Thursday, 10 July 2014

Kentucky coal group sues TVA over Paradise plant


A group of landowners and a Kentucky coal industry group are asking a federal judge to halt plans to shut down two coal-fired units at a Tennessee Valley Authority power plant in western Kentucky.


The Kentucky Coal Association argues in the suit filed Thursday that the TVA did not follow proper federal procedure and its own rules in deciding to close the units at the Paradise Fossil Plant. The TVA announced last year that it would build a new facility powered by natural gas at the site, as well as keep a third coal-fired unit in operation.


The suit says the TVA did not perform a proper environmental impact statement when making the decision.


A TVA spokesman said Thursday that officials will review the lawsuit and respond appropriately.



Woman Invents Parking Signs Not Made of Nonsense


Everything about parking signs suggests they're meant to aggravate you, not only with their restrictions but also with their poorly designed presentation of those restrictions. You know the drill: Park in the spot, get out, walk to the nearest sign, and gaze longingly at it wishing it were faster to read and made sense and didn't require getting out of the car to see, especially when it delivers the bad news that no, you cannot park there.


If parking signs looked like the ones created by Nikki Sylianteng, a designer in New York, that maneuver would be a thing of the past. Sylianteng has been putting her signs up in New York (which happened to introduce a new design last year) and soliciting feedback on her website.


Aside from the overall design challenge, she's still working out the smaller issues: How would colorblind people see a red and green sign? Will people who don't read English be able to understand the signs? Should the week start on Sunday or Monday?


So, since the beginning of the year, Sylianteng's design has evolved:



And it will continue to change as she collects more feedback and, I hope, comes to other cities.


This post was originally published by Popular Mechanics



This Dad Is Sweating All These Heat Related Child Car Deaths


Terry Williams is fed up with hearing about another child dying in a hot car every time he turns on the news, left to suffocate while their parent is running some errand or just forgot their progeny sweating to death in the back seat. Determined to raise awareness for what is becoming the hot button social issue of the summer, the North Carolina man locked himself in his car and video taped the experience, sweating profusely after just minutes as exterior temperatures reached near 90 degrees.


This isn’t a new trend – numbers have been steadily rising over the past few years, with 44 heat stroke related child car deaths in 2013 alone. Temperatures in cars can rise as much as 20 degrees beyond the exterior in just minutes, and a child’s body temperature can increase at a rate five times faster than an adult’s. For younger kids, this can be fatal in less than the time it takes to pop into the coffeeshop for your daily Frappuccino. A concerned father himself, Williams’ act is catching on, and other like-minded folks are re-creating his protest and posting their experiences to his Facebook page.


As for Williams himself, he just hopes that this leap into meme-dom will save some lives. As he says in the video, “Don’t be the next fool on the damn news.”



The President's Been Busy This Year

"Let's make this a year of action."


That's what President Obama said in this year's State of the Union address — and he's been doing his part. Since January, the President has taken more than 40 executive actions to help families across the country succeed.


The President has helped to make student loan payments more affordable, support equal pay and workplace flexibility, cut carbon pollution, and raise the minimum wage for all workers on new federal contracts. And those are just a handful of the actions he's taken.


Find out how the President is working to ensure opportunity for all Americans.


Learn more about the President's actions this year.


Possible compromise emerges on border request

The Associated Press



Outlines of a possible compromise that would more quickly deport minors arriving from Central America emerged Thursday as part of President Barack Obama's $3.7 billion emergency request to address the immigration crisis on the southern border.


Republicans demanded speedier deportations, which the White House initially had supported but left out of its proposal after complaints from immigrant advocates and some Democrats. The top House and Senate Democrats pointedly left the door open to them.


"It's not a deal-breaker," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. "Let them have their face-saver. But let us have the resources to do what we have to do."


In the Senate, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said: "I'm not going to block anything. Let's see what comes to the floor."


Reid and Pelosi made their comments as House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., both said they didn't want to give Obama a "blank check" to deal with the crisis of tens of thousands of unaccompanied children arriving at the Texas border, many fleeing gang violence and drawn by rumors they would be able to stay in the U.S. Boehner and McConnell indicated policy changes would be necessary to win their support.


"We want to make sure we actually get the right tools to help fix the problem," McConnell said. Obama "needs to work with us to get the right policy into effect."


The developments came as Obama's Homeland Security secretary, Jeh Johnson, defended the emergency spending request at a hearing of the Senate Appropriations Committee. He said in written testimony that without the funds, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement would run out of money in August and the Homeland Security Department "would need to divert significant funds from other critical programs just to maintain operations."


At issue is a law approved in 2008. Passed to give protection to sex trafficking victims, it requires court hearings for migrant young people who arrive in this country from "noncontiguous" countries — anywhere other than Mexico or Canada.


Because of enormous backlogs in the immigration court system, the result in the current crisis is that kids streaming in from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala are released to relatives or others in the U.S. with notices to appear at long-distant court hearings that many of them never will attend.


Republicans want the government to have the authority to treat Central American kids the same way as kids from Mexico, who can be removed quickly unless they convince Border Patrol that they have a fear of return that merits additional screening.


"I think clearly we would probably want the language similar to what we have with Mexico," Boehner said.


White House officials have said they support such changes and indicated last week that they would be proposing them along with the emergency spending request. But advocates objected strongly, saying kids would be denied legal protections, and now the White House position is less clear.


Asked Thursday about whether the White House would consider proposals to revise the law, White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the administration is open to discussions about ways to better enforce it.


"That is to say, how can this law be enforced in a more efficient way?" Earnest told reporters traveling with Obama in Texas. He added that if there are others who have ideas about how to make the process more efficient, "we're certainly open to those discussions."


Advocates said they remained strongly opposed and expressed anger that after comprehensive immigration reform failed to advance in Congress this year, lawmakers may be headed toward a vote on deporting minors more quickly.


"They weren't able to get immigration reform done in this Congress and this is going to be the only piece of immigration that gets done, a bill that says we're going to deport children fleeing violence faster," said Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center. "If Democrats can't stand up to this and be the party that's protecting children and refugees, it's a really sad day for the country."


More than 57,000 unaccompanied children have arrived since October even as tens of thousands more have arrived traveling as families, mostly mothers with their children.


Many are trying to reunite with family members and to escape a spike in violence in their countries, but they also report hearing rumors that once here, they would be allowed to stay. Republicans blame Obama policies aimed at curbing deportations of immigrants brought into the country illegally as children for contributing to those rumors, something Obama administration officials have largely rejected.


The situation has complicated the already rancorous debate over remaking the nation's immigration laws at a moment when Obama has declared legislative efforts to do so dead and announced plans to proceed on his own executive authority to change the flawed system where he can.


---


AP White House Correspondent Julie Pace in Dallas contributed to this report.



On Twitter, follow Alicia A. Caldwell at http://bit.ly/1dPiHP8 and Erica Werner at http://bit.ly/1qOt4rP.


Oil prices continue to fall as supplies grow


The price of oil continued to fall Thursday, trading below $102 a barrel as the outlook for supply remained robust.


By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark U.S. crude for August delivery was down 34 cents to $101.95 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils, was down 12 cents to $108.16 on the ICE Futures exchange in London.


Oil has been falling steadily for more than a week partly because worries about disruptions of the oil supply from Iraq have subsided and Libyan oil is returning to the global market.


Political strife has shut ports and disrupted production in Libya but agreements with local militias are now expected to open two ports. A major field restarted production Tuesday. Analysts said crude shipments could ramp up quickly because oil has accumulated in tanks at the closed ports.


Meanwhile, government data showed that a fall in U.S. oil supply was smaller than expected. The U.S. Energy Department reported Wednesday that U.S. crude supplies fell 2.4 million barrels last week. Analysts had expected a 3 million barrel decline. The department had revised up its estimate for U.S. crude production for this year and next year.


In its latest report on oil markets, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said global oil demand would grow from 91.1 million barrels a day in 2014 to 92.2 million barrels a day in 2015.


