Tuesday, 2 September 2014

AP Photos: More Atlantic City slots stop spinning


Gamblers at two Atlantic City casinos got in their final bets over Labor Day weekend as Revel Casino Hotel and the Showboat Casino Hotel became the latest victims of Atlantic City's drastic slide.


Atlantic City, which started the year with 12 casinos, will have eight before summer is over. Trump Plaza received final state approval Tuesday to close on Sept. 16, and the Atlantic Club closed in January.


Staffers shut Revel down Tuesday morning, pulling yellow chains across its entrances and herding the small handful of gamblers that remained toward the doors.


The casino broke ground just before the Great Recession. It ran out of money halfway through construction and had to drop its plans for a second hotel tower while scrambling for the remaining $1 billion or so needed to finish the project. When it opened, Revel was so laden with debt that it couldn't bring in enough revenue to cover it.


The Mardi Gras-themed Showboat shut down Sunday after 27 years on the Atlantic City Boardwalk. It was one of four casinos in the city owned by Caesars Entertainment.


One of the final songs piped in over the Showboat's loudspeakers: Queen's "Another One Bites The Dust."


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Teen due for sentencing in trade center climb


A teenager who sneaked to the top of the 1 World Trade Center tower is set to be sentenced to community service for a climb that fueled questions about security at the nation's tallest building.


Justin Casquejo was due Wednesday in a Manhattan court. He pleaded guilty in July to breaking a city misdemeanor law against scaling tall buildings without permission and was promised a sentence of 23 days of community service.


His March escapade came about a week before three men were arrested on charges of skydiving off the as-yet-unfinished skyscraper, the centerpiece of one of the country's most security-conscious sites. Together, the episodes stirred officials' concern and prompted security changes at the trade center.


Casquejo, a 16-year-old extreme-climbing aficionado from Weehawken, New Jersey, slipped through a small gap in a construction fence early on March 16, then used a ladder, scaffolding, elevators and stairs to climb the skyscraper, court papers said. Along the way, he got past an inattentive security guard, authorities said.


He spent about two hours atop the tower before heading down — and encountering a security guard on his way.


In the aftermath, the guard Casquejo eluded was fired, and the building's head of security resigned. Both worked for a private company protecting the building. The government agency that owns the trade center, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, also made changes, hiring a company that guards its airports to handle security at trade center entrances.



Japan PM selects new Cabinet, 5 women picked


Japan's prime minister picked a record-matching five women for his Cabinet.


The appointments announced Wednesday are sending the strongest message yet about Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's determination to revive the economy by getting women on board as workers and leaders.


The 18-member Cabinet includes Yuko Obuchi, the daughter of a former prime minister, as the trade and economy minister, while retaining some key positions.


Having five women in the Cabinet is extremely rare for Japan, and is the record number set in 2001. The previous Cabinet, dissolved earlier in the day, had two women ministers.


Abe has stressed his policies of economic growth center around utilizing the talent of women and empowering them. He has set the goal of having women in 30 percent of leadership positions by 2020.



Maduro replaces Venezuela's longtime oil chief


President Nicolas Maduro has replaced Venezuela's longtime oil boss and economic czar as part of a cabinet shakeup sidelining the most-prominent voice within his administration for pragmatic reforms to tackle a deep economic crisis.


Rafael Ramirez had served as oil minister and president of the state-run oil giant PDVSA for more than a decade, earning a reputation as a loyal servant of the late Hugo Chavez's socialist revolution. He saw his power within the government expand dramatically a year ago when Maduro tapped him as vice president for economic policy, giving him effective oversight of everything from the country's foreign currency reserves to the price of gasoline.


As part of what Maduro called a new assignment for the 50-year-old engineer, Ramirez was designated instead foreign minister and given a newly-created position of vice president for political sovereignty.


Maduro's cabinet shuffle Tuesday night was widely-anticipated after his ministers collectively offered up their resignations two weeks ago. But few Venezuelans expected such a dramatic demotion for Ramirez, who looked on long-faced as the president thanked him for his past service in front of an audience of top military and civilian officials at the presidential palace.


Ramirez's loss of responsibility for the world's largest oil reserves and 95 percent of Venezuela's export earnings means investors who had been hoping that recent economic pain would spur a pro-business tilt will lose a potential ally.


In recent weeks Ramirez had been promising policies that in many ways took distance from the past 15 years of increasing state control over the economy. These included an unpopular plan to raise gas prices — the world's cheapest — and unify three official exchange rates that have been fueling the bolivar's freefall in the black market, bleeding currency reserves and stoking inflation running over 60 percent.


While hardliners and military insiders were cold to such moves, Ramirez had the ear of Maduro, knew the ins and outs of the oil-dependent economy like nobody and from PDVSA had carved out a power base from which many believed he could execute a much-needed overhaul.


In the end, Maduro may have calculated such moves were too costly politically — at least for now. Opposition protests in the spring left 43 dead by the official count; Venezuela's bolivar has lost more than half its value in the illegal black market during his 16-month presidency; and essential items such as soap and sugar have become impossible to find with any regularity.


Recent polls show that support for Maduro has slipped below 40 percent.


During the three-hour televised address, Maduro provided scant details of the economic reforms that he's promising for weeks, a sign to analysts that the crisis will continue unabated.


Instead, the president focused on what he called five "revolutions" in diverse areas to bring the government closer to its supporters among the poor and boost productivity.


"We must assume this new phase with strength," he said.


Ramirez, who was expected to make a rare visit to Wall Street this month to meet with foreign investors, will be succeeded as head of PDVSA by engineer and career oilman Eulogio Del Pino. Del Pino has sat on the PDVSA executive board for more than a decade, and most recently served as vice president of exploration and production.


Asdrubal Chavez, an engineer and cousin of the late president, will step in as oil minister, while current Finance Minister Rodolfo Marco Torres, a low-profile army general, will take over Ramirez's job as top economic policymaker.



Associated Press writer Hannah Dreier contributed to this report from Caracas. Goodman reported from Bogota, Colombia.


Gulf of Maine: 'Poster child' for global warming


Imagine Cape Cod without cod. Maine without lobster. The region's famous rocky beaches invisible, obscured by constant high waters.


It's already starting to happen. The culprit is the warming seas — and in particular the Gulf of Maine, whose waters are heating up faster than 99 percent of the world's oceans, scientists say.


Long-established species of commercial fish, like cod, herring and northern shrimp, are departing for colder waters. Black sea bass, blue crabs and new species of squid — all highly unusual for the Gulf — are turning up in fishermen's nets.


The Gulf of Maine's warming reflects broader trends around the North Atlantic. But the statistic — accepted by scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — underscores particular fears about the Gulf's unique ecosystem and the lucrative fishing industries it supports for three U.S. states and two Canadian provinces.


"These changes are very real, and we're seeing them happen quickly," said Malin Pinsky, a biology professor at New Jersey's Rutgers University who studies ocean temperature change and was not involved in the research that resulted in the 99 percent statistic.


