Thursday, 28 August 2014

Fed Chair Yellen's assets up 8 percent during 2013


Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen's assets rose in value by at least 8 percent during 2013, raising their total to between $5.3 million and $14.1 million, according to her latest financial disclosure released Thursday.


Yellen's biggest asset is a trust fund she set up in 1992 with her husband, George Akerlof, a Nobel Prize-winning economist. The value of the trust fund is estimated at between $1 million and $5 million.


Yellen's assets have likely been driven up in value by a rebounding economy and a rising stock market. In 2012, her disclosure form estimated her assets at between $4 million and $13 million.


Some of Yellen's listed assets belong to her alone; others are co-owned with Akerlof.


The disclosure documents provided only a broad range rather than a specific figure for total assets.


Yellen's disclosure form covers calendar year 2013, when she served as the Fed's vice chair before succeeding Ben Bernanke in February to become the first woman to head the central bank.


One of the assets Yellen listed was a stamp collection, valued at between $15,000 and $50,000, a value that did not increase from 2012. The stamp collection was jointly owned with Akerlof.


Yellen, 68, said she was receiving a pension from the University of California, Berkeley, where she and Akerlof taught on the faculty for many years.


In a letter in October, when her nomination as Fed chair was pending before the Senate Banking Committee, Yellen said she and Akerlof were both receiving book royalties from Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press and Princeton University Press.


Akerlof is serving as a visiting scholar at the International Monetary Fund in Washington.


Among the stocks listed on the disclosure form were shares of Conoco Phillips, DirecTV, DuPont, Office Depot, Pfizer, Raytheon, Phillips 66, Norfolk Southern and 21st Century Fox. The disclosure form showed that Yellen held a mix of company stocks and investment funds.



Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Aug. 29, 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-Joumhouria


Obama dispatches Kerry to region to form anti-ISIS alliance


Diplomatic efforts intensified Thursday to stop the advance by ISIS militants who have killed dozens of Syrian soldiers in captivity trying to withdraw from the perimeter of Tabqa airfield in the Raqqa province.


U.S. President Barack Obama has dispatched Secretary of State John Kerry to the Middle East to build a regional alliance to confront terrorist like ISIS.


Meanwhile, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk told Al-Joumhouria that he would visit Gen. Michel Aoun to discuss the “serious situation” in Arsal.


Al-Mustaqbal


Berri stands united ‘in Cabinet’ with electricity contract workers


Prime Minister Tammam Salam touched upon the electricity issue during a Cabinet meeting Thursday, highlighting the negative impact of the protests of electricity contract workers on the electric utility.


Ministerial sources said Transportation Minister Ghazi Zeaiter, member of Speaker Nabih Berri’s parliamentary bloc, expressed his solidarity with the contract workers during the Cabinet meeting.


“We have to apply the law, which provides for making these contract workers full-time employees and close this case," Zeaiter was quoted as telling the Cabinet.


Change and Reform bloc member, Energy Minister Artur Nazarian, reiterated his coalition’s rejection of the contract workers’ demands.


More to follow ...



Official: Bidders compete for Uruguay pot business


Uruguay's new market for legalized marijuana has attracted at least 20 companies bidding for the right to supply pot to the country's pharmacies, a government official said Thursday.


An official from President Jose Mujica's office says cannabis regulators will review and pick the best businesses from the competitors that passed initial scrutiny. It's not clear how many may eventually be granted licenses in the South American country.


The government official did not specify an exact number of bidders, saying only it was "more than 20 and less than 25." He spoke Thursday on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.


Successful companies must identify everyone involved in their businesses, document the source of their financing and be cleared by Uruguay's anti-money laundering agency.


Uruguay is the first nation in the world to attempt to regulate the cultivation and sale of pot on a nationwide scale. The legalization law, passed in December 2013, allows growers and users to form clubs and authorizes pharmacies to sell up to 40 grams of pot a month to registered users.


Mujica has said the sale of marijuana through pharmacies would be postponed until next year.


On Wednesday, people in Uruguay who want to grow their own marijuana at home for personal use were able to register to do so as the government launched the latest phase in its legalization program.


The government's Institute of Cannabis Regulation and Control said in a statement on Thursday that 54 home growers had registered over two days, including 21 in the Montevideo department that includes the capital of the same name.


"It was a very simple bureaucratic step, much less complicated that I had thought," said marijuana grower Juan Vaz.


Presidential and legislative elections are scheduled for October and the major opposition candidates have signaled they intend to repeal all or part of the legalization law if they gain power.



NH Supreme Court upholds education tax credit law


The state Supreme Court has left intact a New Hampshire law that creates a business education tax credit to fund scholarships to private schools.


In its unanimous ruling Thursday, the justices vacated a lower court ruling that deemed unconstitutional part of the law making religious school students eligible for scholarships.


The program was passed in 2012 by Republican lawmakers who overrode a veto by then-Gov. John Lynch, a Democrat.


Gov. Maggie Hassan, also a Democrat, made repeal of the law a priority, but Republicans blocked repeal efforts. She expressed her disappointment in Thursday's ruling.


"The voucher tax credit is bad public policy for public education in New Hampshire and our taxpayers, diverting millions of dollars in taxpayer money with no accountability or oversight to religious and private schools."


Opponents of the law argued it violates the separation of church and state provision of New Hampshire's constitution and will hurt public schools. Supporters said it promotes educational freedom and choice for low income families.


In January 2013, nine New Hampshire parents, taxpayers and a business challenged the program. Their case was waged by the New Hampshire Civil Liberties Union, Americans United for Separation of Church and State and a dozen other opponents of the tax credit program. In June 2013, a Strafford County Superior Court judge deemed unconstitutional the portion of the law that makes religious school students eligible for the scholarships.


The justices Thursday vacated the lower court ruling, saying the challengers had suffered no injury and therefore had no right to sue. They declared unconstitutional a 2012 amendment to state law that permits taxpayers to sue even if they can't show their rights were violated.


Proponents of the law called the ruling a victory for parental choice and liberty. Opponents of the tax credit say the ruling dilutes government accountability.


"We are delighted that the Supreme Court recognized that the trial court erred in allowing this case to proceed in the absence of any personal harm suffered by the plaintiffs from the alleged unconstitutionally of the program," said Senior Attorney Dick Komer, who represented two families seeking scholarships and the Network for Educational Opportunity (NEO), the state's only operational scholarship-granting organization. "


Gilles Bissonnette, lead lawyer for the New Hampshire Civil Liberties Union, said the ruling "will have a significant impact on government accountability."


"In striking down taxpayer standing, the New Hampshire Supreme Court has made it far more difficult for the people of this state to constrain the actions of government bodies when those actions violate sacred constitutional rights."


The justices' position on standing eliminated their need to rule on the constitutionality of the law.


In arguing in support of the law before a packed courtroom in April, Senior Assistant Attorney General Richard Head told the justices that the businesses donate to an independent scholarship organization. In return, they get a credit on their business profits and enterprise taxes amounting to 85 percent of their donations.


Kate Baker runs that independent scholarship fund — the Network for Educational Opportunity. She said in April that 91 percent of the 103 scholarships awarded last year went to children who qualify for free and reduced lunch programs. None of the $128,000 in scholarships was given to students attending religious schools because of the lower court ruling, she said.


Republican Rep. William O'Brien, who championed the education tax credit in his former role as House Speaker, applauded the ruling and the choice it gives parents to send their children to religious or secular schools.


"It will be up to them and not up to vested education industry interests trying to corral all students into failed government schools," O'Brien said.


Scott McGilvray, president of the New Hampshire chapter of the National Education Association, said lawmakers should "protect and improve, not denigrate and defund" the state's public education system.



Apple to unveil next products at Sept. 9 event


Apple's latest product launch will be in a setting that holds a special place in its history, signaling how big this event is for the company.


The Sept. 9 launch, which is expected to feature a larger iPhone and possibly a computerized watch, will be in the same Silicon Valley venue where Apple's late co-founder, Steve Jobs, took the wraps off the original Mac computer 30 years ago. That machine was hailed as a major breakthrough that helped bring personal computing to the masses.