OPEC, however, said demand for its crude oil would fall slightly in 2015 due to rising supplies from other sources.


"Therefore, even if next year's world economic growth turns out to be better than expected and crude oil demand outperforms expectations, OPEC will have sufficient supply to provide to the market," said the Vienna-based group.


In other energy futures trading:


— Wholesale gasoline inched down 0.03 cent to $2.9374 a gallon.


— Natural gas rose 0.7 cent to $4.177 per 1,000 cubic feet.


— Heating oil added 0.42 cent to $2.8753 a gallon.



Average US 30-year mortgage rate rises to 4.15 pct


Average U.S. rates on fixed mortgages edged up slightly this week, remaining near historically low levels.


Mortgage buyer Freddie Mac said Thursday that the nationwide average rate for a 30-year loan rose to 4.15 percent from 4.12 percent last week. The average for the 15-year mortgage increased to 3.24 percent from 3.22 percent.


Mortgage rates are slightly lower than they were at the same time last year, having fallen recently after climbing last summer. That's when the Federal Reserve began talking about reducing the monthly bond purchases it has been using to keep long-term interest rates low.


Rates have fallen modestly this year as Fed officials have signaled strongly that while they are trimming the bond purchases, they are in no rush to start boosting a key short-term rate the Fed controls.


To calculate average mortgage rate, Freddie Mac surveys lenders across the country between Monday and Wednesday each week. The average doesn't include extra fees, known as points, which most borrowers must pay to get the lowest rates. One point equals 1 percent of the loan amount.


The average fee for a 30-year mortgage rose to 0.7 point this week from 0.5 point last week. The fee for a 15-year loan, popular in refinancing, increased to 0.6 point from 0.5 point last week.


The average rate on a one-year adjustable-rate mortgage rose to 2.40 percent from 2.38 percent. The average fee was unchanged at 0.4 point.


The average rate on a five-year adjustable-rate mortgage ticked up to 2.99 percent from 2.98 percent. The fee remained at 0.4 point.



Los Alamos to get new supercomputer


Los Alamos National Laboratory is getting a next-generation supercomputer to help maintain the safety and effectiveness of the nation's nuclear weapons.


The National Nuclear Security Administration announced Thursday that it is contracting with Cray Inc. to help develop the supercomputer, called Trinity.


Trinity will be used by Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore and Sandia national laboratories and will be housed at Los Alamos' Metropolis Computing Center. Officials say Trinity will be sized to run the largest and most demanding simulations of stockpile stewardship, assuring the safety, security, and effectiveness of the country's nuclear stockpile without underground testing.


Scheduled for delivery starting in mid-2015, Trinity will have at least eight times greater applications performance than Cielo, the current NNSA supercomputer at Los Alamos.



Ex-minor leaguers sue MLB over low salaries


Like many young baseball players, Aaron Senne dreamed of fame and fortune when he signed his first contract as a Miami Marlins' draft choice after a record-breaking college career at Missouri.


Reality as a low-level minor leaguer was far different: vending machine dinners, bug-infested apartments and a paltry salary with an equivalent hourly wage less than what fast-food workers make.


Senne and former minor-league players in each of the 30 big-league organizations are suing Major League Baseball, alleging violations of federal wage and overtime laws in a case some legal observers suggest has significant merit. They are seeking class-action status on behalf of the estimated 6,000 ballplayers who toil each summer in outposts stretching from Bluefield, Virginia, to Bakersfield, California, as well as an unspecified amount of back pay.


"You come from high school or college where you're not making anything and you just think, 'I'm getting paid to play baseball. I'll chase my dream,'" said Senne, who retired last year after having Tommy John surgery on his elbow in 2011, one year after the Marlins paid him a $25,000 signing bonus as a 10th round pick. "You get that first paycheck and you do a double take. It's an eye opener."


In Senne's case, that first check from the Jamestown (N.Y.) Jammers, a short-season Class A affiliate, was for $1,100 a month — maximum scale for all first-year players, who typically sign seven-year contracts — and $25 a day in meal money. At his peak, he earned $7,000 in 2012, but like all minor-leaguers, wasn't paid at all during spring training or for his offseason conditioning work.


Federal antitrust exemptions have largely protected pro baseball from comparable legal challenges. But in this case, the 32 plaintiffs recruited by attorney Garrett Broshuis — another former minor-leaguer from Mizzou who went to law school after six seasons in the San Francisco Giants' organization — allege violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act, a 1938 law that stipulates a minimum wage for workers and requires overtime for most employees who work more than 40 hours weekly.


The suit was filed earlier this year in federal court in San Francisco, though Major League Baseball wants to move the suit to Florida, where most of its teams spend spring training and courts are considered more employer-friendly.


"Yes, these guys are chasing a dream," said Broshuis, acknowledging that short-term sacrifices can become distant memories should a big-league contract with a $500,000 minimum salary and average annual wages of $3 million be attained. "But it's also a job. And it's a job they put a lot of hours in."


Attorneys representing Major League Baseball in the California case did not respond to interview requests, and a spokesman in the league's New York office declined comment. In a 78-page response to the suit, the league and Commissioner Bud Selig outlined 30 objections, including an exemption under the federal wage law for "seasonal, amusement or recreational" workers and a contractual requirement that workplace disputes must first go to arbitration before courts intervene.


University of New Hampshire law professor Michael McCann, director of the school's Sports and Entertainment Law Institute, notes that most minor-league salaries fall far below the federal poverty level of $11,670 for a single person and $23,850 for a family of four. Nor do minor leaguers have the power of a union to advocate on their behalf.


"Maybe for a 19- or 20-year-old, that's all right," McCann said of the typical minor-league contract. "For a guy who's 28 years old with a family, I don't see how there's enough money to pay the bills."


He said the lawsuit makes a "credible argument," but noted that MLB has yet to offer a detailed response.


Broshuis attributed the disconnect between the idealized version of paying one's dues in the minors and his actual experience as his primary motivation for pursuing a legal career. Drafted by the Giants in 2004 and out of baseball five years later after a few stints in Class AAA, he was valedictorian of his law school class at Saint Louis University.


"Very early in my career, I realized that something just didn't seem quite right," he said. Compared to college, "it almost seemed like a step down in working conditions. It seemed backward."


Senne was one of three original plaintiffs in a case that is back in court later this week. He said the suit is a long-overdue challenge to a management mindset that embraced financial sacrifice as a necessary rite of passage.


For players who voiced their concerns, the response from coaches and managers was uniform, he said.


"They would say, 'If you don't like it, play better,'" Senne said. "'Or go get a 9-to-5 job.'"



Cleanup of ND pipeline spill could last weeks


Company officials say cleanup efforts are expected to take weeks after a pipeline on North Dakota's Fort Berthold Indian Reservation leaked around 1 million gallons of saltwater.


Some of the brine found its way to a tributary of a lake that provides drinking water to the reservation. Tribal and company officials say the leak near Mandaree has been isolated and drinking water is unaffected.


Three Affiliated Tribes Chairman Tex Hall tells The Associated Press that the underground pipeline owned by Aero Pipeline LCC leaked about 24,000 barrels, or about 1 million gallons. The company says the leak started over the weekend and was discovered Tuesday.


Aero Pipeline is a subsidiary of Houston-based Crestwood Midstream Partners.


Saltwater is a byproduct of oil production that's 10 to 30 times saltier than seawater.



Corbett signs budget, takes on lawmakers, pensions


Gov. Tom Corbett signed the state budget 10 days late on Thursday and used his line-item veto to strike $65 million from the General Assembly's own appropriation, urging a renewed effort to curb public-sector pension benefits for newly hired teachers and state workers


Corbett, a Republican, said he wanted to avoid any more school districts raising property taxes to cover their pension obligations, and criticized the GOP-controlled Legislature for refusing to contribute any of its approximately $150 million surplus to help state government close a massive deficit.


He cut $7.2 million in earmarks and other spending items picked by lawmakers, noting that the proposal sent to him last week increased the General Assembly's own $320 million budget by 2 percent and included $5 million for parking.


