Thursday, 27 March 2014

Minnesota farm income dropped sharply in 2013


Lower corn prices fueled a dramatic 78 percent drop in Minnesota farm income last year, according to an annual report released Thursday by the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system and University of Minnesota Extension.


Net farm income was $41,899 for the median farm in the study, compared with $189,679 in 2012. Livestock farms did not fare much better, as incomes for dairy, hog and beef operations also declined in 2013.


While the authors said they expect another down year for crop farmers in 2014, they expect a much better year for livestock producers who are already catching a break from lower feed costs and higher meat prices.


Extension economist Dale Nordquist said the big question is how long the lower profits for crops will last.


The huge drop in overall farm income was not a surprise, he said, given that 2012 was an unusually profitable year for Minnesota crop farmers, who largely escaped a widespread drought and benefited from the resulting high prices. Most farmers still had enough cash on hand so they didn't feel the full impact in 2013, but it'll hit harder this year when they sell off the rest of last year's crops, he said.


"It's not pretty," Nordquist said. "For a lot of farmers it's certainly not a crisis. They did come in with great working capital. It's just a matter of this year they're going to have to use up some of that working capital to make up for losses in production."


Minnesota's net return per acre of corn fell from a $377 profit in 2012 to a loss of $24 in 2013, the report said. Soybeans returned a profit of $85 per acre compared with $216 in 2012. And sugar beet producers lost an average of $300 per acre as the price dropped from $65 a ton to $35.


Other factors putting the squeeze on profits included rising land rents and other production costs, Nordquist said, as well as and a cold, wet spring followed by drought that led to below-average yields.


"At current prices, many producers will lose money on cash-rented land in the coming year," Ron Dvergsten, coordinator of the farm business management program at Northland Community & Technical College in Thief River Falls, said in the report.


While rents and other costs are projected to increase in 2014, he said, one plus is that fertilizer prices are down.


Even with strong prices for meat and milk, Nordquist said, livestock producers struggled through most of last year because of high feed and forage costs that didn't come down until the harvest.


"But now coming into 2014, it looks like a really strong year for livestock producers," Nordquist said.


Prices for meat and dairy products keep rising. In fact, he said, livestock farmers are starting to worry that consumers will start shying away because of the high prices they're now seeing in grocery stores. Government figures show beef prices jumped 4 percent in February alone because of the western drought, the most in more than 10 years, while milk and other dairy prices also rose.


One wild card for Minnesota's pork producers is the porcine epidemic diarrhea virus, he said. It's deadly to newborn piglets so it can be a disaster for farms stricken by it. The virus showed up in the U.S. last spring and has been spreading rapidly in several states including Minnesota.


The study used data from 2,063 participants in MnSCU farm business management education programs, 111 members of the Southwest Minnesota Farm Business Management Association and 41 participants who worked with private consultants.


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Online:


Annual report: http://bit.ly/1fpCVvP


FINBIN Farm Financial Database: http://bit.ly/1gvRand



Natchez hospital bankruptcy petition filed


Natchez Regional Medical Center has filed its Chapter 9 bankruptcy petition, and the hospital's trustees will meet with the Adams County Board of Supervisors.


Hospital attorney Walter Brown's office tells The Natchez Democrat (http://bit.ly/1m7MbcB ) the bankruptcy petition was filed Wednesday.


The hospital announced in February it would seek bankruptcy after administrators said its financial liabilities exceeded its assets by approximately $3 million. The petition is the first step in asking the federal court to grant the hospital bankruptcy status.


The announcement came after more than a half-year of marketing the hospital for sale. Hospital representatives said at the time of the bankruptcy announcement, a sale was in negotiation, a statement that was reaffirmed this month.


The hospital trustees are scheduled to meet with the county supervisors Thursday.


Supervisor Calvin Butler said he hopes long-standing financial questions the supervisors have will be answered at the meeting.


"I am looking forward to looking and seeing what has been going on and what has gotten us here," he said. "When we started (the sale process), everything was supposed to be good and it was a sure sale, and then all of a sudden we get a bankruptcy notice."


Supervisor David Carter said he looks forward to hearing what will be shared and what will be made public record with the filing the bankruptcy proceedings.


"I know the basics, but I think every citizen has a right to know some basic stuff that they have been excluded from in the past eight months," he said.


NRMC opened in 1960 as Jefferson Davis Memorial Hospital. Its $2.4 million construction was underwritten by an $800,000 local contribution and state and federal funds.


It has been financially independent since 1974 and does not receive tax support, but is backed by a 5-mill standby tax that the Mississippi Development Bank required the hospital get in 2006 when it asked for the MDB to reissue its revenue bond.



NYC tech firm opening upstate office, employ 180


A Manhattan-based technology company that turns ideas for inventions into finished products plans to open an upstate office that's expected to employ 180 people in three years.


Ben Kaufman, the founder and CEO of Quirky, joined local officials Thursday to announce that the four-year-old firm will open an office in downtown Schenectady in May.


The company will get nearly $1 million in local and state grants and tax credits to open its Schenectady project.


Last year, General Electric, formerly based in Schenectady, announced it would license thousands of patents to Quirky, which lets people collaborate on designing household products and brings them to stores.


Quirky develops inventions from sketches to the final product. The company keeps the rights to the products and the inventors and Quirky members who gave input on the designs get royalties.



McDonald's workers arrested at LSU


LSU police say employees of an on-campus McDonald's restaurant stole more than $30,000 from students over the past year in a fraud scheme.


The Advocate reported (http://bit.ly/1m8GgE5 ) investigators believe the alleged scheme could have been active for several years.


LSU police said they expect to make at least one more arrest.


According to investigators, cashiers and managers overcharged students on university-issued debit cards, pocketing the difference and falsifying records to hide the thefts.


McDonald's couldn't provide financial records dating before March 2013, but over the past year records indicate employees overcharged students by more than $31,000, according to arrest warrants.


A portion of many students' meal plans includes money dedicated to "paw points," which can be spent only at specified restaurants, stores and some other locations on or near the LSU campus. Many of the businesses, such as the McDonald's, have special card scanners for school-issued debit cards to process the transactions.


According to arrest warrants, employees involved in the scheme would ring up meals for the correct amount on the store's cash register. Then, when they typed in the amount of paw points spent at the second scanner, some employees would overcharge student accounts in varying amounts up to $10.


Students wouldn't be provided receipts and store employees would later adjust financial records to balance the register, a detective wrote in the arrest warrants.


Police were made aware of the alleged scheme by an anonymous tipster.


Police said they booked Jeannine Rooks, 34; Constance Brown, 31; Bertrand Brown, 34; and Danielle Marie Casey, 23, all of Baton Rouge. The arrests were made on Wednesday.


It was not immediately clear whether any of the suspects has an attorney.



Anti-smoking groups want money spent for health


Anti-smoking groups want to ensure that the money Michigan gets from its settlement with tobacco companies is used to improve the health of the state's residents.


The national tobacco settlement brings in Michigan about $250 million to $350 million a year, and some of the money has been used to pay for higher education scholarships, business grants and budget fixes. Gov. Rick Snyder has proposed setting aside $17.5 million in tobacco settlement reserves annually for 20 years to help resolve Detroit's bankruptcy.