It is a rallying point for environmental activists, who see the response to the temperature rise and its impact on fisheries as a touchstone for the global debate about climate change.


"The warming is already here," said Jeff Young, a spokesman for Pew Charitable Trust's oceans project, which has campaigned in favor of restrictions on fishing for herring, another species leaving for colder water. "And we have to deal with it."


The rising waters in the Gulf — a big dent in the East Coast stretching from Massachusetts to Nova Scotia and New Brunswick — have interfered with the work of Diane Cowan, founder of the Lobster Conservancy, who has conducted lobster censuses in New England for 22 years.


The shore of a cove off Maine's Friendship Long Island has long been the best site on the East Coast to find baby lobsters, she said. Around 2007, she couldn't lift a rock without finding one, and usually found several.


But the rising sea has prevented her from getting there much since 2010, she said, because it's almost always underwater.


On a recent August morning, she made it to the site and found 19 young lobsters — far down from the huge colonies she found seven years ago, she said.


"Things have changed dramatically," she said.


The rising sea is connected to the warming waters because higher temperatures make the water less dense, said Bob Steneck, a professor at the University of Maine's School of Marine Sciences.


Until 2004, Gulf temperatures were increasing by about 0.05 degrees per year since 1982, about in line with worldwide trends, said Andy Pershing, chief scientific officer at the Gulf of Maine Research Institute and the man behind the 99 percent figure. But then the pace accelerated to about a half-degree per year — nearly 10 times faster.


Scientists are not certain why. The rest of the oceans are also warming, albeit not as fast, as increased carbon dioxide in the air has contributed to rising temperatures, Pershing said.


"Atmospheric events" could be pushing additional heat into the Gulf, causing a "perfect storm" of conditions that combine to dramatically raise temperatures there, said Nick Record, a research scientist at the Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, a Maine center for oceanography. Pershing and many peers agree.


Another possible cause, Pershing said, is that shifts in the Gulf stream, the Atlantic current that originates in the Gulf of Mexico and keeps Europe mild, warmed the ocean off the Northeast.


The Gulf of Maine's temperature is expected to rise more than 4 degrees by the end of the century, Pinsky said.


The 99 percent statistic isn't arbitrary. Pershing and others compared ocean trends and presented the figure to NOAA in April.


Pershing's work illustrates that the Gulf is indeed among the fastest-warming bodies of water, said Roger Griffis, climate change coordinator for NOAA Fisheries Service.


The Gulf of Maine, he said, is "one of the poster children, unfortunately, for major changes."


Its historical chill and strong tidal currents, which mix the waters and increase nutrients, make it one of the most productive marine ecosystems and a key summer territory for rare whales.


But half of 36 fish stocks studied in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, including many commercial species, have been shifting northward over the past 40 years, a 2009 NOAA report said.


Ironically, the warmer water has created ideal conditions for lobsters and contributed to an overabundance in recent years, causing prices to tumble to their lowest point in nearly two decades in Maine. But continued warming could force to them to move north or die off, Steneck said.


Puffin chicks have starved and died because of a lack of the herring and hake they need to grow and fledge. Seemingly overnight, longfin squid — normally found in warmer, more southerly waters — appeared, Record said.


Scallops, also an important economic element in the Gulf, are vulnerable to ocean acidification, which scientists say is another effect of increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.


The changes threaten a three-state industry valued at more than $1 billion in 2012, a year in which fishermen caught more than 550 million pounds, NOAA statistics say.


Governments are reacting by creating new commercial fisheries; Maine regulators are in the process of creating a licensing process for black sea bass, a species associated more with the mid-Atlantic.



Casino closings lead to mass unemployment filing


Thousands of newly laid-off casino workers are expected to turn out at the Atlantic City Convention Center for a mass unemployment filing.


The session Wednesday morning comes after a brutal weekend that saw more than 5,000 employees at the Showboat and Revel lose their jobs.


More than 100 work stations will be set up to accommodate the newly jobless dealers, cocktail servers and other workers.


Officials from the state Department of Labor and the main casino workers' union, Local 54 of Unite-HERE, will help displaced workers file for unemployment, and give them information on signing up for health insurance and other benefits.


By mid-September, four of the 12 casinos with which Atlantic City started the year will have closed, putting almost 8,000 people out of work.


Trump Plaza is closing Sept. 16, and the Atlantic Club shut down in January.


The unemployment session will be the most visible manifestation of the nearly eight-year downturn plaguing Atlantic City's casino industry. Beset by ever-increasing competition In neighboring states, New Jersey's casino revenues have fallen from a high of $5.2 billion in 2006 to $2.86 billion last year.


The immediate cause of the decline was the advent of casinos in neighboring Pennsylvania, which has since surpassed Atlantic City as the nation's second-largest casino market after Nevada.


Analysts and many casino executives say the contraction in Atlantic City, while painful to workers and government finances, is a necessary response to pressures facing the market, and have predicted the remaining eight casinos will fare better with less competition.


The assistance to laid-off workers will continue for two weeks, and then be moved to a different location in mid-September after Trump Plaza closes.



Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Sept. 3, 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.


An-Nahar


Salam: Financial situation in jeopardy


Prime Minister Tammam Salam has expressed concerns that the financial situation is at stake.


“The financial situation is not less important and serious than the security situation in light of the critical circumstances facing the country,” Salam told An-Nahar.


Salam said he will convene a Cabinet meeting to continue discussions on the financial situation in light of the ministers’ observations on Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil’s report.


Salam pointed out that he had received the 2015 budget draft law as the 2014 budget draft law still awaits a decision regarding the salary raise.


As-Safir


Captive soldiers’ case: swap deal impossible


As the Cabinet dedicated Tuesday’s session to the critical financial situation, the issue of the soldiers held captive by Islamist militants remained in the spotlight as ISIS warned in a new statement to kill another hostage amid ambiguity surrounding the presumed negotiations.


The Cabinet will discuss the hostage crisis during a meeting to be held Thursday.


As-Safir, however, has learned that MPs from the March 8 coalition, the Free Patriotic Movement and MP Walid Jumblatt will stress during the Cabinet session that a deal to swap the captive soldiers for Roumieh-held Islamist prisoners is out of the question.


More to follow ...



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CVS changes name, stops tobacco sales early


As CVS sharpens its focus on customer health, the nation's second-largest drugstore chain will tweak its corporate name and stop the sale of tobacco nearly a month sooner than planned.


CVS Caremark said it will now be known as CVS Health, effective immediately. The signs on its roughly 7,700 drugstores won't change, so the tweak may not register with shoppers.


However, those customers will see a big change when they check out. The cigars and cigarettes that used to fill the shelves behind store cash registers have been replaced with nicotine gum and other products that help people kick the tobacco habit. CVS said earlier this year that it would stop selling tobacco products on Oct. 1.