"They filled the budget with discretionary spending and then refused to deal with the biggest fiscal challenge facing Pennsylvania, our unsustainable public pension system," Corbett said in a Capitol news conference.


The pension systems represent a growing financial strain on state government and local school districts, but despite pressure from Corbett over the past couple years, no deal has made it to his desk.


He said lawmakers left Harrisburg "with unfinished business. They need to come back and enact pension reform."


The governor's actions did not affect a bill hung up in the Legislature to increase in Philadelphia's sales tax on cigarettes that city officials say is crucial to ensuring the city's schools have enough money to open in the fall.


The Republican-penned state budget plan passed both chambers without a single vote from a Democrat, and Corbett has said that his administration did not agree to all the final details.


The big task for Republicans was to address a massive and unexpected collapse in tax collections that tore a gaping $1.7 billion hole into the $29.4 billion budget plan that Corbett proposed in February. The one he signed Thursday was $29 billion.


It does not increase taxes and is supported by an approximately 3 percent revenue growth projection.


Under the plan, spending would increase $651 million, or 2.3 percent, over the current year's approved budget. Another $220 million would be added to the books of the nearly ended fiscal year, rather than the new fiscal year, making the entire package an $871 million increase, or about 3.1 percent.


The new spending goes largely toward public schools, prisons, pension obligations, health care for the poor and social safety-net programs. To plug a massive deficit, it relies on more than $2.5 billion in one-time stopgaps to plug a massive deficit, the biggest use of stopgaps outside of the three years around the Great Recession.


The stopgaps include postponing nearly $400 million in Medicaid payments, raiding off-budget programs and draining reserves.


Democrats had proposed making up the shortfall by expanding Medicaid under the 2010 federal health care law, delaying planned tax cuts for businesses and increasing taxes on natural gas extraction and sales of tobacco products.


While Senate Republicans had entertained the idea of a tax increase, House Republicans blocked it and Corbett had insisted he would not approve a tax increase without action on pension legislation.



Samsung faces fresh child labor claim in China


Samsung is facing a fresh accusation that one of its China suppliers hired children to meet production targets during a period of high demand from the South Korean electronics giant.


Samsung Electronics Co. said Thursday it is looking into the allegation by China Labor Watch that its supplier Shinyang Electronics in Dongguan hired children and student workers under the legal working age.


The New York-based labor watchdog said children were hired during a busy production period, worked for 11 hours a day without overtime pay and without social insurance. They usually left employment after three to six months when demand from Samsung declined, but without any severance pay.


The accusation conflicts with Samsung's recent report on conditions at suppliers. It said no child labor was found by an external audit last year of about 100 Chinese suppliers.


That audit found 59 suppliers that did not provide safety equipment to employees. It also said excessive working hours were commonplace.


China Labor Watch said in 2012 that Samsung was turning a blind eye to child labor at its suppliers in China where billions of Apple Inc. and Samsung smartphones are assembled. The 2012 report also said working conditions at Samsung suppliers were "inhumane," citing workers laboring beyond legally permitted hours and other problems.


Then, Samsung promised to eliminate illegal overtime and other labor violations. It began to detail its efforts to remove child workers, such as introducing a new hiring process with strict identity checks at its suppliers in China. Samsung said it would sever its relationship with companies that continued to fail to abide by its code of conduct.


There are hundreds of Samsung suppliers in China.


Citing its latest finding, China Labor Watch said Samsung's audit showing no child labor was inaccurate.


Executive Director Li Qiang said the company's reports are meant to reassure investors and don't have any value for workers.


"Samsung's monitoring system is ineffective and has failed to bring about improvements for workers."


Samsung said it and a third party auditor conducted three inspections of Shinyang Electronics in 2013 and 2014 but did not find child labor during those audits. It reiterated that it has zero tolerance for child labor.


The company said it was "urgently" looking into the allegations.



Biographical information on Joseph Swedish


NAME: Joseph R. Swedish


AGE: 63


CAREER: Former CEO of the health care systems Trinity Health Corp. and Centura Health Corp. Also has served as an executive for the hospital operator HCA Holdings Inc. and as a board member for the insurer Coventry Health Care, which competitor Aetna Inc. acquired in 2013.


EDUCATION: Bachelor's degree in political science, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Master's degree in health administration, Duke University


FAMILY: Swedish and his wife, Gene, have three grown children, Ian, Evan and Erin


UPBRINGING: Parents immigrated from Eastern Europe in the late 1940s and spoke no English upon arriving. Swedish said his first bed was a suitcase and he grew up doing chores on a Virginia farm. He went to elementary school in an orphanage near his parents' home.



India's new government unveils growth budget


India's new government introduced a reform-minded budget Thursday, telegraphing a contentious overhaul of populist subsidies and vowing to lift economic growth to rates of 7-8 percent by spending billions of dollars on infrastructure.


The budget for the fiscal year ending March 2015 was closely watched as an indicator of whether Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government will act quickly to will deliver on promises to revive stalled economic growth. The government also announced plans to ease limits on foreign investment in defense and insurance businesses.


Finance Minister Arun Jaitley outlined the 18 trillion rupee ($301 billion) budget, which he said would be a departure from the "mere populism and wasteful expenditure" that has dragged down Asia's third-largest economy.


India's economic growth has slowed to less than 5 percent for the last two years after a decade of expanding by an average of 8 percent, which is the minimum the government says is necessary to provide jobs for the 13 million young Indians who enter the workforce each year. Big spending on subsidies has limited the government's ability to use its budget to make productive investments that could boost the economy's productivity in the long run.


Jaitley, however, maintained the previous government's target for a budget deficit of 4.1 percent of gross domestic product and also said it would be "daunting" to meet that goal. He said the deficit might end up at 4.5 percent. In the two subsequent years, he forecast the deficit to fall to 3.6 percent and 3 percent of GDP respectively.


He indicated those reductions would involve overhauling expensive subsidies for food, fuel and fertilizer that cost India's government some $40 billion a year. He gave no details other than saying the subsidies would be "more targeted."


In some quarters there was disappointment that the government held back from an immediate and radical slashing of the previous government's populist policies, which provide a social safety net but also swell the budget deficit.


"There was a sense that this budget would an opportunity for the government to break away from the principles, the world views of the previous government. It did not do that," said Jahangir Aziz, head of Asian emerging markets for JP Morgan Chase.


Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party swept to power in May after the most decisive election victory India has witnessed in three decades, ousting the long-dominant Congress party. Voters were fed up with Congress' failure to curb runaway inflation and the wilting of economic growth.


Investors initially welcomed the budget with the Sensex stock index rising 1.6 percent before losing ground and finishing the day down 0.3 percent. Expectations for a pro-growth budget were high and the index hit a series of record highs in the weeks before the budget.


Jaitley said the government could not rely only on spending cuts to reduce the budget deficit and should also work to spur economic growth back to 7-8 percent, which would result in higher tax revenue.


He said that a revival of manufacturing and building of new infrastructure are ways to provide jobs. He announced 500 billion rupees ($8.3 billion) in projects to expand and improve roads, ports and electricity plus tax exemptions to promote investment in small- and medium-sized factories.


Jaitley also announced that the caps on foreign investment in the defense and insurance industries would be raised to 49 percent from 26 percent.


The combination of infrastructure spending and relaxation of foreign investment curbs helped soften the disappointment that the government did not slash food and fuel subsidies in its inaugural budget. That's likely because a weak start to the annual monsoon season is likely to reduce harvests this year and drive food prices up further, which would make cutting subsidies even more difficult and a burden on the poor.


The targets for reducing the budget deficit also could indicate the Modi government plans to generate revenue by selling shares in state-owned businesses, said Sumesh Sawhney of Jones Day, a law firm that works with investors in India.


"It's not a big-bang budget, but it is not a disaster either," Sawhney said.



Son confesses to stabbing, burning father to death



BEIRUT: The son of a man found stabbed and burned to death in his apartment confessed to the police Thursday that he was behind the murder, which was apparently prompted by a fight between the two.


