Tuesday, 15 April 2014

The top iPhone and iPad apps on App Store


App Store Official Charts for the week ending April 14, 2014:


Top Paid iPhone Apps:


1 A Dark Room, Amirali Rajan


2 Monument Valley, ustwo


3 R.B.I. Baseball 14, MLB.com


4 Sleep Cycle alarm clock, Northcube AB


5 Minecraft - Pocket Edition, Mojang


6 Heads Up!, Warner Bros.


7 Facetune, Lightricks Ltd.


8 Afterlight, Simon Filip


9 Plague Inc., Ndemic Creations


10 SkinneePix, PrettySmartWomen LLC


Top Free iPhone Apps:


1 2048 - The Game, Ketchapp


2 Flappy Smash - The End of a Ti..., Makeover Mania Story Games


3 Don't step the white tile, Ayumu Kinoshita


4 What's the Difference? (tilde) spot ..., Candywriter, LLC


5 Trials Frontier, Ubisoft


6 Family Guy: The Quest for Stuff, TinyCo, Inc.


7 LockScreen Buddy for iOS7 - Pi..., theM Dev


8 Facebook Messenger, Facebook, Inc.


9 Snapchat, Snapchat, Inc.


10 Instagram, Instagram, Inc.


Top Paid iPad Apps:


1 Minecraft - Pocket Edition, Mojang


2 Monument Valley, ustwo


3 R.B.I. Baseball 14, MLB.com


4 FTL: Faster Than Light, Subset Games


5 Wallykazam! Letter and Word Ma..., Nickelodeon


6 Doc McStuffins Paint and Play, Disney


7 The Walls - Mini Survival Game, Linal Richmore


8 Cut the Rope 2, ZeptoLab UK Limited


9 Survivalcraft, Igor Kalicinski


10 Notability, Ginger Labs


Top Free iPad Apps:


1 Microsoft Word for iPad, Microsoft Corporation


2 Microsoft Excel for iPad, Microsoft Corporation


3 Trials Frontier, Ubisoft


4 Microsoft PowerPoint for iPad, Microsoft Corporation


5 2048 - The Game, Ketchapp


6 Family Guy: The Quest for Stuff, TinyCo, Inc.


7 Flappy Smash - The End of a Ti..., Makeover Mania Story Games


8 Piano Tiles, HU WEN ZENG


9 Boom Beach, Supercell


10 The Official Masters Tournament, Augusta National, Inc.



(copyright) 2014 Apple Inc.


Detroit strikes 2nd deal with its other retirees


The Detroit pension fund that covers all retirees except former police officers and firefighters says it has reached a tentative agreement with the bankrupt city.


Tina Bassett, a spokeswoman for the city's general pension fund, says retirees would see a 4.5 percent cut and their cost-of-living payments would be eliminated under a deal reached late Tuesday.


Hours earlier, a group representing retired police and firefighters announced that it had reached its own deal to preserve pension benefits but trim cost-of-living payments.


Together, the agreements would cover all of Detroit's retired public workers. They would still need the approval of the more than 20,000 retirees and the thousands of active workers who qualify for a future pension. The bankruptcy judge would also have to approve.



Colorado budget finalized, heads to governor


Lawmakers approved a $23 billion budget for Colorado next year, sending to the governor a spending plan that increases money for public schools, colleges, and funds an aerial firefighting fleet.


The House approved the budget Tuesday on a 38-26 vote with only one Republican voting yes. The Senate approved the budget Monday with greater bipartisan support.


The budget for the 2014-15 fiscal year increases per-student funding at public schools, and adds $100 million to limit tuition increases at colleges.


Lawmakers are also setting aside nearly $20 million to pay for a firefighting fleet in the aftermath of historic wildfire seasons.


It is now up to Gov. John Hickenlooper to sign the budget, which underscores an improving state economy. In recent years, lawmakers had to cut schools and drained the state's rainy-day fund.



2 win $300,000 Rhode Island Innovation Fellowships


A project to start a culinary hub and another to create a high-end digital fabric printing facility are the two winners of this year's $300,000 Rhode Island Innovation Fellowships.


The Rhode Island Foundation announced the winners Wednesday. They each receive a $300,000 grant over three years to make their vision a reality. The program is funded by philanthropists John and Letitia Carter.


Providence resident Amy Bernhardt was chosen for her project called Colorfast, a state-of-the-art research and manufacturing pilot facility for the design and production of digitally printed textiles.


David Dadekian (dah-DAY'-kee-an), of Coventry, will receive a fellowship for what he's calling the Eat Drink Rhode Island Central Market. He conceives it as a destination for visitors, a hub for education and to help to expand existing businesses.



Ford to offer 50th anniversary Mustang


Ford is building a limited-edition Mustang GT to honor the pony car's 50th anniversary.


The company will only build 1,964 special cars, honoring the year the Mustang first went on sale.


The 50 Year Limited Edition will come in one of the two colors of Ford's logo: white or blue. Buyers can choose a manual or automatic transmission.


There are special chrome highlights around the grille, windows and tail lights. The Limited Edition will also be the only 2015 Mustang with a faux gas cap badge on the rear, where the original cap sat.


Limited Edition cars will be among the first built when 2015 Mustang production begins later this year.


Ford is showing the Limited Edition at the New York auto show, which begins this week. Pricing wasn't announced.



Voter initiatives multiply during oil boom


Voter initiatives to control oil and gas drilling are intensifying in Colorado as residents of towns and cities try to ban or limit drilling inside city limits.


So far, Front Range residents have proposed 17 state ballot measures to bolster local control over drilling, and at least four lawsuits are pending.


Natural gas production is slowing, but oil production in Colorado is setting records, up from 49 million barrels in 2012 to 63 million barrels in 2013. The key question before the courts and voters is how far cities and towns can go to shield residents. Under current law, the state has control over developing oil and gas wells, which are springing up around communities. Several lawsuits over local control are pending.


Coloradans for Local Control campaign adviser Rick Ridder is among those fighting industry groups that include a new group — Protecting Colorado's Environment Economy and Energy Independence — that has been formed with $2 million in industry funding to oppose any change in the state constitution on issues already addressed by existing state rules.


"It all comes out of citizen's sentiments that they have a lack of ability to control what goes on with oil and gas drilling in their communities, in their neighborhoods, close to schools or close to hospitals. This is a citizen response to the activities the oil and gas drilling," Ridder said last month.


The industry groups argue that a patchwork of laws in local communities would make energy development a bureaucratic mess.


Attorney General John Suthers told the Denver Post (http://bit.ly/1eH8czV ) he is still waiting on a court decision to determine how far cities and towns can go to shield residents under current law, which establishes an overriding state interest in developing oil and gas. A state lawsuit against limits in Longmont has not been decided.


"If the court says Longmont is free to ban fracking ... that is an earth-shattering reversal by the court," Suthers told the newspaper.


The 17 proposed ballot measures fall into two groups: one that would amend the constitution to allow tighter local control over oil and gas operations, and another that would require buffer zones statewide up to five times bigger than the 500-foot limit set by the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission.


If any voter initiative passes and gives locals power to prohibit owners of oil and gas from extracting it, "a huge consideration will be whether this will amount to a 'taking' of that property by the government," Colorado Municipal League attorney Geoff Wilson said.


"If that's the case, a proposal to ban drilling may amount to a proposal that local taxpayers purchase all the affected mineral rights. That could easily make this popular political and policy choice a very expensive one for local taxpayers," Wilson said.


Colorado Oil and Gas Association policy director Doug Flanders said companies are focused on building rapport and working toward solutions with communities and stakeholders.


"We will continue to do that — whatever is on the ballot," he said.