"We're not opposed to fixing Detroit's economic problems, but we feel a reasonable percentage of the (tobacco settlement) money should be used to help people quit smoking," Peter Hamm, spokesman for the national group Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, told The Detroit News (http://bit.ly/1gF2Ftk ).


According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Michigan needs $110.6 million a year to run an effective, comprehensive smoking prevention program. That's more than 70 times the $1.5 million the state is spending this year, the newspaper said.


The Snyder administration said Michigan's money is being spent strategically and well, despite not meeting the recommended funding level. Snyder also has worked to promote healthy lifestyles in the state, his office said, and that isn't included in such costs.


The governor "takes smoking cessation programs seriously as we work to build a healthier, stronger Michigan," spokesman Dave Murray said.


According to figures distributed by the state, 23 percent of Michigan adults were smokers in 2011 and 2012, above the national averages of 21.2 percent and 19.6 percent, respectively.


Clifford Douglas, executive director of the University of Michigan Tobacco Research Network, said it's "an embarrassment" that Michigan doesn't spend more to counteract smoking-related diseases. He said an effective advertising, cessation and prevention campaign would save lives and substantially reduce the number of early deaths.


"To be blunt, the State of Michigan is not taking seriously its leading epidemic," he said.


Earlier this year, Snyder pledged to commit up to $350 million in state funds to help Detroit as it tries to shore up pension funds that are billions in debt and prevent the sale of valuable city-owned art. Some tobacco settlement funds, Snyder said, could be part of that effort to protect works at the Detroit Institute of Arts.


Under former Gov. Jennifer Granholm, some of Michigan's settlement dollars were used in a now-defunct program providing state-sponsored higher education scholarships. The revenue also was used one year to help wipe out a looming budget deficit.



NBCUniversal closes DailyCandy, TV Without Pity


The entertainment news and lifestyle service DailyCandy will close April 4 after 14 years, parent NBCUniversal said Thursday.


With handy alerts and tips across digital sites, DailyCandy covers a broad range of interest areas, including fashion, beauty, celebrities, food, parenting, and home design and decor. It was "no longer viable," according to a company statement.


DailyCandy was founded in 2000 by a New York writer, Dany Levy, and sold about eight years later.


The NBCUniversal statement said it was also closing the TV forum and review site Television Without Pity for the same reason, though the chat forums will remain open until May 31.


A total of 67 jobs will be affected, but NBCUniversal said it would try to absorb as many as possible.


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Online:


http://bit.ly/1fpuTD3


http://bit.ly/1lpXek8



The Pope And The President: Common Ground But A Clear Divide



Despite some differences, President Obama and Pope Francis shared a laugh during their Thursday meeting at the Vatican. Obama called himself a "great admirer" of the pope.i i


hide captionDespite some differences, President Obama and Pope Francis shared a laugh during their Thursday meeting at the Vatican. Obama called himself a "great admirer" of the pope.



GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty Images

Despite some differences, President Obama and Pope Francis shared a laugh during their Thursday meeting at the Vatican. Obama called himself a "great admirer" of the pope.



Despite some differences, President Obama and Pope Francis shared a laugh during their Thursday meeting at the Vatican. Obama called himself a "great admirer" of the pope.


GABRIEL BOUYS/AFP/Getty Images


President Obama's Vatican meeting with Pope Francis wasn't without a dose of irony.


The U.S. president, once the world leader whose vow of "hope" and "change" excited millions, seemed eclipsed Thursday in that department by the pope.


The pope certainly is polling better than Obama among Americans. A recent St. Leo University poll placed the pope's approval rating at 85 percent among Catholics and 65 percent among all Americans. By contrast, Obama's approval rating was 47 percent in the same poll.


Another irony: while the pope's approval ratings are higher than Obama's, Americans, including many Catholics, agree more with Obama on certain social issues than with the pope.


For instance, on reproductive rights, more Americans are closer to Obama's stance than the pope's. Sixty three percent of Americans say they would not like to see the court completely overturn the Roe v. Wade decision, according to Pew Research polling. More than a third of U.S. Catholics, 36 percent, say abortion should be legal in most cases, according to an Oct. 2013 Quinnipiac University poll; another 16 percent say abortion should be legal in all cases.


When it comes to same-sex marriage, Quinnipiac reports 60 percent of U.S. Catholics support it — a higher level than the general population.


To some extent, the pope benefits from his relative newness, and from the appearance of being a fresh break from his recent predecessors. His eschewing of papal lavishness and call for the Catholic Church to focus more on social justice have excited millions around the world.


By contrast, the realities of being a U.S. president in the 21st century, of being ultimately responsible for drone attacks and controversial NSA surveillance practices, have left even many of Obama's strongest supporters disappointed that the president hasn't changed the world as much as they had hoped.


As Michael Anthony Novak, a theology professor at St. Leo University told It's All Politics, it's more the rule than the exception that a president and pope wouldn't have much ideological overlap.


"Popes and presidents don't perfectly line up," Novak told me. "Whenever they get together, it's a fairly rare thing that their interests would perfectly align."


The kind of alignment between President Ronald Reagan and Pope John Paul II at their first meeting, when they seemed to be of one mind on directly confronting communism, is rare, Novak said.


The U.S. president heads a superpower with vast economic and military might. The pope meanwhile heads the world's smallest country, Vatican City, but as leader of his church he has great moral power even beyond its adherents.


"Obama sounded out the Vatican last year about the idea of intervention in Syria," because the pope's support and moral authority might help the president make his case for action, Novak said.


"Did the Vatican think this fit the concept of just-war theory and so forth? And in that case, Francis seemed to be strongly against the idea of the West intervening in a strong military way," he said.


It was another area in which the president and the pope differed.


One area where the one-time Chicago community organizer and the former Buenos Aires parish priest align, however, is in the need to address economic inequality.


But while they both recognize the problem, the pope is certainly to the left of the president in his critique of capitalism. Still, their concern for social justice represents an opportunity for the two men to work together.


Novak notes that Obama met with the pope for a longer time than the Vatican usually allots for such meetings, even with other heads of state: "I don't know what it says yet but it says something."


Still, he says, the Vatican knows Obama is closer to the end of his presidency than its start.



Canada: No Russian return to G-8 without change


Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper says Russia won't return to the Group of Eight industrialized nations unless President Vladimir Putin fundamentally changes course.


After talks Thursday with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Harper said despite "all of our efforts to make Mr. Putin a partner, he has not desired to be a partner, he's desired to be a rival, and that's just a reality we have to come to terms with."


Russia was ejected from the G-8 indefinitely this week in response to its annexation of Crimea.


Harper says he doesn't "see any way of a return of Mr. Putin to the table unless Russia fundamentally changes its course, its orientation toward the world, and its values and behaviors."


Merkel says Europe will increase sanctions if Russia escalates the situation.



Baxter splitting into 2 separate businesses

The Associated Press



Baxter International Inc. is splitting itself into two separate businesses — one focusing on biopharmaceuticals and the other on other medical products.


The split mirrors one made last year by Abbott Laboratories, which spun off its branded drug business into the new company AbbVie. Abbott's remaining business model is built around nutritional formula, generic drugs, medical implants and diagnostics.


