Tuesday, 26 August 2014

The top 10 songs and albums on the iTunes Store


iTunes' Official Music Charts for the week ending August 25, 2014:


Top Songs


1. Shake It Off, Taylor Swift


2. All About That Bass, Meghan Trainor


3. Bang Bang, Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj


4. Black Widow (feat. Rita Ora), Iggy Azalea


5. Anaconda, Nicki Minaj


6. Stay With Me, Sam Smith


7. Rather Be feat. Jess Glynne, Clean Bandit


8. Boom Clap, Charli XCX


9. Chandelier, Sia


10. Break Free (feat. Zedd), Ariana Grande


Top Albums


1. 1989, Taylor Swift


2. Guardians of the Galaxy: Aweso..., Various Artists


3. Blacc Hollywood, Wiz Khalifa


4. My Everything, Ariana Grande


5. Ignite the Night (Party Edition), Chase Rice


6. In the Lonely Hour, Sam Smith


7. 5 Seconds of Summer, 5 Seconds of Summer


8. TRXYE - EP, Troye Sivan


9. x, Ed Sheeran


10. Nashville Outlaws: A Tribute t..., Various Artists



(copyright) 2014 Apple Inc.


More than 2 million bean bag chairs recalled after children’s deaths in Texas, Kentucky


Federal officials on Friday announced the recall of 2.2 million bean bag chairs after two children unzipped the chairs, climbed inside, and suffocated.


Both victims_a 13-year old boy from McKinney, Texas died and a 3-year-old girl from Lexington, Ky._were found inside the chairs, according to officials with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.


The children apparently had become trapped and choked on the chairs’ foam beads.


The chairs, which were manufactured by Ace Bayou Corp., of New Orleans, La., did not meet the industry’s voluntary safety standard, which requires non-refillable bean bag chairs to have closed and permanently disabled zippers, the commission said.


Friday’s recall affects bean bag chairs sold before July 2013 for between $30 and $100 at Bon-Ton, Meijer, Pamida, School Specialty, Wayfair and Walmart stores and online at Amazon.com, Meijer.com and Walmart.com.


The chairs, which were made in China, come in a variety of sizes and colors. “ACE BAYOU CORP” is printed on a tag on the bean bag chair’s cover seam.


Consumers should immediately remove any bean bag chairs with zippers that can open and keep them out of the reach of children. A free repair kit can be obtained from Ace Bayou. to permanently disable the zippers.


The company can be reached by calling (855) 751-8151 Monday through Friday or online at www.acebayou.com and click on “Recall Information.”



Crested Butte to be Bud Light's 'Whatever' town


Some people in normally laid back Crested Butte are not up for "Whatever" — a secretive Bud Light plan to paint their mountain town blue and turn it into a fantasy town for an online and television ad campaign.


The company has agreed to pay the town $250,000 to fence off its main street and bring in more than 1,000 revelers to the town of 1,500 for the Sept. 5 - 7 event being promoted on social media, The Denver Post (http://dpo.st/VLUCSW ) reported.


Secrecy has been part of the "Are you up for Whatever?" campaign from its beginning at last year's Super Bowl when Arnold Schwarzenegger appeared in a spot playing pingpong with Don Cheadle in an elevator with a llama. Town councilors have been quietly working on the plan since the spring. Word began leaking out recently as outsiders showed up with measuring tapes and checklists, telling locals they couldn't talk about what they were doing and booking lots of hotel rooms.


Residents, including some in costumes, packed a three-hour meeting to talk about the event on Monday night. Some said they backed it as a way to make money for the town but others worried joining forces with a large company would damage the image of a town that hosts an annual film festival and is more partial to craft beers.


Kevin McGruther, who came dressed in Mickey Mouse ears, said he objected to the town being turned into Disneyland. Former U.S. Sen. Tim Wirth, who lives in Crested Butte, also opposed the idea and the secrecy surrounding it.


Dan Marshall, an event planner hired by the town, said the secrecy was necessary to avoid the town being overrun by people wanting to be a part of the event.


Izzy's bagel shop owner Craig Maestro said he was too angry to attend the meeting and vowed to rip down any blue fencing in front of his shop.


"It's an absolute disrespect to the community to keep it secret from us," he said.



With no Miley Cyrus twerking, VMA ratings down


Without Miley Cyrus' twerking to get tongues wagging, ratings for MTV's annual Video Music Awards took a tumble.


The pop music extravaganza, at which Beyonce was in the spotlight, reached 8.3 million viewers on Sunday. That's down from the 10.1 million who saw last year's show but up from the 6.1 million who watched the awards show live the year before that, the Nielsen ratings company said.


The VMAs live or die depending on whether they create a memorable pop culture moment. Last year, Cyrus hit pay dirt on her suggestive duet with Robin Thicke, which set Twitter volume records at the time. Cyrus didn't perform on Sunday's show and sent a homeless youth onstage to accept her award for video of the year.


Still, the VMAs generated 12.6 million tweets from its young audience. By contrast, Nielsen said Monday's Emmy Awards show generated 1.1 million tweets even though, with an estimated 15.6 million viewers, more than twice as many people were watching.


CBS won last week in prime time, averaging 5.8 million viewers. NBC, with "America's Got Talent" again the week's most popular program, was second with a 5.1 million viewer average. ABC had 4 million, Univision had 3.3 million, Fox had 2.6 million, ION Television had 1.28 million, Telemundo had 1.27 million and the CW had 900,000.


ESPN was the week's most popular cable network, averaging 2.59 million viewers in prime time. Fox News Channel had 1.91 million, USA had 1.89 million, TNT had 1.81 million and the Disney Channel had 1.79 million.


NBC's "Nightly News" topped the evening newscasts with an average of 8 million viewers. ABC's "World News" was second with 7.3 million and the "CBS Evening News" had 6.5 million viewers.


For the week of Aug. 18-24, the top 10 shows, their networks and viewerships: "America's Got Talent" (Tuesday), NBC, 9.48 million; "America's Got Talent" (Wednesday, 9 p.m.), NBC, 9.43 million; "NCIS," CBS, 9.11 million; "60 Minutes," CBS, 8.5 million; "2014 MTV Video Music Awards," MTV, 8.26 million; "The Big Bang Theory," CBS, 7.45 million; "Under the Dome, CBS, 7.3 million; "Big Brother" (Sunday), CBS, 7.24 million; NFL Exhibition Football: Cincinnati vs. Arizona, NBC, 6.98 million; "NCIS: Los Angeles," CBS, 6.97 million.


---


ABC is owned by The Walt Disney Co. CBS is owned by CBS Corp. CW is a joint venture of Warner Bros. Entertainment and CBS Corp. Fox is owned by 21st Century Fox. NBC and Telemundo are owned by Comcast Corp. ION Television is owned by ION Media Networks.


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Online:


http://bit.ly/1muLyha



Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Aug. 27, 2014


The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest to Daily Star readers. The Daily Star cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports.


Al-Liwaa


Machnouk dismisses ISIS threat to Army


Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk dismissed a threat by the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria to kill a captive Lebanese soldier if Lebanese authorities failed to meet the group’s demands to release Islamist prisoners and respect the rights of Syrian refugees.


Machnouk told Al-Liwaa Tuesday night that he believed the threat was “not serious,” pointing out that he had received reliable messages that confirm the threat was fabricated and even has nothing to do with ISIS.


In a statement attributed to ISIS, the group threatened to kill a Lebanese soldier if Lebanese authorities failed to meet its demands in 24 hours.


The group also allegedly warned to kill one soldier every three days beginning issuance of the statement Aug. 26.


As-Safir


Saudi-Iranian meeting: a positive start .... Lebanon present


For the first time in many years, regional issues, including Lebanon, were put on the table as Saudi-Iranian talks kicked off amid an all new atmosphere that began in Tehran and Riyadh two weeks ago.