These events have become an annual rite since the 2007 release of the iPhone, but this year's may be the most highly anticipated since the iPad came out in 2010.


A "smartwatch" or other wearable technology would mark the company's first foray into a new product category since the iPad came out.


True to its secretive nature, Apple Inc. isn't giving any clues about what's on the Sept. 9 agenda. "Wish we could say more," Apple said in a succinct white invitation mailed Thursday to reporters and others.


The company scheduled the event at an auditorium about 3 miles from its Cupertino, California, headquarters. It seats about 2,300 people, a far larger capacity than the places that Apple usually uses to show off its new products.


Apple watchers expect an iPhone with a larger screen than the 4-inch display on the previous two generations of the device. The iPhone 6 is expected to feature a 4.7-inch screen to make it more competitive with larger smartphones made by Samsung Electronics and other rivals relying on Google Inc.'s free Android software. There also has been speculation that Apple may release another iPhone model with a 5.5-inch screen.


A bigger-screen iPhone could unleash a surge of sales among Apple fans who own iPhones with smaller displays. Some analysts think Apple could sell at least 70 million units of the iPhone 6 within the first few months after the device hits the market.


Although the iPhone is Apple's biggest moneymaker, much of the intrigue around this year's event surrounds the possibility that the company may release a long-awaited smartwatch that could help monitor people's health and serve as control center for Internet-connected appliances and electronics in the home.


Apple CEO Tim Cook has indicated that he is intrigued with wearable technology devices, but hasn't provided any concrete clues about what the company is working on. Cook has only said he is excited about what Apple's latest inventions, a sentiment echoed by one of his top lieutenants, Eddy Cue, who earlier this year hailed the company's product pipeline as its best in 25 years.


Apple has just been redesigning and adding features to its iPhones, iPads, iPods and Mac since the release of the iPad, raising concerns among investors that the company had run out of new ideas after the October 2011 death of Jobs, who served as its chief visionary.


Those worries have subsided during the past four months as the excitement has built for Apple's new products. Apple's stock hit a new high of $102.78 in Thursday morning's trading before falling back to close at $102.25, up 12 cents for the session. The shares have risen 25 percent in 2014.



Feds to resume leasing for fracking in California


The U.S. Bureau of Land Management will resume issuing oil and gas leases next year for federal lands in California after a new study found limited environmental impacts from fracking and other enhanced drilling techniques, the agency said Thursday.


The move will end a halt that has stood since a federal judge ruled in 2013 that the federal agency failed to follow environmental law in allowing an oil extraction method known as fracking on public land in Monterey County.


The study released Thursday was conducted for the BLM by the state-created California Council on Science and Technology. It concluded the current level of fracking and other so-called well-stimulation techniques by drillers to get more oil out of rock formations did not seem to be poisoning water supplies or increasing earthquake risks in the state.


That is partly because fracking and other methods used in California differ from those in some other states, the researchers concluded.


Fracking involves extracting oil and gas from rock by injecting high-pressure mixtures of water, sand or gravel and chemicals. California drilling typically uses less water and a greater concentration of chemicals in fracking, and drilling is shallower, researchers said. California's different geology also limits the impacts of fracking, they said.


Researcher Jane Long, who led the steering committee that oversaw the study, acknowledged in a phone call with reporters that researchers had drawn their conclusions while lacking some key information.


The oil and gas industry, for example, is not required to disclose all the chemicals, including toxic ones, used in fracking, although a new state law that goes into effect next year mandates that disclosure.


"The conclusions we reached are based on the data available," Long said. "We recognize the data is incomplete."


The Center for Biological Diversity, one of the environmental groups that sued the BLM over the Monterey County fracking, said it was premature for the government to resume selling oil and gas leases before it had harder data.


"This report raises grave concerns about fracking pollution's threat to California's air and water, but it also highlights that government officials have never collected the data needed to determine the risks to our state," Kassie Siegel, director of the center's climate law institute, said in a statement.


Researchers also cast doubt on projections by the U.S. Energy Information Administration on potential oil reserves in California's Monterey Shale, a geological formation that's drawn much interest from oil and gas companies. Early projections of massive amounts of oil in the shell were highly skewed, and more examination is needed before reaching any conclusion, the study said.



Meat processing company plans new Indiana plant


Officials say a meat processing company will build a plant in central Indiana where it could have 200 workers within the next few years.


New Castle-Henry County Economic Development Corp. President Corey Murphy says the project by Boar's Head Meats includes an initial investment of $80 million.


The Courier-Times reports (http://bit.ly/XUZtmx ) the company is buying nearly 65 acres of land in an industrial park near New Castle, about 40 miles east of Indianapolis. The Florida-based company processes deli meats and has been looking at the New Castle location for the past few months.



Visual search to shop: gimmick or game changing?


Imagine using your phone to snap a photo of the cool pair of sunglasses your friend is wearing and instantly receiving a slew of information about the shades along with a link to order them.


It's a great idea — but it doesn't quite work.


Though many companies are trying to make "visual search" a reality, this seemingly simple notion remains elusive.


Take Amazon, which made visual search a key feature in its new Fire smartphone. The e-commerce company says the feature, known as Firefly, can recognize 100 million items. It's similar to a Flow feature Amazon has on its apps for other phones.


So far, Firefly can reliably make out labels of products such as Altoids or Celestial Seasonings tea. That makes it easy to buy items such as groceries online.


But try it on a checkered shirt or anything without sharp corners, and no such luck.


"It works really well when we can match an image to the product catalog," says Mike Torres, an Amazon executive who works on the Fire's software. "Where things are rounded or don't have (visual markers) to latch on to, like a black shoe, it's a little harder to do image recognition."


Visual search is important to retailers because it makes mobile shopping a snap — literally.


It's much easier to take a picture than to type in a description of something you want. Shopping on cellphones and tablets is still a small part of retail sales, but it's growing quickly. That makes it important to simplify the process as much as possible — especially as people look to visual sites such as Instagram and Pinterest as inspiration for purchases.


"Retailers are trying to get the user experience simple enough so people are willing to buy on their phones, not just use it as a research tool," eMarketer analyst Yory Wurmser said.


Mobile software that scans codes, such as QR codes and UPC symbols, are fairly common. Creating apps that consistently recognize images and objects has been more challenging. Forrester analyst Sucharita Mulpuru believes it could take at least three more years.


Since 2009, Google's Goggles app for Android has succeeded in picking up logos and landmarks. But Google says on its website that the app is "not so good" at identifying cars, furniture and clothes in photos.


What's holding visual search back?


The technology works by analyzing visual characteristics, or points, such as color, shape and texture. Amazon's Firefly, for example, identifies a few hundred points to identify a book and up to 1,000 for paintings. U.K. startup Cortexica uses 800 to 1,500 points to create a virtual fingerprint for the image. It then scans its database of about 4 million images for a match.


Without easily identifiable markers, non-labeled objects are difficult to identify. Lighting conditions, photo quality, distance, angles and other factors can throw the technology off. Visual search works best when there is a clearly defined image on a white background.


Some retailers are finding success with visual search by keeping the selection of searchable products limited.


Target's new "In a Snap" app works only with items from its Room Essentials furniture, bedding and decor line. And it works only when snapping a product image in a magazine ad, not when you see the actual product on a shelf. When a shopper scans the ad, items pop up for the shopper to add to a shopping cart.


Heels.com, an online shoe retailer, keeps visual search limited to shoes. Shoppers upload pictures or send links of shoes and are offered similar pairs for sale on the company's website.


"People shop through images nowadays," Heels.com CEO Eric McCoy says. "We want to give them the exact shoe, or something similar."


So, the race is on to perfect the technology that will create smartphone apps that easily recognize objects in a real-world environment.


Cortexica's founders spent seven years on academic research before forming the company in 2009. Since then, it has been trying to mold the technology work more like the human brain when it comes to identifying objects.


"Someday you'll be taking a picture of a whole person, and it will identify the different the things they're wearing and offer recommendations," says Iain McCready, CEO of Cortexica. "That's really challenging technically, but that's what people tell me they really want to do."