Baxter's biopharmaceuticals business includes treatments for hemophilia and other bleeding disorders and blood plasma therapies used to treat immune deficiencies and other problems. It had 2013 revenue of about $6 billion. The business will receive a name at a later date.


Ludwig N. Hantson, currently president, BioScience, will become CEO of the new biopharmaceuticals company. Baxter director Wayne T. Hockmeyer will serve as nonexecutive chairman of the business.


The medical products business includes a portfolio of intravenous solutions and nutritional therapies, drug delivery systems, anesthetics and surgery products. It had 2013 revenue of more than $9 billion. This business will keep the Baxter International name and include the $2.76 billion acquisition of kidney dialysis product maker Gambro AB.


Robert L. Parkinson, Jr. — chairman and CEO of Baxter International — will serve as chairman and CEO of the medical products company.


Both businesses will be headquartered in northern Illinois.


The separation is expected to be complete by mid-2015. It still needs approval from Baxter's board.


Baxter's stock rose $9.42, or 13.4 percent, to $79.50 in Thursday premarket trading.



Follow Linda A. Johnson at http://bit.ly/1rCl3X9


Las Vegas casino workers union holds strike vote


Union members at several Las Vegas casinos are set to vote whether to authorize a strike if bargaining doesn't yield a new contract.


Culinary Union 226 spokeswoman Bethany Khan says voting takes place Thursday in two shifts at the East Las Vegas Community Center — from 10 a.m. to noon and from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.


Unionized casino workers at Binion's, El Cortez, Four Queens, Fremont, Golden Gate, Golden Nugget, Las Vegas Club, Las Vegas Plaza, Main Street Station and Margaritaville and The D are due to vote, along with linen service workers from Brady Laundries.


Results could be known later in the evening.


The union represents thousands of bartenders, food service workers, housekeepers, cooks, porters and others at casinos and properties downtown and on the Las Vegas Strip.



Berri’s bloc visits Christian leaders over election


BEIRUT: A parliamentary committee from Speaker Nabih Berri’s bloc visited Christian leaders Thursday, kicking off the first round of meetings with Lebanese officials to discuss the upcoming presidential election.


The three-member body held talks with MP Michel Murr, Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun and Kataeb Party head Amine Gemayel.


The committee will visit Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai next week, according to one of its members.


Speaking to reporters after the meeting, Murr said that discussions highlighted the need to have Lebanese MPs elect their president without foreign intervention.


“We discussed names of candidates who have various political affiliations, but we did not focus on a specific name as it is still early,” Murr said.


He added that the talks focused on the possibility of convening a Parliament session with a quorum to elect a president.


Berri formed the committee earlier this week and tasked it with visiting various leaders and heads of parliamentary blocs to inquire about their opinions of possible presidential candidates. The committee is comprised of MPs Ali Osseiran, Yassin Jaber and Michel Musa.


The two-month period to elect a new president began Tuesday. President Michel Sleiman’s term expires on May 25.


There are fears of a presidential vacuum, should the events of 2007 repeat themselves, when the rival March 8 and March 14 groups failed to agree on one presidential candidate. Parliament could not convene back then for lack of quorum.


Murr said he believed all MPs should be present at the Parliament once the speaker calls for a session to elect a president.


Murr added that he had no problem with any “serious” presidential candidate, whether he was an independent or from the March 8 or March 14 coalitions, so long as he enjoyed a majority vote.


For his part, Jaber told a local media outlet that the committee would visit Rai Monday.


The MP said that the committee would not be discussing names of potential presidential candidates but “the need for lawmakers to attend the [Parliament] session to elect a president.”


“We do not want to call for a session that cannot convene,” he said.


Jaber added that the committee’s mission would be over within days, adding that Berri had begun efforts to foster a suitable atmosphere to convene a session and elect a president.


On Tuesday, Rai urged Berri to convene a Parliament session as soon as possible in order to elect a new head of state, rather than consult officials over the matter.


Jaber said the committee would not hold consultations with the Future Movement, saying Berri had already held talks with former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora Tuesday. Siniora heads the Future parliamentary bloc.


Future Movement lawmaker Khaled Zahraman said that the March 14 coalition had yet to select its presidential candidate: “It will not be easy, but discussions will lead to picking one candidate.”


“Every candidate within the March 14 group believes that it is his right to be the candidate,” Zahraman told a local radio station. “All this will be put on the table, and the best candidate will be chosen based on certain characteristics or by voting.”


Separately, the speaker chaired a meeting at his Ain al-Tineh residence for Parliament’s Secretariat to discuss the agenda of next week’s legislative session.


Parliament will convene twice Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in the morning and the afternoon to discuss an agenda, which includes 70 draft laws.


Speaking to reporters after the meeting, MP Marwan Hamade, a member of the Secretariat, said that the session’s agenda included a number of important draft laws.


“Among the important draft laws is one on higher education ... and there is a draft law which interests all Lebanese women and most Lebanese, which is a draft law to protect women from domestic violence,” Hamade said.


Also on the agenda are draft laws to hold exams for contract workers at Electricité du Liban to make them full timers, to amend the rent rules and to adopt proportional representation during parliamentary elections.


Next week’s session will be the first legislation session Parliament has held since 2012.


Asked whether a draft law to increase the salaries of public sector employees and teachers was on the agenda, Hamade said this depended on the outcome of a session of parliamentary joint committees that would meet Friday to discuss the draft law.



No fair trial for terror suspects, defense lawyer says


BEIRUT: The roots of last week’s debacle in Arsal, following the fall of Yabroud, were sown about a year before, said Tareq Shandab, a lawyer notorious for defending high-profile terrorism suspects.


From his vantage, it all began with the ambush of the lesser-known fugitive Khaled Hmayyed in the northeast border town last February, which led to the killing of two Army soldiers.


Shandab’s credibility derives from the fact that he had represented Hmayyed’s family in the case in which 30 people, including Arsal’s mayor, had been charged by the authorities for the killing of Capt. Pierre Bashaalani and Sgt. Ibrahim Zahraman.


Over a year later, the details of the case are still ambiguous, leaving many Arsali residents indignant. Once Hezbollah became explicit about its military allegiance to the Syrian regime, latent tensions deepened, as residents of the border town felt increasingly victimized by perceived state-imposed double standards, in which their supportive stances toward the Syrian opposition were considered a transgression.


Hezbollah’s decisions to go to war gave Al-Qaeda-linked groups a rationale to strike Lebanon, and Shandab has felt the repercussions directly with the suspects he’s unenviably agreed to defend – namely, Naim Abbas, Omar al-Atrash and Joumana Hmeid, all of whom were charged with having links to terrorist groups, including the Abdullah Azzam Brigades. However, his work as an attorney is inhibited by the strict and “biased” approach of the military tribunal, he said. He is certain they will not see a fair trial.


The families of the suspects had initially approached Shandab, a vocal critic of the Syrian regime, and implored him to take their case.


“With Naim Abbas, he personally asked the investigative judge to see me – apparently he saw me on TV or heard of me somehow,” Shandab, 39, told The Daily Star in a sit-down interview, the location of which was not decided until 30 minutes before the agreed meeting time for “security reasons.”


Abbas’ father went to see Shandab in person, and when the lawyer appeared before the judge and stood face-to-face with the terror suspect, he had asked him directly for help.