The Internal Security Forces released a statement today saying that 24-year-old confessed to interrogators that he had stabbed Hasan Ali Hashem and burned the house “because of conflicts.” The 54-year-old father was stabbed several times with a sharp object to the head, neck and chest.


The statement said that the young man suffered from mental and nervous illnesses.


Hashem's daughter and her mother arrived home to see the building on fire and Hashem’s body inside.


The son was arrested around 6 p.m. Wednesday after a man reported seeing someone looking anxious and with scratches all over his arms, a security source told The Daily Star.


When asked about the reason behind the scratches, the son said he fell into a tree, the source added.


But after examining the victim’s body, police discovered a fight had erupted between the two either before or during the crime.


Four hours after he was arrested, the source explained, the son confessed during interrogations to having committed the crime. He later made the same statement in front of the special judiciary, which is necessary for a conviction.


Due to his mental illness, however, the young man will most probably not be given the death penalty, which is the typical punishment for such crimes.



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Lost in translation: Connecting youths with Arabic


BEIRUT: Teens from Lebanon and the Arab world exposed the fragility of a deteriorating Arabic language in the University of Iowa’s International Writing Program, Between the Lines, with students favoring writing in English instead of their native Arabic.


“The Arabic tongue is deteriorating, not only because of globalization and the mainstream English language, but because the educational system in the Arab World is connecting the language to social values that are no longer convenient for the youth,” said Lebanese novelist and writing instructor Iman Humaydan.


Humaydan has presided over students from at least nine different Arabic countries -- with different cultural, linguistic and religious backgrounds -- in an attempt to reintroduce the Arabic language to the classroom.


Many of her students were initially resistant to the Arabic tongue, with students refusing to participate at first because they believed that they were entering an purely English writing program.


“What really was a serious issue was to make these students believe that their mother tongue is capable of reflecting their inner selves,” said Humaydan.


The novelist and writer expressed her view that orthodox educational methods have associated the Arabic language with religious values, and other conventional norms derived from old Arabic literature.


According to Humaydan, by eliminating contemporary Arab writers from the school curriculum and simply exposing youths to the same conventional references and teaching methods have, in turn, contributed to the death of the Arabic tongue.


“If you see what is going on in the Arab world and who is teaching the Arabic language you will understand censorship, you will see that they mix between morals and writing,” she added.


Humaydan believed that her students harbored resentment toward what was happening in the Arab world, saying that “they feel there is no hope and they want to find a way out for their future.”


In the last session on July 5, students talked about their dreams and what they’re planning to do and “very few of them said they would stay in their countries,” she added.


“I live in Burj Hammoud. I would like to study abroad and perhaps even live there,” said Megry Tchangoulian, the only Lebanese participant in the program.


Between the Lines coordinator, Kelly Morse, said that one of the struggles of the program has been that students were not writing about their own countries or cultures.


According to the coordinator, students wrote on the basis of what has been presented to them as “neutral literature, so the literature of the west,” adding that the program tried to promote global literature and not just the western conception of it.


“With the Arab kids there is a push back because they want to speak English, and write in English, and they are very distant from movements in Arabic literature. They perceive a freedom in English that they don’t feel in Arabic. What we feel our job is, is to provide a space for all languages, to show that they all have the same power, that they are all equal,” she added.


Morse lauded Humaydan’s efforts to reunite the kids with the Arabic language, saying that when the students arrived in the U.S. they realized that there are some things they can only say in their native Arab tongue.


The program's Lebanese student, Tchangoulian, expressed her own difficulty with the Arabic language -- pointing out that she “used to write only in English; however, once I joined this program I was encouraged to write in Arabic as well.”


Tchangoulian said that once she began writing in Arabic, she realized the true beauty of the language and understood how to be creative with it.


“All of the teachers inspired me but Iman Humaydan inspired me the most. I enjoyed the Arabic writing workshops with her; she explained everything in an interesting way and encouraged us to express our opinions. She advised us to find our voice and always express ourselves freely. In addition, she told us to read and read and read,” she added.


Applications for Between the Lines, a program that brings young writers, aged 16-19, to the University of Iowa for creative writing study and cultural interaction, take place via American embassies in students' home countries -- or for Americans, direct applications via the program website.


The participants come from within the U.S., Russia and the Middle East, and are evaluated according to their writing proficiency in both the English language and their native tongue.


Workshops are divided in to two daily sessions: a morning English-language literature seminar and a creative writing workshop in the students’ native languages during the afternoon.



Amid abundant propane supply, calls come for strategic reserve

McClatchy Newspapers



America is awash in propane, a byproduct of booming oil and natural gas production. Yet getting it to markets at home and abroad is proving challenging and controversial.


Long a niche in the energy sector, propane today is sexy. Record exports and supply disruptions this past winter have refocused attention on propane, after prices went through the roof for consumers, businesses and farmers alike.


Congress and the Obama administration are studying a possible strategic propane reserve, to function like the ones for crude oil and home heating oil. Efforts to create additional private-sector propane storage have met with local and state-level resistance.


“If they could do it with heating oil they could certainly do it with propane,” said Andrew Heaney, the CEO of Propane.pro, a national online marketplace that connects buyers and sellers of residential propane. “This is a vital fuel type, and there is a real danger of having another shortage. . . . It just makes sense to put some kind of buffer into the system. It’s just common sense. It’s an insurance policy against disaster.”


Roughly 50 million homes use propane for winter heating, water heaters, stoves and other appliances. Far from being a winter product used just in homes across the Midwest or New England states, propane has numerous farm and commercial uses. California, Florida, Illinois and North Carolina are among the largest users of propane.


America’s ongoing energy boom has meant a rapid rise in propane production, too. Propane is a hydrocarbon byproduct of the cleaning process in natural gas production and of petroleum refining.


Because of its ready availability and a growing global demand for it, drillers in places as varied as Texas, North Dakota, Ohio and Pennsylvania are increasingly producing liquified petroleum gases, namely propane and butane.


In fact, the supply of LPG now exceeds the American demand for it. Companies are racing to export the excess to Latin America, Europe and Asia. New export terminals are planned for places as distinct as Beaumont, Texas, and Longview, Wash.


The Energy Information Administration projected last year that LPG exports would rise from about 100,000 barrels per day in 2011 to half a million barrels per day by 2017. U.S. exports hit a record 302,000 bpd last year, well on the way.


By contrast, U.S. demand for propane broke records last November at over 1.8 million barrels per day, powered by demand for propane to dry a record corn crop. Another record or near-record crop is projected for 2014.


Despite the boom, homeowners across the nation either couldn’t get propane last winter or paid through the nose for it. Facing a national supply crisis in February, federal regulators intervened, ordering pipeline operators to give priority to propane shipments to markets where some residents were literally freezing to death.


The winter crisis prompted a May 1 Senate hearing, triggered Energy Department studies and sparked calls for everything from banning exports to creating a strategic reserve like the kinds that have been in place since 1974 and 2000, respectively, for petroleum and home heating oil.


“The macro situation is that there are still no restrictions on export of propane, no controls on export of propane. The government has no idea how much propane there is in the country until it’s too late,” Heaney said, arguing for a strategic reserve. “What we saw last winter was an absolute disaster. The public is no less exposed at this point than it was at the beginning of last winter!”


A propane reserve could be created in existing storage hubs such as Conway, Kan., or Mont Belvieu, Texas. Alternately, the federal government could request proposals to pay private companies with existing storage to keep a certain percentage as a buffer, purchasing propane in summer periods when the price is lower.


“The real culprit is storage,” said Joe Rose, the president of the Propane Gas Association of New England, arguing that whether it’s through the government or the private sector, more propane must be set aside over the lower-use summer months to assure sufficient supplies during the winter.


Steve Ahrens agrees. The executive director of the Missouri Propane Gas Association, he’d like to see more storage as a buffer and closer oversight of supplies and pricing after last year’s polar vortex and harsh winter.