Sternberg calls Tampa 'very, very attractive'


Six years after saying they wanted to explore alternative sites to downtown St. Petersburg for a new ballpark, the Tampa Bay Rays still are in search of a location.


"Tampa is obviously very, very attractive on the list, and we expect to at some point, hopefully sooner, look there as well as some other parts of the region," Rays owner Stuart Sternberg said Tuesday during a panel at the MLB Diversity Business Summit.


Sternberg took control of the team after the 2005 season, and in November 2007 the Rays proposed to replace Tropicana Field with a 34,000-seat, open-air stadium at the downtown site of Al Lang Field, a longtime spring training ballpark. They withdrew that plan the following June, and Sternberg said in June 2010 he wanted to explore potential sites throughout the Tampa Bay area.


The Rays' lease at Tropicana Field runs through 2027. Tampa Bay hasn't drawn more than 2 million fans at home since its first season in 1998. Despite winning 90 or more games in each of the last four seasons, the Rays haven't topped 1.6 million in any of the last three years.


"We haven't had the greatest success in attracting the what we call enough fans relative to the success we've had on-field, and we would like to explore other part of the region, specifically Tampa and parts of St. Petersburg," Sternberg said.


He said the Rays need to undertake "a full-out exploration" of transportation and access issues.


"Until we're able to do all the work that's necessary there, I won't really have an answer for it," he said.



GM to ask bankruptcy court for lawsuit protection


General Motors says it will ask a federal bankruptcy judge to shield the company from legal claims involving conduct before its 2009 bankruptcy.


The company revealed its strategy late Tuesday in a motion filed in a federal court case in Corpus Christi, Texas, surrounding defective ignition switches that have led GM to recall more than 2 million cars.


GM's motion is asking the judge in Texas to delay action on the lawsuit until the bankruptcy court rules and other federal courts decide if the case should be combined with other lawsuits.


But the automaker says it's not asking the Texas judge to delay action on a motion to force GM to tell customers not to drive their cars until they are repaired.


The motion says more than 30 cases have been filed against GM since February.



US homebuilder confidence edges up in April


U.S. homebuilders' confidence in the housing market rose modestly in April but remained at low levels for the third straight month, constrained by tight credit for home buyers and a shortage of workers and available land.


The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index, which measures confidence in the single-family home market, edged up to 47 in April from 46 in March, the homebuilders group reported Tuesday.


Readings below 50 mean builders view sales conditions as poor. The index had been above 50 from June through January.


Builders recently have complained that they can't find enough workers or lots to build on.


Many home buyers also have had trouble qualifying for mortgages. The homebuilders' index of traffic by prospective buyers stayed at 32 in April.


The latest reading, based on responses from 301 builders, comes as the spring home-selling season gets going. The season typically sets the pattern for residential hiring and building construction in the ensuing months. The overall confidence index was below 50 in all four regions of the United States — 36 in the Northeast, 45 in the West and 48 in the Midwest and South.


"Builder confidence has been in a holding pattern the past three months," said Kevin Kelly, chairman of the homebuilders association and a developer from Wilmington, Del. "Looking ahead, as the spring home buying season gets into full swing and demand increases, builders are expecting sales prospects to improve in the months ahead."


The index measuring their confidence in home sales over the next six months rose to 57, highest since January.


Housing, while still a long way from the boom of the mid-2000s, has been recovering. Residential construction has grown at double-digit rates over the past two years and contributed about one-third of a percentage point to overall economic growth in both 2012 and 2013.


Though new homes represent only a fraction of the housing market, they have an outsize impact on the economy. Each home built creates an average of three jobs for a year and generates about $90,000 in tax revenue, according to data from the homebuilders association.



Dilemma: I Accidentally Opened a Beer at 11:43 a.m. on a Monday. What Happens Next?


Yesterday, Josh Petri faced an almost impossible moral dilemma: At 11:43 a.m., alone in his apartment, he accidentally opened a beer while working from home.


He was faced with a choice. Does he pour it out? It’s one of those fancy craft beers, so that seems ridiculous, but he is working from home, and he’s deep enough into his task that he thought a craft beer was a Diet Coke.


If he doesn’t, pour it out, why not just go on an immediate bender? Is this how one begins a descent into a Don Draper-level bender, where he forgets he has children altogether and a night in the clink serves as a cute detour instead of a wake-up call?


Why is there seemingly no in-between?


Well, we called Josh about it and asked him what he did next.


Also, if you are questioning the validity of this article, you lack verve and imagination, and I recommend you spend some time on a beach somewhere warm, calling everyone who has ever dumped you and finding out what went wrong.


Esquire.com: How does one open a beer accidentally?


Josh Petri: I was standing up right next to the fridge and I went to reach for a Diet Coke. I sort of grabbed it blindly without thinking about it, then I wound up cracking it open. I looked down and it was a beer. I was immediately met with this feeling of disappointment and horror and I thought, “I’m gonna throw this out.” Then I thought, “Should I waste it? Do I just pour it out? What happens next?”


Yeah, what did you do with it? Did you wait out the 15 minutes?


I compromised with myself. I waited about 10 or 15 minutes until it was officially noon. I had half of it.


You sound like you had real reservations about it.


That’s the thing: It’s not the weekend. I’m not at a boozy brunch. It’s a Monday, so I get it. I’m working from home today. But why waste a beer?


Did you say it was a Bud Light?


Oh, no. Hell no. If it was a Bud Light, I would’ve poured it down the drain. It was a 21st Amendment.


I saw that you tweeted that “we’re all alcoholics” because almost nobody said to pour out the beer. It’s so interesting because the line, in this case, seems to be nominal. You were put in this situation. It’s like how two glasses of wine per day is allegedly good for you, but two-and-a-half of anything makes you an alcoholic.


Yeah, we try to justify these things to yourselves. Red wine has health benefits. It’s sort of a classy beverage, so we allow that. Beer, though, has low class undertones. And that’s part of it. I think, not too long ago, a liquid lunch was a regular part of the workday, with hard alcohol or wine. But I had to think about this.


So what did you do with it? Did you hurriedly drink it and get back to work?


I took it outside. I sat on the patio. I was still working. It was nice. It was very pleasant. Somebody worked too hard to make this beer to waste it.



US consumer prices rose just 0.2 percent in March


Lower U.S. gasoline prices kept consumer inflation in check last month, helping offset higher costs for food and clothing.


The Labor Department said Tuesday that the consumer price index rose 0.2 percent in March, after scant 0.1 percent increases the previous two months. Prices have risen just 1.5 percent year over year. That remains well below the Federal Reserve's 2 percent target for inflation.


Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices increased 0.2 percent in March and 1.7 percent in the past year.


Prices at the gas pump tumbled 1.7 percent in March, lowering costs for the entire energy category.


But food prices jumped 0.4 percent, led by increases in eggs, milk, butter, oranges, pork chops, ground beef and poultry. Prices for clothing, used cars and cable television also rose.


Overall, signs point to continued low inflation. Sluggish growth and a tough job market have limited price increases, making it harder for retailers and other businesses to charge more.


Consumer prices rose just 1.5 percent for all of 2013, down from 1.8 percent in 2012.


Though shoppers welcome lower prices, super-low inflation can stall economic growth. Lower prices encourage consumers to delay purchases. Extremely low inflation can also raise inflation-adjusted interest rates, thereby discouraging borrowing.


Still, low inflation has enabled the Fed to pursue extraordinary stimulus programs to try to boost economic growth.


The Fed is now trying to unwind some of that stimulus. It plans to buy $55 billion in bonds this month, down from $85 billion in March of last year. The bond purchases are intended to lower long-term rates, which can spur borrowing and spending.