Building a solid defense, however, has proven to be a challenge for Shandab, who at one point had to confront the Army intelligence for leaking the content of his client’s confessions, which, he claims, were extracted under conditions of torture. His decision to defend the likes of Abbas has garnered criticism from MPs, who have lashed out at him publicly, inadvertently placing Shandab on one side of the country’s sectarian divide.


Challenges of working with the Army in particular relate to the strict and at times secretive procedures of the military court. “These measures are implemented especially when dealing with such [national security] cases,” he said.


“The Army is the judge and your foe at the same time,” Shandab said of his work at the court, “and here in Lebanon, the military judge does not respect the rule of law.”


It is prohibited to leak the content of ongoing investigations, according to Shandab. “In the cases of Omar al-Atrash, Naim Abbas and Joumana Hmeid, their investigations were leaked to the press and this was against the law.”


The three had confessed to belonging to terrorist organizations, among other crimes. Abbas had confessed to preparing a car bomb to be set off at a later date, according to the Army. The car was located by the authorities in Corniche al-Mazraa laden with explosives.


“A small part of what was leaked was true. That Joumana Hmeid was driving a car rigged with explosives, this is true. That equipment to prepare explosive devices in Abbas’ case, this is true,” the lawyer said. “I’m not saying the suspects are completely innocent, but what I want is the rule of law and their human rights to be respected. We want a fair trial, but that can only happen in a civil court.”


Shandab also criticized the Army for “exploiting” information gleaned from the investigation of his clients.


“The Army takes these confessions and exploits a small part that is true for political purposes, which is against the law,” he said. “In the case of Atrash, he confessed that he transported aid to Syrians within Syria, but he didn’t, for example, confess that he brought explosives with him upon returning to Lebanon as it was alleged.”


He later claimed that his confessions were obtained “under duress.”


Shandab said he has had to confront the Army Command over the leaked investigations, but that his complaints were futile. “It is hard for the Army not to be biased,” he alleged. He is also unable to access his clients as often as he requires; he’s seen Atrash on two occasions, both at the military prison through a thick glass using a telephone.


“When we ask for a specialist to examine suspects if we believe there are signs of torture, they don’t allow it,” he added. “Systemic torture is well known at the Defense Ministry centers. ... We know this because when the suspects come to trial, they tell us everything.”


Apart from bias, and allegations of torture, Shandab’s chief criticism of military trials is that the circumstances which propel suspects, if they are in fact guilty, of perpetrating crimes are seldom broached.


“Those who did commit crimes,” Shandab explained, reflecting on cases he’s defended in the past, “did what they do because of the injustices inflicted on them by the state institutions, especially the Army and its intelligence wing,” referring to events in Arsal, as a case in point. Both Atrash and Hmeid are residents of Arsal, while Abbas hails from Ain al-Hilweh.


If national security cases were tried under the authority of a civil judiciary, the distrust held by these key communities would diminish, Shandab said. While he said he was not permitted to divulge the details of his cases prior to trial, he said there were many ambiguities surrounding Abbas’ case that would be brought to relief once it stood trial in a month’s time.


“Once this case goes to trial and is open to the public, there will be many surprises,” he said. “The real case is very different from what was leaked to the media, namely, the role that the Syrian intelligence has played in it.”


Shandab, who hails from the Dinnieh village of Bqarsouna and holds a degree in criminal law from Beirut Arab University, has been a fierce critic of the Syrian regime since 2012, when he filed a lawsuit against Syrian President Bashar Assad at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, accusing him of committing war crimes. Recently he filed a case in the Lebanese courts against Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem for killing Lebanese civilians. He concedes that these legal projects are symbolic, for the time being.


“For now, I know these cases are not going anywhere because of the political pressures and because of regional circumstances, but I have to do my duty, I have to prepare these cases for the record, and for history, so these criminals know that justice will be done, if not now, then in the future, perhaps 100 years down the line,” he said. “Until the circumstances are ripe for trying these people, I have to be ready, so the case is ready when the time comes.”



Hezbollah mulls presidential election options


The road toward Beirut’s southern suburbs is now easier, and the distance between central Beirut and Hezbollah’s stronghold has become shorter, not only geographically but also politically.


Why? Because the party leadership feels that many of the obstacles have been removed, and it is taking great comfort in its victories over “takfiri” groups in Syria and its destruction of an alleged car-rigging den behind the recent blasts in the country.All of this comes in the wake of the Cabinet’s securing of a vote of confidence from Parliament, adoption of the ministerial statement, and its acknowledgement of the role of the resistance and the importance of power sharing. All that remains now is the presidential election, which is currently being studied by Hezbollah’s leadership carefully and slowly, as it is linked to regional factors.


Lebanon entered the constitutional period to elect a president only a few days ago, which reshuffled Hezbollah’s priorities as it plays a large role in the process.


Facing the Israeli enemy was at the top of the party’s agenda during the 2006 war, and remains so now, on top of which they are facing security problems in the south. Then came the Syrian conflict and the emergence of fundamentalist groups that the party’s military wing made a point of eliminating in Syria’s Yabroud and the wider Qalamoun region, which is close to the Bekaa Valley. Such missions are considered sacred, according to Secretary-General Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah’s statement following the spate of car bombs and terrorist attacks: “We know you by your names, and we will get to you no matter the cost.”


Those familiar with Hezbollah know the importance of such a statement, which led to a professional operation aimed at ruining a car-rigging den 13 kilometers away from the Lebanese border (on which the party’s leaders said not a word, but just smiled broadly).


The presidential election is being followed up on in detail and Hezbollah’s leadership is working on studying the possibilities with extreme care while respecting the constitutional period. One of the scenarios it is preparing for is the possibility of a presidential vacuum, and it is following up with other parliamentary blocs on the issue.


Hezbollah has a particular way of dealing with elections. One party official pointed out that as long as Lebanese political parties helped smooth things in the domestic arena and prevented the country from becoming a center of Sunni-Shiite strife, Hezbollah would in turn make local matters easier and clear potential obstacles. The party’s beliefs, the official said, are focused on the idea that the Syria war is associated with takfiri beliefs that are seen to be far from Islam, and that the conflict next door was not about confronting Sunni influences.


“We have accepted the hawks from the other side, [Nouhad] Machnouk and [Ashraf] Rifi, as heads of the Interior and Justice ministries because we are extending a hand toward real partnership with the Future Movement and we respect its choices and individuals,” the official said. “Let us stand against the takfiri wave whose fire will devour everyone; we are ready for more steps for the sake of Lebanese stability.”


Concerning the presidential election, the Loyalty to the Resistance bloc is studying matters along with Hezbollah’s political leaders before taking the right stance, but measures are currently limited to communication with local and regional actors. There are two options being discussed within the party.


The first involves leaving the election process to run its own course by allowing March 8 and March 14 to nominate a presidential candidate each. This would likely create a scenario similar to the 1970 elections, which former President Sleiman Frangieh won by one vote. That election saw the founder of the Progressive Socialist Party, the late Kamal Jumblatt, divide his party’s votes between Frangieh and fellow candidate Elias Sarkis, with his own vote tipping the balance. Ironically, his son Walid Jumblatt is now playing the same role.