The U.K. company was hired by eBay to develop an app that recognizes cars from behind and matches them with similar cars available on eBay.


Next, eBay asked Cortexica to develop a similar app for fashion. The outcome was Find Similar, which analyzes a clothing item's color, texture and shapes to find similar items available for sale. Find Similar is now being used by startup app Style Thief and other Cortexica clients.


Superfish, a startup in Palo Alto, California, counts 12 people with doctorate degrees on its staff and has 10 patents for visual search technology. Its technology can be found at PetMatch, an app that matches photos of pets with local pets available for adoption.


Superfish CEO Adi Pinhas believes it will be normal in two or three years to use your smartphone to search for things visually.


"Your camera will be as smart as the rest of your smartphone," he says.


Once that happens, Forrester's Mulpuru says, it will "unleash a whole new type of e-commerce."



More beds planned for psych patients in Vegas


More hospital beds are ahead for psychiatric patients in Las Vegas, after federal officials approved the governor's request to double the Medicaid reimbursement rate for mental health treatment, officials said Thursday.


Gov. Brian Sandoval had asked federal officials to let the state hike the Medicaid reimbursement from $460 a day to $944 a day. With the approval on Wednesday, Valley Hospital said it will add a 48-bed behavioral health unit by December.


"This substantial increase in the Medicaid reimbursement rate will help relieve pressure from emergency rooms and state facilities and most importantly, guarantee more resources for those who are in need of care," Sandoval Chief of Staff Mike Willden said in a statement.


Valley Hospital spokeswoman Gretchen Papez called the reimbursement rate increase crucial to her hospital's ability to open a psychiatric care unit.


Willden noted the reimbursement increase was among recommendations from the Behavioral Health and Wellness Council, an 18-member panel that Sandoval appointed last December to review patient-dumping complaints stemming from reports that patients at the state's Rawson-Neal Psychiatric Hospital in Las Vegas were given one-way bus tickets to California and other states.


Medicare reimbursements are handled separately by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.


The increase is also expected to relieve crowding at other hospitals that complain that mentally ill patients clog emergency room facilities.


Rawson-Neal is the only state adult psychiatric hospital in southern Nevada, a region home to about 2 million people. It opened in 2006 with 190 beds. The facility now has 211 beds.


Dr. Tracey Green, Nevada state medical chief, told the Las Vegas Review-Journal that there were 110 patients on Wednesday at Las Vegas-area hospitals awaiting mental illness treatment.


Green aide Mac Bybee didn't immediately respond Thursday to messages from The Associated Press.


Green told the newspaper the new reimbursement rate would apply to acute medical hospitals with psychiatric units.


Willden said Thursday that rates paid to free-standing psychiatric facilities with 16 beds or fewer are negotiated separately.



Hotel owners warn sector facing bankruptcy


Hotel owners warn sector facing bankruptcy


The Syndicate of Hotel Owners deplores the dramatic drop in tourism, warning the decline is forcing many hotels toward...



How states fared on unemployment benefit claims


The number of Americans seeking unemployment benefits slipped 1,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 298,000, a low level that signals employers are cutting few jobs and hiring are likely to remain strong.


Here are the states with the biggest decreases in applications. No state reported an increase of more than 1,000. The data is for the week that ended August 16, one week behind the national figures:


States with the biggest decreases:


California: Down 8,771, no reason given.


Florida: Down 1,462, due to fewer layoffs in farming, manufacturing, retail and services.


Illinois: Down 1,442, no reason given.


Michigan: Down 1,401, no reason given.


Texas: Down 1,050, no reason given.



Hariri congratulates new Turkish PM


Hariri congratulates new Turkish PM


Saad Hariri congratulates newly appointed Turkish prime minister, wishing him success in his mission to lead Turkey...



Arab health workers pay tribute to Gazans at Lebanon conference


Aid flows into Gaza after Israel-Hamas truce


Vital humanitarian aid arrives in Gaza as residents began rebuilding their lives following a devastating 50-day war...



Lebanese soldier missing, another wounded in border clashes


Five killed, 34 injured in Lebanon accidents in 24 hours


Five people were killed and 34 injured in 25 separate road accidents across Lebanon in the past 24 hours, the Traffic...



Rapides Regional Medical Center to expand


Rapides Regional Medical Center is expected to begin construction next week on a $12.5 million expansion of its emergency department.


The Town Talk reports (http://townta.lk/1zJJnrl ) the expansion will nearly double the department beds, from 26 to 51, including four psych beds. It will add 16,370 square feet of space and renovate more than 6,000 of the department's current 20,000 square feet.


Rapides Regional Chief Executive Officer Jason Cobb says construction is scheduled to begin Tuesday and take about 18 months, with expected completion in early 2016.


Rapides Regional officials said construction will take place in three phases to minimize impact on patients.



Deliveries roll following deal in supermarket feud


A six-week standoff between thousands of employees of a New England supermarket chain and management has ended with the news that the beloved former CEO is back in control after buying the entire company.


Tractor-trailers bearing the Market Basket logo and laden with the tons of food it will take to restock the chain's 71 stores in Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine, as well as vendor vehicles, pulled up to loading docks before business Thursday, just hours after the announcement late Wednesday that Arthur T. Demoulas paid $1.5 billion for shares of the company owned by the rival family faction, led by cousin Arthur S. Demoulas.


Market Basket said in a statement late Wednesday that Arthur T. Demoulas would be returning to the company and that he and his management team would handle day-to-day operations while the purchase is completed.


"All associates are welcome back to work with the former management team to restore the company back to normal operations," Arthur T. Demoulas said in a statement


"I feel like I won the lottery," Market Basket truck driver Buddy Wemmers told The Boston Globe.


"I'm thrilled, this is epic," said Tom Trainor, a district supervisor, told the Boston Herald.


Gary Sessa, a front end manager at the chain's Tewksbury store, told WFXT-TV that company bakers came in at midnight after hearing the news and started baking cakes that say "Welcome back Artie T: Market Basket Strong."


The company's two current CEOs, Felicia Thornton and Jim Gooch, are to remain in place until the deal is closed, within the "next several months."


Arthur T. Demoulas was ousted in June by a board of directors controlled by Arthur S. Demoulas, causing workers to stage protests. Hundreds of warehouse workers and drivers refused to deliver food, leading to empty shelves and tens of millions in lost revenue. Customers stopped shopping at Market Basket, with some even taping their receipts from competitors in Market Basket store windows.


The crisis even prompted Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick and New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan to help negotiations.


"We are delighted that the parties have reached agreement on terms of sale and resolution of operating authority, so that employees can return to work and customers will once again be able to rely on these stores to meet their needs," the governors said in a joint statement.


After the company fired eight supervisors who helped organize the revolt, public support for the workers intensified.


More than 160 mayors and legislators in Massachusetts and New Hampshire signed petitions agreeing to boycott Market Basket. The stores, usually jam-packed with shoppers attracted by the chain's low prices, have had only a trickle of customers for weeks.


Business analysts said the worker revolt was remarkable at a family-owned, non-union company, particularly because the workers were not seeking higher wages or better benefits, but instead were calling for the return of their CEO. The workers credit Arthur T. Demoulas for treating them like family, keeping prices low and leading the company's success.


Renee Mulhane, a part-time Market Basket employee in Tewksbury, said late Wednesday she was hoping an agreement was reached so that she could return to the job she held for 13 years before being laid off two weeks ago.


"It has been inspiring the amount of support the public has shown," the workers, she said. The situation has "been draining, but inspiring."


Infighting in the Demoulas family has gone on for decades, but this was the first time the family's squabble had such a deep impact on Market Basket stores.


Arthur T. Demoulas had offered to buy the 50.5 percent of the company owned by his cousin and other relatives on his side of the family. Demoulas had said Friday he had submitted his final bid to buy out his rivals' share in the New England company on Aug. 21.


Market Basket stores have long been a fixture in New England. The late Arthur Demoulas, a Greek immigrant who was the grandfather of Arthur T. and Arthur S., opened the first store in Lowell nearly a century ago.



Ibrahim rejects criticism of the Lebanese Army


Ibrahim rejects criticism of the Lebanese Army


The head of Lebanon's General Security slams criticism of the Lebanese Army, while ongoing clashes between Syrian...