Despite scaling back its purchases, Fed officials have expressed concern about inflation running below their target. As a result, the Fed is prepared to hold shorter-term rates near zero even if unemployment falls by roughly a percentage point from its current level of 6.7 percent. This suggests that the Fed might not raise rates until the middle of 2015.



Aaron's buys Progressive Finance, cuts outlook


Furniture leasing company Aaron's is buying online rent-to-own finance company Progressive Finance Holdings for $700 million in cash, in a bid to turn around its business even as it cut its first-quarter outlook.


Meanwhile, Aaron's says it rejected a takeover offer from Vintage Capital Management for $30.50 per share, a 1 percent premium on the stock's closing price Monday. Aaron's says the offer is not in the best interest of shareholders.


Aaron's sells and leases furniture and accessories and offers flexible payment plans for people with credit problems.


Aaron's says it expects the acquisition of Progressive, from Summit Partners, to help its earnings in 2014.


Aaron's also cut its first-quarter revenue and earnings guidance, blaming the weather and difficult economic conditions.



Tufts Medical Center, Lowell General, seek merger


Tufts Medical Center in Boston and Lowell General Hospital have reached a tentative deal on a merger officials say will make both institutions stronger while lowering medical costs.


Both are among the last remaining independent hospitals in the state and had been looking for partnership opportunities.


Under terms of a tentative agreement announced Monday, each nonprofit hospital would continue to operate independently under a new parent organization, which has yet to be named. Other health care providers could eventually be added.


Lowell General and Tufts already have clinical affiliations.


The two hospitals are similar in size, each with more than 400 beds. The Boston hospital is the principal teaching hospital for the Tufts University School of Medicine.


The deal is subject to approval from state regulators.



Backlash Over State Party's Progressive Agenda May Hobble Udall



Colorado Republican Congressman Cory Gardner after he announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate in March. He's challenging incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall.i i


hide captionColorado Republican Congressman Cory Gardner after he announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate in March. He's challenging incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall.



Chris Schneider/AP

Colorado Republican Congressman Cory Gardner after he announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate in March. He's challenging incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall.



Colorado Republican Congressman Cory Gardner after he announced his candidacy for U.S. Senate in March. He's challenging incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark Udall.


Chris Schneider/AP


Colorado Democrat Mark Udall's bid for a second term has become the most unexpectedly competitive U.S. Senate race in the nation this year – but not for the expected reasons.


Yes, Udall, 63, like other vulnerable Democrats, is already being pummeled by big-money conservative groups for his support of President Obama's health care legislation.


And, yes, even with a last name that carries historic weight in the American West, the low-key senator has been hobbled by incumbency at a time of historic dissatisfaction with Congress, and with party leader Obama's approval rating well south of 50 percent.


Udall's fortunes, however, appear much more lashed to a pair of developments back home:


—Recent and at-times virulent voter backlash against the political agenda – from stricter gun laws to civil unions — pursued by progressives who, with Democrat John Hickenlooper already in the governor's office, took full control of the state legislature two years ago.


—The emergence of a strong Republican candidate, Congressman Cory Gardner, 39, whose decision to run forced from the field Tea Party favorite Ken Buck, the party's losing 2010 Senate candidate. Buck opted instead to run for Gardner's House seat.


Gardner's late February announcement for the seat was hailed by state Republicans as a "game-changer," one that Rob Witwer, who served in the state legislature with Gardner, says could help his party post up better against a superior Democratic voter data and get-out-the-vote infrastructure.


"The conservative infrastructure has not yet matched that of the progressives here, but it's getting there," says Witwer, who documented in a revealing book with reporter Adam Schrager how Democrats by 2008 came to dominate Colorado politics.


(A key Democratic player in the effort that upended the rock-solid Republican control of the state was multi-millionaire Jared Polis, elected to Udall's congressional seat in 2008.)


The scant public polling that exists suggest the race, crucial to whether Democrats retain control of the Senate come fall, is a toss-up; the political race analysts at the Cook Political Report and the Rothenberg Political Report still have the race leaning in Udall's favor.


Democrats nationwide are continuing to struggle for a narrative to motivate voters to get to the polls in this coming mid-term election — that poses a challenge for Udall, in a state where his fellow Democratic Sen. Michael Bennet barely eked out a victory over Buck in 2010.


And that was before state Democrats, by almost all accounts, overreached in a state that Obama twice won, but which is still decidedly divided.


"Last year was an incredibly aggressive liberal year here," says non-partisan Colorado pollster Floyd Cirulli. "Civil unions. Gun control. Environmental legislation. Labor legislation."


"It just poured out," he said. "It certainly hurt the governor, and it hurt the overall Democratic brand here that had been shaped by Hickenlooper, [who was] a moderate, business type."


Udall, and Bennet, both became identified, fairly or not, says Cirulli, with being part of an "aggressive liberal party, even though both are mainstream, center-left guys."


The response came quickly. Eleven rural counties had ballot initiatives last fall to secede from the state; five were approved. Voters in a recall election in September ousted two Democratic legislators who voted to strengthen gun control measures in a state where two of the nation's worst mass shootings – Aurora and Columbine — have occurred; a third legislator facing a potential recall resigned.


Colorado voters also rejected a billion-dollar school-funding ballot initiative heavily supported by Hickenlooper, teachers' unions as well as former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.


Witwer says he views the defeat of the education initiative, and its accompanying tax increase, as perhaps the most significant measure of voter backlash.


"It went down, by a lot," he says. "It was a large vote against a tax increase, and, at the same time, conservatives were sweeping onto school boards."


"It was a significant indication of a changing tide in Colorado," he says.


Cirulli, the pollster, predicts that voter turnout this fall will be about 30 percent less than it was two years ago when Obama won the state, and Democrats took over the legislature. Republicans are more united behind Gardner, who is a capable fundraiser, and whose personality, like that of Udall's, has most frequently been described as "affable."


He's not at war with Republican Party leadership in Washington, and has discarded some of his more controversial positions – including one that would give "personhood" status to a fertilized human egg.


Gardner's campaign reported raising $1.4 million in the first three months of the year – most after his announcement.


Udall, who had about $4.7 million on hand at the end of last year, reported raising an additional $2 million-plus this year through March.


A strong supporter of environmental laws, Udall has also burnished his profile in recent years as one of Capitol Hill's most persistent critics of the National Security Agency's data collection practices.


"He's a strong incumbent," Witwer says, "and he's not prone to saying offensive things or making grand mistakes. His family name is well-known out west.


"His vulnerably has more to do with the national Democratic brand, and, more importantly, his association with some things that are very unpopular in Colorado," he says.



Hundreds bid farewell to slain Al-Manar reporter


SHAATH, Lebanon: Hundreds of men and women, dressed in black and carrying Hezbollah flags, took part Tuesday in the funeral procession of Al-Manar journalist who was killed in Syria the day before.


Weeping and distraught, Hamzeh Hajj Hassan’s mother was surrounded by consoling relatives as she lead the women’s procession in the Bekaa Valley village of Shaath.


Hassan, 26, was among three Al-Manar staffers who were covering the Syrian army’s takeover of the Christian town of Maaloula in Syria when their vehicle came under heavy fire.


Technician Halim Allaw and cameraman Mohammad Mantash were also killed in the attack, the local television said, which was carried out by “takfiri terrorists.”


The shooting came hours after Al-Manar announced regime forces seized Maaloula and two other villages in the Qalamoun region, a mountainous area where the Syrian army backed by Hezbollah fighters have launched an offensive to root out rebels.


As soon as Hassan’s body arrived in an ambulance to the funeral, gunshots were fired in the air as the crowd chanted a popular slogan coined by Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hasan Nassrallah: “Humiliation is far from us.”


Women tossed flowers and rice on the coffin, which was covered with a yellow Hezbollah flag and carried on the shoulders of the dead man's friends and relatives to the burial site.