Well-informed diplomatic sources in Jeddah told As-Safir that Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian held a “very positive" meeting with Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal in Riyadh Tuesday.


The sources pointed out that the relation between the two countries has been put on a positive track.


Hamidreza Dehghani, Iran’s Ambassador to OIC (The Organization of Islamic Cooperation), told As-Safir in a telephone call that the Faisal-Abdollahian meeting was “very positive, fruitful and constructive.”


He said the meeting will have a positive outcome on Saudi Arabia and Iran as well as the Arab and Islamic worlds.


Al-Joumhouria


Ibrahim tasked with captive soldiers’ crisis


Contrary to what has been reported in the media recently about Hezbollah’s withdrawal from Syria in the foreseeable future, or that the group have raised the issue with Iran, information made available to Al-Joumhouria confirmed that there was nothing on the horizon that indicate an intention to withdraw.


Meanwhile, well-informed sources told Al-Joumhouria that the government intends to task Security General head Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim with handling the captive soldiers’ issue.


More to follow ...



China Telecom profit rises as mobile data grows


China Telecom Ltd., one of the country's three main state-owned carriers, says its profit rose 11.8 percent in the first half of the year as its Internet and mobile data businesses grew.


The Beijing-based company said Wednesday it earned 11.4 billion yuan ($1.9 billion), or 0.14 yuan (2 U.S. cents) per share, in the six months ended June 30. Revenue rose 5.3 percent to 165.9 billion yuan ($27.2 billion).


Profits for China's state-owned phone industry have been squeezed by intense competition and the costs of rolling out fourth-generation service.


China Telecom said its total number of mobile subscribers declined by 3 percent to 180 million but mobile data usage rose 30 percent. Revenue for the company's Internet data centers also rose 30 percent.



GOP leader says Labor Dept. is wasting tax money


The chairman of a House panel is asking Labor Secretary Thomas Perez to turn over to Congress documents and information the lawmaker alleges will show "a pattern of wasteful spending and mismanagement" at the Labor Department.


Rep. Darrell E. Issa, R-Calif., who leads the House Oversight Committee, asserted that the Labor Department's Office of Public Affairs "frivolously spends taxpayer money on unnecessary items." As an example, the lawmaker cited elevator posters changed weekly in the 23 passenger elevators at the department's headquarters, at a cost of $2,637 a week.


Since 2009, the posters have cost a total of more than $600,000, Issa wrote to Perez in a letter dated Monday. He also criticized what he depicted as excessive travel by Labor Department officials, and charged that the department used taxpayer dollars to hire a Washington Nationals baseball team mascot for an agency event "and spent over $100,000 to promote a book club."


The department issued a statement defending the spending as a valid morale booster for employees. "Our internal communications efforts make a difference in employee satisfaction, retention and most importantly, performance. Better performance from our employees translates into better value for the public," the department said.


Issa suggested such spending flies in the face of a November 2011 executive order by President Barack Obama directing executive-branch agencies to cut spending on "extraneous promotional items" and to "devise strategic alternatives to government travel."


"Spending taxpayer dollars on elevator posters, award contests, and unnecessary travel seems to be precisely the type of conduct President Obama intended to curtail," said Issa, a frequent critic of the Democratic administration.



State grant spurs Toyota expansion in Michigan


Toyota Motor Corp. says it's expanding its technical center in Michigan and moving 250 jobs from Kentucky.


The automaker's expansion in Washtenaw County's York Township near Ann Arbor comes as a result of a $4 million state grant approved Tuesday by the Michigan Strategic Fund.


Toyota plans to build a new facility and relocate the positions from its North American manufacturing headquarters in Erlanger, Kentucky.


Township officials also are considering tax incentives.


The center serves as the corporation's research and development arm in North America, and is responsible for the development of vehicles that are built and sold throughout the continent. The company also has R&D facilities in Ann Arbor, Plymouth and Livonia.



Feds: Backhoe nicked pipe before Wyoming oil spill


A 25,000-gallon oil spill in the Powder River Basin occurred after a backhoe nicked a 6-inch underground pipeline and, over time, corrosion turned the minor damage into an oil-spewing hole, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management said Tuesday.


It remained unclear how long ago the backhoe damaged the crude oil pipeline owned by Casper-based Belle Fourche Pipeline, and what sort of construction work the backhoe was doing at the time, BLM officials said.


The company's environmental coordinator, Bob Dundas, declined comment when asked if he could provide that information.


"I'm just not going to discuss that," Dundas said.


He also declined to discuss ongoing work to clean up the three-mile stretch of arid gully contaminated by the May 19 spill 45 miles southeast of Buffalo.


Between May 21 and 23, company officials deliberately ignited and burned off the oil in what was deemed a better and more practical option than using vacuum trucks to clean up the mess in the rugged sagebrush country a few miles east of the Powder River.


However, high levels of petroleum compounds called diesel-range organics remained in the soil of Culp Draw weeks later, according to BLM documents obtained by The Associated Press.


"We have determined that additional work will need to be done to ensure that remediation and reclamation of the spill location will be successful," BLM natural resource specialist Dustin Hill told Dundas in a letter dated July 18.


Cleanup following the spill went well and the spill was mostly resolved, Dundas told the AP on July 18.


Additional work in the draw in recent weeks has included tilling the soil and spreading fertilizer to encourage bioremediation of the diesel-range organics, according to BLM spokeswoman Cindy Wertz.


"BLM will continue to work with the company on the remediation," Wertz said by email.


The oil spilled on BLM and state land and it didn't affect private property. The spill stopped a couple miles short of reaching the Powder River, which flows north into Montana.


The BLM released a handful of documents related to the spill and several photos of the burn operation in response to an AP request for information about the cause.


Jill Morrison with the Powder River Basin Resource Council landowner group said the new information about backhoe damage raises more questions.


"There could have been a leak going on beneath the surface for quite a long time. We don't know," she said.



French gov't reshuffle expels dissident ministers


France's prime minister reshuffled his Cabinet on Tuesday to silence ministers who had openly criticized Socialist President Francois Hollande's economic policies as he tries to pull the nation out of stagnation and steer it toward growth.


Emmanuel Macron, who had earlier served as top adviser in charge of the economy, took over the Economy Ministry, replacing Arnaud Montebourg, who had publicly railed against government policies as being too austere and unjust to the French.


Macron, a 36-year-old former banker who advised Hollande until June 2014, is known for his pro-business stance and is sure to send a positive signal to the European Union, which is pressuring France to get its finances in order.


Education Minister Benoit Hamon and Culture Minister Aurelie Filippetti, who supported Montebourg in his criticism, also lost their jobs.


Hamon was replaced by Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, the former sports and youth minister, and Filippetti was replaced by Fleur Pellerin, former minster for commerce and tourism.


Yet, Finance Minister Michel Sapin, Foreign Affairs Minister Laurent Fabius and Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian stayed in place in the limited reshuffle.


The Cabinet reshuffle came less than five months after the ambitious and popular Prime Minister Manuel Valls took office on April 1, steadfastly promoting Hollande's agenda. The changes are aimed at creating a Cabinet that embodies Hollande's policies, seen as too far to the right by some Socialists.


In addition to the ousted ministers, dozens of other Socialists are believed to consider Hollande's economic policies a betrayal of the party's cause.


Valls on Tuesday said any debate "should be held within the government."


"There is a single (policy) line and members of the government cannot make a spectacle," Valls said in a TV interview on France-2 TV in reference to Montebourg's public criticism of French economic policy.


"I have a single mission ... to set the country aright," the prime minister said.


The French president asked all the ministers to proclaim aloud their loyalty to the government line or to leave the Cabinet, a top government official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.


France, the No. 2 economy in the eurozone, has had no growth this year.