SeaPort to provide Tupelo with air service


The U.S. Department of Transportation has selected SeaPort Airlines to provide air service for Tupelo.


SeaPort begins its two-year contract once it determines when to launch its service in Tupelo. Officials hope it can begin next month, but details still are being worked out between SeaPort, outgoing provider Silver Airways, Tupelo Regional Airport and the Transportation Department.


Meanwhile, Greenville hopes to get service through SeaPort. It will be losing Silver service on Oct. 1.


The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reports (http://bit.ly/1q7FtaA ) the Transportation Department selected SeaPort, awarding the Portland, Oregon-based carrier a two-year contract paying $2.5 million annually.



Telefonica ups bid to create Brazil's top operator


Spain's telecommunications company Telefonica has raised its offer to buy Brazilian operator Global Village Telecom, or GVT, from French media conglomerate Vivendi to 7.45 billion euros ($9.82 billion) from 6.7 billion euros previously.


Telefonica S.A. said in a statement Thursday the offer includes 4.66 billion in cash and 12 percent of the share capital in the new company.


The new offer comes after Telecom Italia made a rival bid of 7 billion euros.


Telefonica says combining GVT with its unit Telefonica Brasil would make it the biggest telecom operator in Latin America's largest market. It also reiterated its offer to Vivendi to acquire an 8.3 percent stake it has in Telecom Italia.


Telefonica said the offer initially expires Friday.


Telefonica's shares were down 0.5 percent at 12 euros in Madrid.



Correction: Thailand-Six-Legged Livestock story

The Associated Press



In a story Aug. 25 about insects being raised for food around the world, The Associated Press reported erroneously that the first cricket farm in the United States will open this year in Youngstown, Pennsylvania. The farm is in Youngstown, Ohio, and is now operating.


A corrected version of the story is below:


Edible insects a boon to Thailand's farmers


Do bamboo caterpillars and grasshoppers have a future on dining room tables?


By DENIS D. GRAY


Associated Press


THANON NANG KLARN, Thailand (AP) — Depending solely on the rains to either yield a good rice crop or leave their fields dry and barren, farmers in this village in northeastern Thailand, the country's poorest region, led a precarious and back-breaking existence. Then they discovered bugs.


At Boontham Puthachat's home, six concrete pens seethe with crickets munching on chicken feed, pumpkins and other vegetables — treats to fatten them before they are harvested and sold to hungry humans increasingly eager for a different type of dining experience.


"We haven't become rich, but now we have enough to better take care of our families," Boontham says proudly. "We are self-sufficient."


Boontham's family is one of 30 in this village raising mounds of the profitable crisp and crunchy critters in their backyards, satisfying a big domestic appetite for edible insects, and a slowly emerging international one in countries where most diners would rather starve than sample fried grasshoppers or omelets studded with red ant eggs.


Replicated across the country, these enterprises have spawned a multimillion-dollar industry with more than 20,000 registered farms, most of them small-scale household operations, according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. Averaging an annual output of 7,500 tons in recent years, Thailand leads the world in producing insects for the dining table.


While it may still seem exotic, if not outright repulsive, to many in the Western world, the FAO points out that insects have long been an integral part of human diets in nearly 100 countries, particularly in Asia, Africa and Latin America, with more than 1,600 species consumed.


In China, the use of insects for food and medicine goes back more than 5,000 years. In recent times, cockroach farming has flourished, with some entrepreneurs getting rich by selling dried cockroaches to companies producing cosmetics and traditional medicines.


Besides generating extra income, insects have proven nutritious and farming them is easy on the environment, according to a 2013 FAO report.


"Eating a few insects is like taking a multivitamin," says Patrick B. Durst, a senior FAO official who co-authored a study on Thailand's edible insect industry. A 6-ounce serving of crickets, for example, has 60 percent less saturated fat and twice as much vitamin B-12 as the same amount of ground beef. Farmers don't use antibiotics or growth hormones and — unlike crabs and lobsters — edible insects don't feed on dead animals.


Six-legged livestock, as the agency calls them, are also kinder to the environment than their lesser-legged counterparts. It takes 2,900 gallons of water, 25 pounds of feed and extensive acreage to produce one pound of beef and just one gallon of water, two pounds of feed and a small cubicle to produce a pound of crickets.


And when one suppresses any psychological and cultural biases, many insects taste just fine. This reporter found crickets nicely crisp and nutty (a cross between shrimp and almond), and fried bamboo worms not unlike unsalted potato chips. Palm weevils, to some palates, are likened to bacon soup with a chewy, sweet finish, while insect larvae are rich and buttery. "Mushroomy" is another frequently-used description for some species.


Although a decade ago, insect eating was largely a gimmick - such as a bug embedded in a lollipop - experts say a recent increase in interest in the West is being driven by health and environmental concerns.


Energy bars made from ground-up crickets are now found in some health food stores in the United States, and the first cricket farm opened in Youngstown, Ohio, this year. In San Francisco, the Don Bugito Prehispanic Snackeria can whip up a five-course, all-insect dinner including ice cream with mealworms. A bar in Paris serves insect tapas and a London start-up, Eat Ento, features honey caterpillar and vegetable wraps.


"When I was growing up in the United States, most people would turn up their noses at sushi. Now, it's very chic. People's eating habits do change, so who knows? In 10 to 15 years, eating insects may take off and be regarded as good and cool," says Durst, whose favorites include fried wasp and some crickets with his beer. Creating such a buzz, he says, may involve a celebrity chef putting some palm weevil larvae or giant water bugs on a menu "with someone like Tom Hanks eating them. And then people will say, 'If it's good enough for him, it's good enough for me.'"


Durst is cautious about predictions that edible insects will stave off hunger in parts of the world, but believes that as a supplement, it could become an important component of food security. In countries as far apart as Laos and Ghana, projects are underway to combat malnutrition with insect farming. And there is major growth in the breeding of insects for feed at fish and poultry farms and for bio-security through the release of some species to combat pests.


In Thailand, many people — not just the rural poor — simply enjoy eating some of the 200 different species on offer. Large quantities must be imported from Cambodia, China, Laos and Myanmar and domestically often fetch higher prices than chicken, beef or pork.


This is all good news for farmers like 47-year-old Boontham, who started his business four years ago with a modest capital investment, relatively low-cost input such as cricket feed and little physical labor. He now reaps an annual profit of about $3,000. A neighbor, Chalong Prajitr, says she was able to send her son to university thanks to the extra annual income of $5,000, a considerable sum in northeast Thailand, where annual per capita income is estimated at about $2,200.


"In the past, people depended on rice farming for their source of income. But we get only one harvest a year, while you can harvest crickets once every two months," says Boontham.


And without an irrigation system in the area, a year of drought could spell disaster for farmers. "Crickets," he says, "are less risky."


To boost their business, the village cricket farmers have formed a loose cooperative to share information and facilitate marketing. They also receive help from local authorities and Khon Kaen University, a major center for research on edible insects and efforts to export them, developing products like crickets with Mediterranean herbs and bamboo worms flavored with sour cream.


British businessman Graeme Lee Rose and his Thai wife have seen their own export business to Europe, the U.S. and Australia grow in recent years, especially for cricket powder used in energy bars and biscuits. Still, best sellers for his JR Unique Foods remain novelty items like chocolate-covered scorpions and four-bug kebabs.


"There's been quite a bit of interest and we see a lot of potential but it's not something people are going to be throwing on the barbecue," he says. "It's not going to replace steaks."



Test your bug knowledge with AP's quiz at http://apne.ws/1rBZfOi


Maine pays $7.2M for land on Portland waterfront


The Maine Department of Transportation has paid a Portland businessman $7.2 million for 18 acres of industrial waterfront land it seized from him this spring as part of a seaport terminal expansion project.


The price was more than double what the businessman paid for the same land just two years ago, according to tax records and information obtained by the Portland Press Herald (http://bit.ly/VPxdjH) through a Freedom of Access request.


The businessman, Phineas Sprague Jr., has given the state notice that he will likely challenge the value, a process that could lead to years of litigation.