Hassan along with other Al-Manar reporters have provided extensive coverage of the Qalamoun battles, accompanying soldiers and interviewing Syrian army officers.



In Connecticut, An Obama Campaign Replay



Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy greets President Obama March 5 upon his arrival at Bradley Air National Guard Base in East Granby, Conn., before the president traveled to the Hartford area to highlight the importance of raising the minimum wage.i i


hide captionConnecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy greets President Obama March 5 upon his arrival at Bradley Air National Guard Base in East Granby, Conn., before the president traveled to the Hartford area to highlight the importance of raising the minimum wage.



Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy greets President Obama March 5 upon his arrival at Bradley Air National Guard Base in East Granby, Conn., before the president traveled to the Hartford area to highlight the importance of raising the minimum wage.



Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy greets President Obama March 5 upon his arrival at Bradley Air National Guard Base in East Granby, Conn., before the president traveled to the Hartford area to highlight the importance of raising the minimum wage.


Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP


Few places have embraced President Obama — and his policies — with as much gusto as Connecticut.


The state recently became the first to raised the minimum wage to Obama's preferred rate of $10.10 an hour. The state also toughened already strict gun laws following the Newtown school shooting, something the president was unable to persuade Congress to do.


Connecticut's health insurance exchange has been running so smoothly that Maryland decided last month to dump its troubled system and borrow Connecticut's software.


Dannel Malloy, the state's Democratic governor, is touting all these initiatives in his reelection bid this year. Sometimes, in fact, he seems to be channeling Obama himself.


"We should not turn back over the keys to the people who ran us into the ditch to begin with," Malloy said at a recent campaign stop in Stamford.


That was a reference to the large budget deficit Malloy inherited from his Republican predecessor — an exact copy of rhetoric Obama himself employed in his 2012 campaign.


It was also an acknowledgement of Malloy's biggest weakness: Connecticut is a wealthy state, but its economy has underperformed on his watch, even by the recent tepid standards of the nation as a whole.


That fact has left Malloy highly vulnerable, even as a Democratic incumbent in a blue state.


"Voters are locked in," says Matthew Hennessy, a Democratic consultant in the state, who is not working for Malloy. "About half don't approve of the job he's doing and about half do. He's never gotten above a 50 percent job approval rating."


A Struggling Economy


Malloy can claim to have tamed a budget deficit of $3.6 billion, but to do it he had to raise taxes substantially, early in his term. A recent Gallup poll found that 76 percent of Connecticut residents believe their taxes are too high — which rates among the highest percentages in the country.


A fresh Brookings Institution ranking of economic performance of the nation's 100 largest metropolitan areas in the period since the recession found Greater Hartford and Fairfield County each in the bottom five.


"Statistics show we have one of the worst-performing economies in the country, no matter what the governor says," complains Toni Boucher, a Republican state senator who explored a race for governor. "We're the only state that has negative GDP. We have not recovered half the jobs we have lost."


No surprise, then, that polls show Malloy drawing less than 50 percent support against any likely GOP opponent.


Who Will GOP Pick?


But who will Republicans nominate? They haven't decided.


"The governor's vulnerable, but you can't beat somebody with nobody," says Pauline Kezer, a former GOP secretary of state.


On Friday, five Republican candidates gathered for their first televised debate. Tom Foley, a businessman and former ambassador whom Malloy beat by a whisker in 2010, was notable by his absence.


Foley is the favorite this year, but hasn't enamored himself to party faithful by complaining of corruption in the Republican ranks, as well as among Democrats. It's possible he could lose the nomination, but it's not at all clear yet who else in the large field will emerge as the most likely alternative.


That field includes state Senate GOP leader John McKinney, who is running as a relative moderate — he's the only Republican who backs the state's gun law. There's also Danbury Mayor Mark Bouton, and several more conservative candidates, including attorney Martha Dean.


Each has regional or ideological bases of support, but none has the money to match Foley.


Another Obama Replay


Democrats stand ready to depict Foley as an aloof millionaire who doesn't understand the problems of most voters.They note that all the Republican candidates oppose the recent minimum wage increase, which polls suggest is highly popular in the state.


"There's a clear pattern on the Republican side," says James Hallinan, Malloy's campaign spokesman. "The Republican field has a lot to do to connect on the issues that impact working families in Connecticut."


If Malloy hopes to borrow a page from Obama's playbook by castigating his wealthy opponent's worldview, his fortunes may ultimately rest on mimicking yet one more Obama trick. Namely, turning out every available supporter in a year when Democratic enthusiasm is not running especially high.


"This time, it's still a question mark, whether the Democrats are going to get fired up for this guy," says Scott McLean, a political scientist at Quinnipiac University. "It's going to take organization on the ground, just to squeeze the votes out of those highly Democratic areas in a slow turnout election."


Malloy is preparing to do just that. A disciplined organizational effort, along with the state's generally Democratic voting habits, are what the governor is counting on to eke out a win.


"Even they realize that this is going to be a very close race," Hennessy, the Democratic operative, says of the Malloy campaign. "They've made peace with the fact that they're not going to win by 10 points."



Firm nears takeover of Indiana Limestone Co.


An investment firm is the only bidder to take over a southern Indiana company that supplied limestone to the Empire State Building, the Pentagon and other iconic buildings.


A bankruptcy court auction for Indiana Limestone Co. set for Monday was called off after only a subsidiary of suburban Chicago firm Wynnchurch Capital expressed interest in bidding.


The Herald-Times reports (http://bit.ly/1m4Qf0j ) the firm is now in line to buy the limestone company's assets for $26 million. The company filed for bankruptcy protection in February and notified state officials it would lay off 166 workers from its Bloomington operations and Oolitic (oo-LIH'-tihk) headquarters.


Indiana Limestone president Duffe Elkins says the business is expected to reopen and rehire workers after the new ownership takes charge.



Yellen says Fed examining additional bank rules


Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen says recent initiatives by the Fed and other regulators to help banks make it through periods of financial stress are important, but they may still need to be strengthened.


Yellen believes current rules governing how much capital banks must hold in case of losses do not address all threats. She said that the Federal Reserve staff is actively considering what additional measures may be needed.


Bank regulators need to focus on this area, Yellen says, since bank runs generated at shaky firms were the primary engine that triggered the 2008 financial crisis.


Yellen's comments Tuesday came in an address delivered by video to a financial markets conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve's regional bank in Atlanta.



Criterion Collection extends Hulu streaming deal


The Criterion Collection and Hulu have extended their deal to keep the video platform as the exclusive streaming home of Criterion's vast library of art house films.


Terms of the deal, revealed exclusively to The Associated Press, weren't disclosed, but both Hulu and Criterion said it will run for several years.


Since 2011, Criterion Collection films have streamed exclusively on Hulu Plus, Hulu's monthly subscription streaming service. In a fractured streaming landscape, the partnership has been a rarity, making Hulu Plus the digital home to more than 800 movies in Criterion's singular collection.


"It was important to us that Criterion actually have a home and have a strong central locus to which our audience could gather and know they were finding the breadth of the library," said Peter Becker, president of the Criterion Collection.


For many movie buffs, the Criterion Collection is synonymous with the greatest classics of world cinema, from "L'Avventura" to "Seven Samurai." Criterion is known for its lavish DVD and Blu-ray packages, many of which feature restorations of older films.


The Criterion-Hulu partnership is for many movie lovers the chief draw of the $7.99-a-month Hulu Plus. The service has more than 5 million members, according to Hulu. Hulu Plus is otherwise mostly driven by television content, featuring in-season shows from NBC, ABC and Fox. The audience for Criterion titles on Hulu Plus increased by more than 25 percent from 2012 to 2013, Hulu said.