Hollande is the most unpopular president in recent French history, with ratings below 20 percent. He has promised to lower the country's 10 percent jobless rate, cut the deficit, and rekindle growth. He has a goal of cutting 50 billion euros ($29 billion) in state spending by 2017.



American, US Airways will stop listing on Orbitz


American Airlines and US Airways are pulling flight listings from Orbitz-run websites in a long-running dispute over fees that the travel company charges to list and sell the flights.


Shares of Orbitz Worldwide Inc. fell nearly 5 percent on Tuesday.


American said that it had already dropped its fares from Orbitz and that US Airways listings would be pulled on Monday.


Corporate customers of the airlines will still be able to book travel through Orbitz, but individuals will have to go to the airlines' websites or other travel agents, including online rivals of Orbitz such as Expedia Inc.


American's withdrawal extends to Orbitz's other websites, such as CheapTickets and European-based ebookers.com. However, those sites were still selling seats on American flights that were listed by American's so-called code-sharing partners, including British Airways and Japan Airlines.


Because of that quirk, and the fact that corporate travel will be unaffected, the impact of American's decision is likely to be felt mostly by Orbitz customers booking leisure travel within the U.S.


Scott Kirby, president of American Airlines Group Inc., which owns both airlines, said that his company "worked tirelessly with Orbitz to reach a deal with the economics that allow us to keep costs low and compete with low-cost carriers." One such airline, Southwest — which doesn't list on Orbitz either — saves on commissions by selling 80 percent of its tickets on its own website.


Orbitz suggested that American has the most to lose in the latest dispute.


"Our sites offer hundreds of airlines which are eager to capture the revenue American is choosing to forego," Orbitz spokeswoman Marita Hudson Thomas said in a statement, "and we will continue to show our customers a broad range of flight options to thousands of destinations in the U.S. and worldwide."


American has been trying for several years to cut commission spending by selling more tickets directly to consumers. That has led to fights with online travel agencies and intermediaries such as Travelport and Sabre that operate ticket-distribution systems.


American pulled its flights off Orbitz in 2010, but an Illinois court ruled in 2011 that American had to make the listings available through Orbitz. American later sued the travel agency, claiming that it violated antitrust laws by downplaying American flights when consumers searched the site. The companies reached a settlement last year. Terms were not disclosed.


Expedia also stopped showing American flights for a time, although that ban was lifted after the companies agreed on a new contract in 2011.


"It's not like we haven't seen this before," said Rick Seaney, CEO of the travel website FareCompare.com. "This is likely a negotiating ploy" that could signal further negotiations between the companies.


Seaney said American probably won't lose much business on routes and at airports it dominates, such as Dallas and Miami. But it could see some effect on competitive routes such as New York-Los Angeles, he said.


Orbitz, which was created in 2000 by five of the biggest U.S. airlines, now sells more hotel bookings than air travel. In 2008, airline tickets were 39 percent of its revenue and hotels were 27 percent. Last year, hotels accounted for 35 percent and air travel was 29 percent.


Shares of Orbitz closed down 39 cents, or 4.6 percent, at $8.04 after dropping 8.5 percent earlier in the session. American Airlines shares fell 33 cents to $39.09.



Fresno mayor touts independence in controller bid


Fresno Mayor Ashley Swearengin, who is regarded as the Republican Party's best hope for winning a statewide office in November, introduced herself on Tuesday as an outsider who would bring fiscal independence as California's state controller.


Swearengin said during an appearance at the Sacramento Press Club that she is the best person for managing the state's finances because she would not have to cater to the demands of Democrats, California's majority party.


"I think I'm the right person for the job because I believe this job requires independence, free from one political party, a major political party in power here in Sacramento," Swearengin said. "I think we need an outsider."


Swearengin finished first in the June primary and is running against Democrat Betty Yee, a member of the state Board of Equalization. Yee edged out former Assembly Speaker John Perez, a Los Angeles Democrat, by just 481 votes out of nearly 4.5 million votes cast in the race.


Swearengin, 42, touted her experience pleading California's fifth largest city with 3,200 workers.


Elected in 2008 and re-elected in 2012, Swearengin focused on her experience managing Fresno's finances amid the recession, taking both short-term and long-term actions to prevent municipal bankruptcy.


She said one of the highlights of her tenure was zeroing out negative fund balances in city accounts.


Swearengin contrasted herself with Yee, 56, a longtime legislative and administrative staffer before being elected to the five-member tax commission in 2006.


"Being the direct elected executive is very different from being a government staffer, a quasi-legislative function, it's different," Swearengin said. "Those are important roles in state government but it's different being the one person who is accountable for all 3,200 people."


Parke Skelton, Yee's campaign consultant, said Swearengin has a problem if she is campaigning on Fresno's fiscal health.


"During her term as mayor, the city of Fresno has had their bond rating downgraded three times to junk status," Skelton said. "The city has been teetering on the brink of abyss for quite some time and she has failed to address many of the structural budget issues in the city."


Yee's fiscal policy work and experience working on the state budget makes her much better qualified for the controller's job, Skelton said. "She's not been a partisan politician," he added.


Democrats currently hold all statewide offices.


If elected controller, Swearengin said she would focus on bringing transparency to California's long-term liabilities, propose a fiscal framework that incorporates paying down debt, and initiate a review of the controller's office to improve management and training of the department. Skelton said Yee would be open to a review of the controller's office.


Swearengin said she continues to support the high-speed rail project championed by Gov. Jerry Brown despite criticism from her own party. She credited the Democratic governor and Legislature for passing a responsible budget this year.


She also said she is evaluating whether to vote for GOP gubernatorial candidate Neel Kashkari.


Kashkari, a millionaire and former Goldman Sachs banker who trails Brown in election polls, announced last month that he spent a week living as a homeless person in Fresno to highlight the disparity between the governor's claim that the state is making an economic comeback and the reality faced by the working poor.


Swearengin said even though she understood Kashkari's point, she was surprised by his visit.


"I wish I could have known," she said about wanting to show him new housing for the homeless.


Mary-Sarah Kinner, communications director for Kashkari's campaign, said he supports Swearengin and looks "forward to voting for her and the entire Republican ticket."



Survey: US consumer confidence near a 7-year high

The Associated Press



U.S. consumer confidence this month reached its highest point in nearly seven years, boosted by strong job gains.


The Conference Board said Tuesday that its confidence index rose for a fourth straight month to 92.4 from 90.3 in July. The August reading is the highest since October 2007, two months before the Great Recession officially began.


The optimism suggests that Americans will be more likely to spend in the months ahead, an important boost to the economy. Consumer spending drives about 70 percent of U.S. economic activity.


"Enthusiastic households are more likely to open their wallets in the coming months and support solid output growth in the second half of the year," said Gregory Daco, an economist at Oxford Economics.


The survey found that Americans' outlook on the job market brightened considerably. The percentage of respondents who said jobs were "plentiful" rose to 18.2 percent from 15.6 percent in July. That's the highest level since 2008. Consumers' perceptions generally track the unemployment rate over time.


The "substantial improvement in August points to another strong employment report next week," said Ted Wieseman, an economist at Morgan Stanley.


The government's jobs report for August, to be released next week, will show whether hiring was strong for a seventh straight month.


Steady and solid hiring this year has provided more Americans with paychecks to spend. Employers have added an average of 230,000 jobs a month this year, up from about 195,000 a month in 2013. Average monthly job gains since February have produced the best six-month stretch since 2006.


The unemployment rate ticked up to 6.2 percent in July from 6.1 percent in June. But that was because more Americans began looking for work. Most didn't immediately find jobs, but the increase in people looking for work suggests that they are more confident about their prospects.


Lower gasoline prices have also likely helped. The average price of a gallon of gas nationwide Monday was $3.44, the lowest in nearly six months, according to AAA. That leaves Americans with more money to spend on other goods and services. This month, the percentage of Americans who said they plan to buy a car reached its highest level in five months.