“We certainly felt it was a natural disaster, like a hurricane or tornado, and that people should not be profit-taking,” said Ahrens, whose state uses propane on farms and to heat 1 in 10 homes.


He added, “If you put a dollar amount on all the pain and suffering . . . last year, you might be able to support some sort of government purchase of propane through the summer to build those inventories.”


Inventories in the Midwest were lower than last year's averages for much of this springtime, keeping prices elevated. Storage has now slightly passed last summer's levels, suggesting some relief, but the buildup before winter will be key to next winter’s prices. Low storage levels will likely mean high prices for consumers and businesses alike, said Ahrens.


“That’s how markets allocate a scarce resource,” he said.


Except that propane isn’t scarce. It’s being produced and exported in record amounts.


That might explain why the Obama administration is mum on the idea of a strategic reserve for propane. The U.S. Department of Energy declined to make anyone available to discuss the matter.


At the Senate hearing in May, the agency’s director of energy policy testified that the crude and home heating reserves were created when energy supplies were scarce, which is not the case with propane.


“Reserves are certainly something we will be looking at,” Melanie Kenderdine said in noncommittal testimony.


An alternative to a strategic reserve is simply more private-sector storage, perhaps in the Finger Lakes region of southern New York. In the town of Watkins Glen, Crestwood Midstream Energy has tried for several years to open a propane storage operation in salt caverns that were used for decades to store natural gas.


The facility, which overlooks the pristine Seneca Lake and its gliding sailboats, would have a storage capacity of 2.1 million barrels. That’s about half of what had been stored there. The project has cleared all federal hurdles but remains under study by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.


“The balancing benefits of our Finger Lakes storage project will extend far beyond New York and the neighboring New England and mid-Atlantic markets,” said Bill Gautreaux, the president of liquid gases for Crestwood Midstream Partners LP.


Pointing to supply strains last winter that prompted deliveries from across the Canadian border and a faraway propane-storage hub in Apex, N.C., he said diverted supplies meant higher prices elsewhere.


“Our Finger Lakes storage facility, had it been operational, would have dramatically reduced the winter demand for propane stored in these facilities, which would have benefited propane consumers in the Midwest and Southeast regions,” Gautreaux said.


After years of state delay, the Schuyler County Legislature passed a resolution June 9 that calls on the department to make a decision on the project.


“This is an ongoing project,” Peter Constantakes, a Department of Environmental Conservation spokesman, said in declining to make experts available.


Many locals oppose the storage project because of its proximity to the 38-mile glacial Seneca Lake, a major tourist draw.


“I’m just worried about pollution into the lake. People from all over come here,” said Lorraine Selkirk, a chiropractor. “If they could find somewhere else I’d be OK with it.”


Politicians are hedging their bets. They want the jobs and tax revenues that the storage project would bring but are mindful that residents worry about soiling a treasure.


“The biggest frustration for all sides is how long it’s taken for a decision to be made,” said Philip Palmesano, the area’s state assemblyman, who was interviewed in the state capital of Albany. “Quite frankly, I think it’s sitting until after the elections” in November.


It’s a similar story in Newington, N.H., where a local port terminal operator, Sea-3, seeks to expand its Shattuck Way terminal to handle more propane. After more than half a year of discussion, local planners approved the expansion May 19 but now face appeals.


Pan Am Railways, a regional railroad that serves the port, has pledged to upgrade its line as the volumes of propane grow. The Sea-3 terminal used to bring in propane on barges from Europe, but now it hopes to bring it in by rail, where it will be offloaded for distribution across New England states by truck.


“Propane is something that’s definitely increased,” said Cynthia Scarano, Pan Am’s executive vice president, who said that twice-a-week shipments might grow to six. “As far as shipping it by rail, more of it is coming from within the country now.”



Boeing raises forecast for new airplane demand


Boeing is raising its long-term forecast for new airplane demand by more than 4 percent and it's still the Asia-Pacific region that is driving most of the growth.


Boeing expects orders of 36,770 new airplanes over the next 20 years, with total list prices valued at an estimated $5.2 trillion.


Low-cost carriers are helping to fuel the fastest growing segment of the market, single-aisle airplanes. Those aircraft make up 70 percent of all orders.


Boeing says about 37 percent of the airplane deliveries will be made in the Asia-Pacific market, with North America and Europe the next two most common destinations.


Boeing says the market for airplanes is strong and resilient.


Shares of the Chicago company hit an all-time high this year, but have fallen almost 8 percent this month.



Hezbollah condemns Israeli offensive, slams Arab silence



BEIRUT: Hezbollah Thursday condemned the Israeli attacks on Gaza, and the subsequent Arab and international silence, hailing the decision to confront these attacks with an armed struggle.


“ Hezbollah condemns the Zionist attack on the Gaza Strip against the innocent civilians,” said a party statement. “This attack is the continuation of an ongoing Zionist war against the Palestinian people.”


The statement blasted the lack of reactions by the international community and Arab countries, in face of what it called “a brutality that crossed all borders.”


Hezbollah saluted the Palestinian factions carrying on the armed struggle, praising "the Palestinian resistance in all its factions.” The party also saluted the “Palestinian people’s decision to choose resistance as the way of confronting the attacks,” stressing armed struggle “has proven to be the only path toward dignity, victory and the recuperation of rights.”


Hezbollah’s MP Nawwaf Moussawi made a speech similarly condemning the Israeli offensive.


“The Zionist entity is performing a political and military genocide against the Palestinian people and their cause,” Moussawi said in a statement Thursday.


He called for protecting Palestine and Gaza “by enhancing our Islamic and National unity, and adopting [armed] resistance as the only way to get back what was occupied of lands and holy places.”



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Stigmatized nuclear workers quit Japan utility


Stigma, pay cuts, and risk of radiation exposure are among the reasons why 3,000 employees have left the utility at the center of Japan's 2011 nuclear disaster. Now there's an additional factor: better paying jobs in the feel good solar energy industry.


Engineers and other employees at TEPCO, or Tokyo Electric Power Co., were once typical of Japan's corporate culture that is famous for prizing loyalty to a single company and lifetime employment with it. But the March 2011 tsunami that swamped the coastal Fukushima Dai-ichi plant, sending three reactors into meltdown, changed that.


TEPCO was widely criticized for being inadequately prepared for a tsunami despite Japan's long history of being hit by giant waves and for its confused response to the disaster. The public turned hostile toward the nuclear industry and TEPCO, or "Toh-den," as the Japanese say it, became a dirty word.


Only 134 people quit TEPCO the year before the disaster. The departures ballooned to 465 in 2011, another 712 in 2012 and 488 last year. Seventy percent of those leaving were younger than 40. When the company offered voluntary retirement for the first time earlier this year, some 1,151 workers applied for the 1,000 available redundancy packages.


The exodus, which has reduced staff to about 35,700 people, adds to the challenges of the ongoing work at Fukushima Dai-ichi to keep meltdowns under control, remove the fuel cores and safely decommission the reactors, which is expected to take decades.


The factors pushing workers out have piled up. The financial strain of the disaster has led to brutal salary cuts while ongoing problems at Fukushima, such as substantial leaks of irradiated water, have reinforced the image of a bumbling and irresponsible organization.


"No one is going to want to work there, if they can help it, said Akihiro Yoshikawa, who quit TEPCO in 2012.


After leaving he started a campaign called "Appreciate Fukushima Workers," trying to counter what he calls the "giant social stigma" attached to working at the Fukushima plant.


Many of the workers were also victims of the nuclear disaster, as residents of the area, and lost their homes to no-go zones, adding to personal hardships. They also worry about the health effects of radiation on their children.


The Fukushima stigma is such that some employees hide the fact they work at the plant. They even worry they will be turned away at restaurants or that their children will be bullied at school after a government report documented dozens of cases of discrimination.


While TEPCO is out of favor with the public, the skills and experience of its employees that span the gamut of engineers, project managers, maintenance workers and construction and financial professionals, are not.


Energy industry experience is in particular demand as the development of solar and other green energy businesses is pushed along in Japan by generous government subsidies.