Criterion will kick off its new chapter with Hulu Plus on Tuesday with the streaming addition of the Oscar-winning Italian film "The Great Beauty." Having just come out on home video last month, it's a quick add to its streaming library. But it's a fitting one, says Becker, given Criterion's passion for Paolo Sorrentino's movie and the film's references to other Italian classics.


"It feels like we're sort of putting it on the shelf next to the Fellinis and the Rossellinis," says Becker. "That's the way we always feel when we're adding films to the collection: We're always imagining it on the shelf."


Though Criterion films are also available for rent or download from places like iTunes and Amazon, Hulu Plus offers a digital equivalent of that library shelf. It has led to some new opportunities, like making subtitles for some films that didn't previously have them. Many films that Criterion isn't able to put out on DVD are also available only for streaming. (There are 30-plus films from Japanese master Yasujiro Ozu, for example.)


To Becker, such options make it a great time to be a film lover.


"Even some things that aren't necessarily in restored shape are still worlds better than the 17th-generation VHSs that we used to have to watch," says Becker. "For real cinephiles who want to dig in and see lots of different kinds of films, I don't think there's ever been a better time."


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Follow AP Film Writer on Twitter at: http://bit.ly/1hRgkIH


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Online:


http://bit.ly/1hRgkYU



Teenage Syrian refugee killed by alleged attempted rapist


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: A 17-year-old Syrian refugee girl was shot and killed by her alleged attempted rapist in the northern town of Minyeh earlier this week.


Raghd Al-Bakhas was working on a farm in the early hours of Tuesday morning when an unidentified man approached her and allegedly tried to rape her, residents told The Daily Star.


Khass fought with the man and ran away seconds before he shot her in the back at close range.


Her body was transferred to the Al-Kheir Hospital in Minyeh.


Speaking to Al-Jadeed television, Bakhas' uncle, who fled to Lebanon from Homs, appealed to the security forces to investigate the case and find the perpetrator.


"To those with a conscience, I ask them to hold the man who killed her accountable," the distraught, teary-eyed man said.


"We can only turn to God," he added.


Bakhas fled with her uncles to Lebanon while her parents remain still in Homs.



German company starts gas deliveries to Ukraine


German utility company RWE said Tuesday it has started sending natural gas to Ukraine, a move that could support the country if Russia acts on its threat to cut off supplies because of a massive debt for past deliveries.


The reverse-flow deliveries from Germany via Poland are largely symbolic for the moment, but could be ramped up to provide about a fifth of the country's gas needs.


Last week, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Ukraine owes Russia $35.4 billion for gas — about 20 times more than Moscow had previously asked for. He said Russia may ask for Ukraine to start paying for gas in advance or face a shut-off.


About a third of the gas RWE AG will supply to Ukraine originally comes from Russia, said company spokesman Helmut Weintoegl. The rest comes from Norway, Britain, the Netherlands and Germany.


RWE Supply & Trading is the first Western European company to begin gas deliveries to Ukraine this year, the Essen-based company said in a statement.


"Further significant volumes could be delivered to Ukraine if various transport restrictions at the Slovakian-Ukrainian border are politically and technically resolved within the next weeks or months," the company said.


RWE declined to disclose the exact price it is charging Ukraine, but said the supply wasn't subsidized in any way. "The price is a normal market price," Weintoegl told The Associated Press. "It's currently more attractive for Ukraine than what it pays in its long-term contracts," he added.


Under an agreement signed with Ukraine's state-owned Naftogaz in 2012, RWE could supply up to 10 billion cubic meters (353 billion cubic feet) of natural gas per year, it said. This is about one-fifth of Ukraine's gas needs, according to U.S. Department of Energy figures for 2012. RWE previously supplied it with 1 billion cubic meters of gas in 2013.


Analyst Arno Behrens, head of energy at the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels, said the RWE gas supply "could certainly help alleviate hardships" in the short term, but could not on its own make up for a potential shut-off in Russian gas supplies to Ukraine.


Behrens said German companies can buy gas from Russia at lower prices than what Gazprom is asking from Ukraine, so that RWE could add a transport premium and still offer Ukraine a lower price than Gazprom's.


Recent liberalization of the EU gas market has made it possible for companies to re-sell gas. Behrens said that building out the European gas network by increasing such reverse flow capacity — most pipelines previously only flowed east to west — would be a key factor in reducing customers' dependence on Russia.



Boston Globe wins Pulitzer for bombing coverage


An award that usually is met with cheers and jubilation instead came with a moment of silence, as The Boston Globe won the Pulitzer Prize for breaking news for its "exhaustive and empathetic" coverage of the Boston Marathon bombing and the manhunt that followed.


The Globe's newsroom was closed to outsiders Monday, the day the awards were announced and a day shy of the anniversary of the tragedy. Staff members marked the announcement by honoring those killed and injured.


"There's nobody in this room who wanted to cover this story. Each and every one of us hopes that nothing like it ever happens again on our watch," Globe Editor Brian McGrory told the newsroom.


The bombing last April 15 that killed three people and wounded more than 260 also led to a Pulitzer in the feature photography category for Josh Haner of The New York Times, for his photo essay on a blast victim who lost his legs.


The Times also won in the breaking news photography category, for Tyler Hicks' coverage of the Westgate mall terrorist attack in Kenya.


The Washington Post and The Guardian won the Pulitzer Prize in public service for revealing the U.S. government's sweeping surveillance programs in a blockbuster series of stories based on secret documents supplied by National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden.


The stories about the NSA's spy programs revealed that the government has systematically collected information about millions of Americans' phone calls and emails in its effort to head off terrorist attacks. The resulting furor led President Barack Obama to impose limits on the surveillance.


The reporting "helped stimulate the very important discussion about the balance between privacy and security, and that discussion is still going on," said Sig Gissler, administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes.


The NSA stories were written by Barton Gellman at The Post and Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras and Ewen MacAskill, whose work was published by The Guardian US, the British newspaper's American operation, based in New York.


Snowden, a former contract employee at the NSA, has been charged with espionage and other offenses in the U.S. and could get 30 years in prison if convicted. He has received asylum in Russia.


Snowden's supporters have likened his disclosures to the release of the Pentagon Papers, the secret Vietnam War history whose publication by The New York Times in 1971 won the newspaper a Pulitzer. His critics have branded him a criminal.


The Washington Post won a second Pulitzer in the explanatory reporting category, for Eli Saslow's look at food stamps in America.


The Pulitzers are given out each year by Columbia University on the recommendation of a board of distinguished journalists and others. The two winners of the public service award will receive gold medals. The other awards carry a $10,000 prize.


The Center for Public Integrity's Chris Hamby won for investigative reporting for detailing how lawyers and doctors rigged a system to deny benefits to coal miners suffering from black lung disease.


The prize for national reporting went to David Philipps of The Gazette of Colorado Springs, Colo., for an investigation that found that the Army has discharged escalating numbers of traumatized combat veterans who commit crimes at home.


The Pulitzer for international reporting was awarded to Jason Szep and Andrew R.C. Marshall of Reuters for their coverage of the violent persecution of a Muslim minority in Myanmar.


The Oregonian won for editorial writing for its focus on reforms in Oregon's public employee pension fund. The prize was the third in the newspaper's history for editorial writing.


The Tampa Bay Times' Will Hobson and Michael LaForgia in Florida won in local reporting for writing about squalid housing for the homeless.


The Philadelphia Inquirer's architecture critic Inga Saffron won for criticism. At The Charlotte Observer, Kevin Siers received the award for editorial cartooning.


No award was handed out for feature writing.


In the arts categories, the fiction prize went to Donna Tartt for "The Goldfinch," while the general nonfiction prize was won by Dan Fagin, for "Toms River: A Story of Science and Salvation."