CVS and other drugstores have delved deeper into customer health care in recent years, in part to serve the aging Baby Boom generation and the millions of uninsured people who are expected to gain coverage under the federal health care overhaul. They've built hundreds of walk-in clinics in their stores and have steadily expanded the services they provide.


Drugstores now offer an array of vaccinations and flu shots, and their clinics can help monitor chronic illnesses like diabetes or high blood pressure. CVS said its new name reflects its broader commitment to health care.


"We're doing more and more to extend the front lines of health care," CEO Larry Merlo said.


As part of this push, the drugstore chain announced earlier this year that it would phase out tobacco sales.


The company said it could no longer sell tobacco in a setting where health care is delivered, and the presence of that product was hard to justify when it tried teaming up with hospital groups and doctors to help with patient care.


Merlo said the company moved up its quit date nearly a month because they got ready for the move sooner than they anticipated, not because its distribution centers had already run out of tobacco.


The corporate name change represents an improvement because the average person didn't understand the word Caremark, which represents the company's pharmacy benefits management business, said Laura Ries, president of the brand consulting firm Ries & Ries.


The new name may provide a better sense of what CVS does to the few investors or people on Wall Street who don't know about the company, which is ranked 12th in the 2014 Fortune 500.


But Ries said the name's power is limited because health is a generic word that is common in many company names.


"It's an improvement off of Caremark, but it's not some amazing wonderful thing that will change the world," she said.



CVS changes name, stops tobacco sales early


As CVS sharpens its focus on customer health, the nation's second-largest drugstore chain will tweak its corporate name and stop the sale of tobacco nearly a month sooner than planned.


CVS Caremark will now be known as CVS Health. The signs on its roughly 7,700 drugstores won't change, so the tweak may not register with shoppers.


However, those customers will see a big change when they check out. The cigars and cigarettes that used to fill the shelves behind store cash registers have been replaced with nicotine gum and other products that help people kick the tobacco habit. CVS said earlier this year that it would stop selling tobacco products on Oct. 1.


CVS and other drugstores have delved deeper into customer health care in recent years.



Jindal Tubular USA acquires PSL North America


The $6 million expansion of the former PSL North America plant in Port Bienville Industrial Park in Bay St. Louis will move forward under the new ownership of Jindal Tubular USA.


Jindal Tubular acquired the assets of PSL North America for $104 million. The sale, which was approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, was announced Tuesday.


The manufacturing and coating plant at Port Bienville can producing more than 300,000 tons of pipes annually, ranging from 18 inches to 120 inches and up to 80 feet in length.


The pipes are used primarily for natural gas, petroleum and water transmission.


The expansion will broaden the range of products at the facility, adding cement-coated steel pipe for use in water transmission to the existing line of products.



Novartis and Exelixis are big market movers


Stocks that moved substantially or traded heavily Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market:


NYSE


Novartis AG, up $3.43 to $93.47


The drug developer presented positive data for a potential heart-failure drug and will ask for approval by the end of the year.


Las Vegas Sands Corp., down $3.41 to $63.10


The casino operator and its gambling company peers experienced a decline in revenue from the gambling hub Macau during August.


Cloud Peak Energy Inc., down $1.27 to $14.44


The coal company lowered its coal shipment and adjusted earnings guidance for 2014, citing rail issues and weather impacts.


Crown Holdings Inc., up $1.85 to $50.12


The packaging products company is buying the Mexican can packaging business of brewer Heineken for just under $1.23 billion.


Nasdaq


Exelixis Inc., down $2.29 to $1.85


The biotechnology company said its potential treatment for prostate cancer failed to meet a key goal in a late-stage study.


Conns Inc., down $13.83 to $31


The consumer goods retailer reported second-quarter profit below Wall Street expectations and cut its full-year profit guidance.


Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd., up $3.68 to $36.99


The cruise line will buy Prestige Cruises International for about $3 billion and expects to close the deal in the fourth quarter.


Acadia Pharmaceuticals Inc., up $2.63 to $26.61


The biotechnology company received a special FDA designation for its potential Parkinson's disease psychosis treatment, Nuplazid.



Man killed in fuel tank explosion near Lebanon’s Zahle


Italian senator pledges to support Lebanon's anti-terrorism efforts


The Italian Senate’s head of the Defense Commission Nicola Latorre pledges to support Lebanon in its struggle against...



Italian senator pledges to support Lebanon's anti-terrorism efforts


Rai to head Christian delegation to Washington


A 3 day-long conference on protecting the Christian presence in the East will be held next week, gathering senior...



Talk to Syria before ISIS: Lebanon's FPM


BEIRUT: The Lebanese government should reach out to countries sponsoring ISIS and the Nusra Front to secure the release of the captive soldiers, the Change and Reform Bloc urged Tuesday, arguing that it was preferable to seek help from Syria than negotiate directly with radical groups.


“Some people criticized MP Michel Aoun for urging the government not to negotiate with terrorists but his remarks backed Prime Minister Tammam Salam who rejected the principle of negotiation to free the soldiers,” former Labor Minister Salim Jreissati told reporters after the end of the bloc’s weekly meeting.


“We should communicate instead with countries that are sponsors of these terrorist organizations and with the Syrian government if needed,” he said.


“Our priority is to free the captured soldiers and help return them to their families and the Army, but we should also preserve national dignity.”


The bloc also dismissed the March 14 coalition’s recent initiative to break the presidential deadlock, lobbying once again for MP Michel Aoun’s own proposal to end the paralysis.


"The initiative that was proposed today is old, repetitive and useless ... Michel Aoun has proposed his own salvation initiative and we want answers to that,” Jreissati said.


“Any initiative unrelated to the one objective, national and technical one that [former] General Michel Aoun proposed is a waste time.”


Earlier in the day, the March 14 coalition said it was ready to hold talks with rival parties to agree on a consensus candidate in what the group described as the “national compromise” initiative to elect a new president as soon as possible.


Aoun, the head of the Change and Reform bloc, has proposed an amendment to the presidential election mechanism in which the president would be elected by popular vote not Parliament.


But his rivals rejected the proposal, saying that the amendment would potentially change Lebanon’s political system.



New York: Bank didn't lend to blacks in Buffalo


A bank refused to offer mortgages to African-Americans living in Buffalo, New York's attorney general said in a lawsuit that he said was part of a wider investigation into an illegal practice known as redlining.


Evans Bank violated fair housing and discrimination laws by intentionally denying services and products to Buffalo's east side, home to more than 75 percent of the city's African-American population, the federal lawsuit alleges.


The bank's president, David Nasca, called the accusations "meritless." He said Evans, which has 13 branches in western New York, will vigorously defend itself.


"We remain confident that our residential lending practices meet all applicable laws and regulations," Nasca said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press.


Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's lawsuit alleges that Evans used a map to define its lending area that excluded the city's east side. The company is also accused of refusing to market its loan products or locate its branches in the area.


