Saturday, 6 September 2014

Developer dead in mystery crash revamped a NY city


A developer presumed dead with his wife in a private plane crash near Jamaica had an "uncanny instinct" for revitalizing properties and an "incalculable" impact on his western New York hometown's resurgence from crumbling industrial center to trendy destination for young professionals, friends and colleagues said.


Laurence Glazer, 68, bought up dozens of properties in Rochester, on the shores of Lake Ontario, including landmark buildings belonging to the manufacturing giants Xerox Corp. and Bausch + Lomb. He converted abandoned factories into loft apartments and turned a shuttered hospital into offices.


Glazer had a way of "taking properties that were dead and breathing life back into them at a time when people were really skeptical about the ability to do that," Heidi Zimmer-Meyer, president of Rochester's Downtown Development Corp., said Saturday.


The U.S. Coast Guard said Glazer and his wife Jane were on a single-engine turboprop Socata TBM700 that flew on its own for 1,700 miles before running out of fuel and slamming into the sea off Jamaica's northeast coastline. The couple apparently was incapacitated.


Rescue crews said Saturday they could no longer see debris spotted Friday evening by a military aircraft drifting roughly 24 miles off the coastal town of Port Antonio in a stretch where the water is up to 6,500 feet. A 154-foot U.S. Coast Guard cutter and a helicopter crew aided in the search Saturday.


"We would have to assume it may have sunk," Jamaica Coast Guard Commander Antonette Wemyss-Gorman said.


Laurence and Jane Glazer, the founder of household-products catalog company QCI Direct, were both experienced pilots. They were flying to Naples, Florida, near where Glazer's development company, Buckingham Properties, also has interests.


"It's beyond tragic here. We're reeling," Zimmer-Meyer said, calling the couple "people who just cannot be replaced."


Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy and Sen. Charles Schumer were among the officials who publicly expressed sorrow for the couple's loss.


Duffy, the former mayor of Rochester, said the Glazers "possessed two of the brightest minds in business."


Their son, Rick, refused to confirm his parents were killed, saying "we know so little" about the crash.


Air traffic controllers were last able to contact the pilot of the Glazers' plane at 10 a.m., about 75 minutes after it took off from the Greater Rochester International Airport.


Fighter pilots sent to shadow the plane saw its windows frosting over and the pilot slumped over but breathing. One of the pilots speculated that the pilot was suffering from hypoxia, or oxygen deprivation.


Cases of unresponsive pilots are unusual and often attributed to insufficient cabin pressurization that causes the pilot to pass out, aviation safety expert John Goglia said. A 1999 Learjet crash that killed professional golfer Payne Stewart and five others was attributed to cabin depressurized that caused all aboard to lose consciousness.


Harold Samoff, the lawyer who recruited Glazer to real estate from working for his wife's family's printing company in 1970, said his friend was a "man of many, many, many skills" who had an interest in "practically everything."


"Once he got involved, he knew it," Samoff said.


Glazer and Samoff started with a small apartment building, around the start of the city's long economic decline, and went on to acquire and revitalize more and bigger properties on the periphery of the city's core, reasoning that "just like blight can spread, improvement can spread, also," Samoff said.


"His contribution is actually incalculable because a lot of other people didn't step up" to refurbish buildings as early as he did, Samoff said.


Glazer was also generous with advice to others just starting out, Zimmer-Meyer said. She said she received a call last week from a young real estate entrepreneur who mentioned that Glazer had helped her.


"The one good thing is that he's left an unbelievable legacy," Zimmer-Meyer said. "The difficult thing is that he's gone."



Associated Press writer Jennifer Peltz reported from New York.


Bat deaths down sharply at Nevada wind farm


Federal land managers say the number of bats killed by turbines at a wind farm in White Pine County is down sharply from a year ago.


Paul Podborny of the federal Bureau of Land Management's Ely District Office says 23 bats have died at the Spring Valley Wind Farm so far this year compared with 103 bat deaths over the same time period last year.


He told The Ely Times (http://bit.ly/1obteWn ) 533 bats in all were killed by the farm's wind turbines in 2013, triple the amount allowed by federal regulators.