Currently the government pays solar plants 32 yen ($0.31) per kilowatt hour of energy. The so-called tariff for solar power varies by states and cities in the U.S., but they are as low as several cents. In Germany, it's about 15 cents.


Sean Travers, Japan president of EarthStream, a London-based recruitment company that specializes in energy jobs, has been scrambling to woo TEPCO employees as foreign companies do more clean energy business in Japan.


"TEPCO employees are very well trained and have excellent knowledge of how the Japanese energy sector works, making them very attractive," he said.


Two top executives at U.S. solar companies doing business in Japan, First Solar director Karl Brutsaert and SunPower Japan director Takashi Sugihara, said they have interviewed former TEPCO employees for possible posts.


Besides their experience, knowledge of how the utility industry works and their contacts, with both private industry and government bureaucracy, are prized assets.


"It's about the human network and the TEPCO employees have all the contacts," said Travers, who says he has recruited about 20 people from TEPCO and is hoping to get more.


Yoshikawa, the former TEPCO maintenance worker, said he has received several offers for green-energy jobs that paid far better than his salary at TEPCO of 3 million yen ($30,000) a year.


Since September 2012, all TEPCO managers have had their salaries slashed by 30 percent, while workers in non-management positions had their pay reduced 20 percent.


But last year, TEPCO doled out 100,000 yen ($1,000) bonuses to 5,000 managers as an incentive to stay on.


In another effort to prevent the loss of qualified personnel, TEPCO is reducing the pay cuts to 7 percent from this month, but just for those involved in decommissioning the Fukushima plant.


The departures, however, have not been arrested, partly because of ongoing financial pressure.


TEPCO was bailed out by the government after the disaster. Compensating the thousands of people forced to evacuate from the vicinity of the plant is expected to weigh on the company for years.


"We need people for decommissioning," TEPCO spokesman Kohji Sasakibara said. "But we have caused a disaster, affecting not only Japan but the whole world. And so we must work harder to gain public understanding."


Given such dire conditions, it's inevitable that TEPCO workers are looking to build careers elsewhere, according to Naoyuki Takaki, professor of nuclear engineering at Tokyo City University.


Takaki recalled that Japan's nuclear industry in its heyday had a magical allure like space exploration. He believes it is still a viable field of study and an important profession, bringing clear benefits for society.


Takaki, a former TEPCO researcher who quit in 2008, said the number of students entering the nuclear field has shrunk after the disaster. That means the shortage of nuclear professionals could become even more critical in coming years.


"TEPCO has grown into a target of people's hate," he said.



US stocks sink on Portugal worries


U.S. stocks are dropping in early trading amid financial jitters in Europe and disappointing retail earnings.


The Dow Jones industrial average slid 129 points, or 0.8 percent, to 16,856 moments after the stock market opened Thursday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 14 points, or 0.7 percent, to 1,958. The Nasdaq slid 66 points, or 1.5 percent, to 4,352.


U.S. markets were hit by losses in Europe, where worries over the health of one of Portugal's largest financial groups slammed stocks and pushed investors into safer bonds.


Family Dollar Stores reported quarterly profit early Thursday that fell by 33 percent and missed analysts' expectations. The stock fell 2.3 percent in early trading.


The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.51 percent from 2.55 percent late Wednesday.



Greece raises cash in 3-year bond auction


Greece has raised 1.5 billion euros ($2.04 billion) in an auction of three-year bonds, its second debt issue in three months after a long absence from the international markets.


The finance ministry said Thursday it had accepted 1.5 billion euros of the 3 billion euros offered by investors, and that the yield had been set at 3.5 percent.


It expressed satisfaction with the sale, which it said was carried out amid an "exceptionally unfavorable economic climate in the international markets yesterday and today." Bond markets sank Wednesday and Thursday in a pullback after sharp gains, and following announcements by the Federal Reserve that it would end it stimulus program in October.


Greece was frozen out of bond markets in 2010 and was saved from bankruptcy by an international bailout.



Bank of England leaves interest rates steady


The Bank of England has kept interest rates steady at a record low of 0.5 percent and refrained from pumping more money into the economy even as the recovery gathers strength.


Thursday's decision was widely expected, even after Bank of England Governor Mark Carney startled analysts last month when he said that an interest rate rise could happen more quickly than markets expected. The remarks surprised economists who had been expecting a rise next year — and now predictions suggest a rise as soon as the fall.


Though Carney has expressed concern about spiking housing prices, analysts fear that raising rates will dampen the wider recovery.


The Bank of England has instead announced measures to tighten mortgage lending and cool off the housing sector.



US, China talk cyberhacking amid new allegations


Top American officials said Thursday they challenged their counterparts in China to rein in alleged cybersecurity infringements as a new allegation emerged of a brazen attempt by Chinese hackers to break into U.S. government personnel files.


U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the two powers had a frank exchange on the issue during this week's "Strategic and Economic Dialogue" in Beijing. However, Kerry said he and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew only were notified of the latest accusation of wrongdoing after the gathering's conclusion.


"We did not raise it in specific terms. We raised the subject, obviously," Kerry told reporters. He said the alleged incident referred only to an "attempted intrusion" still being investigated but said no sensitive material appears to have been compromised.


The New York Times reported that the hackers, who aren't believed to be government actors, sought information on people who were candidates for higher security clearances.


The issue of cybersecurity was already among one of the most sensitive at this year's dialogue after the United States unsealed indictments against five senior Chinese military officials in May. They are accused of stealing trade secrets from the computers of American companies and passing them on to Chinese competitors.


In retaliation for the action, China suspended a working group on cyber-related matters. China has demanded the withdrawal of the charges, and foreign policy chief Yang Jiechi said Thursday the U.S. must first create the proper conditions for dialogue for the working group to be renewed.


Earlier, Kerry said the loss of intellectual property through hacking has had a "chilling effect on innovation and investment," and said such activity is hurting U.S. companies.


Yang described cybersecurity as a "common threat facing all countries." But, speaking through an interpreter, he suggested the issue was being abused: "Cyberspace should not become a tool for damaging the interests of other countries," he said.


Treasury Secretary Jack Lew also addressed the question of cybercrime, but highlighted some progress. He said China committed to vigorously prosecuting trade secret theft cases.


Lew also stressed Chinese pledges to reduce intervention in its currency "as conditions permit."


"China is making preparations to adopt greater transparency including on foreign exchange, which will accelerate the move to a more market based exchange rate," he said. Such actions will help level the playing field for American workers and companies, he added.


Cyberhacking was a rare issue of disagreement at a conference that otherwise highlighted the increasing levels of cooperation between the two countries over everything from the security threats posed by North Korea and Iran, to fighting climate change and combating wildlife trafficking.


Kerry said the two sides discussed ways to persuade North Korea to give up nuclear weapons. "We both understand that there's more we can do in order to bring North Korea into compliance with its obligations to denuclearize," he said.


The U.S. has long pushed for China to use its status as North Korea's only major ally, and a crucial source of fuel and food, to pressure Pyongyang to give up its nuclear capabilities. The U.S. and Western leaders saw President Xi Jinping's visit to South Korea last week as a positive sign.


Yang Jiechi, China's top diplomat, said it was important to maintain restraint in dealing with North Korea and said the two sides could do "more things to relax the situation."


Meeting later with Xi, Kerry said the two sides had come to an agreement "that we must press forward together in unity with respect to Iran's nuclear program." Kerry also said close cooperation between the two was essential to deal with other world problems such as conflicts in Ukraine, Iraq and Syria.


The U.S. had hoped to secure stricter rules governing territorial claims in Asia's contested, resource-rich seas, but Yang signaled that Beijing's position hasn't changed. He urged the U.S. not to take sides and to adopt a "just and objective position."


American allies Japan and the Philippines, as well as Vietnam, have become increasingly worried by Chinese efforts to drill for oil or assert authority in waters they consider their own. China also has tried to enforce control over contested airspace.



Cubs to pitch another Wrigley expansion plan


The squabble between the Chicago Cubs and the owners of the rooftop venues across the street from Wrigley Field is returning to City Hall.