Schneiderman said the lawsuit is part of a wider investigation by his office into redlining, in which a lender denies access to mortgages or charges more in certain neighborhoods based on race.


"Redlining is illegal and it's discriminatory — and must, once and for all, be made a thing of the past," Schneiderman said. "It is crucial that all New Yorkers, regardless of the color of their skin or the racial composition of their neighborhood, be afforded an equal opportunity to obtain credit."



New Mexico utility plans to request rate increase


Public Service Co. of New Mexico plans to ask state regulators for a rate increase for the utility's electricity customers.


The Albuquerque Journal (http://bit.ly/1lwe9CZ ) reports that PNM wants to recover costs for investment in power plants and other infrastructure, and to make up for a decrease in power consumption.


The drop in consumption is attributed to such factors as the state's weak economy, energy conservation and renewable sources such as rooftop solar.


Vice President for Regulatory Affairs Gerard Ortiz says PNM expects to file a rate case with the Public Regulation Commission by December, but he says PNM hasn't yet decided how big of an increase it will request.


PNM last got a rate increase in 2011 when the commission approved a 9 percent increase in customers' bills.



Norwegian sails into luxury with Prestige purchase


Norwegian Cruise Line is sailing into the luxury sector, spending about $3 billion in cash and stock to acquire the high-end Prestige Cruises International.


The deal will give Norwegian access to Prestige's eight ships on the Oceania and Regent Seven Seas cruise lines and its big-ticket vacation packages. Norwegian, which owns 13 ships, is known for its "Freestyle Cruising" that lets travelers choose where they want to eat and at what time.


Buying Prestige will help Norwegian be more competitive with its larger rivals: Carnival Corp. owns luxury cruise lines Cunard and Princess, while Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. owns Celebrity Cruises.


Norwegian, which is based in Miami, values the deal at $3.03 billion when debt is included. Shareholders including private equity firm Apollo Global Management LLC, Prestige's majority owner, could get another $50 million in cash if certain performance targets are reached.


Apollo also owns about 20 percent of Norwegian, whose shares rose 11 percent Tuesday.


The two other big Norwegian shareholders, Genting Hong Kong Ltd. and TPG Capital, have already signed off on the deal. It's expected to close in the fourth quarter.


Shares of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd. added $3.58 to $36.89 Tuesday.



Netflix unveils new way to share recommendations


Netflix is giving its Internet video subscribers a more discreet way to recommend movies and TV shows to their Facebook friends after realizing most people don't want to share their viewing habits with large audiences.


Until now, Netflix subscribers linking the service to their Facebook accounts automatically disclosed everything they were watching with a potentially wide-reaching range of people. The company believes the open-ended approach discouraged most Netflix subscribers from connecting their accounts with their Facebook profiles.


The automatic disclosures will end Tuesday as Netflix Inc. embraces a new system that empowers subscribers to select which friends will receive their video recommendations. A menu of friends culled from Facebook will appear after Netflix subscribers finish watching a video if they have turned on the sharing feature.


The move reflects Facebook's evolution into a service where people have allowed passing acquaintances into their networks, along with close friends and family.


"There are a lot of people on Facebook that you don't really know that well," said Cameron Johnson, Netflix's director of product development.


Netflix believes people will share their viewing experiences if they are given more control over who sees what they've been watching. The Los Gatos, California, company, in turn, hopes the recommendations will deepen subscriber loyalty and attract new customers.


"If you are really moved by a piece of content and you know someone in your life that would like it, you are going to want them to watch it too, so you can talk about it and get excited about it together," Johnson said.


Netflix began offering the Facebook sharing option to subscribers outside the U.S. in 2011. U.S. subscribers got that option 18 months ago.


The Facebook recommendations are limited to subscribers of Netflix' video-streaming service, which costs $8 or $9 per month in the U.S. The streaming service has 50 million subscribers worldwide. There are no plans to extend the Facebook recommendations to the DVD-by-mail service, which is steadily shrinking. Netflix ended June with 6.3 million DVD subscribers, less than half the number it had three years ago.


The recommendations made under the new sharing system will appear in a few ways.


If both people are Netflix subscribers who have connected to Facebook, the recommendation will appear as a marquee attraction at the top of the recipient's Netflix page. The Facebook profile picture of the person touting the video also will appear alongside the recommendation.


A subscriber's recommendation will be sent as a Facebook message if the recipient isn't a Netflix subscriber or hasn't connected a Netflix account to Facebook.


The recommendations will no longer appear on the customers' Facebook profile page or the news feeds that their friends see.


To make it possible for its U.S. subscribers to share what they're watching, Netflix had to persuade lawmakers last year to revise a 1988 law that banned the disclosure of video rental records without a customer's written consent.



US home prices rose at slower pace in July

The Associated Press



U.S. home prices rose in July but at a slower rate compared with earlier this year. The moderating price increases could help support sales.


Real estate data provider CoreLogic says prices rose 7.4 percent in July from July 2013. That was slightly below June's year-over-year increase of 7.5 percent.


Prices rose 1.2 percent in July from June. But CoreLogic's monthly figures aren't adjusted for seasonality, such as buying that occurs in warm weather.


The smaller price gains should make homes more affordable. The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 4.1 percent last week, the lowest in a year. And the number of available homes rose 3.5 percent in July to the most in nearly two years. A greater supply tends to limit the bidding wars that inflate prices.



Some fear auto industry returning to bad habits


Big discounts. Six- or seven-year loans, in some cases to buyers who would have been turned down in the past.


As the auto industry strives to sustain its post-recession comeback, car companies are resorting to tactics that some experts warn will lead to trouble down the road.


Vehicle discounts have risen 5.5 percent from a year ago. More than a quarter of new buyers are choosing to lease, a historically high percentage. Auto company lending arms are making more loans to people with low credit scores. The industry is adding factory capacity. And the average price of a car keeps rising, forcing some customers to borrow for longer terms to keep payments down.


Annual auto sales in the U.S. should top 16 million for the first time in seven years. But the pent-up consumer demand that has driven sales is ebbing. Sales are predicted to grow 5.5 percent this year, the slowest pace since the financial crisis.


The big discounts and other steps eventually should help push sales above 17 million, most experts say. But Honda Motor Co. U.S. sales chief John Mendel last week scolded competitors for using "short-term" tactics such as subprime loans, 72-month terms and increased sales to rental car companies to pad their sales.


"We have no desire to go there," said Mendel, whose company's sales through July have fallen 1.3 percent, trailing the industry.


Some on Wall Street see a price to pay.


"It could be a disaster later on," says Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas. "We're clearly robbing Peter to pay Paul." He sees sales growing to an annual rate of 18 million in 2017 — then sinking to 14 million a year later. That will mean factory closings, restructurings, and thousands of job cuts just for companies to break even.


Not all forecasts are that dire and on one — not even Jonas — is predicting a repeat of billion-dollar losses and cars piling up on dealer lots. Automakers have cut costs and are better positioned to handle a downturn than they were in 2008 and 2009.