He attributes this year's decrease in bat deaths to Pattern Energy's move to increase the wind speed required to spin a turbine from 7 mph to 11 mph.


Mexican free-tail bats migrate through Spring Valley each year.



Decree sets water-rights for Big Horn River basin


A Wyoming judge has signed a decree to end 37 years of water-rights cases in the Big Horn River basin and set how much water is to be allocated to federal, tribal and state interests.


The decree signed by Judge Robert E. Skar on Friday finalizes all of the interim orders that have been entered over the years, starting with a complaint filed in 1977 on the division of water rights in northern Wyoming.


"We went through an adjudication of every water right that existed before 1984 for one-quarter of the state of Wyoming," said State Engineer Pat Tyrrell. "The sheer size of this thing took time."


The final order sets those rights and ends those claims, the Casper Star-Tribune reported (http://bit.ly/1nCKOCz).


"We now have a quantified amount of the tribal award and other federal rights, so we know what they are," Tyrrell said.


Skar's ruling must still go through an appeal period before it is official. Big Horn water rights cases will then be returned to the jurisdiction of the state engineer's office.


There had been disagreement over water usage among tribal and state entities, but that appears to be resolved.


"The adjudication did cause some discord over the types of rights the tribes have, but for the most part those rights are assured. That's a positive," Eastern Shoshone Attorney General Kimberly Varilek said.


The case was handled in seven phases, beginning with an examination of tribal water rights awarded in the Second Treaty of Fort Bridger. In the original case, the Wyoming Supreme Court ruled the tribes were awarded 499,862 acre-feet of reserved water right for use on their irrigable agricultural lands.


The next phases handled treaty issues, state water right adjudication and federal adjudications.



$1.9M in incentives for suburban Chicago gun club


A Chicago suburb is using nearly $1.9 million in sales tax and other incentives to lure a developer to build a gun club with shooting ranges, a gun store and a hotel and restaurant.


Oak Forest community development director Adam Dotson and city planner Jake Melrose acknowledge it's a lot of money, but say the financial benefits outweigh the expense. The incentives, they say, are needed to compete with other communities.


The Southtown Star reports (http://bit.ly/1pBGgMi ) that construction on the Eagle Gun Club could begin within weeks.


The newspaper reports that the deal with the city includes $650,000 up front to help buy the property and $1.2 million in sales tax incentives over 10 years.


Club co-owner Omar Ahmad says it will be "a destination" for people around the region.



FIFA audit panel asks member to explain his arrest


FIFA's financial monitoring panel has asked one of its members to explain his arrest in a corruption case.


Canover Watson was detained in his native Cayman Islands on Aug. 28 by police anti-corruption and financial crime units.


Local media reported that Watson was quizzed about alleged money laundering and abuse of public office. The case reportedly involves a 2010 contract to supply public hospitals with swipe-card billing technology.


FIFA audit and compliance committee chairman Domenico Scala said Watson has been contacted about the case.


"We have asked Canover Watson whether he can share with the audit committee any additional information," Scala said on Saturday in an email reply to the Associated Press.


Scala wrote that the request is "in agreement with the (FIFA) ethics committee."


Watson is an associate of FIFA vice president Jeffrey Webb, a banker from the Cayman Islands and president of the CONCACAF regional body since 2012.


Watson serves the North and Central American and Caribbean region on Scala's eight-member watchdog scrutinizing FIFA's financial integrity. Soccer's governing body gets more than $1 billion revenue annually and has nearly $1.5 billion in reserves.


The panel was formed in 2012 under Scala's leadership as a key part of anti-corruption reforms. They were ordered after bribery and vote-buying scandals implicating senior FIFA officials, including disgraced former CONCACAF leader Jack Warner, who resigned in 2011 to avoid investigation by FIFA.


CONCACAF said in a statement on Saturday it was "awaiting the complete review of the ongoing proceedings" involving Watson.


"At CONCACAF, we take great pride of the highest standards of integrity, governance and transparency that lead the organization," the statement said.


Reports said Watson was released on bail on the same day of his arrest. He released a statement through his lawyers the following day, denying any wrongdoing.