Confidence bottomed during the Great Recession in February 2009 at 25.3 before beginning an upward swing. While the index still hasn't returned to full health, it is well above last year's average of 72.3. In the 20 years before the downturn, the index averaged nearly 102.



CEO named for HealthCare.gov


The Obama administration has picked a Connecticut official to run HealthCare.gov ahead of a second open enrollment season looming as a test of competence for the feds.


Kevin Counihan leads Access Health CT, a health insurance marketplace seen as a national model.


As CEO of the federal exchange, Counihan's challenge will be far bigger. Connecticut enrolled about 80,000 people, while more than 5 million signed up in the 36 states served by the federal marketplace.


Insurance exchanges offer subsidized private coverage to people who don't have workplace health plans.


The role of federal CEO is new, created by Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell to avoid a repeat of last year's technical meltdown. Burwell also named Lori Lodes of the Center for American Progress as communications director.



Best Buy sales slip spooks Wall Street


Best Buy's fiscal second-quarter net income fell 45 percent, with sales weakening as shoppers continued their move to making purchases online.


The consumer electronics company's adjusted profit topped Wall Street's view, but revenue fell short. Its share declined in Tuesday premarket trading.


The Richfield, Minnesota-based company earned $146 million, or 42 cents per share, for the period ended Aug. 2. That compares with $266 million, or 77 cents per share, a year earlier.


Stripping out certain items, earnings were 44 cents per share.


That easily beat the 31 cents per share expected by analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research.


Revenue dropped to $8.9 billion from $9.27 billion. Wall Street forecast $8.97 billion in revenue.


Sales at domestic stores open at least a year declined 2 percent. This figure is a key gauge of a retailer's health because it excludes results from stores recently opened or closed.


Best Buy Co.'s share fell $1.07, or 3.3 percent, to $30.92 before the market open.



A look at Tim Hortons


Tim Hortons, Canada's favorite doughnut and coffee chain, could soon become a bigger international player.


Burger King said Tuesday it struck a deal to buy the chain for about $11 billion and move its corporate headquarters to Canada. The companies say the deal creates the world's third-largest fast-food company. 3G Capital, the investment firm that owns a majority of Burger King, says it will use its expertise to expand Tim Hortons around the world, although it provided no details on specific markets.


Here's a look at Tim Hortons:


—The chain was founded in 1964 and initially sold just coffee and doughnuts. Over the years, it added bagels, muffins, cakes, pies, soups, chili, sandwiches and the bite-sized doughnut holes known as Timbits.


— Ron Joyce was the original franchisee of the first restaurant in Hamilton, Ontario. Joyce and professional hockey player Tim Horton became full partners in the company in 1967. Horton died in a car accident in February 1974, at which point Joyce became the sole owner.


— Wendy's International Inc. purchased Tim Hortons in 1995. In 2006, Wendy's spun off Tim Hortons as a separate company.


— It is now Canada's dominant fast-food chain with more than 3,600 locations. McDonald's, by contrast, had about 1,400 locations in the country last year. Overall, Tim Hortons has more than 4,500 locations, including 866 in the U.S.


— Most Tim Hortons locations are open 24 hours.


— After the Burger King deal, which is expected to close by early next year pending regulatory approvals, the companies say Tim Hortons will continue to be run out of Oakville, Ontario.



Los Angeles schools halt iPad deal amid criticism


Faced with criticism about the planning and rollout of a $1 billion effort by the Los Angeles Unified School District to provide iPads to all students, Superintendent John Deasy has suspended future use of a contract with Apple Inc.


The move follows disclosures that Deasy and his top deputy had close contact with executives at Apple, which makes the iPad, and Pearson Education, the company providing the curriculum on the tablets, the Los Angeles Times reported Tuesday (http://lat.ms/1zx8XQo ).


In addition, an internal district report found that the implementation of the iPad plan was beset by a flawed bidding process.


In a memo sent Monday to the Board of Education, Deasy announced the nation's second largest school district "will no longer utilize" the current contract with Apple.


"Not only will this decision enable us to take advantage of an ever-changing marketplace and technology advances, it will also give us time to take into account concerns raised surrounding the (project)," he wrote.


Under the contract approved last year, Apple had been expected to provide iPads, with Pearson as the subcontractor. School board members were told that the $30 million contract likely would expand to about $500 million over the next year or so, the Times reported. An additional $500 million would be used to improve Internet access and other school infrastructure issues.


The districtwide iPad rollout began last fall at 47 schools.


The purchases were being approved in phases, which gave Deasy the option of suspending the contract and restarting.


The district report found, among other things, that the initial rules for winning the contract appeared to be tailored to the products of the eventual winners — Apple and Pearson — rather than to district needs. It said key changes to the bidding rules came after most of the competition had been eliminated.


The report also found that past comments or associations with vendors, including Deasy, created an appearance of conflict even if no ethics rules were violated.


Deasy defended his staff and the original process but said he had not read the draft report because he did not receive a copy.



Buffett's firm helps finance Burger King deal


Warren Buffett's company is putting up $3 billion to help Burger King acquire Canadian fast food chain Tim Hortons Inc.


Berkshire Hathaway is expected to receive preferred stock in the new company in return for helping finance the $11 billion deal.


This is not the first time Buffett has worked with the investment firm that controls Burger King, 3G Capital. Last year, Buffett joined with 3G to buy H.J. Heinz Co. in a $23.3 billion deal.


In May, Buffett told Berkshire Hathaway shareholders that he'd like to do additional deals with 3G Capital because the investors do "a magnificent job running a business."


Like with the Heinz deal, Berkshire is not expected to have a role in operating Burger King and Tim Hortons.



SC-based Sonoco packaging acquires German firm


Hartsville-based packaging company Sonoco is buying the German firm Weidenhammer Packaging Group for $383 million.


Sonoco president M. Jack Sanders said Monday the move makes the company a global leader in the composite can market and expands its technological capabilities.


The German firm has about 1,100 employees. It operates 13 production sites, with five in Germany and plants in eight other countries, including the United States.


Sanders says the addition increases Sonoco's international consumer packaging and services annual sales to nearly $3 billion. He says that's just over half of the company's combined revenue. The two companies will employ 21,000 people.



US probes Ford Explorer police SUV brake hoses


U.S. safety regulators are investigating a complaint that front brake hoses can fail on some Ford Explorer Police Interceptor SUVs.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says the probe covers about 20,000 Explorers from the 2013 model year. Failure can cause increased stopping distances.


An unidentified metropolitan police department complained to the agency that 13 brake hoses failed on 11 of its 45 Explorers. Small splits were found in an inspection of the hoses.


The agency says it's investigating to see how often the problem happens and assess the consequences.


Ford says it's cooperating with the investigation.



Consumer confidence heads north, durable orders take flight

McClatchy Newspapers



A closely followed measure of U.S. consumer confidence in August reached its highest level since October 2007, the Conference Board announced Tuesday.


The board’s Consumer Confidence Index jumped 2.1 points in August to 92.4, its highest level since before the financial crisis and Great Recession.


“Consumer confidence increased for the fourth consecutive month as improving business conditions and robust job growth helped boost consumers’ spirits,” Lynn Franco, the New York-based group’s director of economic indicators, said in the monthly report. “Looking ahead, consumers were marginally less optimistic about the short-term outlook compared to July, primarily due to concerns about their earnings. Overall, however, they remain quite positive about the short-term outlooks for the economy and labor market.”


The Conference Board’s survey measures what people feel about their present conditions and what their expectations are for the future. The August reading of their current conditions continued to improve, with those describing economic conditions as good edging up and those describing it as bad falling slightly.