On Thursday, the team was expected to make its pitch to the city landmarks commission for a renovation project that's bigger than the one the city approved last year — a pitch that in itself is a challenge to the rooftops to take their best legal shot. The rooftop owners oppose the proposal they say will destroy the exact thing they need for their businesses to survive: A view of the field.


The commission, which must approve the proposal because Wrigley is a city landmark, is expected to vote Thursday, clearing the way for the full City Council to vote on it.


The Cubs want to dramatically expand a $500 million renovation plan approved last year for the 100-year-old ballpark. The team now wants the previously approved Jumbotron and video board to be joined by a second video board and four more signs in the outfield — each as big as 650 square feet. The Cubs also want to expand the bleachers, add seats down the foul lines and erect light standards in the outfield.


The team also wants to move the bullpens from along the foul lines to underneath the bleachers.


The Cubs say they were willing to scale down the original renovation proposal if the rooftop owners promised not to sue, but went ahead with everything they want because they never got that promise.


"We learned ... the threat of litigation was very real, so we felt if we were going to get sued over two signs that we felt we were within our rights to proceed with the original proposal," team spokesman Julian Green said. He said it doesn't matter that the rooftop owners recently said they'd drop their threat of a lawsuit if the team stuck to the smaller plan already approved by the city.


"We are prepared to defend our right to put up additional signs," he said.


The rooftop owners have a contract with the team to hand over 17 percent of their gross revenues until 2023. One said he and his fellow owners threatened to sue because they believed it was the only option available to keep the Cubs from hurting their businesses.


"Any time we have given into these guys on anything they just go and overdo it," said Max Waisvisz. "It's like someone going back again and again to a buffet table."


Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who has urged the two sides to keep talking, clearly wants the renovation project and all the construction jobs, permanent jobs and tourist revenue that will come with it. That has some owners thinking it won't matter what they say Thursday before the commissioners.


"I have no doubt they're going to say yes to everything," said Waisvisz's partner, Dan Finkel. "Emanuel wants it."



More 'headline-grabbing' corporate deals expected


More "headline-grabbing" acquisitions are likely over the coming year as businesses take advantage of a period of improving economic growth and cheap financing.


That's the conclusion of business consulting firm EY, which says the value of takeover deals announced in the first half of 2014 struck its highest level since the end of the boom years in 2007.


In its half-yearly update of corporate activity, EY said Thursday that the value of deals rose by 50 percent from the same period the year before, to $1.7 trillion. Not since the global financial crisis first erupted, prompting companies to batten down the hatches, has the value of deals been that high.


For years, big mergers and acquisitions have been notable for their absence as companies stocked up on cash reserves to weather the global economic storms. Pursuing M&A was very much a secondary consideration for boards round the world.


The latest EY figures confirm change is afoot. From the planned $67 billion tie-up between Comcast and Time Warner, and AT&T's $67 billion deal with DirecTV to Valeant Pharmaceuticals' $55 billion hostile approach for botox maker Allergan, the last few months have seen a flurry of high-value corporate activity. Facebook even announced its biggest ever acquisition with a proposed $19 billion takeover of WhatsApp.


EY, which sourced data from Dealogic, said the next 6 to 12 months should continue to provide the "ideal window of opportunity" for businesses to pursue more deals. It said high equity valuations, low interest rates and cheap debt, as well as high cash levels built up during the years of retrenchment, have provided a favorable environment for deal-making.


Those favorable conditions may fade as major central banks start raising interest rates as the global recovery gathers pace. In the U.S., expectations are for rates to start rising in 2015, potentially increasing the cost of financing deals.


"Leading companies will look to do smart and strategic M&A before the current deal climate changes, so we can expect more large, headline-grabbing acquisitions to come," said Pip McCrostie, EY's global head of M&A.


Though high in value, EY said the number of mergers and acquisitions remains low, with businesses seemingly looking for big, transformative deals.


Most of the M&A deal-making is happening in developed economies, such as the U.S., Britain and France, as executives think they are less risky options now that their economies are growing again. Though U.S. economic growth suffered a big setback in the first quarter due to bad weather, it's poised to grow relatively strongly over the rest of the year. And the 18-country eurozone is growing consistently, albeit at a modest pace.


"Emerging high-growth and frontier markets will always be attractive in terms of investment, but safe and secure modest growth is attracting the most investment as the global economy moves into a new phase," said McCrostie.



NY emergency health facility opens after Sandy


A suburban city of 33,000 is once again receiving emergency health care after its hospital was severely damaged by Superstorm Sandy.


The newly opened South Nassau Urgent Care Center at Long Beach began operations last week, replacing the shuttered Long Beach Medical Center. The medical center, which was flooded during the October 2012 storm, never reopened after revelations surfaced that it was in dire financial shape.


A bankruptcy judge in May approved the sale of the medical center to South Nassau Communities Hospital of Oceanside, which held an open house on Thursday to celebrate the changeover.


"This is just the first step in building a patient-centered, high-quality healthcare delivery system that restores vital healthcare services to the residents of Long Beach and surrounding communities," said Richard J. Murphy, president and CEO at South Nassau Communities Hospital.


While not a full-fledged hospital, the new Long Beach facility — located up the street from the old medical center — has 10 private examination rooms, two procedure rooms and radiology imaging and laboratory suites. Those in need of more extensive care will be transferred to either South Nassau's Oceanside hospital or a hospital of their choice, officials said.


The facility will be open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday to Friday, and 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekends and holidays.


Until last week, all Long Beach residents had to either travel to Oceanside or other hospitals further away from the barrier island that faces the Atlantic Ocean.


"Having an urgent care facility in Long Beach is definitely a positive step forward by South Nassau, and we are still advocating to have a 911-receiving emergency room as soon as possible," said Long Beach City Council Vice President Fran Adelson.



U.S. sanctions Beirut-based Hezbollah 'front' company


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Truck crashes near Bikfaya shops


BEIRUT: An eighteen-wheeler Mercedes truck crashed on the roadside by local shops in the Al-Amriyeh area of Bikfaya Thursday, injuring the driver.


According to the Traffic Control Center, the green truck did not damage nearby shops, instead it crashed over the railing on the Ain Alaq road at the Al-Amriyeh junction in Bikfaya.


The driver suffered minor wounds and no other casualties have been reported.




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Disaster management network to be formed in south Lebanon



BEIRUT: MP Bahia Hariri Thursday headed a meeting with government agencies and civil society representatives, to discuss founding a network to raise awareness and cope with natural disasters.


The meeting was held to discuss establishing a network that would join governmental and non-governmental agencies, relief organizations, civil society groups, actors in the education sector and experts on natural disasters.


Hariri stressed that “it is important that all the actors complement [their efforts] in order to reduce the repercussions of any natural phenomena like the tremor we have recently witnessed.”


The meeting, held in the southern town of Majdalyoun, was attended by high-ranking officials and experts.


Among them was south Lebanon's governor, Mansour Daou, who announced that a meeting would be held in the governorate’s office at Sidon’s governmental Serail next Thursday “to proceed with practical steps, especially about raising awareness and the dealing with sudden tremors.”


Lebanon experienced a series of tremors over the past weekend that prompted warnings by experts that the country remains unprepared for a future, major earthquake.


Many residents of the southern city of Sidon evacuated their homes Saturday night, heading to the coasts and open areas in light of the tremors.


The shake destroyed the glass facades of many buildings in east Sidon, which instigated panic among locals.



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Mel Gibson Is Absolutely Right About Shia LaBeouf


Shia Labeouf has his problems. From a noted lack of original thought to famously decrying his celebrity status, all the way to getting arrested at a Broadway show, the 28-year-old is having nothing short of a shitty year. But he’s not without his supporters, among whom he can now count none other than Mel Gibson, who, in an interview with Indiewire, admitted an affinity for his fellow fallen celeb:



"People are in line to sort of point the finger at him and say that he's this, that, or the other. It's easy to judge. But I'm sure he's going through some kind of personal, very painful, cathartic thing that he has to exorcise and get out there.”