Currently managing director of a financial services company, Watson's biography on the firm's website states he is also a director of the Cayman Islands Stock Exchange.


An email sent to his business email address on Saturday prompted an automatic reply that he is "currently on an indefinite leave of absence."


The Cayman Islands has had increased standing and respect in world soccer since Webb was elected to the FIFA hierarchy. He remains president of the islands' football association, and Watson is treasurer.


There is no suggestion Webb is linked to the police probe.


Watson is also among four vice presidents of the Caribbean Football Union.


His colleagues on the CFU executive include FIFA appeals committee chairman Larry Mussenden of Bermuda, and Sonia Bien-Aime, a co-opted member of FIFA's ruling board from the Turks and Caicos Islands.


The FIFA audit and compliance group is next scheduled to meet Dec. 16 in Morocco on the sidelines of the Club World Cup.



FIFA audit panel asks member to explain his arrest


FIFA's financial monitoring panel has asked one of its members to explain his arrest in a corruption case.


Canover Watson was detained in his native Cayman Islands on Aug. 28 by police anti-corruption and financial crime units.


Local media reported that Watson was quizzed about alleged money laundering and abuse of public office. The case reportedly involves a 2010 contract to supply public hospitals with swipe-card billing technology.


FIFA audit and compliance committee chairman Domenico Scala said Watson has been contacted about the case.


"We have asked Canover Watson whether he can share with the audit committee any additional information," Scala said on Saturday in an email reply to the Associated Press.


Scala wrote that the request is "in agreement with the (FIFA) ethics committee."


Watson is an associate of FIFA vice president Jeffrey Webb, a banker from the Cayman Islands and president of the CONCACAF regional body since 2012.


Watson serves the North and Central American and Caribbean region on Scala's eight-member watchdog scrutinizing FIFA's financial integrity. Football's governing body gets more than $1 billion revenue annually and has nearly $1.5 billion in reserves.


The panel was formed in 2012 under Scala's leadership as a key part of anti-corruption reforms. They were ordered after bribery and vote-buying scandals implicating senior FIFA officials, including disgraced former CONCACAF leader Jack Warner, who resigned in 2011 to avoid investigation by FIFA.


CONCACAF said in a statement on Saturday it was "awaiting the complete review of the ongoing proceedings" involving Watson.


"At CONCACAF, we take great pride of the highest standards of integrity, governance and transparency that lead the organization," the statement said.


Reports said Watson was released on bail on the same day of his arrest. He released a statement through his lawyers the following day, denying any wrongdoing.


Currently managing director of a financial services company, Watson's biography on the firm's website states he is also a director of the Cayman Islands Stock Exchange.


An email sent to his business email address on Saturday prompted an automatic reply that he is "currently on an indefinite leave of absence."


The Cayman Islands has had increased standing and respect in world football since Webb was elected to the FIFA hierarchy. He remains president of the islands' football federation and Watson is treasurer.


There is no suggestion Webb is linked to the police probe.


Watson is also among four vice presidents of the Caribbean Football Union.


His colleagues on the CFU executive include FIFA appeals committee chairman Larry Mussenden of Bermuda, and Sonia Bien-Aime, a co-opted member of FIFA's ruling board from the Turks and Caicos Islands.


The FIFA audit and compliance group is next scheduled to meet Dec. 16 in Morocco on the sidelines of the Club World Cup.



Moody's: State pension debt vs. revenue is worst


Illinois' pension liability as a percentage of state revenue is far and away the nation's highest, a major credit-rating agency says in a new report.


Moody's Investors Service reported that the state's three-year average liability over revenue is 258 percent. The next closest is Connecticut at about 200 percent.


The report averaged the Illinois percentage from 2010 through 2012. In 2012 alone, the state's rate was 318 percent.


The state has a $100 billion deficit in the amount of money that should be invested in the portfolios of five state-employee pension accounts. Lawmakers adopted an overhaul plan last fall that cuts benefits and increases worker contributions to significantly cut that debt.


But the law has been challenged in court. A Sangamon County judge last week indicated he wanted the case moved swiftly to appellate courts, suggesting the Illinois Supreme Court's rejection in July of a law affecting retiree health insurance could prove a model for the pension challenge.