Still, easier credit brings back not-so-fond memories for at least one auto dealer.


"It just seems like 2007 all over again," said veteran Toyota dealer Earl Stewart of North Palm Beach, Florida. "The credit ease with which people are financed is as liberal and loose as it ever was."


Among the numbers that concern some experts:


— $2,702: Average discount per new car through July. They're heaviest in two segments: Midsize cars (up almost 21 percent through July) and compacts (up 10 percent). Automakers need to move the cars because a lot of factory space is committed to building them.


— 12.7 percent: The year-over-year increase last quarter in auto loans to "Deep Subprime" buyers — those with credit scores lower than 550. Loans to "subprime" buyers (credit score lower than 620) rose 5.3 percent, according to Experian. Combined, both are just over 12 percent of all auto loans. Those with lower credit scores generally have a higher default risk.


— 32 percent: Percentage of auto loans that are 72 months or longer, up from 23 percent in 2008, according to LMC Automotive. Longer loans keep buyers out of the market because it takes longer to build equity for a trade-in.


— 26 percent: Percentage of sales that are leases, up from 18 percent in 2008, according to LMC. A flood of expiring leases in three years could depress used-car prices, hurting new car sales.


— 70 percent: The increase last quarter in auto repossessions, according to Experian Automotive. Sixty-day delinquencies are up 7 percent. Still, both are below 1 percent of all auto loans.


Karl Brauer, senior analyst for Kelley Blue Book, sees trouble in the juicy discounts. In 2007, spending on incentives was just under 9 percent of the average sales price for a vehicle. That dropped to around 8 percent in 2012 and 2013. It's back up to 8.4 percent and likely will rise toward 9 percent later in the year, he says.


Based on an average sales price of just over $32,000, the additional discounts would cost the industry almost $5.2 billion per year.


"This was the trap that got everyone in trouble before the recession," Brauer says.


Others are more sanguine. Melinda Zabritski, senior director of auto finance for Experian, says repossessions and delinquencies still are extremely low. And longer loan terms keep payments down, reducing late payments and defaults.


Former Hyundai U.S. CEO John Krafcik, now head of the TrueCar.com auto pricing site, says used-car values should fall from current record highs, will fall to a normal level as leased cars enter the market. Those who lease will be shopping again every three years.


All automakers report sales on Wednesday, and most analysts are predicting the numbers will be flat compared to 2013. That's still a strong month, with an annual sales rate of 16.5 million or more.



Halliburton reaches $1.1B oil spill settlement


Halliburton says it has agreed to pay $1.1 billion to settle a substantial portion of plaintiff claims arising from the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill.


The settlement, which is subject to court approval, will be paid into a trust until appeals are resolved over the next two years.


Halliburton was BP PLC's cement contractor on the drilling rig that exploded in the Gulf in April 2010, killing 11 workers and triggering the largest offshore oil spill in U.S. history.


The deal will settle claims assigned to Halliburton as a result of BP's settlement in 2012 and punitive damages from the loss of property or commercial fishing activity resulting from the oil spill.



Water contamination in Lebanon's Nabaa area fixed


BEIRUT: A water contamination problem in the Nabaa area of north Beirut has been fixed, the public water company announced Tuesday, saying the issue was due to a limited leak of sewage water.


Eau de Beirut et Mont Liban released a statement explaining that a leak from the municipality’s sewage pipeline reached a building in Nabaa area, causing the contamination of the utility water in that building.


“There is no water pollution in the Nabaa’s public water network,” the statement said.


EBML said it had inspected the issue after a TV channel reported on Aug. 25 that drinking water was polluted in the Nabaa area.




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Jet with cracked windshield returns to Los Angeles


An American Airlines jet bound for North Texas has safely returned to Los Angeles International Airport after the front windshield cracked.


American spokesman Paul Flaningan said Tuesday that nobody on Flight 2448 to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport was hurt.


Flaningan says the Boeing 757 took off Monday afternoon but within minutes the pilot noticed a windshield crack. Flaningan says authorities are trying to determine what caused the crack and that there's no preliminary indication of a bird strike.


He says the jet carrying 184 passengers and a five-person crew returned to Los Angeles. Passengers boarded another American jet and were on their way about 90 minutes later.


Flaningan says the windshield-damaged jet was taken out of service for repairs.



Rai to head Christian delegation to Washington



BEIRUT: A 3 day-long conference on protecting the Christian presence in the East will be held next week, gathering senior Middle Eastern Christian figures and American officials in Washington D.C.


Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai will head the delegation of Christian patriarchs and will meet with top U.S. officials during his brief stay. According to the Central News Agency, the conference may include a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama and Foreign Secretary John Kerry.


The first day of the conference will take place at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in D.C., followed by two days at the Capitol building where Rai and his companions will hold talks with U.S. senators and attend lectures on human rights and freedom of belief.


The meetings, according to the CNA, are aimed at producing an American position on the Christian situation in the Middle East, along with a decision to take concrete steps toward safe-guarding the group’s survival under the threat imposed by the rise of fundamentalist groups.


The agency also reported that Rai will extend his visit for a few days after the conference, in order to visit several Maronite dioceses in Los Angeles, California and San Antonio, Texas.


The CNA said that sources close to Rai did not dismiss the possibility of a similar visit to Moscow later on, as part of the tour that started with the visit to Kurdistan and continued with the trip to Vatican that ended Tuesday.


The Christian delegation, which includes Syriac Catholic Patriarch Ignace Joseph III Younan, Syriac Orthodox Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II and Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Sako, is expected to leave Lebanon Monday morning.



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Norwegian Cruise to acquire parent of Oceania, Regent lines


The world’s third-largest cruise ship company is about to get bigger.


Miami-based Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings announced Tuesday morning that it will acquire Prestige Cruises International, the parent of upscale Oceania Cruises and luxury Regent Seven Seas Cruises for more than $3 billion.


The deal, expected to close in the fourth quarter, adds eight ships to Norwegian’s fleet of 13 vessels and gives the company access to a built-in audience accustomed to paying higher fares for more inclusive cruise experiences.


“The acquisition of Prestige represents an extraordinary opportunity for Norwegian Cruise Line to expand our market presence by adding two established, award-winning brands in the upscale cruise segment with loyal followings,” said Norwegian Cruise Line CEO Kevin Sheehan in a statement.


Prestige chairman and CEO Frank Del Rio will remain CEO of Prestige, which is based in Doral.


“We are excited to become part of the Norwegian family and start a new chapter for our company,” Del Rio said in the statement. “With Oceania and Regent, we have built iconic brands with distinctive product offerings and strong customer loyalty. The combination is very compelling and will allow us to further enhance our renowned guest experience.”


Reuters reported that a deal was in the works over the weekend.


Norwegian has long been a distant third, size-wise, to industry leaders Carnival Corp. and Royal Caribbean Cruises. Carnival operates about 100 ships under 10 brands, while Royal Caribbean’s fleet includes 42 ships under several North American and European brands.