If anyone can relate to publicly shooting oneself in the foot, it’s Gibson, who’s own gaffes include drunken anti-Semitic tirades, spewing hate speech, and a penchant for domestic abuse. The Lethal Weapon and Braveheart star has even found himself on the wrong end of a plagiarism accusation. But maybe in this case Gibson has seized upon something that the rest of us are forgetting in our haste to ridicule and deride: LaBeouf’s actions, while certainly bizarre and, in the case of plagiarism, morally troubling, are more than the child-like flailings of an inflated ego caught with its pants down. There was a point, not long ago, where LaBeouf was beloved; a young actor poised for greatness. To see all that was promised to him yanked away, and the public turn on him with the suddenness of a deranged hyena, has had to have been foundation-rocking. Whether you pass it off as “art” or merely spectacle, parading about with a bag on your head or sitting and inviting public abuse are not the machinations of a stable mind.


Should we feel responsible for the flogging he’s received in the Internet-tabloid-fueled court of public opinion? Maybe, and maybe not. But we should at least remember that celebrities are, as Gibson pointed out:



“…a target. And you have to be really adept at tap dancing and dodging the bullets. And sometimes you get hit. And sometimes mortally.”



And while we enjoy the blood-in-the-water feeding frenzy of a fallen star, LaBeouf can take some solace as he seeks treatment for alcoholism that we also love a comeback, a cycle Gibson is intimately familiar with, noting:



“He’ll probably play it out and come back. Whatever it happens to be. He’ll be all right.”



We hope he's right.



Machnouk: Militants in Lebanon seek to emulate ISIS


BEIRUT: The success of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria has emboldened like-minded militants in Lebanon who believe they can emulate it, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said, confirming the militant Sunni group had now appeared in Beirut for the first time.


In an interview with Reuters, Nouhad Machnouk also signaled that there would be no quick end to the political instability buffeting Lebanon. He forecast the country would remain without a president for at least six more months.


Indicating how the country's politics remain hostage to events in the wider region, Machnouk said the fate of the presidency that fell empty in May was out of Lebanese hands.


That suggests no imminent deal between competing states such as Iran and Saudi Arabia that wield influence in Beirut through their alliances with rival Lebanese groups.


Long-standing political divisions among the Lebanese have been exacerbated by the civil war in neighbouring Syria. That conflict has triggered spasms of armed conflict in the north, government paralysis, and a wave of bombings by Sunni militants.


While Lebanese politicians remain divided on many issues, the threat posed by the Sunni militants has spawned rare cooperation between security agencies controlled by competing groups, pointing to shared concern about the danger.


Machnouk said the security forces were coordinating more closely than at any time since the end of the Lebanese civil war in the early 1990s. Their successes included a recent sweep that netted a militant cell affiliated with the Islamic State, which has seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq.


"I think this is their first official, documented appearance," said Machnouk, a Sunni politician and member of the Future Movement headed by former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a Saudi-backed billionaire and Lebanon's most influential Sunni leader.


The cell, rounded up in three separate locations, included a Saudi man who blew himself up when the police stormed a Beirut hotel on June 25. Machnouk said the men had yet to receive instructions on their target.


He assessed the current threat posed by the Islamic State as "individuals and not more."


The Islamic State has declared a caliphate in Iraq and Syria in an effort to redraw the borders of the Middle East.


The Lebanese state news agency reported Monday that 28 people had been charged with belonging to the group and planning attacks. Only seven of them were in custody.


The Islamic State's arrival in Lebanon adds to a list of militant Sunni groups already operating in the country.


Sunni militants have staged numerous bomb attacks in Lebanon since last year, typically targeting areas controlled by Hezbollah, which is aiding President Bashar Assad's forces in Syria's civil war.


"We must admit that what has happened in Iraq has caused great excitement among these groups that believe they can benefit from the Iraqi experience," Machnouk said.


"They think they can carry out similar operations in Lebanon. But so far, in the last two months, it is clear that the security awareness has been able to obstruct this," he said.


But he added: "The danger of bombings is still there."


Machnouk took office in February, when politicians finally managed to agree on a new government after Lebanon had gone for nearly a year without one. The formation of that government was widely attributed to a deal between Saudi Arabia and Iran on the need to spare Lebanon more political turmoil.


But as yet there has been no such deal on the presidency, a post reserved for a Maronite Christian according to Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing system. Former army chief Michel Sleiman vacated the post in May when his term ended.


While Machnouk did not see the presidential vacuum lasting as long as a year, he said it would take "not less than six months" before the post was filled.


Machnouk said: "The presidential election is a regional and international decision that has so far not been made and will not be made in the near term."


A political deal is needed because none of the rival groups hold enough seats in Parliament to secure a quorum for a vote.


He said: "It is linked to all the developments in the region: the situation in Iraq, American-Iranian negotiations, the possibility of Saudi-Iranian negotiations, many things."


Reflecting the political turmoil, parliamentary elections were indefinitely postponed last year because there was no government at the time and the parties could not agree on an election law.


Instead, Parliament extended its term until November, 2014. Machnouk played down the chances of legislative elections happening this year.


"It is technically possible, but politically, it is difficult," he said.



Lebanon judge issues arrest warrant for ISIS suspect


BEIRUT: Military Investigative Judge Imad Zein Thursday issued an arrest warrant for a Syrian man who allegedly recruited his fellow countrymen to attack Syrian regime forces.


A judicial source told The Daily Star that Zein also accused the Syrian national of recruiting men to carry out suicide attacks against Syrian army checkpoints and other military posts for Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces inside Syria.


Zein also charged the suspect of belonging to the radical Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria.


The source said the suspect is a Syrian army defector who was recently arrested by Lebanese authorities on his way from Beirut to the Bekaa Valley in east Lebanon.




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A dollar for the disabled


BEIRUT: Customers of restaurants, cafés, night clubs and bakeries in Lebanon can assist disabled children by including a $1 donation to their final restaurant bill, as a part of an initiative launched Thursday.


“In foggy days like these, there is no bigger joy than the smile on a child’s face after we all contribute to their future, even if it’s with only one dollar,” said Paul Ariss, President of the syndicate of Owners of Restaurants, Cafés, Night-Clubs and Pastries in Lebanon.


The Happy Treat campaign -- a collaboration between the ORCNP syndicate and local NGO SESOBEL, a local charity for the welfare of Lebanese children -- was launched at a news conference at Al Falamanki restaurant Thursday.


The initiative announced that leading restaurants like Mounir, Casper and Gambinis, Duo, Em Sharif and thirty other institutions will provide the option of adding the $1 voluntary charge to the customer’s final bill.


“Every year we [ORCNP] choose an organization and this year we have chosen SESOBEL, because we believe that they are doing great work,” the syndicates Secretary General, Tony al-Rami, told The Daily Star.


“I mean they are even training some of the kids in hospitality and management, and because of them, these kids may one day join our syndicate,” he added.


President of SESOBEL, Fadia Safi told The Daily Star that the 38-year-old NGO employs a holistic approach towards aiding children with physical and mental disabilities, including children with autism.


“The money will help provide educational, medical, and psycho-emotional assistance for six hundred and fifty kids,” she said.


Despite the negative impact the deteriorating security situation has had on restaurants and night clubs in the country, al-Rami expressed hopes that things will get better, adding that “it is our job to persist and stand by NGOs.”


“The Lebanese government is going to break its back with the aid allocated to Syrian refugees, so it’s our job to stand next to organizations like SESOBEL, so they can provide assistance to the forthcoming generations,” added Ariss.


SESOBEL provides assistance to disabled youth through vocational rehabilitation services, such as chocolate factory work, sewing, horticulture, laundry, mechanical aid, sale of products made at SESOBEL and graphic design.


The local NGO also offers special education programs tackling learning difficulties by emphasizing oral and written language education, while also providing medical services such as diagnosis, medical consultations and examinations, assessments, evaluation and even surgery.