A lawyer for Sprague says the price was justified because an announcement last year by Eimskip shipping line to make Portland its only port of call in the United States dramatically increased the land's value.



EU struggles with dearth of women in top jobs


Don't be fooled by Angela Merkel. The German chancellor may be the most powerful leader in the European Union, but she hardly paints a true picture of the place of women in EU politics.


EU leaders meet on Saturday to divide top jobs for the next half decade, and after years of paying lip service to increasing equality between the sexes, the problem of inequality is still plain for all to see at these meetings — where are the women?


"If you look at the family picture of these European summits for the past few years, there always is this blot of grey men in lookalike suits and the color of only a few women," said European political science Professor Hendrik Vos of Ghent University.


One summit won't change much, he said. "It will certainly not be the major breakthrough for women."


Within the EU's bureaucracy, Baroness Catherine Ashton now is the most recognizable woman among the EU officials. The foreign policy chief flies across the world and hobnobs with the great and powerful to deal with anything from Iran's nuclear program to the fighting in Ukraine and the Middle East.


She is leaving, and whether she will be replaced by another woman is one of the key questions for the government leaders at this summit, which was called because a first attempt to divvy up the 30-odd jobs among nations, political affiliations — and gender — ended inconclusively.


Beyond the foreign policy slot, the 28 leaders will be looking for someone to take the top job of EU Council president, the main representative for the EU, as incumbent Herman Van Rompuy is at the end of his term. They will also want a financial wizard to head the Eurogroup, the gathering of finance ministers from the 18 countries that use the euro. And a slew of EU Commissioners, the EU executives in charge of policy in fields like trade, farming and culture, will also need to be named, if not this weekend then over the coming days. The new Commission starts in November.


Former Luxembourg prime minister Jean-Claude Juncker has already been picked to lead the Commission, the executive body that handles day-to-day issues for the EU, and his prime concern is getting more women on his 28-member team.


There were nine women on the outgoing team of 28 and with the days ticking down to Saturday's summit only five of the 28 nations have committed a woman as their designated Commissioner — Sweden, Bulgaria, Italy, Czech Republic and Slovenia. That puts Juncker in a tough spot, because now only the candidates put forth by national governments can be considered for the Commissioner jobs.


The current female Commissioners have set up a campaign to have at least 10 women in the group. They sent Juncker a joint statement ending with "You deserve a flying start — and with 10 or more female Commissioners in your team, you will get it."


Juncker will need to make a strong stand for women to get his Commission candidates approved by the European Parliament, which has the power to reject his team. "Parliament will not accept a gentlemen's club," European Parliament President Martin Schulz warned.


So Juncker could well face a struggle.


Facing a dearth of women candidates from national capitals, Juncker is going to take a different approach to the issue: offering women the more prestigious jobs.


"If, in the end, we still have far fewer women than men in the new Commission, I must compensate," Juncker told the Austrian newspaper Kurier this week. "Female commissioners will then very certainly have a very good chance of an important portfolio." And since important jobs equal national clout in Brussels, it might sway some late holdout nations to nominate women.


Saturday's summit could provide some hope for more equality since Italy's Foreign Minister Federica Mogherini is a chief candidate for taking over from Ashton, and Denmark's Prime Minister Helle Thorning Schmidt has an outside chance to succeed Van Rompuy.


"Perhaps there is a chance for those two positions and then you would have two women in important jobs," said Vos.


Still the road will be long, especially since the EU outlines in report after report that there are still major gender discrepancies in just about all major sectors of European life.


"If you have this gender inequality in society, you will have it in politics too," said Vos.



Warrant out for ISIS commander over clashes in Lebanon's Arsal



BEIRUT: Lebanon Thursday issued arrest warrants for two Syrian nationals, including the ISIS commander whose apprehension by the Lebanese Army ignited gunbattles in the Bekaa Valley border town of Arsal earlier in August.


Military Investigative Judge Imad Zein issued arrest warrants for Imad Ahmad Jomaa, an ISIS commander in Syria’s Qalamoun region, and Ahmad Jomaa. According to a judicial source there is no relation between the two men.


Both Jomaas were charged with belonging to a terror group, carrying out terrorist activities, as well as plotting the Aug. 2 attack on Arsal that resulted in the deaths civilians as well as the killing and kidnapping of policemen and Lebanese soldiers.


Zein also charged them with undermining the authority of the state and trying to establish an Islamist emirate in Arsal.


The judicial source refrained from revealing the content of the confessions made by either suspect in order to protect secrecy of the investigation.


Zein will continue to interrogate the remaining 18 suspects – 14 Syrians and four Lebanese – held in connection to the Arsal clashes, the source added.


He said the interrogations would be carried out in batches beginning next week.



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Groups to discuss oil pipelines during bridge walk


Environmentalists will use the annual Mackinac Bridge walk to raise awareness about oil pipelines in the area and urge Gov. Rick Snyder to make sure they won't leak into the Great Lakes.


Representatives of the "Oil and Water Don't Mix" coalition say they'll attend the Labor Day event to discuss two lines that run beneath the Straits of Mackinac, carrying about 23 million gallons of oil each day.


They are owned by Enbridge Energy Partners LP, which also owns a pipeline that ruptured in southwestern Michigan in 2010 and spilled oil into the Kalamazoo River.


The coalition will have a petition urging Snyder to protect the lakes from a spill from the lines.


Enbridge says they're safe and has answered a lengthy list of questions about them from state agencies.



HK graft cops raid pro-democracy media boss's home


Hong Kong anti-corruption police on Thursday searched the home of a pro-democracy media magnate who is an outspoken critic of Beijing.


Wielding search warrants, officers from the Independent Commission Against Corruption paid a morning visit to the homes of Jimmy Lai and Lai's top aide Mark Simon, Simon said.


The timing raised eyebrows because it comes days before a key decision by Beijing on direct elections for the leader of Hong Kong, a special administrative region of China. It also comes a month after a trove of documents was leaked to competing news outlets detailing donations by Lai to local pro-democracy political parties and groups.


Lai told reporters camped outside his home in an upscale neighborhood that "ICAC was here. They've all gone now and there is no further comment."


Lai's Next Media owns popular newspaper Apple Daily, which is frequently critical of Beijing.


Simon said ICAC officers spent three hours going through the computers in his home, but they "took away nothing, they downloaded nothing." He did not know if anything was taken from Lai's home.


On Sunday, China's legislature is expected to unveil a proposal to allow Hong Kong voters, rather than a committee of pro-Beijing elites, to vote for their leader.


But the proposal is widely expected to require candidates to be vetted by a committee loyal to Beijing, which will anger democracy groups calling for genuine democracy and set the stage for a confrontation between the two sides.


Simon said the police searches were "a wonderful diversion two days, three days before what's not going to be very popular is announced."


An ICAC spokeswoman said the agency would not comment on individual cases.


Shares of Next Media have been suspended from trading on the Hong Kong stock exchange, pending an "announcement related to inside information of the company," it said.



Lebanese Army: US military aid to be delivered Friday


Five killed, 34 injured in Lebanon accidents in 24 hours


Five people were killed and 34 injured in 25 separate road accidents across Lebanon in the past 24 hours, the Traffic...



Olive Branch airport manager retires


David Taylor, Olive Branch airport manager for 30 years, is retiring after a successful career at one of the busiest runways in Mississippi.


The 65-year-old Taylor tells The Commercial Appeal (http://bit.ly/VSkBYQ ) is looking into another job option. His plans aren't yet set, but September is booked for relaxation.


Taylor had a front-row seat on Olive Branch's growth explosion, with the airport as a key player.


The 6,000-foot runway was 2,000 feet shorter when Taylor was hired by Belz Enterprises, the airport's owner, in 1984. The then 11-year-old airport had two hangars and 27 airport-based planes. Belz had acquired the airport a year earlier.


The airport today is home to 56 hangars and 160 airplanes. Last year, the airport recorded 70,000 takeoffs and landings, making it busier than Jackson.



Five killed, 34 injured in Lebanon accidents in 24 hours


Syria ready to help Lebanon fight jihadists: envoy


Syria is willing to help Lebanon in its fight against Islamist militants, Syrian Ambassador Ali Abdul-Karim Ali said...



