeted after he lost a highly publicized billion-pound legal dispute with fellow Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich.


He said Berezovsky seemed depressed and "very low" at the time. Berezovsky's body was found slumped on the floor at his ex-wife's home last March.


Police said the death was "consistent with hanging" and that there was no sign of a struggle.


Berezovsky was a one-time Kremlin insider who had become a harsh critic of Russian leaders. He was living in Britain in self-imposed exile at the time of his death.


The inquest is expected to last two days.



Global Geophysical files for bankruptcy protection


Global Geophysical Services Inc., which provides seismic data to oil and gas companies, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.


CEO Richard White said in a statement late Tuesday that the Houston company has been burdened with "significant debt" incurred over the last several years.


White said Global Geophysical Services has been in talks with its lenders and bondholders to start exploring methods to improve its liquidity.


"We are beginning the process of developing a consensual financial restructuring plan that will reduce the company's debt and align our financial profile with the strength of our operations," he said.


White added that Global Geophysical Services has a strong backlog and is seeing increased demand for its services.


Global Geophysical Services filed for bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Texas, Corpus Christi Division. It has asked for authority to continue to support its international operations and plans to pay suppliers in full under normal terms for goods and services provided after the Tuesday filing date.


The company's subsidiaries outside the U.S. were not included in the filing.



Fans take photos, souvenirs as movie theater falls


The demolition of a well-known movie theater in western Michigan is attracting picture-takers and souvenir-seekers.


Michael Arnold says it was "horrible" to watch crews tear apart Studio 28 in the Grand Rapids-area community of Wyoming, but he says he had to witness it. The 45-year-old Jenison man saw "Star Wars" there as a child and he recalled it was his first movie in a theater.


The Grand Rapids Press reports (http://bit.ly/NSVVLA ) Arnold was among those who stopped by Tuesday to watch exterior demolition begin. Some walked away with bricks.


Arnold snapped images on his cellphone to send to a friend.


The property, which has sat empty for six years, was condemned by the city of Wyoming in December. Plans call for redevelopment at the site.



North Adams hospital, affiliates to shut down


More than 500 people are without a job and patients across northern Berkshire County are looking for answers following the announced closure of North Adams Regional Hospital and its affiliates.


Northern Berkshire Healthcare, which owns the hospital, a visiting nurse and hospice group, and three medical practices, announced Tuesday that it will shut down Friday.


The group's trustees approved the closure in response to a "worsening financial status."


The board said in a statement that "given our finances and the daunting challenges that small rural community hospitals are facing in this health care environment, we can no longer continue."


Local lawmakers say they are working with the state authorities on a bailout package to keep the hospital running as it sought a more stable partner for a merger.



Agriculture summit in Lansing hears from governor


Gov. Rick Snyder is speaking at the Pure Michigan Agriculture Summit in Lansing.


The governor's office says he'll address those at the event Wednesday morning. It's taking place at the Crown Plaza Lansing West hotel.


The Michigan Economic Development Corp. is co-sponsoring the event.


Organizers say the summit is an "is an invitation-only event to connect food buyers to food processors, producers and aggregators."


They say it aims to launch a long-term collaboration of businesses and state agencies "to assist in supply chain connectivity and create more opportunities for Michigan products."



Nissan recalls nearly 990K vehicles for air bags


Nissan is recalling almost 990,000 cars, SUVs and minivans in the U.S. because the front passenger air bags may not inflate in a crash.


The recall affects the Altima, Leaf, Pathfinder and Sentra models from the 2013 and 2014 model years, as well as the NV200 Taxi van and Infiniti JX35 SUV from 2013. Also covered is the Infiniti QX50 SUV from 2014.


The company tells the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that the vehicles' computer software may not detect an adult in the passenger seat. If that happens, the air bags won't inflate.


Nissan will notify owners and dealers will update the software for free. The recall is expected to start in mid-April.