The second option would rely on the “Jean or Jean” formula and would involve an agreement on a consensus candidate to help Lebanon make it through this difficult phase with the least damage possible. This might necessitate amending the Constitution in order to elect Army chief Gen. Jean Kahwagi – who technically should resign six months before taking up the post – or else agreeing on someone else. This person would be outside the usual political partisanship and would enjoy good relations with influential countries – former Foreign Minister Jean Obeid seems particularly appropriate in this respect.


A March 8 MP said Change and Reform bloc leader Michel Aoun had received a Saudi message stating: “We do not stand against Christian aspirations in Lebanon to beget a strong Christian president who would help pass the storms and relieve the damages as much as possible.”


This has apparently titillated Aoun’s political aspirations to seize the presidential chair and has made him feel as if he is moving ahead of March 14’s most obvious contender, Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea.



Future slams Bassil for ignoring Syrian violations


BEIRUT: The parliamentary Future bloc Thursday criticized Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil for failing to file a complaint during this week’s Arab summit against Syria’s violations of Lebanese territory.


Bassil, who attended a two-day Arab summit in Kuwait that ended Wednesday, did not address repeated Syrian violations of Lebanese territory at the Arab League meeting. Instead, he pleaded with Arab leaders to support the poorly equipped Lebanese Army to fight terrorism and highlighted the threat posed by the presence of an estimated 1 million Syrian refugees who have fled for safety to Lebanon.


“The [Future] bloc was greatly surprised because the Foreign Ministry ignored repeated and brazen attacks and violations carried out by Syrian regime forces against Lebanese sovereignty in [several] border areas,” the bloc said in a statement issued after its weekly meeting chaired by former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.


It added that President Michel Sleiman had urgently asked Bassil to prepare a complete file about the Syrian attacks and violations against Lebanese territory.


“The convening of the Arab summit in Kuwait and its appreciated support for Lebanon was an occasion to bring up these condemned [Syrian] attacks before Arab leaders and include them in the final communiqué so that [these attacks] will not escalate and Lebanon can reserve its right to complain to the [U.N.] Security Council,” the statement said.


The bloc also reiterated its demand for the deployment of the Lebanese Army along the eastern and northern border with Syria with the support of U.N. peacekeepers “to protect Lebanon and shield it from the dangerous repercussions” of the 3-year-old conflict in Syria.


Earlier this month, Sleiman described a series of attacks by the Syrian warring factions on Lebanese border towns as an attempt to drag Lebanon into the Syrian conflict.


Syrian warplanes have frequently attacked the town of Arsal and its outskirts, allegedly in pursuit of Syrian rebels. The Bekaa Valley towns of Brital and Hermel have also been targeted with rockets from Syrian territory by Al-Qaeda-linked groups in retaliation for Hezbollah’s military intervention in Syria.


Sleiman last year sent a memorandum to the U.N. listing violations of Lebanese territories by the warring factions in Syria.



Domestic violence punishable by death: judge


BEIRUT: A judge Thursday recommended the death penalty for a man accused of bludgeoning his wife to death with a pressure cooker, a move lauded by activists as a major step in Lebanon’s fight against domestic violence.


Judge Fouad Murad issued an indictment against Mohammad Adnan al-Nhaily, accusing him of premeditated murder for the death of his 34-year-old wife, Manal Assi, whom he allegedly beat “violently and viciously.”


The indictment is unprecedented in a domestic violence case.


On Feb. 8, Nhaily is alleged to have taken a pressure cooker off a hot stove to strike Assi, a teacher, after a quarrel between the couple turned violent. Assi died from her injuries.


The incident is one of six cases of alleged domestic violence that have come to light this year, prompting increased calls for the government to pass a draft law criminalizing domestic violence in an effort to curb attacks against women.


In the indictment, the judge wrote that on the day of the murder, Assi and Nhaily engaged in a dispute that turned violent after the husband accused his wife of infidelity.


Nhaily snatched Assi’s phone and discovered messages that revealed she had been corresponding with another man, Wassim Hafez, with whom she had planned a meeting and exchanged photographs, a judicial source, reading the indictment, told The Daily Star.


Nhaily, who said he had lost his temper and began beating his wife, claimed that Assi had admitted to having an affair.


In the indictment, the judge exonerated Hafez’s wife, Rania Shahrour, of incitement to murder.


Shahrour is said to have informed Nhaily that her husband had been having an affair with his wife. During her interrogation, Shahrour said she had phoned Assi and asked her to stop seeing her husband. She told the judge that she learned of the affair after discovering messages exchanged between Assi and Hafez on Hafez’s phone.


The judge will refer the case to the Criminal Court, which will put Nhaily on trail soon.


Assi’s lawyer was confident that the court would uphold the indictment. He said the death penalty request was based on Article 549 of the Penal Code, meaning that the offense required punishment without the possibility of a lesser sentence.


Lawyer Raed Hamdan recounted some of Nhaily’s remarks during his interrogation and described him as a “criminal par excellence.”


“I personally asked Manal’s husband if he would do what he did again if he had the chance and he proudly said yes,” Hamdan told The Daily Star.


He also said Nhaily kept beating Assi even after she died, an issue that the medical examiner neglected in their report.


“The autopsy report did not even mention that most of the hair on her head had been ripped off, that her teeth were all broken along with her toes. ... The report was manipulated,” he said, adding that Assi’s alleged affair was a fabrication.


Activists said they considered Murad’s recommendation to be the result of pressure they had been exerting on the judiciary.


“This is a courageous decision ... and a very good and encouraging one as well,” Hayat Mirshad, a women’s rights activist, told The Daily Star.


Mirshad said the judicial request indicated that the judiciary was taking these cases seriously, recognizing that they could be held accountable if they neglected to, referring to last month’s large protest against domestic violence.


Murad’s decision also gave hope to those seeking retribution, after the husband of Roula Yaacoub, who was accused of beating his wife to death, was declared innocent by an investigating judge last month.


Yaacoub, 31, was reportedly found beaten and comatose at her home in Halba last year.


But the fight is not over yet, according to activists from KAFA, a women’s rights group. They plan on hold a sit-in on April 1, when Parliament is scheduled to convene for the first time since last year.


“It will be open-ended if need be, until lawmakers approve and pass the draft law,” KAFA activist Faten Abu Shaqra told The Daily Star.


On the legislative agenda is the amended version of a domestic violence draft law that was first submitted to Parliament in 2010.


The amendments altered the text’s title, which now refers to violence against the family. A clause criminalizing marital rape was also removed after it sparked outrage from religious figures and some politicians.



Fatah to sign neutrality pact after Islamists agree to end assassinations


SIDON, Lebanon: The Fatah Movement has agreed to sign a memorandum of understanding aimed at insulating Palestinian refugee camps from Lebanese conflicts and the crisis in neighboring Syria, after the Islamist Jund al-Sham and Fatah al-Islam factions agreed to stop assassinating Fatah members.


The memorandum is the outcome of an initiative put forth by Islamic Jihad and will also be signed by Hamas, the Osbat al-Ansar group and Sheikh Jamal Khattab, the spiritual leader for Islamist groups inside Ain al-Hilweh. The memorandum is an effort to quell escalating tensions between Hezbollah and the Amal Movement on one side and Palestinian Islamist factions on the other, as both groups hold conflicting stances toward the conflict in Syria and the terrorist attacks that have targeted areas associated with Hezbollah.