German unemployment ticks up slightly in August


Germany's Federal Labor Office says the country's jobless rate ticked up slightly to 6.7 percent in August as 30,000 more people joined the ranks of the unemployed.


The office said Thursday there were 2.90 million people out of work in August overall, and as a result the unemployment rate inched 0.1 percentage point higher from July.


When adjusted for seasonal factors, the jobless rate has remained steady at 6.7 percent since March.


Federal Labor Office head Frank-Juergen Weise says he doesn't expect much change in Europe's largest economy over the coming period.



Large Maine wind farm gets preliminary approval


A proposal to build what would be Maine's largest energy-generating wind farm has received preliminary approval from state environmental regulators.


The Department of Environmental Protection's draft decision, issued Wednesday by Commissioner Patricia Aho, means the department could issue a final decision as early as Sept. 5. The deadline is Sept. 8.


Blue Sky West, a Boston-based developer and subsidiary of First Wind Holdings Inc., has been seeking approval for the $400 million, 62-turbine project proposed for Bingham and surrounding communities since May 2013.


A company spokesman tells the Kennebec Journal (http://bit.ly/XUQpxZ ) the project does not yet have financing.


The 206-megawatt project has faced legal challenges over financing and environmental impacts.


The project could be appealed to the state Board of Environmental Protection if it receives final approval.



Dubai port operator H1 profits up 26 percent


Dubai-based port operator DP World said Thursday its profit rose 26 percent in the first half of the year as it was able to process more cargo thanks to new capacity and a pick-up in global trade.


The government-backed cargo handler said it earned $332 million in profit attributable to its owners during the first six months of 2014, up from $264 million during the same period a year earlier.


DP World ranks among the largest port operators, with a heavy emphasis on fast-growing markets in the developing world. It operates more than 65 sea cargo terminals on six continents, with additional projects being developed in India, Africa, Europe and the Middle East. That broad geographic footprint gives it a window onto trade flows around the world.


Its holdings include the new London Gateway port in Britain and Embraport in Brazil. It also runs Dubai's sprawling Jebel Ali seaport, the busiest in the Middle East.


"The addition of new capacity and a pick-up in global trade has resulted in a return to robust volume growth, which has translated into an impressive financial performance," Chairman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem said.


Revenue for the first half increased to $1.66 billion, up from $1.51 billion a year earlier.


Increased cargo volumes were a key driver of those sales. The company handled the equivalent of 13.9 million standard 20-foot shipping containers at ports it controls during the first half of the year, compared to 12.8 million containers during the same period a year earlier.


In the short term, CEO Mohammed Sharaf cautioned that geopolitical issues could prove challenging through the end of the year. But executives voiced confidence in the company's future, saying it is well-placed to take advantage of the industry's long-term potential.


Sharaf described the company's finances as strong, saying its high cash flow gives it the ability to invest in growth "and the flexibility to make new investments should the right opportunities arise."



Follow Adam Schreck on Twitter at http://bit.ly/1mdSWtE.


A flavor out of favor: Dog meat fades in S. Korea


For more than 30 years, chef and restaurant owner Oh Keum-il built her expertise in cooking one traditional South Korean delicacy: dog meat.


In her twenties, Oh traveled around South Korea to learn dog meat recipes from each region. During a period of South Korean reconciliation with North Korea early last decade, she went to Pyongyang as part of a business delegation and tasted a dozen different dog dishes, from dog stew to dog taffy, all served lavishly at the Koryo, one of the North's best hotels.


She adapted famous dishes to include dog meat, replacing beef with dog in South Korea's signature meat and rice dish bibimbap. But the 58-year-old's lifelong experience with a food eaten for centuries in Korea is about to become history.


Daegyo, the famous dog meat restaurant she opened in a Seoul alley in 1981, will serve its last bowl of boshintang, or dog stew, on Friday, a reflection of the challenges facing a trade that is neither legal nor explicitly banned under South Korean laws governing livestock and food processing.


Opposite views on dogs as either for eating or petting have co-existed in the country's recent history, feeding a controversy that becomes most bitter in the summer. On three "dog days," which are among the hottest times of the year, many South Koreans queue for the dish of shredded dog meat and vegetables in hot red soup, believing it gives strength to bear the heat.


Animal rights activists protest nearby, urging people not to eat man's best friend. The closure of Oh's restaurant, dubbed by a local newspaper as the "Holy Land of boshintang" and frequented by two former presidents, Lee Myung-bak and late Roh Moo-hyun, shows one view of dogs is gaining more traction among young South Koreans.


"There is too much generational gap in boshintang," said Oh. "There are no young customers."


Dogs are also food in countries such as China and Vietnam. The long tradition of eating the meat in South Korea is such that a respected 17th century book on Korean medicine extols its health benefits. But today it is an increasingly tough sell and a less attractive dining option for young South Koreans. Oh plans to reopen her restaurant as a Korean beef barbecue diner.


Animal rights groups have also highlighted that some of the 2 million or so dogs eaten in South Korea each year suffer painful and inhumane deaths.


Most young people eat chicken soup on a dog day and even those who eat dog tend to refrain from talking about it openly, according to Moon Jaesuk, a 32-year researcher who enjoyed eating dog meat before he moved to Seoul.


"There's a burden in a group of 10 or 20 people to suggest eating dog, like making a sexual joke," he said. "It's not easy to talk about eating dog when there are a lot of people."


Young South Koreans grow up watching TV shows about raising puppies and other pets, which sapped appetite for dog meat, said Oh.


Her restaurant used to sell as many as 700 bowls of dog stew a day in the 1980s. These days it is less than half that. Young people also enjoy a diverse dining culture unlike previous generations that came of age amid the poverty that followed the 1950-1953 Korean War.


Meanwhile, Nonghyup Economic Research Institute forecasts the pet business in South Korea to swell to 6 trillion won ($5.9 billion) by 2020, from 0.9 trillion won in 2012. It says one in five South Korean households have either a pet dog or cat.


Sometimes the differing perceptions of dogs become a source of family tension. Kim Dongyoung, 30, said she gets into fierce arguments with her grandfather over her lap dog.


"Whenever he saw my dog at home, he would say it's the size of one bowl of hot soup," Kim said. She recently pulled out of signing a lease for an apartment when she saw it was in the same building as a dog stew restaurant.


There is no official data on the dog meat industry, but people who raise dogs as livestock or supply dog meat to diners say its consumption is in decline.


Butcher Shin Jang-gun who supplies dog cuts to restaurants said the number of merchants in the dog meat trading business has shrunk to half of what it was. He keeps a list of between 700 and 800 restaurants in Seoul, some current and others potential clients, and believes there was once more than 1,500.


His father sold only dog meat for several decades. After Shin inherited the butcher shop in southern Seoul in 2002, he added goat meat to offset declining dog meat sales.


"Dog is not an industry with a long-term future," Shin said. "New generations don't eat a lot."


Choi Young-im, secretary general of an association of dog farmers, said dog meat, which used to be most popular after beef, pork and chicken, has been overtaken by duck but will remain a fixture on menus.


Choi estimated between 2 million and 2.5 million dogs are consumed in South Korea each year.


With one fewer dog meat restaurant in downtown Seoul, Oh feels sad that young people are losing touch with the tradition.


"Even now when I see young people at my restaurant, I feel so happy," she said.



Report: Student loan education efforts lacking


A new report finds that most universities aren't offering students enough help in understanding the financial burden posed by student loans.


Two Kansas State University professors helped write the white paper, called "Financial Literacy in Higher Education: The Most Successful Models and Methods for Gaining Traction."


The report outlines different ways to educate students, ranging from classroom-based programs to individual counseling. The paper also identified a need for financial education at universities, noting that many universities do not have a program.


Associate professor Sonya Britt says financial issues are one of the top reasons that students drop out of college. She also stressed that most incoming college students haven't benefited from financial literacy courses in high school and lack basic money management skills.



Survey: Americans Are Grumpy About The Economy



Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.