Former contractor sentenced on fraud charges


A former contractor with the city of Southaven who pleaded guilty to submitting fake invoices to an area bank for drainage work at a subdivision that his development company never built has been sentenced to serve 21 months in federal prison.


The Commercial Appeal reports (http://bit.ly/1pyos5x ) U.S. Dist. Judge Sharion Aycock also on Tuesday ordered James M. Harris Jr. to pay $247,467 in restitution to Citizens National Bank in Olive Branch, which gave Harris' former company, RH Holdings, a $5 million loan to build the subdivision in Southaven.


Harris pleaded guilty last September to loan and credit application fraud.



Arab League voices support for Lebanon, Army


BEIRUT: The Arab League Wednesday voiced solidarity with Lebanon and called for enhancing the country’s security forces.


“We call for solidarity with Lebanon and for securing political and economic support for the country while maintaining Lebanon’s sovereignty,” Khaled al-Jarallah, Kuwait's foreign ministry undersecretary, said, reading the final Arab summit statement.


“We hail the role of the Lebanese Army and Lebanese security forces and we stress the need to further enhance their capacities to ensure stability in the country,” he said.


The statement also saluted “ Lebanon and its resistance against Israeli occupation, particularly in the July [August] 2006 aggression,” referring to the 33-day war between Lebanon and Israel.



In Ohio, Gov. Kasich Rises From Forsaken to Favorite



Ohio Gov. John Kasich delivers his State of the State address Feb. 24 at the Performing Arts Center in Medina, Ohio.i i


hide captionOhio Gov. John Kasich delivers his State of the State address Feb. 24 at the Performing Arts Center in Medina, Ohio.



Tony Dejak/AP

Ohio Gov. John Kasich delivers his State of the State address Feb. 24 at the Performing Arts Center in Medina, Ohio.



Ohio Gov. John Kasich delivers his State of the State address Feb. 24 at the Performing Arts Center in Medina, Ohio.


Tony Dejak/AP


Early in his term, Ohio Republican Gov. John Kasich was considered the most unpopular governor in the country. Between that and a sputtering state economy, a second term looked like a dicey proposition.


But Kasich's standing has recovered over the past two years and the latest polling indicates his Democratic opponent Ed FitzGerald remains largely unknown.


It's early in the election season — Ohio's primary isn't until May — but FitzGerald is struggling to find the issue with which he can convince people to turn Kasich out.


"All the polling shows that people are looking for an alternative," says FitzGerald, the Cuyahoga County executive. "He's like a product people have lined up to make a return."


FitzGerald, however, hasn't yet made the case that he's the right alternative. That's reflected in his fundraising, which is running well behind Kasich's, despite big investments from the Ohio Democratic Party.


"If Kasich were perceived as highly vulnerable, that would obviously help FitzGerald's fundraising a great deal," says former GOP Gov. Bob Taft. "I don't think Kasich is perceived as that vulnerable."


Bragging On The Economy


Kasich can plausibly make the claim all politicians like to make — that things have gotten better on his watch.


Kasich inherited an $8 billion budget shortfall, and now the state is running a surplus and talking about another round of income tax cuts. Ohio lost nearly 400,000 jobs in the four years before he took office, and has gained 140,000 jobs since.


"What he inherited, to say that Ohio was a state that was struggling is an understatement," says Connie Wehrkamp, Kasich's campaign spokeswoman.


State unemployment fell to a post-recession low in January. In fact, new figures released earlier this month showed that the state gained twice as many jobs last year (51,000) than had been previously counted.


Numbers like these have brought Kasich's approval ratings up and given the once-struggling governor a slim but consistent lead.There's already speculation that Kasich will not only win, but turn around and mount a run for president.


"The economy's not soaring, but it's doing okay," Taft says. "It's a lot better than when Kasich took office."


Making Himself Known


FitzGerald says that most of the new jobs don't pay very well and only a "small group" have truly prospered under Kasich's leadership. And it's true that Ohio's unemployment rate, which was below the national average in 2012, is now a little worse.