Alan Taylor won the history prize for "The Internal Enemy: Slavery and War in Virginia, 1772-1832" and the biography prize went to Megan Marshall for "Margaret Fuller: A New American Life."


The drama prize was awarded to Annie Baker for "The Flick" and Vijay Seshadri got the poetry prize for "3 Sections."


The music prize went to John Luther Adams for "Become Ocean."



Associated Press Writers Verena Dobnik and Meghan Barr in New York; Frank Eltman in Mineola, N.Y.; Steve LeBlanc in Boston; Eileen Sullivan in Washington; Tamara Lush in Tampa, Fla.; Nigel Duara in Portland, Ore.; Brett Zongker in Washington; and Kathy Matheson in Philadelphia contributed to this report.


Textbook publisher quits Stamford for Boston


Textbook publisher Cengage Learning Inc. says it's moving its headquarters from Connecticut to Boston.


The company, which emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection this month after restructuring its finances, will locate 500 jobs in Boston and is looking to add about 50 full-time jobs. Spokeswoman Lindsay Stanley tells the Advocate of Stamford that the Stamford site has about 30 employees and some will relocate to Boston.


Cengage praised Boston as home to some of the nation's leading publishers and companies in education technology and a premier network of colleges and universities.


Cengage has been in Stamford since 2007, when private equity investors purchased the unit from Thomson Reuters.


It filed for bankruptcy protection in July with $5.8 billion in debt.



Remains of suicide bomber handed over to family


SIDON, Lebanon: Security forces Tuesday handed over the remains of a suicide bomber who blew himself up outside the Iranian Embassy last year to his relatives.


Nineteen-year-old Mouin Abu Dahr was one of the two suicide bombers involved in the Nov. 19 attack outside the Iranian Embassy in the Beirut neighborhood of Bir Hasan.


Authorities handed his remains over to his family who buried him in the coastal city of Sidon’s cemetery.


Abu Dahr reportedly left Lebanon for Sweden a couple of years ago and later returned to the region to fight with rebels seeking to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad.



Changes approved for Detroit property taxes


State regulators have approved a plan to overhaul the Detroit department that sets property taxes following complaints of over-assessments.


The Detroit News reports (http://bit.ly/1no1squ ) the city will go through a $10 million, citywide reassessment of all 386,000 parcels by December 2016 as a part of a plan from the Michigan State Tax Commission. The city said last year it would make changes.


Commission Chairman Doug Roberts says it's a "real plan" under a "reasonable timeline."


The state launched an investigation about a year ago after a series in The Detroit News exposed over-assessments, tax delinquencies and mismanagement in the assessment division.


Chief Assessor Gary Evanko, who took over last year, says aerial photos will be taken next week in the first steps of a process to accurately value properties.



Lebanon to limit Syrian refugee flow: Machnouk


BEIRUT: Authorities are seeking to reduce the number of refugees coming into the country amid rising concerns that Lebanon has reached a breaking point, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said Tuesday.


“Our plan aims to limit the entry of more Syrian refugees into Lebanon and to undertake certain procedures to determine refugee status and the country's ability to absorb them and the services that can be offered, because donations often are few and come late,” Machnouk told delegations representing different municipalities.


He said the plan was being coordinated with the European Union.


Machnouk said Syrian refugees registered in Lebanon make up 27 percent of the country's population, while in Jordan they make up 10% percent of the population and in Turkey they make up 4 percent.



China Film takes 1st stake in Hollywood movies


China's state-owned film distributor is making its first investment in Hollywood movies by taking a stake in two Legendary Entertainment productions.


China Film Co. will make an "eight-figure equity investment" in two upcoming films, "Seventh Son" and "Warcraft," the Chinese unit of Legendary Entertainment said Tuesday.


The exact amount of the U.S. dollar investment was not specified.


"Seventh Son" is a fantasy adventure starring Jeff Bridges and Julianne Moore that's scheduled for release on Feb. 6, 2015. "Warcraft," based on a popular video game series, is slated for release March 11, 2016.


If approved for release in China, China Film would distribute the movies under current rules and regulations for foreign films, which are limited to just 34 a year. The deal calls for China Film to be credited on the movies.


China Film, which is planning to go public, owns stakes in movie theater chains that make up half of the country's box office receipts. Its parent, China Film Group, is the gatekeeper for foreign studios because it controls film imports and co-productions.


The projects are the first since Legendary and China Film teamed up about a year ago to produce global blockbusters. It's one of a number of recent tie-ups between companies in the world's two biggest movies markets.


As box-office revenue growth flattens out at home, Hollywood studies are keen to move into China, now the world's second biggest movie market with $3.6 billion in ticket sales last year. China's leaders hope that entertainment companies can benefit from the joint ventures by acquiring know-how to develop their own cultural industries in order to expand influence abroad.


Legendary Entertainment's films include "The Dark Knight" and "Hangover" trilogies and last year's sci-fi action adventure "Pacific Rim."



EU lawmakers to complete financial system overhaul


The European Parliament is set to approve legislation that will complete the biggest overhaul of the bloc's financial system since the introduction of the euro currency.


Lawmakers in Strasbourg on Tuesday are slated to sign off on the establishment of a European authority to unwind or restructure failing banks as well as new rules designed to prevent any further bailouts with taxpayer money.


Parliament is also expected to pass legislation protecting all deposits of up to 100,000 euros ($138,000) in case of bank failures across the 28-nation bloc.


The votes during the EU Parliament's final plenary session before elections due in May bring to a close an ambitious reform agenda launched in the wake of the 2008-2009 global financial crisis that had led to government bailouts worth hundreds of billions.



Greek short-term borrowing costs tumble


Greece's borrowing costs in a short-term debt sale have tumbled, days after the country returned to the international bond markets.


The interest rate on a 13-week treasury bill issued Tuesday fell to 2.45 percent, compared with 3.1 percent for a similar issue last month, according to the public debt management agency.


Greece raised 1.625 billion euros ($2.25 billion) in Tuesday's sale, which was 2.73 times oversubscribed.


After being locked out of the international bond market for four years by excessively high interest rates, Greece sold its first five-year bond since 2010 last week. The auction was eight times oversubscribed, and the country raised 3 billion euros at a 4.95 percent yield.


Athens has been relying on international bailout funds worth 240 billion euros since nearly going bankrupt in 2010.



Fletcher says more help on the way for Army


BEIRUT: British Ambassador Tom Fletcher said Monday additional assistance will be provided to the Lebanese Army in coordination with other countries during his meeting with President Michel Sleiman at Baabda Palace.


According to a statement released by the embassy, Fletcher underscored that more help would be made available in consultation with Britain's international partners, saying the “state's security forces should be given the best possible chance to stabilize Lebanon.”


Fletcher also congratulated the government on progress made in the security plan in recent weeks, which was drafted to restore law and order to several parts of the country, particularly Tripoli and areas bordering Syria.


Britain had been proud to support the Lebanese Army's efforts through a significantly expanded program of training and equipment, in response to the Army's requests,” Fletcher said.


He also updated Sleiman on Britain's support to Lebanon's long-term development, including a program to provide school textbooks for public school students.


“This is recognition of the burdens placed on Lebanese society by the generous response to the Syria refugee crisis. Britain is the second largest national donor to the humanitarian effort,” the statement quoted Fletcher as saying.


The envoy also expressed his gratitude to Sleiman for his “determined personal efforts to promote dialogue in support of Lebanon's stability and sovereignty.”



Finmeccanica shares down on CEO change


Shares in the Italian state-backed Finmeccanica defense contractor are down sharply after the government announced a new CEO.


Premier Matteo Renzi late Monday named new CEOs for four strategic companies, including oil giant Eni, Enel power company and the Italian postal service, sweeping aside current executives.