The number of survey respondents saying jobs are plentiful also jumped in August, while those who said jobs are hard to get fell slightly.


“This is a good report. It indicates that consumer confidence is maintaining itself at elevated levels and starting to gain traction,” Chris Christopher, director of U.S. economics for forecaster IHS Global Insight, said in an investor note. “In addition, the rise in consumer confidence indicates that retail sales in August are likely to be more robust than July’s poor performance.”


That view was shared by economists at RDQ Economics in New York, who said in an investment note that consumers “are pulling out of their prolonged funk.”


On another positive note, the Commerce Department said orders for durable goods_ big ticket items such as planes and cars_ shot up by a record monthly gain of 22.6 percent in July. But the unusually steep monthly rise came largely because Boeing Corp. logged $80 billion in orders for its 777X. Even without Boeing’s orders, July was unusually strong because orders for motor vehicles were also up by double digits.



Muslim Scholars call for neutral mediator


Muslim Scholars call for neutral mediator


The Committee of Muslim Scholars called Tuesday for a “neutral” mediator to step into negotiations over the release of...



US home price gains slow in June


U.S. home prices increased at a slower pace in June — a cooldown that could continue for several more months.


The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index rose 8.1 percent in June from 12 months earlier, according to a Tuesday report. That's down from 9.4 percent a month earlier and the smallest annual gain since December 2012.


Yearly price growth weakened in all 20 cities. Home values in Cleveland nudged up just 0.8 percent. Las Vegas led with a 15.2 percent gain. But prices in Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami and Tampa, Florida, are still at least 33 percent below their housing bubble peaks of almost a decade ago.


The deceleration should help ease some of the price pressures on would-be buyers. After slumping at the start of 2014, existing-home sales have picked up as price gains have slowed. But buying remains 4.3 percent below the July 2013 level, according to the National Realtors Association.


Price growth should continue to slow now that the recovery from the Great Recession has entered its sixth year. Many economists project that the Federal Reserve will begin to raise short-term interest rates in 2015 because the economy has strengthened, which could cause mortgage rates to rise from relative lows and make it more expensive to borrow.


"Rising mortgage rates won't send housing into a tailspin, but will further dampen price gains," said David Blitzer, chairman of the index committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.


Even hot markets such as San Francisco-where a two-bedroom condominium can cost more than $1 million-are finding that price growth has slowed. Prices in that city rose 12.9 percent in June, compared with an annual growth rate of 18.4 percent in April.


The sharp price gains of the past few years had been part of a natural snap back in response to the devastating housing bust, which triggered the recession at the end of 2007. Still, the fallout from that downturn continues to cast a shadow over the real estate market.


Nearly 35 percent of homeowners are "effectively underwater" on their mortgages, meaning that they either have less than 20 percent equity in their homes or could not sell their properties and have enough money left over for a down payment on another home, the online real estate firm Zillow said Tuesday.


The consequence of this is that fewer homeowners are willing to list their homes for sale. The impact is disproportionately been felt among Generation X. More than 42 percent of this generation — 35- to 49-year olds— owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth. Nearly a third of baby boomers between the ages of 50 and 64 are in the same predicament.


That in turn makes it harder for the younger millennial generation to afford homes, said Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries.


"Because so many homes are stuck in negative equity or are effectively underwater, the inventory of homes for sale is severely constrained, leading to more competition for those that are available," Humphries said. "And millennials likely don't have the resources to compete with cash offers or engage in bidding wars."


New construction is increasingly catering toward apartment rentals and high-end homes, pricing out many other would-be buyers.


The Commerce Department said Monday that new-home sales fell 2.4 percent in July to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 412,000. New-home sales lost much of their upward trajectory toward the end of last year, hurt by modest wage growth and a bump in mortgage rates after the Fed initially signaled a shift in its policies.



Turner Broadcasting offering buyouts


The corporate parent of CNN, TNT and TBS on Tuesday offered voluntary buyouts to 600 veteran employees, part of an overall cost-cutting effort at the Atlanta-based broadcasting company founded by Ted Turner.


The offer went out to U.S.-based employees who are over 55 and have worked at the company for at least 10 years, excluding on-air talent and others with specific contracts. Some 9,000 of Turner's 13,000 employees are based in the United States.


The company would not comment Tuesday, saying it should become clear this fall how many employees it will be shedding. Turner Broadcasting chief executive John Martin has been talking for several months about a restructuring plan he has called Turner 2020.


Turner also owns The Cartoon Network, HLN, Tru TV and Turner Classic Movies.



Trop Greenville looks to completion of expansion


Tropicana Entertainment expects to open its expanded gambling operation and resort in October.


Trop Greenville is adding new table games and 300 more slot machines, including a high limit area.


Max & Erma's, a full-service casual dining restaurant chain, will open along with a new VIP Lounge and a live entertainment area on the casino floor. A 140-space underground parking garage will also open.


Roscoe Greene, general manager of Trop Greenville, says in a news release the public is invited to join in the open ceremony and celebration at 11 a.m. on Oct. 10.


Tropicana is a publicly traded company that, through its subsidiaries, owns and operates eight casinos and resorts in Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nevada, Missouri, New Jersey and Aruba. The company is based in Las Vegas.



ABC News makes changes at top broadcasts


ABC News is making leadership changes behind the scenes at its top two broadcasts.


The network announced Tuesday that Tom Cibrowski (sih-BROW-skee), the top executive behind "Good Morning America" as it passed by NBC's "Today" show in the ratings, will become a top deputy to news division President James Goldston. As senior vice president of news programs, news gathering and special events, he'll report to Goldston and promote coordination at all of the network's broadcasts.


Michael Corn will replace Cibrowski as senior executive producer at "Good Morning America." He's been the top producer at Diane Sawyer's "World News."


With David Muir to take over next week as the evening show's anchor, Almin Karamehmedovic (care-uh-meh-MEHD-oh-vich) will become that show's top producer.



Feds seek comments on 'modified risk' tobacco


Federal regulators are seeking public comment on smokeless tobacco maker Swedish Match's request to certify its General-branded tobacco products as less harmful than cigarettes.


It is the first time the Food and Drug Administration has accepted a modified risk tobacco product application, a move that's being closely watched by both the public health community and tobacco companies, which are looking for new products to sell as they face declining cigarette demand due to tax increases, health concerns, smoking bans and social stigma.


Swedish Match's application highlights a philosophical debate over how best to control tobacco. One camp says there's no safe way to use tobacco and pushes for people to quit above all else. Others embrace the idea that lower-risk alternatives like smokeless tobacco or electronic cigarettes can improve public health, if they mean fewer people smoke.


The FDA on Tuesday said it will accept comments on the company's application to market the snus (pronounced "snoose") products as "modified risk" for 180 days. Snus — teabag-like pouches or loose tobacco that users stick between their cheek and gum to get their nicotine fix — are popular in Scandinavian countries and are part of a growing smokeless tobacco market in the U.S.


The agency's scientific advisory panel also plans to review the application in about 90 days.


The entire review process is expected to take about a year under a 2009 law that gave the FDA authority to evaluate tobacco products for their health risks and lets the agency approve ones that could be marketed as safer than others. None has been given the OK yet, but the agency has noted that some tobacco products could pose less of a health risk to users than smoking.


In an application filed in June, the company, whose North American headquarters is in Richmond, Virginia, is proposing to say that the snus products are addictive but substantially less risky than smoking. The company also wants permission to remove one of the required health warning labels relating to oral cancer.


Tobacco companies want to market more smokeless tobacco and other alternatives like electronic cigarettes to make up for falling cigarette sales. But they are not allowed to explicitly market them as less risky than cigarettes.


The question remains whether smokers, which total about 42 million adults in the U.S., are willing to switch, even if it means saving their lives.