"You still have a lot of people who are struggling," says Chris Seelbach, a Democratic member of the Cincinnati city council.


That may give FitzGerald an opening, but he's got to sell himself first. The same Quinnipiac University poll last month that showed FitzGerald close behind Kasich also showed that 70 percent of Ohioans didn't know enough about him to form an opinion.


FitzGerald has gotten high marks for his work in Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, reshaping a county government that was the subject of a 2008 FBI corruption investigation, which has led to dozens of convictions.


FitzGerald is a former FBI agent himself, but looking good in Cleveland is not necessarily enough to make him shine in the rest of the state. Because Ohio is so large — Cincinnati is much closer to Indianapolis and Louisville than it is to Cleveland — candidates for statewide office often have to run once and lose, just to make themselves known.


And FitzGerald stumbled out of the gate. His first running mate, state Sen. Eric Kearney, had tax problems. FitzGerald stuck by him longer than many in his own party thought wise.


"That lieutenant governor mishap definitely hurt him, that's a fact," Seelbach says.


The Case Against Kasich


FitzGerald picked as his new running mate Sharon Neustadt, a Dayton-area attorney who has sat on a local Planned Parenthood board. A change in state law threatens to put half of Ohio's abortion clinics out of business. He notes that under Kasich, it's not just women's reproductive rights that have been weakened, but voting rights as well.


FitzGerald says the governor has been more stealthy about these "extreme things" than he was about pursuing an unpopular anti-union law enacted during his first year in office, which voters quickly repealed. But FitzGerald says people simply don't agree with these policies, which is prompting buyer's remorse.


"All of those touch somebody, in different ways, but not in a good way," says Joe Schiavoni, Democratic leader of the state Senate.


While all of these issues — jobs, inequality, abortion rights — speak to the Democratic base, FitzGerald hasn't crystallized his argument about why Kasich needs to be turned out of office.


"One of the problems with the FitzGerald campaign is that it hasn't really homed in on a single message," says Vladimir Kogan, an Ohio State University political scientist. "Alternating among those, depending on what's in the news, takes away from the campaign."


Kasich is also hard to paint as someone who serves only the interests of the rich, since he's been attentive to education issues and is a rare Republican governor willing to embrace the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act.


Democrats are hopeful that FitzGerald's campaign can catch fire as voters start to pay more attention to the race, but they concede it may be difficult, given the incumbent's cash advantage.


"Nobody's going to win big in Ohio these days, but Kasich has a lead and he's obviously come back from some really bad numbers," says Peter Brown, a pollster with Quinnipiac. "He does have some things that are important, like a rather large advantage in money."



Deal allows Tesla to sell cars in Ohio


Ohio auto dealers have struck an agreement that will allow Tesla Motors to sell its electric cars in the state.


The agreement with the Ohio Automobile Dealers Association was negotiated on Tuesday and approved by a Senate panel.


The bill allows Tesla to keep its existing stores in the Columbus and Cincinnati areas, and allows a third to open in Cleveland. It prohibits the company from opening any other stores.


The bill allows no other automaker to operate manufacturer-owned stores in the state.


Ohio was among states proposing to block Tesla from setting up additional direct-sales galleries on grounds they undercut traditional auto dealerships. Dealers saw Tesla as a threat to a system in which nearly all dealerships are independently owned franchises that are separate from manufacturers.



Disaster film about jet crash at sea put on hold


A disaster movie about a jet that mysteriously crashes into the ocean has been put on hold because of its similarities to the missing Malaysian plane.


Arclight Films, the production company behind "Deep Water," said Wednesday that preproduction has been halted for the time being.


Managing Director Gary Hamilton said, "we're delaying it out of respect for what's going on."


An international search effort is scouring a remote stretch of the southern Indian Ocean for a Malaysia Airlines jet that disappeared March 8. Hamilton said it was a "pretty tragic event."


According to the company's website, the film is about a flight from Sydney to Beijing that goes down in the ocean, leaving the surviving passengers and crew to fight off sharks and other dangers.