Investors signaled concern in early trading Tuesday. Finmeccanica shares dropped 2.7 percent to 6.92 euros ($9.56) on the nomination of Mauro Moretti, currently head of the Italian railway. He replaces Alessandro Pansa, who took over the scandal-plagued firm a year ago following the ouster of two successors.


The government chose insiders at Eni and Enel for the top jobs. Shares in Eni were down 0.5 percent while Enel dropped 1.2 percent, in line with the market.


Shareholders must approve the nominations.



Chinese sneaker factory workers go on strike


Workers at a Chinese factory owned by the world's largest maker of athletic footwear are striking in a dispute over benefits.


A worker said more than 10,000 employees at Yue Yuen Industrial's plant in the southern province of Guangdong joined the strike on Tuesday.


The number could not be independently verified. A company spokesman could not be reached for comment.


The Taiwanese owned company makes shoes for Nike, Adidas, Reebok, Asics, New Balance, Timberland and other brands.


The worker and labor groups said the workers are upset because the company failed to pay full social security and housing fund contributions. The strike started on April 5 and resumed Monday when the demands were not met.


Yue Yuen employs about 60,000 workers in the region.



Keesler plans more moves in metro Jackson market


Keesler Federal Credit Union, a $2.1 billion member institution, has acquired Mississippi Department of Transportation Federal Credit Union.


The deal closed March 31. The merger is expected to be completed by June 30.


Both entities are among Mississippi's earliest credit unions. The Transportation Department began its operation in 1941 and Keesler in 1947.


Keesler began as a credit union for military personnel at Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi, Miss. It has since grown to 187,000 members and recently expanded into Slidell, La.


Jeff Gerard, COO of Keesler Credit Union, tells the Mississippi Business Journal (http://bit.ly/QlYDLj ) the new acquisition will be a springboard for establishing several branch operations in the Jackson metropolitan market.


Mississippi Department of Transportation Federal Credit Union is a $4.8 million member institution.



Tripoli militia commanders surrender to Army


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Four militia commanders involved in recent fighting in the northern city of Tripoli turned themselves in to the Lebanese Army Tuesday.


Security sources told The Daily Star that Amer Ibrahim al-Maarouf, Amer Arish, Hussam Abu Mkhaiber and Jamal al-Maneh have surrendered to Army Intelligence.


The sources said all four men are wanted by authorities in connection with gunbattles between the rival neighborhoods of Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tabbneh.


The two districts have been feuding since the 1975-1990 Lebanese Civil War, but the traditional rivalry between Alawite Jabal Mohsen and mainly Sunni Bab al-Tabbaneh has been aggravated by the three-year-old crisis in neighboring Syria.


Lebanon’s Military Prosecutor Saqr Saqr Monday charged an additional 38 individuals over gunbattles in Tripoli.



Monday's Sports In Brief


SWIMMING


Michael Phelps is coming out of retirement, lured back into the pool by the fun of it and the possibility of swimming at a fifth Olympics in Rio in 2016.The 22-time Olympic medalist will compete for the first time since the 2012 London Games at a meet in Mesa, Ariz., on April 24-26.


Bob Bowman, the swimmer's longtime coach, told The Associated Press that Phelps is entered in three events — the 50- and 100-meter freestyles and the 100 butterfly.


Phelps returned to training last fall and re-entered the U.S. drug-testing program. He has completed his six-month waiting period by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency to be eligible for competition. Bowman said Phelps is "pretty far" from being back in top form. He's been training Monday through Friday with Bowman's team at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club in his hometown.


Besides Phelps, USA Swimming said Olympians Ryan Lochte and Katie Ledecky are among those expected to swim in the Arena Grand Prix at Skyline Aquatic Center.


NBA


WASHINGTON (AP) — LeBron James' only visible significant role was that of postgame heckler, interrupting Michael Beasley's interview amid a loose, upbeat locker room that normally wouldn't jibe with a 21-point loss — or throwing in a towel in the race for a No. 1 seed.


James and Chris Bosh took the night off, and the Heat were beaten 114-93 by the Washington Wizards in a no-contest game that guaranteed the Eastern Conference's top seed for the Indiana Pacers.


The Pacers are locked in to a first-round series against the eighth-seeded Atlanta Hawks, while the two-time defending champion Heat get the No. 2 seed and either the Wizards or the Charlotte Bobcats. Figuring it would be better to be fresh for the postseason, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra sat two of his Big Three, saying they were dealing with "minor ailments" from "the residual of a long season."


PHOENIX (AP) — The Memphis Grizzlies are back in the playoffs and the upstart Phoenix Suns are staying home.


Mike Conley and Zach Randolph made the critical plays in the final 68 seconds and the Grizzlies pulled out a 97-91 victory over Phoenix that clinched the last playoff spot in the West and eliminated the Suns from postseason competition.


Randolph scored 32 points to lead the inside power game that was just enough for Memphis to beat the Suns for the fourth time in four games this season and send the Grizzlies to the playofs for the fourth straight year.


INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Pacers' biggest win so far this season came off the court.


One day after breaking out of a slump by beating Oklahoma City and hours before Miami rested its star players, essentially ceding the top seed in the East, the city's Capital Improvement Board approved a new deal that would help the Pacers stay financially competitive in one of the NBA's smallest markets.


In exchange for providing $164 million to pay for operating costs at Bankers Life Fieldhouse over the next 10 years, the Pacers agreed to extend a lease agreement that will keep them in Indy for up to 13 more seasons. Board members voted 8-0 in favor of the deal.


BASEBALL


SAN DIEGO (AP) — The San Diego Padres think so much of second baseman Jedd Gyorko that they gave him a hefty raise and he's only 13 games into his second full big league season.


Gyorko's agreement is a six-year deal that adds $35 million over five seasons through 2019.


It replaces a one-year deal agreed to last month and includes a team option for 2020. San Diego essentially buys out one year of free agency and possibly two.


Gyorko proved himself with a big rookie season, hitting .249 with 23 home runs and 63 RBIs.


HOCKEY


NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — General manager David Poile hopes he sent the strongest message possible by making the first coaching change in Nashville's history: missing the playoffs is not acceptable for the Predators.


Poile announced that Barry Trotz, the NHL's longest tenured head coach with one team, would not be back for a 16th season after the Predators missed the postseason for a second straight year. A few hours later, Poile said at a news conference that won't get it done.


Trotz's contract expires June 30, and the Predators offered him a job in their hockey operations department. The two-time Jack Adams finalist made it clear in a very emotional news conference before Poile spoke that he appreciated the offer but wants to keep coaching.


WNBA


UNCASVILLE, Conn. (AP) — Chiney Ogwumike was selected No. 1 by the Connecticut Sun in the WNBA draft, joining her sister Nneka, drafted by Los Angeles in 2012, as the only siblings to be chosen first in the league.


Peyton and Eli Manning are the only other siblings to be taken No. 1 in the history of the four major American pro sports according to STATS.


Odyssey Sims of Baylor went second to Tulsa and San Antonio took Notre Dame's Kayla McBride with the third pick.


New York drafted Alyssa Thomas of Maryland fourth before trading her to Connecticut as part of a deal to acquire 2012 MVP Tina Charles.


The Indiana Fever selected Natasha Howard of Florida State with the fifth pick.



McCrory, tax overhaul opponents talk on filing day


Conservatives are using the April 15 deadline to celebrate tax changes that North Carolina lawmakers argue will keep more money in family wallets and encourage job creation.


Gov. Pat McCrory and key legislators plan to join right-leaning policy groups Tuesday for a tax-filing day news conference in Raleigh. They plan to highlight a new annual report from the American Legislative Exchange Council to promote the tax overhaul law.