Norwegian said it will finance the acquisition with existing cash, new and existing debt and the issuance of approximately 20.3 million shares of its common stock. Prestige is owned by private equity firm Apollo, which is also a major Norwegian shareholder.


“The combination of three distinct brands, each serving a different market segment, under one umbrella immediately creates an industry-leading cruise operator with an unmatched growth trajectory and a portfolio of products that allows us to appeal to guests at every stage of their life cycle,” Sheehan said in the statement. “We are fully committed to retaining the brand propositions, guest experiences and cultures of the Norwegian, Oceania and Regent brands that have allowed each to realize such success.”



Pike County sees first TMS oil well permits


A Texas oil company is seeking to drill the first oil wells in Pike County as part of the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale formation.


Experts have said the formation, stretching across parts of southwest Mississippi and central and southeast Louisiana, could hold 7 billion barrels of oil. Drilling activity has stepped up this year.


The Enterprise-Journal reports (http://bit.ly/1ozZYaX ) that Houston-based Sanchez Oil & Gas Corp. has filed permits to establish drilling three units in the southwestern part of the county for oil wells.


The Mississippi Oil and Gas Board will consider Sanchez's permits at a Sept. 17 hearing. The oil and gas board has set a Sept. 9 deadline to contest the permit request.


Pike County will become the third county in Mississippi to see drilling in the formation.



Ex-House majority leader joins investment bank


Former House Majority Leader Eric Cantor has a new job as vice chairman and managing director of a global independent investment bank.


New York-based Moelis & Company announced Cantor's appointment Tuesday in a news release.


Cantor lost his re-election bid in the June primary and left Congress in August. The Virginia Republican had served seven terms representing the state's 7th Congressional District.


Cantor says in the release that he considered his career options and knew he wanted to join a firm with what he calls "a great entrepreneurial spirit that focused on its clients."


Moelis & Company has 15 offices in North America, South America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Australia.



Lebanese contract teachers protest over delayed wages


BEIRUT: Public school contract teachers demanded that civil service exams be restricted to current instructors and that they be paid overdue wages in a protest Tuesday at Beirut’s Riad al-Solh Square.


The head of the High School Contract Teachers Committee, Hamza Mansour, warned that holding open civil service exams would “eliminate” the prospects of those teachers who had been working on contracts for the last 10 years.


The contract teachers are seeking fixed, long-term employment in the public schools to gain access to social benefits such as pensions.


The teachers argue that if the civil service exams were open to newcomers rather than restricted to current contract workers, the increased competition would mean many of them would lose their chance at becoming permanent employees.


Without permanent employment, those teachers who have been working in public schools for 10 years would still have nothing to show for it with regard to a pension, which has prompted many of them to oppose the idea of open exams.


Speaking at the protest, Mansour called for an end to the “massacre” of open exams, and asked for a formula to be found that would allow for a “fair, restricted exam that all contract teachers sit, with the selection process not dependent on sectarian affiliation.”


The second demand of the contracts teachers is for salaries that have been pending since last year.


“We demand the payment of our dues returning to the third term of the 2013-2014 academic year,” said Umayma Nassar, secretary of the Elementary Public School Contract Teachers Committee.


She called for a mechanism to ensure the teachers are paid on time in the future.


Nassar raised the need to approve the decision to raise the hourly wage of the contract teachers, “that was decreed more than one year ago.”


The protesters also called for “a real dialogue” with the Education Minister Elias Bou Saab, saying that several previous attempts to hold discussions with the minister had failed.



UNIFIL commander hails Lebanese Army role in border protection


BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army remains well-regarded for its capabilities in protecting the border, the new commander of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon said Tuesday after talks with Speaker Nabih Berri.


“We must continue to build on our strategic partnership with the Lebanese Armed Forces that has stood the test of time and proved critical in establishing strong bulwarks against any destabilizing impulses along the Blue Line,” Maj. Gen. Luciano Portolano said.


It was Portolano’s first meeting with Berri since assuming command of the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon on July 24.


The meeting focused on the situation in southern Lebanon and the implementation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701, Portolano said.


“I assured the speaker of my firm commitment to our mandated tasks under Resolution 1701.”


“Equally important in this endeavor has been the understanding and support of the people of south Lebanon, whose safety is at the heart of our operations,” Portolano stressed.


He also hailed Berri as a “beacon of support” for UNIFIL. “I thanked him for his personal attention to our concerns and his appreciation of UNIFIL’s role in furthering our common goal for security and stability in southern Lebanon.”




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Select Income REIT adds to portfolio in $2.7B deal


Select Income REIT will spend about $2.7 billion in cash and stock to buy Cole Corporate Income Trust in a deal that adds 64 office and industrial properties to the real estate investment trust's portfolio.


The transaction will give Select Income strategic distribution centers for companies like Amazon.com and headquarters locations for companies including Tesoro Corp. and Noble Energy Inc. Select Income said Tuesday the acquisition will expand its United States footprint to 35 states from 21 and diversify its tenants. The combined company will have more than 43 million square feet of real estate.


The acquisition totals about $3 billion, counting the assumption of mortgage debt.


Select Income also will sell 23 health care properties to Senior Housing Properties Trust for about $509 million once the Cole acquisition closes. That would knock the net purchase price of Cole for Select Income down to about $2.2 billion, not counting the mortgage debt.


Select Income will use proceeds from the health care properties sale to help pay for the Cole acquisition as well as a bridge loan and its revolving credit line.


The Cole acquisition is expected to close in next year's first quarter, pending shareholder approval.


Select Income REIT was spun off from Commonwealth REIT and went public in 2012. The Newton, Massachusetts, company's shares closed at $27.90 on Friday and have climbed about 4 percent so far this year.



This Is Why You're Fat: The Expendables Edition


A new study in the Journal of the American Medical Association: Internal Medicine has deduced that if you really want to avoid packing on the extra pounds, you should also avoid watching shows or movies with lots of camera cuts and loud noises while surrounded by piles of junk food. Seems all the excitement easily distracts, and next thing you know, you’ve destroyed that giant bag of chips just like Rambo did the terrorists.


The docs involved in the study found that when they compared groups watching Charlie Rose and The Island, lo and behold, the latter consumed almost twice as much. Which we’re sure had nothing to do with the fact that the former fell asleep from boredom. Besides, who wouldn’t be distracted by our Sexiest Woman Alive ?


Watching the shows on mute cause the balance to shift oh-so-slightly, with The Island team managing to cut consumption to just 36% more than the poor bastards stuck with a muted Charlie Rose. At least they still had this to keep them occupied:



One bonus to being distracted: The movie group made healthier snack choices, they just happened to eat a lot more of them. Seems Scarlett and Ewan McGregor managed to keep their viewers at least aspirational towards being fit. The TV team just gave up and binged on junk.