The initiative aims not only to distance Palestinians from Lebanese conflicts but also to take precautions to protect the Palestinian identity and the right of return, specifically by rejecting resettlement projects and supporting the unity of Lebanon, boosting Lebanese-Palestinian relations and supporting Palestinian resistance against Israel.


Fatah’s condition for signing the MOU was a statement that all relevant parties would stop assassinating its party’s members. Fatah introduced the statement after a number of Palestinian officials, many from Fatah, were killed. The movement’s leadership in south Lebanon approached Islamist groups, notably Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Osbat al-Ansar and Sheikh Khattab, over the assassinations, saying there was clear evidence Islamists were the culprits but that they would not retaliate in order to maintain stability in the camps.


The statement, named the Gathering of the Muslim Youth, was signed by Islamists Haitham al-Shaabi, Bilal Badr, Jamal Hamad, Ziad Abu Naaj and Osama Shehabi – all of whom are wanted by Lebanese authorities. Hamas, Islamic Jihad,and Osbat al-Ansar leaders supervised the signing of the statement.


“We at Ain al-Hilweh camp find ourselves targeted for our religion and our cause, which is one of the most just causes on earth. ... Conspiracies are being hatched against us at all levels,” the statement said.


It goes on to say that the group rejects the killing or physical harming of any Muslim, adding that Palestinians at the camp are united under one religion, and that killing is prohibited under God’s law.


“We denounce the recruitment of individuals from the Palestinian camps in Lebanon to carry out security or military operations,” the text said. “And the concerned authorities have been notified in this regard, and we received enormous support.”


The statement also called on all Palestinian leaders and parties to cooperate with Lebanese figures.


The Palestinian factions will sign the MOU Friday at 4 p.m. at the Ziad Atrash Hall in Ain al-Hilweh. The memorandum, which features 19 points, addresses the various aspects of the political, legal and security issues of the Palestinian presence in Lebanon and spells out the duties of both the Lebanese and the Palestinian authorities.


Palestinian leaders are hoping that the initiative will strengthen relations between both sides to safeguard Palestinian camps, as they consider it part of a larger initiative to maintain Lebanon’s security and stability.


The Palestinian initiative aims at “preserving the Palestinian camps and neutralizing them under the slogan of the [Palestinian] refugee cause, working on preventing sectarian strife and preventing Palestinian-Lebanese or Palestinian-Palestinian fighting, protecting Lebanese national identity by maintaining the right of return and refusing land resettlements, displacements and alternative housing, supporting Lebanon’s unity and its security and stability and reinforcing Lebanese-Palestinian relationships,” the memorandum said.


Palestinian Ambassador Ashraf Dabbour is expected to speak Friday, along with seven others from different Palestinian factions.


Articles of the MOU outline how to fight different forms of strife, denounce attacks and assassinations across Lebanon, refuse to shelter extremist elements involved in security operations, and stress neutrality.



Women And Wealth: Local To Global Money Lessons



Our Women and Wealth series will involve you, too. We're asking women to share their best lessons about earning, saving, investing or using money. Add your two cents at our Tumblr, She Works Her Money. i i


hide captionOur Women and Wealth series will involve you, too. We're asking women to share their best lessons about earning, saving, investing or using money. Add your two cents at our Tumblr, She Works Her Money .



NPR

Our Women and Wealth series will involve you, too. We're asking women to share their best lessons about earning, saving, investing or using money. Add your two cents at our Tumblr, She Works Her Money.



Our Women and Wealth series will involve you, too. We're asking women to share their best lessons about earning, saving, investing or using money. Add your two cents at our Tumblr, She Works Her Money .


NPR


When it comes to money, women rule. Literally.


Think about it: A woman holds the top job at the Federal Reserve, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of Budget and Management and the Social Security Administration.


At the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde is the managing director.


These women run large, complex organizations that decide how money is invested, budgeted, saved and spent. They shape the rules that govern the global economy.


But over on Wall Street and in Silicon Valley, men still do more risk-taking.


Why is that?


And while U.S. women's earnings are catching up — now at 81 cents for every dollar a man makes — many say they lack confidence about investing.


Why is that?


These are among the topics NPR is exploring as part of the ongoing Changing Lives of Women series. This season's collection of stories and conversations, called Women and Wealth, will look at changes in the economic lives of women in this country and overseas.


In the weeks leading up to Tax Day on April 15, NPR will be talking with influential women who will share lessons they have learned about money. And this rolling conversation will involve you, too. We'll be asking audiences to share their experiences and advice about earning, saving, investing or using money.


These are some of the stories we'll be covering:


Women's Role In The Global Economy


IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde has been speaking out recently about the need for more women in the labor force to boost both developing and developed economies. Morning Edition host Renee Montagne speaks with Lagarde about the kinds of decisions a monetary organization can make that support women as earners, and about Lagarde's own unique career path.


Women And Personal Investing


American women have more assets to invest than ever. And more women are single, or earn just as much as their spouses. Yet, many continue to lack confidence when it comes to investing their money — even though studies show that when they do, they get better returns than men. NPR's Jennifer Ludden speaks with women seeking financial guidance about their beliefs and fears about money management.


Women And Wall Street


Long-time Wall Street banker Sallie Krawcheck was one of very few women in the highest banking jobs in New York. But until recently, she says she never thought of reaching out to other women as partners in investment deals. That's part of the mission behind her new organization, 85 Broads, named for the address of Goldman Sachs. She speaks with Morning Edition host David Greene.


Women And Negotiating


Research shows women negotiate raises less often than men, and that they dislike the process. But for any woman who thinks she's a lousy negotiator, there's some good news. Women negotiate brilliantly when they do it for someone else. Ashley Milne-Tyte of NPR's Planet Money team reports.


Women And Business School


New research explores gender disparities in business school enrollment by the different ways men and women appear to deal with ethical dilemmas. Women report they are less likely to enroll in business school because they perceive material success to be in conflict with ethical impulses. New research suggests men are likely to experience the same conflict — they just seem more comfortable in living with it. NPR Social Science reporter Shankar Vedantam discusses the new findings.


Social Security And Women


Social Security plays out differently for women and men, Social Security Acting Commissioner Carolyn Colvin says. Since women are more likely to take a break from the paid workforce, work part-time or in lower-paid fields, their earnings and later payout are usually lower than those of men. Just ahead of Tax Day, Colvin talks with Morning Edition guest host Kelly McEvers about financial factors women need to consider as they balance work and family — well before retirement is on the horizon.


Indian Women And Gold


For women in India, gold is not just about ornamentation. It's a solid investment and insurance policy against bad economic times and marriages that could go sour. The obsession is worth tens of billions of dollars. And it ties up India's foreign reserves in a commodity that often does little more than sit in vaults. But enterprising, practical Indian women are now using it to get loans to fix houses or start small businesses. NPR's Julie McCarthy reports.


Cundinas


Cundinas are popular with Mexican immigrants in the U.S. looking to save money. A group of family, neighbors or co-workers gets together and gives the appointed "leader" a certain amount of money. Each participant gets the big pot of money at the end of that week or month, like an interest-free loan system. NPR's Shereen Marisol Meraji talks with Latinas in LA about why they participate in cundinas instead of going to their local bank.