A new survey by Rutgers University found two out of three Americans felt no improvement in the last year. And only about one in four expect things to get better in the year to come.



Rep. Ryan Cautions Obama Not To Issue Immigration Executive Order



Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.





Steve Inskeep talks to House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan about the prospects for an immigration bill. On Friday, Morning Edition will take to Ryan about his ideas for fighting poverty.



Colo. Democrats Bet On Immigration To Boost Udall's Re-Election Bid



Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.





Sen. Mark Udall's campaign has been hitting Republican Rep. Cory Gardner hard on the issue, and the state's Latino community is once again thought to be the constituency that could decide the race.



Former Border Protection Insider Alleges Corruption, Distortion In Agency



James Tomsheck poses in his office in Washington in June 2009. At the time, he was assistant commissioner for internal affairs with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.i i



James Tomsheck poses in his office in Washington in June 2009. At the time, he was assistant commissioner for internal affairs with U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Alex Brandon/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Alex Brandon/AP

James Tomsheck poses in his office in Washington in June 2009. At the time, he was assistant commissioner for internal affairs with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.



James Tomsheck poses in his office in Washington in June 2009. At the time, he was assistant commissioner for internal affairs with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.


Alex Brandon/AP


Two months ago, James Tomsheck was pushed out of his job as internal affairs chief for U.S. Customs and Border Protection.


At the time, authorities criticized him for not doing enough to discipline agents.


But now Tomsheck tells a very different story: about a culture that goes out of its way to evade legal restraints.


Use of force by law enforcement agents along the Southwest border has drawn attention and criticism recently, after reports that Border Patrol agents shot and killed unarmed migrants and faced no consequences.


Since 2010, 28 people have been killed by agents and officers. Tomsheck says he believes about a quarter of the incidents are highly suspicious.


"I believe the system was clearly engineered to interfere with our efforts to hold the Border Patrol accountable," he says.


When asked how that could happen, he responded: "Some persons in leadership positions in the Border Patrol were either fabricating or distorting information to give the outward appearance that it was an appropriate use of lethal force when in fact it was not."


Things like exaggerating the threat an unarmed migrant posed, he says. Or claiming a migrant was on the U.S. side of the border, when he was actually in Mexico.


And in describing how Border Protection leaders forced him out after eight years on the job, Tomsheck doesn't mince words:


"I think there's every indication that my removal from the position ... was an effort to identify a scapegoat."


A scapegoat, he says, to silence criticism that few, if any, agents face justice for killing unarmed migrants on the border.


What's wrong overall, Tomsheck says, is the culture. After the Sept. 11 attacks, Border Protection agents and officers thought of themselves as an extension of the military. "The phrase was frequently used — a 'paramilitary border security force' or a 'paramilitary homeland security force.' "


One that he says operated outside normal legal bounds. "I believe that has caused them to believe that they are separate and distinct from the federal law enforcement community," he says. "And not bound by the same constitutional restraints regarding use of force."


For some of the very same reasons, CBP leaders recently brought in an FBI agent to review use of force, launched more training programs, and said they'd try to jump-start an internal affairs unit that allegedly lost its way under Tomsheck.


For his part, Tomsheck says he supports reforms to ensure the CBP is acting within the law. That includes putting body cameras on agents to capture images of their interactions with people on the border and bringing in independent investigators to review use-of-force complaints.


The internal affairs unit he ran for eight years is now headed by an FBI agent, brought in by management to lead a sweeping review of operations.


Tomsheck suggests he start by looking for corruption within the Customs and Border Protection ranks.


A significant number — 5 or 10 percent — of agents and officers, he says, are likely to be corrupted by money or family ties.


"That is a number which I believe is a conservative estimate based on the number of unsuitable persons who have entered the agency by virtue of hiring surges, most of which occurred after 2006," he says.


Hiring surges so urgent that the CBP failed to administer polygraph exams to job candidates. Exams that he says could have rooted out past criminal behavior or connections to drug cartels and human trafficking networks.


Before the polygraphs, Tomsheck says, about 20 percent of candidates got weeded out as unsuitable. But after the polygraphs became a regular part of screening, that number rose to more than half.


Now he's the one with human resource problems. After being ousted for allegedly failing to do enough to investigate misconduct, Tomsheck filed a complaint with the federal whistleblower office. He's speaking out now to try to clear his name.


"To hear it suggested that I didn't properly discipline persons — when I know that neither myself or anyone in the office of internal affairs has anything to do with discipline — was quite difficult to hear," he says.


Tomsheck says he prepared reports on use of force and other misconduct, which he says was part of his job. By his account, higher-ups are the ones who were supposed to make decisions about whether to investigate abuse and corruption.


A spokesman for Customs and Border Protection says he can't discuss personnel issues. But he says the agency is committed to openness and accountability.




Chaldean Patriarch Sako says US behind ISIS



BEIRUT: Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Sako has unleashed a vehement attack on the West, accusing the United States of supporting ISIS.


“America is behind ISIS, which is the crime of the century, and they want to brazenly displace Christians from their homes and churches,” Sako told the local newspaper Ad-Diyar, saying the reason was that the West’s labor force needed immigrants.


“The West watched us and it seemed they have ignored our suffering,” he complained. “But we will not leave our land, whatever the sacrifices.”


Sako also criticized Muslim countries for lack of support.


“Our Muslim neighbors did not help us,” he said as he urged Muslim preachers to issue a religious ruling against the killing of innocent people.


“Issuing a fatwa preventing Muslims from killing fellow Muslims is not enough,” Sako said.


He also slammed Wednesday’s meeting that gathered Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai with representatives of the five permanent members at the U.N. Security Council.


“They were not helpful. We don’t want statements,” he said of the meeting, which he also attended, in Bkirki, the seat of the Maronite Church.


“America is responsible for what happened to the Christians in the East. And the patriarchs did not beg Arabs nor others to instill [peoples’] rights,” Sako said.



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Arsal, EDL workers topping Lebanon's Cabinet agenda


Arsal, EDL workers topping Lebanon's Cabinet agenda


Rumors of renewed fighting in Arsal and the crippling strike at EDL are expected to figure prominently in an open...



Maronite patriarch calls for caretaker status in Lebanon presidency


BEIRUT: Lebanese presidents should remain in power until a successor is elected, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai said Thursday, calling to amend the Constitution in a bid to prevent future vacuums in the country’s top post.


"We have always said that it is the duty of the Parliament to convene and elect a head of state. Parliamentarians should seek to avoid vacancy in the presidential post at the end of the six year tenure, by amending the Constitution to allow the outgoing president to remain in his post until a successor is elected," Rai told reporters at the airport before heading to the Vatican to brief the Holy See on the conditions of Christians in the Middle East and the presidential deadlock.


Under the Lebanese Constitution, the president's authority falls to the Cabinet when the presidency is vacant. During the current presidential vacuum, the Cabinet has struggled to exercise either its functions or the additional ones of the presidency, requiring complete consensus among all 24 ministers to pass any decrees.


Rai said that he hopes that “after the election of the president, if he is elected, the lawmakers would first work on making presidential candidature mandatory, as it is the case for Parliament hopefuls," in a reference to Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun, regarded as the undeclared presidential candidate of the Hezbollah-led March 8 Coalition.


Deep political divisions over a compromise candidate have prevented Parliament from electing a successor to President Michel Sleiman, whose six-year tenure expired on May 25.


During his five-day visit to the Holy See, Rai will report to the pope on the outcome of his trip to Iraq earlier this month and the recommendations made at a meeting of Eastern churches on the plight of Christians suffering persecution by takfiri groups in the Middle East.


Rai will also attend a conference of world parliamentarians to discuss the persecution of Christians in the Middle East, especially in Iraq and Syria, seeking Vatican assistance to address the crisis.


"The Vatican is a state with moral and diplomatic powers. It is the role of the Holy See to move the minds and hearts of the international community and bring countries to cooperate in order to put an end to the acts of terrorist takfiri groups," Rai said.


Asked to comment on accusations from Iraqi church leaders that the U.S. was behind the creation of ISIS, Rai said the international idleness in the face of the threat stirred doubts about alleged complicity.