Total sales of snus are about 50 million cans per year in the U.S., growing from virtually nothing in the mid-2000s, said the subsidiary of Stockholm-based Swedish Match AB.


Market researcher Euromonitor International estimates U.S. sales at $342 million in 2013 and predicts that snus retail volume will grow by about 20 percent in the U.S. by 2017.


General (pronounced gen-er-AHL) snus was first sold in Sweden in mid-1860s and has been sold in the U.S. since 2007. It is currently available nationwide in more than 20,000 stores and is kept in small chillers to preserve the product. The brand has at least a 6 percent share of the retail market, which is dominated by Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based Reynolds American Inc., which sells the market-leading Camel-branded snus, and Richmond, Virginia-based Altria Group Inc., which sells Marlboro-branded snus.


Swedish Match's snus brands make up 75 percent of the market in Scandinavia. But in the U.S., the company said it only has a 10 percent share of the overall smokeless category.


The category grew about 5.5 percent in the U.S. last year but is still small compared with cigarettes.



Michael Felberbaum can be reached at http://bit.ly/1dbspXO.


Hospitals deplore government overdue bills



BEIRUT: The Syndicate of Hospitals in Lebanon Tuesday appealed to the government to pay outstanding hospital bills amounting to LL 120 billion, cautioning that delay in payments would jeopardize medical services in certain hospitals.


“The Council [of the syndicate] appeals to the official institutions to process the administrative transactions submitted by hospitals and it makes a special appeal to Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil to honor an outstanding bill of LL 120 billion,” the Syndicate said in a statement.


It cautioned that “the problem of overdue invoices,” that state institutions owed Lebanese private hospitals, including LL 92.5 billion for the military institutions, has reached a tipping point, adversely affecting medical services and threatening the survival of certain hospitals.


“The council reaffirms the hospitals’ full commitment to continue in carrying out their duties even in the most critical times, and implores all concerned (government) institutions to give the hospitalization sector the attention it needs to enable it to continue providing quality services to all citizens without discrimination,” the statement added.


Hospitals are legally required to provide any emergency treatment until the patient’s life is secured, but the costs due on the government are systematically delayed on the excuse of the lack of funds.


The syndicate also called for readjusting the medical quota and pricing of services determined by the National Social Security Fund, which it complained did not reflect the real cost of the services and the growing cost of hospitalization.


“The hospitals are passing through a critical time due to a lack of essential liquidity needed to sustain operations, including meeting payment deadlines imposed by importers of medications and medical equipment,” the statement said.






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Case-Shiller: Miami area home prices rose 11.5 percent in June


South Florida home prices rose 11.5 percent in June from a year earlier, as the pace of gains continued to slow, according to S&P/Case-Shiller data.


Home prices inched up 0.6 percent from May to June in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties, not seasonally adjusted. That compared with a 1.2 percent increase between April and May.


The slower pace of price increases in Florida came amid a “widespread slowdown” in home price gains, the report said.


The Case-Shiller 10-City and 20-City Composite indices gained 8.1 percent for the year ended in June. South Florida still outpaced most cities, ranking third in gains among 20 cities, behind Las Vegas (up 15.2 percent) and San Francisco (up 12.9 percent.)


The S&P/Case-Shiller index reports lags the market by two months. The indices reflect resales of single-family homes that have sold at least twice.



Global stocks edge up after US data


Global stocks edged higher on Tuesday after upbeat U.S. economic data and as investors were heartened by the S&P 500's foray to record highs.


KEEPING SCORE: By early afternoon in Europe, Germany's DAX was up 0.2 percent at 9,526.71 and France's CAC-40 was up 0.6 percent at 4,367.54. Britain's FTSE 100 added 0.4 percent to 6,801.34 after being closed Monday for a public holiday. Wall Street was expected to open higher, with Dow and Standard & Poor's 500 futures up 0.1 percent. On Monday, the S&P briefly rose past the 2,000-point mark and closed at a second record high in a week.


HIGHER ORDERS: Trading sentiment was buoyed further on Tuesday by figures showing orders of durable manufactured goods surged by a record 22.6 percent in July on the back of a jump in aircraft sales. Looking ahead, investors will keep an eye on official U.S. economic growth figures due Thursday.


ANALYST TAKE: Experts said the durable goods figures are a definite positive, even though demand for items outside transportation was not as strong. "With some producers starting to push up against capacity constraints and loans to businesses rising at a rapid rate, we suspect that investment will prove to be one of the economy's bright spots in the second half of this year," said Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics.


STIMULUS HOPES: Stocks have also been boosted by reassurances by Europe's and Japan's top central bankers that they will continue to provide stimulus. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi's hint that the bank could pursue a more aggressive program of bond purchases pushed stocks up this week and caused government bond yields to drop to record lows. The U.S. dollar, meanwhile, has risen against major currencies since Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen hinted the Fed is inching toward interest rate hikes because of faster-than-expected improvement in employment.


ASIA'S DAY: China's Shanghai Composite Index declined 1 percent to 2,207.11 while Tokyo's Nikkei 225 shed 0.6 percent to 15,521.22. Hong Kong's Hang Seng declined 0.4 percent to 25,074.50 and India's Sensex was off 0.4 percent at 26,340.20. Singapore and Jakarta declined while Seoul and Sydney gained.


ENERGY: Benchmark U.S. crude for October delivery was up 30 cents to $93.65 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract declined 30 cents on Monday to close at $93.35.


CURRENCIES: Major currencies stabilized after losing ground to the dollar. The euro rose to $1.3204 from the previous session's $1.3181. The dollar declined to 103.88 yen from Monday's close of 104.09 yen.



Gap plans to expand New York distribution center


Gap, Inc. plans to expand its distribution center in the Hudson Valley, adding up to 1,200 jobs over the next five years while investing $96 million into upgrading the facility.


The San Francisco-based clothing retailer and Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced Monday that the company will expand its 14-year-old property in the Dutchess County town of Fishkill, on the Hudson River 57 miles north of New York City.


Cuomo says Gap considered other locations across the U.S. for its expansion project, but ultimately chose New York state. Empire State Development is providing the company with up to $12 million in tax credits tied to job creation and investment commitments.


Local economic development officials say Gap currently employs 428 people at its 2.3 million-square-foot Fishkill operation.



Burger King buying Tim Hortons for about $11B


Burger King says it struck a deal to buy Tim Hortons Inc. for about $11 billion, a move that would give the fast-food company a stronger foothold in the coffee and breakfast market.


The corporate headquarters of the new company will be in Canada, which stands to help lower Burger King's corporate taxes. Such tax inversions have been criticized by President Barack Obama and Congress because they mean a loss of revenue for the U.S. government. Burger King and Tim Hortons said the chains will continue to be run independently and that Burger King will still operate out of Miami.


The deal would create the world's third largest fast-food company with about $23 billion in sales and more than 18,000 locations, the companies said.


The tie-up could help Burger King and Tim Hortons pose a greater challenge to market leaders such as McDonald's and Starbucks and reflects a desire by both companies to expand internationally. Burger King, which has nearly 14,000 locations, has been striking deals to open more locations in developing markets. The company sees plenty of room for growth internationally, given the more than 35,000 locations McDonald's has around the world. Tim Hortons has more than 4,500 locations, mostly in Canada.


Back in the U.S., breakfast and coffee have been hot growth areas in the fast-food industry. Between 2007 and 2012, breakfast grew faster than any other segment in the restaurant industry at about 5 percent a year, according to market researcher Technomic. But it has long remained a weak spot for Burger King.


McDonald's Corp. led the category with 31 percent of the market in 2012, while Burger King Worldwide Inc. had just 3 percent to 4 percent, according to Technomic. As newer players such as Taco Bell have pushed into breakfast, McDonald's has said it plans to put more marketing muscle behind coffee as a way to get more customers in the door.