The changes approved last year didn't affect 2013 state individual income tax returns most must turn in before Tuesday night. The law reduced income and corporate income tax rates and increased standard deductions starting in 2014.


Critics to the changes plan their own news conference Tuesday morning. They say the changes actually will lead to higher taxes for lower-income taxpayers.



Federal tax prosecutions seen as reminder


Seven Chicago area residents are facing prosecution for alleged federal income tax crimes.


The office of U.S. Attorney Zachary Fardon released information about the cases Monday, one day ahead of the April 15 tax filing deadline.


Fardon says it's a good reminder of the importance of complying with tax obligations.


One alleged scheme involved 173 fictitious income tax returns using the personal information of dental patients in the Chicago suburb of Woodridge. Prosecutors say in an indictment unsealed Monday that tax refunds were sent electronically to bank accounts controlled by the accused men.


Other Illinoisans have been indicted for tax evasion recently for failing to file federal income tax returns.


Each count of tax evasion carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.



NC LGBT group to hold rally over tax filing policy


North Carolina's largest LGBT advocacy group is holding a rally to protest a new state tax policy regarding same-sex couples.


Equality NC has scheduled a rally for Tuesday afternoon at Pullen Memorial Baptist Church in Raleigh to protest the policy from the state Department of Revenue. The policy says same-sex spouse couples cannot file income tax returns as "married filing jointly" or "married filing separately."


That's despite a ruling by the Internal Revenue Service directing that such filing be allowed.


The rally will include speeches by tax experts and LGBT families, as well as other married couples who support their cause.



MPs brace for heated debate over wage hike


BEIRUT: Parliament holds a crucial session Tuesday as rival politicians and parliamentary blocs scramble to avoid a confrontation with civil servants and teachers over the public sector’s disputed wage hike bill.


The Parliament session comes amid threats by the Union Coordination Committee to escalate their street protests, including an open-ended strike, if the salary scale draft law is not approved by MPs Tuesday.


The UCC, which represents civil servants and teachers in public and private schools, has called for a general strike Tuesday ahead of the Parliament session in a move apparently aimed at exerting pressure on lawmakers to approve the salary scale draft law without slashing the wage hike demanded by the UCC or rolling out the hike in installments.


Former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora chaired an extraordinary meeting of the parliamentary Future bloc Monday night to discuss what stance the bloc’s lawmakers would take during the Parliament session.


The bloc warned that the salary scale proposal would be a breach of the Constitution. “The salary scale draft law in its version amended by the [parliamentary] committees constitutes a clear violation of the Constitution,” the bloc said in a statement after its meeting.


It said that Article 84 in the Constitution allows Parliament and committees to demand a reduction in spending rather than increasing it.


“The bloc calls for studying the draft law carefully so that it would achieve its goal without burdening the treasury and without causing negative effects on the economy,” the statement said. It called for the salary scale bill to be coupled with the approval of a series of binding economic and administrative reforms.


MP Ali Khreis from Speaker Nabih Berri’s parliamentary bloc said he expected heated debates during the Parliament session before the wage hike bill is endorsed, given the divisions among lawmakers over the salary increase.


“We support the approval of the salary scale bill, but it should be laced with the implementation of basic and fundamental reforms in the public administration,” Khreis told The Daily Star.


Although the salary scale proposal was approved last week by Parliament’s Joint Committees following a series of marathon sessions, MPs failed to reach agreement on when the hikes would go into effect, whether they would be retroactive and if they would be paid in installments. They also remained split over the increase in value-added tax and on details of the raises for teachers.


President Michel Sleiman and Prime Minister Tammam Salam urged lawmakers to adopt a series of administrative reforms before passing the public sector wage hike in a bid to limit possible adverse effects on the country’s ailing economy.


“Stemming from our keenness to preserve the interests of citizens, discussions in Parliament should carefully focus on creating a balance between revenues and expenditures so that [the wage hike] will not negatively affect the economy and burden citizens with additional taxes,” Sleiman and Salam said in a joint statement after their meeting at Baabda Palace.


They stressed that the salary hike should be accompanied by “administrative reforms to stop corruption and control spending, which would safeguard the treasury and pave the way for a serious and practical discussion on how to apply the salary scale.”Berri has called a Parliament session for Tuesday to debate and vote on the public sector’s salary scale, which is estimated to cost the cash-strapped state treasury more than $1.6 billion annually.


A staunch supporter of the salary scale bill, Berri met with members of his parliamentary bloc to discuss the issue on the eve of the Parliament session. He later dispatched Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil, a member of his bloc, to Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt who has said his parliamentary bloc would vote against the salary scale draft law if the funding sources were not clear enough.


Khalil briefed the Chouf MP on the means to find revenues to fund the salary increases.


Jumblatt, who chaired a meeting of his parliamentary bloc, the National Struggle Front, warned of dire economic consequences if the salary scale bill was approved haphazardly.


“The Front sees that what hurts the popular sections most is an attempt to mislead them that a theoretical approval of the salary scale [bill] will be in their interest. At best, this approval will lead to an inflation that would erode all gains and rights,” the front said in a statement after the meeting.


“At worst, it would lead to a financial and economic collapse at an extremely complicated and critical time internally and regionally, whereby it would be difficult to expect any support for Lebanon if the worst happened,” it added.


MP Michel Aoun’s parliamentary Change and Reform bloc said the wage hike bill should be accompanied by the implementation of reforms in the public administration.


“The people’s rights in the public sector are rightful. But [the state’s] resources and reforms should be taken seriously into account in order for the state, rights, workers and employers to survive in Lebanon,” MP Ibrahim Kanaan told reporters after the bloc’s weekly meeting chaired by Aoun in Rabieh, north of Beirut.


He said the bloc’s lawmakers would make proposals and amendments to the wage hike bill during the Parliament session. “We are keen on rights, resources and reforms,” he added.


The heads of Catholic schools sent a memorandum to Berri in which they warned that the approval of the salary scale bill in its first version would lead to the closure of a number of private schools and leave their teachers jobless. Among other things, the memo demands that the wage hike bill be accompanied by reforms and the cancellation of the bill’s retroactive effect.


Meanwhile, the UCC called on employees in all ministries, public departments, municipalities and teachers in government and private schools to observe a general strike Tuesday along with a central sit-in at 11 a.m. on Riad al-Solh Square while Parliament is in session.


Hanna Gharib, head of the UCC, said the strike was designed to protect the salary scale against attempts to divide and install it, reduce its figures, or failing to approve the same 121 percent pay hike granted to judges and Lebanese University teachers.



Oil falls below $104 ahead of Ukraine meeting


The price of oil fell Tuesday ahead of talks in Switzerland that might help defuse tension between the West and Russia over Ukraine.


Benchmark U.S. crude for May delivery was down 68 cents to $103.39 at 0650 GMT in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose 31 cents to close Monday at $104.05.


Officials from the U.S., Russia, Ukraine and the European Union are set to meet in Geneva on Thursday for negotiations aimed at persuading Russia to back off in Ukraine following its annexation of Crimea.


Failing that, European Union leaders could meet as early as next week to decide on tighter sanctions on Russia, a major producer of oil and gas, which has been accused of fomenting unrest in eastern Ukraine. The Ukraine government said on Sunday it was sending in troops to try to quash a pro-Russian insurgency in the region.


Brent crude, a benchmark used for international varieties of oil, was down 43 cents to $108.64 on the ICE exchange in London after hitting a six-week high.


In other energy futures trading in New York:


— Wholesale gasoline fell 0.3 cent to $2.999 a gallon.


— Natural gas fell 0.3 cent to $4.557 per 1,000 cubic feet.


— Heating oil fell 0.2 cent to $2.977 a gallon.