Moody's points out that even if the pension overhaul gets constitutional approval from the high court, it still will take decades for the state to dig out of its financial hole.


Moody's first released a state-by-state ranking of what it calls "adjusted net pension liability" in June 2013, when it put the Illinois rate at 241 percent. The latest report, focusing just on Illinois, doesn't give specific percentages for those trailing the state, but Moody's said 15 months ago that Connecticut was at 190 percent and Kentucky at 141 percent.


The median percentage for all states at the time was 45 percent. In the latest report, Moody's sets that level at 51 percent.


Several larger states, similar to Illinois, are well below the median and rank in the 10 lowest percentages of adjusted net pension liability, including Ohio, Florida and New York. The group also includes Illinois neighbors Iowa and Wisconsin — the latter having the lowest level next to Nebraska.


Only three others states — New Jersey, Hawaii and Louisiana — have rates higher than 120 percent.


Adjusted net pension liability is a calculation Moody's uses to "achieve greater comparability and transparency" by recalculating state and local net pension liabilities based on a market-determined discount rate and the market value of assets.


For the 2012 fiscal year, Moody's says Illinois had an unfunded actuarial accrued liability in its pension programs of $93 billion and an adjusted net pension liability of $187 billion, yielding liabilities as a percentage of revenue of 318 percent.



New Texas math standards mean learning earlier


Some Texas children are finding their teachers are moving at a faster pace after a shift in math test standards has forced educators to cover more ground.


The Dallas Morning News (http://bit.ly/1oR0wct ) reported Saturday that the changes moved some content that previously was covered in higher grades to lower grades. And students in upper grades will have to scramble to get up to speed with content that they should've covered in previous years under the new standards.


For instance, using a protractor to measure an angle was a skill learned at a sixth-grade level. Now students in fourth grade will learn to do it. Therefore, children currently in fifth and sixth grade are assumed to know how to use it, even if they did not cover it in previous years.


Last year's State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness tests results showed that 9 percent of fifth-graders and 11 percent of eighth-graders did not pass the tests they needed to get automatic promotion.


A chart produced by the Richardson Independent School District shows that 46 percent of fifth grade students' curriculum remained the same, 28 percent was moved down from the sixth and seventh grade and 26 percent is new content.


Children will also be required to cover more content on financial literacy since kindergarten.


Math standards for higher grades won't change until next fall.


The changes have been coming since 2011, when the Texas Education Agency recommended major shifts to meet college and career readiness.


However, STAAR tests this year will not count for promotion because the new exams will not have been field tested and the state needs to know how the students score before it sets a passing standard.


"The students will be exposed to what they need to know. Will the timelines be met? Yes," said Oswaldo Alvarenga, Dallas' executive director for STEM instruction. "How deep an understanding will students have? That is a great question. Our teachers are working really hard to get that understanding and reach it to that level."



Mystery shrouds US couple's crash off Jamaica


Search-and-rescue crews searching off Jamaica's northeast coast on Saturday were stymied in efforts to solve the mystery of a small private plane carrying a prominent upstate New York couple taken on a ghostly 1,700-mile journey after the pilot was apparently incapacitated.


Jamaica Coast Guard Commander Antonette Wemyss-Gorman told a news conference Saturday afternoon that debris spotted off the coast on Friday evening could no longer be seen. "We would have to assume it may have sunk," she said.


Maj. Basil Jarrett of the Jamaica Defense Force had said earlier in the day that possible wreckage of the high-performance plane was spotted Friday evening by a military aircraft flying off the island's northeast coast, floating roughly 24 miles (38 kilometers) off the coastal town of Port Antonio.


Leroy Lindsay, director of Jamaica's civil aviation authority, said that the area where the private U.S. plane went down has depths of up to 2,000 meters (more than 6,500 feet). The Jamaican military on Friday had reported finding an oil slick in the general area where the plane vanished.


Lindsay said that once the wreckage is located, French authorities have offered to provide expertise and equipment to bring it up from the ocean depths because the airplane was French-made.