As Obamacare Deadline Nears, Louisiana Gets Special Attention



Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., speaks at an Oct. 2013 news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Landrieu's support for the Affordable Care Act is center stage in her campaign for a fourth Senate term.i i


hide captionSen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., speaks at an Oct. 2013 news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Landrieu's support for the Affordable Care Act is center stage in her campaign for a fourth Senate term.



Evan Vucci/AP

Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., speaks at an Oct. 2013 news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Landrieu's support for the Affordable Care Act is center stage in her campaign for a fourth Senate term.



Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., speaks at an Oct. 2013 news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. Landrieu's support for the Affordable Care Act is center stage in her campaign for a fourth Senate term.


Evan Vucci/AP


With only four days left before the March 31 enrollment deadline, the White House is kicking into high gear trying to round up more Affordable Care Act enrollees – and Louisiana got special attention Thursday.


Why? Enrollment in the federal healthcare exchange there has lagged behind other states and, perhaps as important, citizens are getting bombarded with anti-ACA ads as Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu gears up for a tight race in November.


As part of its push to promote the ACA hard in the last days before the deadline to enroll, the White House has been inviting the media to dial into a series of conference calls to highlight positive anecdotes in certain states under the new healthcare law. Thursday's call showcased Landrieu's backyard, and a 34-year-old New Orleans waitress named Tierney Brinkman, who found a lump in her breast when she was 19.


"Until the Affordable Care Act, my mammograms were outrageous. I'd end up spending about $500 in a day – and that is not something that I can afford," said Brinkman.


Brinkman said for years she was unable to get decent health insurance because her lump was considered a pre-existing condition.


"I don't even know how to begin to explain or describe what it's like to think that you might end up with a disease that is a killer that you can't afford," said Brinkman.


Other states the White House has spotlighted in similar conference calls the last few weeks include Texas, Arizona, North Carolina, Florida and Georgia.


"These calls are just one more aspect of our outreach on the importance of ACA enrollment," said a White House official, when asked how the administration was selecting the states on which to focus during these calls.


One reason Louisiana may have made the list: enrollment in the state has been sluggish and Republicans are determined to use the healthcare law to get voters to sour on Landrieu.


President Obama announced Thursday that more than six million people have signed up for health insurance through the state and federal exchanges. But the administration's habit of citing the national total obscures the fact that in some individual states – like Louisiana – the insurance market isn't doing too hot.


Data compiled by the Kaiser Family Foundation, a health policy research group, shows that more than 45,000 in Louisiana have signed up on the exchanges. That amounts to only 9.3 percent of all the people in the state who are eligible in the state to participate in the healthcare exchanges.


In the U.S. overall, about 15 percent of eligible individuals have signed up on the exchanges.


Meanwhile, any White House efforts to promote the ACA must be done delicately in Louisiana, where the President is unpopular and where aveteran Democratic senator is facing a really close race.


"No amount of spin can hide the fact that Obamacare led to more policy cancellations than it did new coverage for the uninsured in Louisiana," said Jason Dore, executive director of the Louisiana Republican Party. "Senator Landrieu has doubled and tripled down on Obamacare and now the Louisiana voters are ready to hold her accountable for its epic failure."


The Koch-brothers-funded group Americans for Prosperity has poured millions into the 2014 midterm elections. Landrieu has been a favorite target in the group's political attack ads, which have been focused on telling Louisianans how much their families have suffered under Obamacare.


"I think in Louisiana we're caught up, unfortunately, in a political vortex," said Shreveport mayor Cedric Glover,a Democrat who also participated in the White House's Thursday conference call. "A lot of the misinformation ... out there for lots of folks in places like Louisiana to consume is actually not based in fact, but is more driven by politics."


White House Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett has also been making the rounds on Louisiana radio shows this week.


"However unpopular the White House is, it's important that they assist Senator Landrieu in changing the narrative regarding the Affordable Care Act," said Joshua Stockley, a professor of political science at the University of Louisiana at Monroe.


Come November, Stockley said, it's still possible for the Affordable Care Act to recede as an election issue.


"If the positive news outweighs the negative news – this could absolutely neutralize the Affordable Care Act as a campaign weapon," said Stockley. "It's only March. So we have seven full months of campaigning. One or two weeks can be an eternity in electoral time."



Day 4: The President Travels to Italy, Meets with Pope Francis

Today, President Obama headed to Italy, continuing his five-country trip across Europe and Saudi Arabia.


The President started off the day at the Vatican, where he had an audience with His Holiness Pope Francis. This was President Obama's first time meeting Pope Francis, and the two "had a wide-ranging discussion," the President said.


"I would say that the largest bulk of the time was discussing two central concerns of his," said the President. "One is the issues of the poor, the marginalized, those without opportunity, and growing inequality. ... And then we spent a lot of time talking about the challenges of conflict and how illusive peace is around the world."


read more


Drone technology way ahead of FAA as it tries to set rules for use


When it comes to unmanned aerial vehicles, it’s starting to become the Wild West out there.


Drones are flying across the U.S. and being used by researchers, farmers, amateur photographers and others.


But if they’re used for commercial purposes, it’s illegal – at least in the view of the Federal Aviation Administration.


Technology has advanced quickly – much faster than the regulations that government officials say are needed to ensure safety.


So as Americans try out drones to deliver beer, photograph university campuses and scout out accident scenes, federal officials have ordered them to stop.


The FAA says it’s illegal to operate a drone for business or commercial purposes, no matter how seemingly benign.


“But that’s not stopping people,” said Ladd Sanger, a Dallas-based aviation lawyer and a managing partner with Slack & Davis. “We’re seeing a lot of people violating the FAA regulation.”


Read more here



Conn. job gains in Feb. cut unemployment rate


Connecticut's Labor Department says the state regained 800 jobs in February after a major employment decline in January caused by extreme weather.


Labor officials reported Thursday that the unemployment rate fell to 7 percent in February from 7.2 percent in January. It's still higher than the U.S. rate of 6.7 percent in February.


Unemployment in Connecticut peaked at 9.5 percent in November 2010. The most recent high point was 7.9 percent last July.


Connecticut has added 10,300 jobs over the year, with the private sector adding 2,700 jobs. Labor officials say the turnaround from the decline in January seems to confirm that weather was at least partly responsible.


The state has recovered 59,500 jobs, or nearly half of the 119,100 jobs lost in the downturn from March 2008 to February 2010.



Drug recalled after foreign pills found in bottles


GlaxoSmithKline is recalling the weight loss drug Alli after receiving reports of unknown pills and tablets in the bottles.


The over-the-counter drug comes in a turquoise blue capsule with a dark blue band and the text "60 Orlistat." However, people in seven states have reported finding tablets and capsules of various shapes and colors in the bottles, the British drugmaker said Thursday.


Those states include New York, Texas, Florida, North Carolina, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi.


There are also reports that the tamper-resistant seals on some bottles are not authentic. Alli comes in bottles with an inner foil barrier labeled "Sealed for Your Protection."


Some bottles are missing their labels as well.


The drugmaker is still trying to determine what the foreign pills and tablets are.


GlaxoSmithKline has received information about 20 tampered Alli bottles so far, but no related reports of serious illnesses.