"Seeing heads and hands [of Christians and other minorities] being chopped off [by ISIS] while the international community led by the U.S. is watching idly, make us question the usefulness of the United Nations, the Security Council and the International Criminal Court," Rai said. "The international community is has an obligation to protect the people and their rights."


Rai and the patriarchs of Eastern churches raised the alarm at a meeting with envoys of the five permanent Security Council members and the U.N. secretary-general’s representative in Lebanon Wednesday during which they appealed for international action to stop the slaughter of Christians at the hands of militants from ISIS.


The Maronite patriarch led a delegation of church leaders who visited Iraq earlier this month to show solidarity with thousands of Christians who had fled the advance of the Islamist militants in Mosul.



Global stock markets muted, Qantas surges


Global stock markets were muted Thursday ahead of U.S. economic data and possible policy announcements from Japan.


KEEPING SCORE: France's CAC 40 slipped 0.4 percent to 4,377.14 in early European trading, while Britain's FTSE 100 was down 0.2 percent to 6,818.81. Germany's DAX fell 0.6 percent to 9,508.15. Wall Street was set to retreat, with Dow futures down 0.1. S&P 500 futures were off 0.2 percent.


ASIA'S DAY: The Nikkei 225, the benchmark for the Tokyo Stock Exchange, inched down 0.5 percent to close at 15,459.86. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.7 percent to 24,741.00 while South Korea's Kospi rose 0.04 percent to 2,075.76. Sydney's S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.5 percent to 5,624.40. Markets in Thailand and the Philippines fell but Singapore shares rose.


US OUTLOOK: Revised data on U.S. economic growth for the April-June quarter is scheduled to be released later Thursday. But markets are more interested in employment data due for release the following week.


ANALYST TAKE: Hideyuki Ishiguro, strategist with Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo, said action was muted in the absence of market-moving news, and traders looking to the release of U.S. employment data next week. "Players are also waiting for signs on how long the weak yen might last," he said on NTV news. Expectations the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates next year has contributed to renewed weakness in the yen recently, which is plus for Japan's exporters because it raises the value of their overseas earnings.


JAPAN POLITICS: Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is expected to announce his new Cabinet ministers next week, which could signal what's in store for his so-called "Abenomics" policies that have helped Japan's economic revival and stock prices. The policies are believed to have helped the yen weaken and prices to rise in Japan, curbing the negative spiral of deflation.


QANTAS FLIES: Qantas Airways surged 7 percent in Sydney despite reporting a record loss that stemmed from tough domestic competition, a struggling long-haul business and a massive writedown of the value of its fleet. Investors welcomed confirmation it would separate its domestic and troubled international businesses, possibly attracting new investors to the long-haul operation.


ENERGY, CURRENCIES: Benchmark U.S. crude for October delivery was down 34 cents at $93.54 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The euro rose to $1.3209 from $1.3192 late Wednesday. The dollar dropped to 103.72 yen from 103.91 yen.



Future of 'Big Oil' suit at stake as panel meets


The committee that nominates members for a south Louisiana flood control authority has two vacancies to fill and the people it nominates to fill them could provide Gov. Bobby Jindal with the votes to kill a lawsuit against dozens of oil, gas and pipeline companies.


At a Thursday meeting, the nominating committee is expected to consider applicants to fill the expired term of Paul Kemp on the Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority-East. Kemp supports the authority's lawsuit aimed at making the oil industry pay for coastal restoration work in areas where companies drilled and dredged.


Kemp has applied for another term on the board. Thursday's meeting could determine whether the governor will have an alternative choice who could end the flood authority's current 5-4 majority in favor of the suit.



Buy a ticket? Psh! NFL teams selling memberships


The change made by the Kansas City Chiefs a few years ago was subtle — one word, really — yet it ushered a pronounced change in the way the franchise viewed its most important fans.


Season-ticket holders became known as "season-ticket members."


Suddenly, the entire paradigm shifted. No longer were Chiefs fans merely customers, buying a ticket, attending a game and then heading home afterward. Rather they began to feel as though they were part of the franchise, just as integral to the success or failure of the team as quarterback Alex Smith, coach Andy Reid or even general manager John Dorsey.


And by offering those members exclusive gifts and experiences, the Chiefs have rebuilt their season-ticket rolls at a time when many franchises are having a hard time filling stadiums.


"Four or five years ago, we started a process of saying, 'Let's look at season tickets and really research what drives them. What drives behavior?'" Chiefs president Mark Donovan told The Associated Press. "'What do they value versus what do we think they value?' And one of the things we learned was feeling valued was a key driver. That's been the impetus for our approach."


The result? Free personalized jerseys for every season-ticket member, much to the chagrin of Donovan's merchandising department. The establishment the "Kingdom Pass," which not only serves as a game-day ticket but provides discounts on merchandise and concessions. And a system that allows members to accumulate points that are redeemable for memorabilia and events.


While the NFL does not disclose season-ticket information, a person familiar with the numbers who spoke on condition of anonymity told the AP that the average franchise sells about 45,000 in a given year. The Chiefs will surpass 60,000 season-ticket members this season.


"I can tell you we're going to break records," Donovan said. "Now, that's a credit to our fans. But it's a credit to all the other things. It's creating value. It's not only a great product on the field, but also making sure you deliver when they're in the building."


Other franchises are certainly taking note.


In the past couple of years, the Cowboys began conference calls with owner Jerry Jones and coach Jason Garrett exclusive to their members. Club and suite holders are granted access to the field after games, giving them a chance to toss footballs as if they're Tony Romo.


The Vikings are contemplating similar programs during the construction of their new $1 billion stadium, set to open in 2016. Personal seat licenses are helping to defray the costs.


"We know we're in a battle with HD-TV and your couch. The NFL is a great made-for-TV sport," said Lester Bagley, the Vikings' vice president of stadium development. "So what we've focused on, particularly in the design of the new stadium, is the fan experience. We want to incentivize people to come to the stadium, enjoy the pregame festivities and enjoy the game experience."


The changing approach to season-ticket holders has trickled down to other pro leagues, many of which are also trying to combat sagging attendance caused by those 60-inch televisions.


The Atlanta Hawks, for example, offer membership exclusive "meet the team" events, town halls with general manager Danny Ferry, open gyms and private entrances to Philips Arena.


The San Diego Padres have likewise adopted the idea, offering member picnics on the field at Petco Park, the opportunity to take batting practice and unique spring training experiences.


"The secondary ticket market has been a big driver of this," said Brian Lafemina, the NFL's senior vice president for club business development. "If you were selling entrance to 10 games, you were selling something you could buy on the secondary market, and you could pick only the games you wanted, and sit in the seats you wanted to. You didn't need to be a season-ticket holder.


"Now, your ticket is a portal to your favorite team. That changes the dynamic."


In Kansas City, the Chiefs are able to determine when fans arrive at parking tollgates, pass through the turnstiles and purchase concessions, all by logging swipes of their Kingdom Pass.


There are a couple of benefits to the "Big Brother" system.


First, the Chiefs can better connect to fans. If they know someone buys two hot dogs and a soda every game, they can have an employee waiting with the order at their seat when those fans arrive. It's a small gesture but one that might convince them to renew the following season.


Second, the Chiefs are able to shape the entire game-day experience by incentivizing specific actions. If fans arrive early, for example, they can swipe their Kingdom Pass for bonus points. In turn, those early arrivals help to ease traffic congestions heading into the stadium.


"Season-ticket holders have always been the sort of lifeblood of our organization," said Seth Rabinowitz, senior vice president of marketing for the Jets. "They create the home-field advantage for us. They propel the team. We've had a heightened understanding of that in recent years."


In fact, the Jets modeled part of their season-ticket system after the Chiefs. But they are also taking incentives a step further by rewarding points for directly affecting the game, such as causing an opposing offense to commit a false penalty due to crowd noise.


"With any business, customers continue to raise their expectations for what they get in return for their patronage," Rabinowitz said. "I think everybody is starting to address that."


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AP Sports Writers Schuyler Dixon and Jon Krawczynski contributed to this report.



AP NFL website: www.pro32.ap.org and http://bit.ly/1f8IcYq .