Dollar General raises Family Dollar bid to $9.1B


Dollar General upped its bid for the rival Family Dollar chain and addressed an earlier roadblock, saying that it will more than double the number of stores it would shed to tamp down the antitrust concerns of its takeover target.


The newest bid is worth $9.1 billion, or $80 per share, up from $78.50 per share in the previous offer.


Family Dollar, based in Matthews, North Carolina, rejected the earlier bid in favor of a lesser offer of $8.5 billion from Dollar Tree Inc., saying that regulators were less likely to stand in the way.


On Tuesday Dollar General, the country's largest dollar-store chain, said it would divest as many as 1,500 stores, well above the 700 that it had originally agreed to, in order to sidestep any anti-monopoly actions that regulators might pursue.


The Goodlettsville, Tennessee company has also said it will pay a $500 million reverse break-up fee to Family Dollar Stores Inc. if the deal hits antitrust roadblocks.


Dollar General Chairman and CEO Rick Dreiling said that a second antitrust review supported its prior bid, but that its offer was revised "to demonstrate the seriousness of our commitment."


The businesses of Family Dollar and Dollar General are more similar than Dollar Tree's. The first two sell items at a variety of prices while at Dollar Tree, all items are a buck.


Family Dollar has been looking for a lifeline after running into some financial stress, shuttering stores and cutting prices. In June one big shareholder, Carl Icahn, urged the company to put itself up for sale.


Family Dollar acted one month later, accepting an offer from Chesapeake, Virginia-based Dollar Tree Inc. of $59.60 in cash and the equivalent of $14.90 in shares of Dollar Tree for each share held. The companies valued the transaction at $74.50 per share at the time. Including debt and other costs, Family Dollar and Dollar Tree estimated the deal to be worth approximately $9.2 billion.


Shares of Family Dollar added 67 cents to $80.50 in premarket trading, while Dollar General's stock gained $1.08 to $65.07.



Health care spending in Massachusetts on the rise


A new report says health care spending in Massachusetts continues to grow faster than the rate of inflation.


The report is scheduled to be released Tuesday by the Center for Health Information and Analysis, created under state law in 2012 to monitor health care spending.


The report says overall spending grew 2.3 percent last year. That is below the cost growth benchmark of 3.6 percent set by the state, but higher than the inflation rate, which was 1.5 percent.


The report says higher spending was driven by the state's largest health insurer, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts; and the biggest provider, Partners HealthCare. Both called the state's calculations inaccurate.


More than $50 billion was spent on health care, an average of $7,550 per person. Sixty percent went to taxpayer-funded care.



The Politics Of Calling In Sick



Women are more likely to take time off to care for a sick child or elderly adult, making mandatory paid sick leave a hot partisan topic.i i



Women are more likely to take time off to care for a sick child or elderly adult, making mandatory paid sick leave a hot partisan topic. Shutterstock hide caption



itoggle caption Shutterstock

Women are more likely to take time off to care for a sick child or elderly adult, making mandatory paid sick leave a hot partisan topic.



Women are more likely to take time off to care for a sick child or elderly adult, making mandatory paid sick leave a hot partisan topic.


Shutterstock


Got the flu? Or a new baby? Perhaps a little one with chicken pox? In most countries, your employer must pay your wages if you stay home sick or to care for others. Not in America.


But a growing grass-roots movement aims to change that — starting with paid sick leave.


Already the movement has met some success. This past weekend, California became the second state in the country to mandate sick leave for employees.


Others may join soon. Sick-day measures are on at least a half-dozen ballots in November, including in Massachusetts, Oakland, Calif., and a few citIes in New Jersey. At least six more states will take up the issue in 2015, including Colorado, Maryland and Vermont.


"We understand these are building blocks to a national standard," says Ellen Bravo, director of Family Values @ Work, an umbrella organization for state coalitions pushing paid leave. She hopes this fall's vote will boost momentum, upping the issue's profile and making 2015 "a tipping point to going national."


The effort is part of a fierce partisan battle for women voters, who are much likelier than men to take time off to care for a sick child or an elderly parent. Family-friendly policies let Democrats demonstrate some pro-women bona fides — and accuse Republicans who oppose such measures of stoking a "war on women."


That sort of rhetoric is already playing big in top 2014 races, and it's likely to intensify ahead of 2016, especially if Democrats nominate Hillary Clinton or another woman for president.


"There is only one developed country in the world that does not offer paid maternity leave, and that is us," President Obama told an audience in June at the White House Summit on Working Families. "And that is not the list you want to be on by your lonesome." The U.S. is also one of a few countries that do not have national requirements on paid sick days.


Business groups and conservatives have resisted paid leave, arguing that it stifles job creation and imposes heavy administrative burdens. Groups like the National Federation of Independent Business have released studies warning that future legislation will squelch employment, but they've mustered little real-world evidence.


Workers' advocates say data refute those claims, though their evidence suggests that paid sick leave isn't free. In a 2011 survey on San Francisco's paid sick-day ordinance, enacted in 2006, 14 percent of businesses said the ordinance hurt profits, but 71 percent said it didn't.


Administration was harder, with 31 percent of firms saying it was "somewhat" or "very difficult" to implement the ordinance, and 54 percent said it was "not difficult" or "not too difficult." The survey was conducted by the Institute for Women's Policy Research, which supports paid leave. While the results give some ammunition to paid-leave opponents, they counter the potent claim that paid leave kills jobs.


Such data have underpinned a city-by-city and state-by-state campaign by a coalition of labor unions, women's organizations and community groups that now can count at least 10 major victories since 2006. Most are in progressive havens like Connecticut, Seattle and Eugene, Ore. The goal is to get to a critical mass of cities and states that will force action from the federal government, which hasn't touched leave for decades.


In 1993, Congress passed the Family Medical Leave Act, which requires employers to offer unpaid maternity leave or unpaid family health leave to certain employees. But the FMLA's exemptions are gaping: They exclude the more than 40 percent of people who work part time or for small, exempt companies. Disproportionately, those people are women, single, minorities and workers with a high school education or less.


Activists say that ballot initiatives can compensate for the lack of legislative clout. Oakland is a good example. After it became clear that some members of the Oakland City Council would fight tooth and nail against a proposal that would raise the minimum wage and require five paid sick days, a grassroots coalition gathered enough signatures to put the proposal directly on the November ballot. Advance polling shows strong support from voters.


The Oakland Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce tried to get a counter proposal on the ballot that would have created an extended phase-in for the wage hike and required fewer sick days. The chamber argued its proposal offered a more "sustainable approach to achieving fair and sustainable compensation," while keeping "Oakland's economy booming."


But it didn't get approval in the city council, and the group has since stopped its public campaign. Chamber representatives did not reply to interview requests. It's still possible, though, that state or national pro-business organizations could get involved.


There's pushback elsewhere. In San Diego, which enacted a minimum wage hike and paid-leave law on Aug. 18, the California Restaurant Association and San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce are gathering signatures for a 2016 ballot initiative to repeal it. Just getting the needed signatures would freeze the law until the vote takes place.