The company is asking pharmacies and retailers in the United States and Puerto Rico to immediately remove the drug from store shelves.


Customers who have questions can call 800-671-2554.



State Investment Council OKs funding for startups


New Mexico's state government is putting more cash on the line to promote economic development.


The State Investment Council on Tuesday approved providing an additional $40 million for venture capital investments in local companies.


The Albuquerque Journal (http://bit.ly/1o3Zhwk ) reports that the money will be invested in startups in health care, energy and other fields in the next three years.


The allocation increases the state Co-Investment Fund to $150 million from $10 million.


The money comes from the state's severance tax permanent fund.



Families targeted in new Reno-Tahoe tourism survey


Tourism official say last year's visitors to the Reno-Tahoe area stayed longer, spent more money and brought their children along more often than they did two years earlier.


Officials for the Reno-Sparks Convention and Visitors Authority say the survey identifies families as a key target audience moving forward because they spend more than groups with only adults. They also stayed nearly twice as long last year — averaging 6.2 days compared to 3.2..


The survey shows the share of families traveling with children under age 21 increased from 27 percent in 2011 to 35 percent last year. It says families averaging spending $773 compared to $637 by adults-only visitors.


The survey also found that for the first time visitation from Los Angeles equaled visitation from the San Francisco Bay Area.



Judge tosses lawsuit by baseball FanFest volunteer


A New York judge has tossed out a lawsuit by a volunteer at last July's baseball All-Star FanFest who claimed 2,000 volunteers should have been paid by Major League Baseball.


Federal Judge John Koeltl (KOHT'-uhl) in Manhattan says the league was protected by an exemption from federal minimum wage laws for temporary amusement or recreation establishment events. The judge's findings were released publicly Wednesday.


John Chen's lawsuit had sought lost wages. He said federal and state minimum wage laws were violated when the league recruited volunteers to operate 40 attractions at an event advertised as "the largest interactive baseball theme park in the world" July 12-16.


Chen's lawyer, Justin Swartz, says they are "just in the early innings." He says they plan to pursue the case in state court.



Russia to set up own payment system


Russia's President Vladimir Putin said Thursday that Russia will set up its own payment system to rival Visa and MasterCard after the companies pulled their services from several banks in the wake of the sanctions imposed on the country.


Last week, the United States and the European Union imposed travel bans and asset freezes on two dozen Russians who are believed to be Putin's close allies, following the country's annexation of Crimea.


The banks of some of those individuals reported suspension of card services. Visa and MasterCard suspended services for St. Petersburg-based bank Rossiya, which was specifically targeted by U.S. sanctions, and two of its subsidiary lenders.


In a meeting with Russian lawmakers Putin said the country's central bank is "working hard" to set up Russia's own payment system, citing the recent troubles facing Rossiya and others.


"This is not our decision," he said in televised comments. "We have to protect our interests, and we will do it."


Putin expressed "regret" that the companies halted their services and cited Japan's JCB or China's UnionPay as examples of successful card business which started off as domestic companies but have expanded internationally ever since.


Russian officials have criticized the reliance on Visa and MasterCard, saying Russian banks are hostage to international corporations.



Voting Rights Fight Takes New Direction



An election official checks a voter's photo identification at an early voting polling site, in Austin, Texas.i i


hide captionAn election official checks a voter's photo identification at an early voting polling site, in Austin, Texas.



Eric Gay/AP

An election official checks a voter's photo identification at an early voting polling site, in Austin, Texas.



An election official checks a voter's photo identification at an early voting polling site, in Austin, Texas.


Eric Gay/AP


It's that time again, when primary voters start casting their ballots for the mid-term elections. As in recent years, voters face new rules and restrictions, including the need in 16 states to show a photo ID.


But this year, some voting rights activists say they're seeing a change — fewer new restrictions, and even, in some places, a hint of bipartisanship.


Although that wasn't the case last month in Ohio, when the legislature voted along party lines to eliminate a week of early voting. Lawmakers also agreed to prevent local election officials from mailing out unsolicited absentee ballot applications.


"We're talking about disenfranchising thousands of folks," Democratic state Rep. Alicia Reece said on the House floor. "And don't tell me it can't be done, because our history has shown it has been done."


But Republican state Rep. Andrew Brenner defended the changes, saying they were needed to ensure that election results in the state were reliable.


"I've got a concern that there could be voter fraud. And just because you don't see it, doesn't mean it isn't happening," he said.


A similar, emotional debate was heard last week in Wisconsin, where the state Assembly agreed to eliminate weekend voting, popular with many minority voters. Backers of the legislation said weekend voting was a burden for election offices in smaller, rural areas. After the bill was approved, a spectator in the gallery shouted out "racists" and "white supremacists."


But Myrna Perez of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University says, Ohio and Wisconsin are the exceptions this year rather than the rule.


"We've seen a lot of real momentum in 2014, thus far, towards improving our elections both at the states and nationally," she says.


Perez is encouraged that a bipartisan presidential commission just came out with recommendations on ways to fix long lines at the polls (you could link here to my story on this earlier this year). And that there's a bipartisan effort in Congress to revise the Voting Rights Act after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down an important section.


She also notes that more and more states are allowing voters to register online. That's something liberals like because it makes it easier to register to vote, and conservatives like because it makes it easier to prevent duplicate registrations and other errors that could lead to fraud.


And, Perez adds: "We've seen promising bipartisan developments in Nebraska, Massachusetts and Kentucky on a wide variety of issues, ranging from online registration to early voting to restoring voting rights to persons with criminal convictions."


In fact, she notes, the restoration of voting rights for felons has won the backing of people as politically diverse as U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul.


Still, there's a lot in flux. Court challenges have blocked new voter ID requirements for now in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. But a Supreme Court decision last year opened the way for other states, like Texas and Mississippi, to go ahead with their new ID requirements.


And a court ruling last week allowed Kansas and Arizona to require new voters to show proof of citizenship, although that decision is expected to be appealed.


"If the question is will voters have more or less access to the polls, I think the answer is yes, depending on where they're from," says Doug Chapin, an election expert with the University of Minnesota.


Chapin thinks that one reason there are fewer new restrictions this year is that states that were inclined to enact things like voter ID have already done so. He says now states and the courts are focused on working out the kinks.


"The big story in this cycle with ID is the lengths to which some states are going to make sure that people without ID get ID," says Chapin.


One good example, he says, is Mississippi, which has new photo ID requirements going into effect this June.


Delbert Hosemann, Mississippi's secretary of state, says they're trying to do what they can to make sure that every voter can get an ID.


"We'll pick you up for free and take you to the circuit clerk's office. We offer free reviews and verifications of your birth certificate. And we'll issue a free ID," says Hosemann.


Hosemann says he studied other states' voter ID laws very carefully to avoid some of their mistakes. Many other laws have been challenged for placing too great a burden on elderly, poor and minority voters who don't have an ID and might have difficulty getting one because they lack documents, such as a birth certificate.


"I feel like we've addressed all the issues that could come up and that would be an impediment to someone getting an ID," says Hosemann.


Although people like Myrna Perez say that remains to be seen. Despite her optimism this year, she says her advocacy group and others will still monitor closely what happens at the polls.