3G Capital, the investment firm that owns Burger King, will own about 51 percent of the new company. The firm, which has offices in Brazil and New York, has been slashing costs at Burger King since buying it in 2010. Last year, 3G teamed up with Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway to buy ketchup maker Heinz as well.


Berkshire Hathaway is also helping finance the Tim Hortons deal with $3 billion of preferred equity financing, but will not have a role in managing operations.


Under the deal, Burger King will pay $65.50 Canadian ($59.74) in cash and 0.8025 common shares of the new company for each Tim Hortons share. This represents total value per Tim Hortons share of $94.05 Canadian (US$85.79), based on Burger King's Monday closing stock price. Alternatively, Tim Hortons shareholders may choose either all-cash or all stock in the new company.


Tim Hortons stock rose more than 10 percent in Tuesday premarket trading. Burger King's shares fell slightly.



Oilfield waste disposal well under construction


Vanguard Environmental has begun construction on the controversial oilfield-waste disposal facility north of downtown Houma.


Meanwhile, The Courier reports (http://bit.ly/1BYradJ ) attorneys hired by Terrebonne Parish government are continuing efforts to halt the facility's operation.


The company has given notice to state regulators that it is preparing to drill the well into which oilfield wastewater will be injected 4,000 feet into the ground below Houma.


Terrebonne government waged an unsuccessful legal battle against the construction of the facility arguing parish laws prohibited such operations in close proximity to homes and a school.


Ultimately courts held that state law under which Vanguard was granted a permit supersedes parish rules.



Baton Rouge area home sales post gain in July


Home sales in metro Baton Rouge increased by 2 percent in July, thanks to increased sales in East Baton Rouge and Livingston parishes.


There were 856 home sales that closed in July in the nine-parish area. That's according to figures released Monday by the Greater Baton Rouge Association of Realtors to The Advocate (http://bit.ly/1tPYa28).


That compares with 839 closed sales in July 2013. The biggest monthly gainer was Livingston Parish, where sales were up 11.7 percent from 137 to 153.


East Baton Rouge, the largest market for sales, was up by 3 percent, from 465 to 479.


The median sales price for the metro area was up 3.5 percent from $176,650 to $182,900 last month.



2 Virginia-based banking companies to merge


Two Virginia-based banking companies have agreed to merge in a cash-and-stock-deal valued at more than $24 million.


Danville-based American National Bankshares Inc. and Martinsville-based MainStreet Bankshares Inc. announced the merger Monday in a news release. The merger is expected to close in early January 2015, if it's approved by regulators and MainStreet shareholders.


MainStreet shareholders would own about 10 percent of the combined company under the agreement. They would receive 0.482 shares of American National stock and $3.46 in cash for each MainStreet share they own.


MainStreet is the bank holding company for Franklin Community Bank, N.A. and MainStreet RealEstate, Inc. Franklin Community Bank will be merged into American National Bank and Trust Company, which has branches in southern and central Virginia and north central North Carolina.



Michael Brown's Funeral Is Mixed With Tributes, Political Messages


One subject mentioned by protestors and non protesting residents of Ferguson, Mo., was voting. The turn out for registered African American voters in the last municipal elections was 6 percent.



UN health agency: E-cigarettes must be regulated


The U.N. health agency says electronic cigarettes should be regulated and banned from use indoors until the exhaled vapor is proven not to harm bystanders.


The World Health Organization also calls for a ban on sales to minors of the popular nicotine-vapor products, and to either forbid or keep to a minimum any advertising, promotion or sponsorship.


In a report Tuesday, the Geneva-based agency said the "apparently booming" $3 billion global market for more than 400 brands of e-cigarettes is increasingly becoming a competition between independent companies and transnational tobacco companies aggressively muscling for market share.


The report is to be discussed at a WHO conference on controlling tobacco in October.


The American Heart Association backs the battery-powered devices that vaporize nicotine as a last resort to help smokers quit.



Contractor pleads in NW Pa. well-plugging case


A contractor has pleaded guilty in federal court to a charge that he lied to the government in saying that he had plugged abandoned northwestern Pennsylvania oil wells in accordance with environmental regulations.


The Erie Times-News (http://bit.ly/1vi4KSI ) reports that 45-year-old Ronald A. Wright of Pleasantville pleaded guilty Monday in U.S. District Court in Erie to one count of "false writing or document to the government."


Federal prosecutors said Wright, an employee of Pleasantville-based S&T Services and Supply Inc., filed false certificates that environmental regulators relied upon to approve an injection well Elk County.


Assistant U.S. Attorney Marshall Piccinini said Wright had plugged 95 wells over seven years and a sample testing of nine wells showed all had "irregularities," so all 95 will likely have to be re-plugged.



Berri holds talks with foreign envoys



BEIRUT: Speaker Nabih Berri Tuesday held talks with the representatives of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council.


Among the attendees was U.S. Ambassador David Hale who arrived at Berri's Ain el-Tineh residence Tuesday afternoon.


According to the National News Agency, the meeting is centered on the current situation and developments in Lebanon and the region.



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Future MP snubs Hezbollah call for dialogue


BEIRUT: Future MP Ammar Houri Tuesday snubbed Hezbollah’s recent call for reactivating national dialogue, saying that dialogue was senseless while the party refuses to discuss the main points of contention.


“What dialogue and what understanding are they calling for?” Houri asked. “Our conflict with Hezbollah revolves around three main issues which they consider to be off the table,” Houri said in an interview with the Voice of Lebanon radio station.


Hezbollah’s military involvement in the Syrian conflict, the fate of Hezbollah’s military arsenal and the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, are the main divisive issues between Future-led March 14 coalition and their rival March 8 camp.


Houri argued that Hezbollah’s withdrawal from Syria “would inevitably ease internal tensions and help create a relaxed atmosphere conducive to dialogue and understanding.”


Hezbollah’s deputy leader, Sheikh Naim Qassem, had called on March 14 to submit a political vision for ending the three-month political deadlock that has blocked the election of a new head of state to succeed former President Michel Sleiman, whose tenure expired on May 25.


Commenting on a reported bid to break the stalemate in presidential election undertaken by MP Walid Jumblatt and Speaker Nabih Berri, Houri said there was no clear initiative for agreeing on a compromise candidate to fill the country’s top post.


“MP Walid Jumblatt a short while ago started a tour of political leaders for the sake of consultation, but until this hour there is no detailed proposal or initiative,” Houri said.


He argued that March 14 was flexible in the sense that it would discuss pulling out its presidential hopeful, Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea, in favor of a compromise candidate.


“This should open the way for the opposite camp to move closer, but they have not shown any positive response and are still showing stubbornness,” Houri added.


The lawmaker played down expectations that a Saudi-Iranian rapprochement could have positive impact on Lebanon in the imminent future.


“Any positive development in the region would eventually have a positive impact on Lebanon, but I don’t think that any regional understandings would result in a quick and immediate improvement in Lebanon, because it takes time to translate all this on the ground,” Houri said.


Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian visited Saudi Arabia Monday, a move seen aimed at repairing strained relations.


The two countries are on opposite sides in the Syrian conflict, with Tehran backing President Bashar al-Assad and Riyadh supporting the rebels trying to topple him.



China investigating managers at VW joint venture


The Chinese anti-corruption agency said Tuesday it is investigating one current and one former manager at Volkswagen's main joint venture in China.


A former deputy general manager of First Auto Works-Volkswagen, Li Wu, and a deputy sales manager of the venture's Audi division, Zhou Chun, are suspected of "serious violations," according to the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection said.


The one-sentence announcement gave no details. There was no indication Volkswagen AG was a target of the investigation.


A Volkswagen spokeswoman in Beijing declined to comment.


FAW-Volkswagen is a joint venture between the German automaker and state-owned FAW Group Corp. Phone calls to FAW and to VW spokespeople were not answered.