And three years after Milwaukee enacted paid sick leave requirements in 2008, Gov. Scott Walker pushed a statewide measure that nullified them. States like Florida and Oklahoma have followed suit. And in the past, pro-business groups have beat back legislative proposals in Maine, Maryland and New Hampshire.

All of which underscores why Bravo and others hope the statewide measures create a platform for federal action.


But for politicians in Washington to get on board, it first has to prove to be the vote-getter they promise.



Sen. Menendez Wants Ukraine Supplied With Defensive Weapons



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





David Greene talks to Sen. Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, about the situation in Ukraine. The New Jersey Democrat has just returned from a trip to Ukraine.



Report: Midwest economic index inched up in August


A monthly economic survey index for nine Midwestern and Plains states rose slightly in August, suggesting growth is ahead.


A survey report issued Tuesday says the overall Mid-America Business Conditions Index inched up to 57.2 last month from 57.0 in July. The index had reached a three-year high of 60.6 in June.


Looking six months ahead, the business confidence portion of the overall index climbed to 60.4 from 60.0 in July. It had hit 63.6 in June.


The survey results from supply managers are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers at Creighton University say any score above 50 suggests economic growth, while a score below that suggests decline.


The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.



Nebraska students can win scholarships with art


Nebraska students dreaming of the future can win a scholarship from First National Bank by drawing a picture of what they envision becoming when they grow up.


Nebraska students from first grade to eighth grade can enter the contest by submitting a drawing before the end of September. Twelve winners will receive $1,000 scholarships in a NEST 529 College Savings Plan account.


The Nebraska Art Teachers Association will judge the contest entries, which must be created with pencil, crayons, paint, watercolor or a paper collage.


More details about the contest and the college savings plans are available on the state treasurer's website: http://bit.ly/1pDnqKp .



Commission rejects London mayor's plan for airport


Britain's Airport Commission has rejected a plan to build a four-runway airport in the Thames Estuary, describing it as more problematic and more expensive than other options.


The commission said Tuesday it rejected the estuary proposal pushed by London Mayor Boris Johnson because it would cause economic disruption and because environmental hurdles may make it impossible to deliver.


The commission, headed by Howard Davies, is examining how to best expand Britain's airport capacity amid growing international competition. Heathrow, once the world's biggest hub airport, has argued it needs to add at least one runway to be competitive.


Johnson says he'll fight on for the idea, arguing that "in one myopic stroke the Airports Commission has set the debate back by half a century."


Three proposals remain under the panel's consideration.



Court halts ridesharing service Uber in Germany


A court has issued an injunction barring ridesharing service Uber from operating in Germany, the latest shot in a fight with the country's taxi drivers.


The state court in Frankfurt ruled that Uber can't offer its services without a specific permit under German transport laws, news agency dpa and the plaintiff reported Tuesday. The injunction applies pending a full hearing of a suit brought against Uber by a German group that offers a taxi-ordering app.


The ruling comes after Berlin authorities last month barred Uber from operating in the capital because of safety concerns.


Their arguments were in line with those of established cab companies which claim Uber's app-based services, which offer limousines and pickups by private drivers, dodge rules that ordinary taxi firms have to abide by.



AAA Michigan: Gas prices rise 8 cents in past week


AAA Michigan says gasoline prices in the state rose about 8 cents in the last week.


The auto club says that the average price of a gallon of self-serve regular unleaded gasoline was $3.59 on Monday. That's about 15 cents less than one year ago.


Dearborn-based AAA Michigan surveys fuel costs at 2,800 Michigan gas stations daily. It says the cheapest price was $3.48 a gallon in the Traverse City area, and the most expensive was $3.62 in the Saginaw/Bay City/Midland and Flint areas.


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Online:


http://bit.ly/1k72HZs



$2.4B Revel casino shuts down after just 2 years


Revel Casino Hotel closed its doors Tuesday morning, a little more than two years after opening with high hopes of turning around Atlantic City's struggling casino market.


The 5:25 a.m. casino shutdown followed the closure of its hotel on Monday.


By mid-September, four of Atlantic City's 12 casinos will have closed, but none will be a costlier failure than Revel.


It started construction just before the Great Recession hit and had to take on so much debt it never could turn a profit.


The Showboat closed on Sunday, Trump Plaza is closing Sept. 16, and the Atlantic Club closed in January.


The consolidation is a reaction to the saturated northeastern U.S. casino market, which continues to add new gambling halls to markets without enough demand to support them all.



Berri postpones presidential election to Sept. 23


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Lebanese Army raids Syrians' apartments in Sidon


Lebanese Army raids Syrians' apartments in Sidon


The Lebanese Army raids two apartments for Syrians in the coastal city of Sidon, a security source said.



Arrest warrants for seven detained in Arsal


Arrest warrants for seven detained in Arsal


Arrest warrants have been issued for six Syrians and one Lebanese man after Military Investigative Judge Imad al-Zein...



Obama Fires Opening Salvo In Fall Congressional Campaign



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





At a Labor Day picnic in Milwaukee, the president accused the GOP of blocking economic initiatives. He urged the sympathetic union audience to turn their frustration into political action in November.



Syrians held hostage by Lebanese families escape


BEIRUT: Seventeen Syrians in north Lebanon escaped from a garage they were being held in by relatives of captured soldiers, a security source told The Daily Star Tuesday.


The Syrians were taken hostage by people who claimed to be families of soldiers captured by ISIS and the Nusra Front during last month's clashes with the Lebanese Army, said the source, speaking on condition of anonymity.


They stayed overnight in a garage in the village of Shmustar and were able to break the door and escape.


Media reports said the families held the Syrians to exchange them for the captured soldiers.


Meanwhile, the families of the hostages blocked the main northern Batroun-Tripoli highway at Qalamoun, calling for the speedy release of the remaining captives after the Nusra Front freed five soldiers Sunday.


Jihadists from ISIS and the Nusra Front are now holding at least 23 soldiers and policemen captive to trade them for Islamist prisoners held at Lebanon’s Roumieh prison. Five soldiers and policemen were freed earlier this week while the body of Ali al-Sayyed, who ISIS beheaded last week, was handed over to the Lebanese Army Monday.


In videos posted by the radical groups, the captive soldiers and police officers have pleaded with their communities to block roads in the country to pressure the government to negotiate with the Islamist fighters or they would be killed.


The gunmen are demanding the release of Islamist detainees in Roumieh Prison, most of whom have been held since 2007 over involvement in clashes with the Army in the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr al-Bared.


The government has decided to speed up the trials of the detainees and release those who have been in detention longer than any sentence they face.


According to judicial sources, the government is working through the Justice Ministry with the judiciary to find “a legal and judicial solution” for the cases of 94 Islamist detainees held in Roumieh prison since 2007, judicial sources said.