Global automakers are under scrutiny by Chinese anti-monopoly regulators. An official said earlier that Audi, Volkswagen's luxury unit, would face unspecified punishment for violating the anti-monopoly law.


A number of Chinese executives at major companies including PetroChina Ltd., Asia's biggest oil and gas producer, have been detained in a sweeping anti-corruption crackdown.



New solar farm in Richmond begins generating power


A utility says its latest solar farm in eastern Indiana has started generating electricity.


Indiana Municipal Power Agency says the eight-acre solar farm on the grounds of Richmond Power and Light contains about 4,000 solar panels. They will generate one megawatt of electricity at peak capacity, or enough electricity to power about 200 homes.


Indiana Municipal says the Richmond solar farm utilizes a horizontal tracking system for the panels that enables them to move, tracking the sun throughout the day. It says construction began earlier this year and was completed this month. A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held Friday.


Indiana Municipal also operates solar farms in Rensselaer (ren-suh-LEER') and Frankton. The not-for-profit wholesale power provider serves 59 Indiana communities.



About 250 parents join county college savings plan


An official in Cuyahoga (ky-uh-HOH'-guh) County says about 250 parents of kindergartners have registered for a college savings account program that started with the county contributing $100 for each child.


The fund idea was started earlier this year by count executive and candidate for governor Ed FitzGerald.


Ken Surratt, a special assistant to FitzGerald, tells the Northeast Ohio Media Group (http://bit.ly/1BY2yBF ) that 27 of the savings account have received money on top of the $100 in taxpayers' money used to start each of them.


Voters approved a county charter in 2009 that called for establishing a countywide education fund.


FitzGerald says too few lower- and middle-class families are saving for college, and the program aims to create a local culture that encourages more saving.



Even if attacked, airline could be liable in crash


Families of passengers who were on the Malaysia Airlines plane shot down over Ukraine are starting to sort through the long process of gaining compensation for their loss.


Officials in the Netherlands, where the majority of Flight 17 victims lived, say that Malaysia Airlines has been making $50,000 payments to the families without admitting any wrongdoing in the crash.


Such payments may create goodwill, lawyers say, but they are not likely to discourage some families from seeking more than the amount promised under an international treaty — about $174,000.


Since the early days of commercial aviation, international agreements have governed compensation for crash victims. It is a no-fault system — the airline pays a standard compensation even if is blameless. Under a treaty called the Montreal Convention, families can sue for more if the airline or another party was negligent.


Aviation-accident lawyers say it would be almost impossible to collect damages from Russia or the pro-Russian rebels accused of shooting down the plane with a far-reaching surface-to-air missile. Malaysia Airlines will be left as the prime — maybe the only — defendant, and lawsuits are likely to hinge on the plane's planned route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur on July 17.


Malaysian officials have said that the route over eastern Ukraine was deemed safe by international aviation authorities as long as the plane flew higher than 32,000 feet — below that, Ukraine had closed the airspace, presumably because of the threat posed by pro-Russia rebels armed with shoulder-held anti-aircraft guns, which have a limited range. While the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration had prohibited flights over the Crimean Peninsula, the U.S. ban did not extend to eastern Ukraine until after the shoot-down.


And, Malaysian officials have noted, other airlines continued to fly the same route, even on the day that Flight 17 was shot down.


But some aviation lawyers say that the families could have a strong case by arguing that Malaysia Airlines should have stopped flying over eastern Ukraine after the rebels shot down military jets earlier in July.


"The idea that somebody else was equally as stupid as they were is not that good of an argument," said Jonathan Reiter, a New York personal-injury lawyer who has handled many aviation cases.


Families of those on this year's major air crashes — Flight 17; Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared as it flew from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing; the crash of TransAsia Airways Flight 222 in stormy weather in Taiwan; and the crash of Air Algerie Flight 5017 in Mali — could be waiting years for compensation from the airlines and their insurers.


Under the Montreal treaty, lawsuits can be filed in the home country of the victim, the country where the airline is based, where the ticket was bought or where the plane was headed. Americans and Europeans have often received higher awards than families in countries such as Malaysia, where the courts usually stick to the treaty limit, lawyers say.


"You could have two people sitting next to each other who may have the same income. (The family of) one gets multi millions, and the other one gets $75,000," said Justin Green, an aviation attorney whose firm represented families of victims of Pan Am 103, bombed over Scotland in 1988.


For some relatives of those on Flight 17, the pain is still too raw to decide whether to go to court.


In the Netherlands, Kevin Fan is grappling with the job of running two Rotterdam restaurants that were owned by his parents, who, along with his grandmother, died in the crash. Fan's father, who went by Popo, was the chef at Asian Glories; his mother, Jenny, was the hostess.


On a recent day, several bunches of fresh-cut flowers had been left as a memorial outside the small restaurant. The 30-year-old Fan, an acclaimed young chef, was finishing a meeting with two accountants to go over the restaurant's books. He was about to start his next shift in the kitchen.


"It is overwhelming. There is just a lot to arrange," he said, choosing his words carefully. "My family is really stepping in to help."


As for suing the airline, Fan said, "I'm not focused on that right now."


Harun Calehr, whose two nephews were on Flight 17, said that even an initial partial payment from Malaysia Airlines was emotionally taxing.


"My mother and my sister were thinking that it is blood money," said Calehr, who was born in the Netherlands and now practices law — including aviation law — in Houston. "I told them, 'This is not profiting from the boys' demise. This is your right.' The only accountability you can get from a company is financial compensation, and maybe an apology."


In the months since Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared, Steve Wang, a Chinese citizen whose mother was on the plane, decided to seek more than the $174,000 limit. It is a form of leverage.


"What I need most is not the compensation," Wang said. "What I really need is (to know) what happened to the plane — where is it now? So we want to push them to search in a faster way."


After many crashes, lawsuits are filed against the airlines, the aircraft manufacturer, and the makers of aviation systems on the plane. In the Air Algerie case, Spain's Swiftair, which was operating the flight, could be a target.


Flight 17 is different — a civilian airliner shot out of the sky — but if families can't sue Russia or the rebels suspected of firing the missile, there is precedent for finding an airline liable after its plane was shot down.


In 1983, a Soviet fighter jet downed Korean Air Lines Flight 007, a Boeing 747 jumbo jet bound from New York to Seoul via Anchorage, Alaska. The KAL plane with 269 people on board had flown off course and into Soviet airspace. The Soviets never compensated any of the passengers' families. Years later, families in the U.S. won settlements and jury awards against Korean Air that ranged up to $10 million, The Associated Press reported at the time.


Governments can invoke sovereignty, but they have compensated families in rare cases. After an American warship shot down Iran Air Flight 655 in 1988, the U.S. agreed to pay $61.8 million to the families of victims.


Libya agreed to pay $2.7 billion in compensation for the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in exchange for the lifting of U.S. and international trade sanctions imposed after the attack. Unlike Russia, the U.S. government had designated Libya a state sponsor of terrorism.


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Toby Sterling in Amsterdam and Kelvin Chan in Hong Kong contributed to this report.


Contact David Koenig at http://bit.ly/1leSbmw



No deal yet in Market Basket feud


The family feud that has brought the Market Basket supermarket chain to its knees may be nearing its end.


Ousted CEO Arthur T. Demoulas has reportedly made a $1.5 billion offer to buy out the part of the company controlled by his rival cousin, Arthur S. Demoulas, and his allies on the board.


The board was scheduled to meet Sunday but the meeting was called off due to disagreements over some terms of the sale.


Arthur T. Demoulas' ouster earlier this summer prompted an employee walkout and customer boycott that has led to empty shelves and a mere trickle of business at the private company's 71 stores in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine.


Store managers and employees expressed confidence over the weekend that a deal was imminent.