The single-engine turboprop Socata TBM700 was carrying Rochester real estate developer Laurence Glazer and his entrepreneur wife, Jane — both experienced pilots. On Friday, U.S. fighter pilots were launched to shadow the unresponsive aircraft observed the pilot slumped over and its windows frosting over. Officials say the plane slammed into the sea at least 14 miles (22 kilometers) off Jamaica's northeast coastline.


In a Friday statement, the Coast Guard 7th District command center in Miami said three people were reportedly on board the plane. A 154-foot (47-meter) U.S. Coast Guard cutter and a helicopter crew are aiding in the Saturday search off Jamaica.


The plane's pilot had indicated there was a problem and twice asked to descend to a lower altitude before permission was granted by an air traffic controller, according to a recording of the radio conversation. Radio contact with the plane was lost shortly thereafter.


Son Rick Glazer said he could not confirm his parents were killed, adding that "we know so little."


But public officials offered their condolences for a couple described as a linchpin in efforts to rejuvenate an upstate New York city stung by the decline of corporate giants Kodak, Bausch & Lomb and Xerox.


"The Glazers were innovative and generous people who were committed to revitalizing downtown Rochester and making the city they loved a better place for all," Gov. Andrew Cuomo said.


Laurence Glazer co-founded Buckingham Properties and served as chief executive and managing partner, working alongside two sons. Overall, the company owns more than 60 properties in the Rochester area and in central Florida.


His friend Harold Samoff said Saturday that he and Glazer got started in the real estate business in 1970 with a small apartment building, then went on to acquire and revitalize more and bigger properties on the inner-city periphery, reasoning that "just like blight can spread, improvement can spread, also." Samoff retired about a decade ago.


Glazer went on to more complex projects, such as converting former industrial properties into loft apartments and turning a shuttered hospital into offices. More recently, he bought Xerox Corp.'s Rochester tower — the city's tallest — and Bausch + Lomb's building.


Jane Glazer started QCI Direct, which produces two national retail catalogs selling household and other products. It made Rochester's Top 100 list of fastest growing privately held companies last year, according to its website.


The single-engine plane took off at 8:45 a.m. Friday from the Greater Rochester International Airport in New York en route to Naples, Florida. Air traffic controllers were last able to contact the pilot at 10 a.m., the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement.


On a recording made by LiveATC, a website that monitors and posts air traffic control audio recordings, the pilot is heard saying, "We need to descend down to about (18,000 feet). We have an indication that's not correct in the plane." A controller replied, "Stand by."


After a pause, the controller told the pilot to fly at 25,000 feet (7,620 meters). "We need to get lower," the pilot responded. "Working on that," the controller said.


Controllers then cleared the plane to descend to 20,000 feet (6,096 meters), a command which the pilot acknowledged. A couple minutes later, a controller radioed the plane by its tail number: "900 Kilo November, if you hear this transmission, ident" — identify yourself. There was no response.


At 10:40 a.m., two F-16 fighter jets were scrambled from a National Guard base in South Carolina to investigate, according to a statement by the North American Aerospace Defense Command. Those jets handed off monitoring duties around 11:30 a.m. to two F-15 fighters from Homestead Air Reserve Base in Florida.


The U.S. fighter jets followed the plane until it reached Cuban airspace, when they peeled off, said Preston Schlachter, a spokesman for the North American Aerospace Defense Command & US Northern Command.


On a LiveATC recording, the fighter pilots can be heard discussing the Socata pilot's condition.


"I can see his chest rising and falling right before I left," one said.


"It was the first time we could see that he was actually breathing. It may be a deal where, depending on how fast they meet them, he may regain consciousness once the aircraft starts descending for fuel ..." the fighter pilot said.


The pilot was speculating that the Socata pilot was suffering from hypoxia, or oxygen deprivation, but Schlachter said the Air Force doesn't know for certain that was the case.


The crash was the second in less than a week in which a private pilot has become unresponsive during a flight. On Aug. 30, a pilot lost consciousness and his plane drifted into restricted airspace over the nation's capital. Fighter jets were also launched in that case and stayed with the small aircraft until it ran out of fuel and crashed into the water.


Cases of pilots becoming unresponsive while their planes wander the sky are unusual, with probably not much more than a handful of such incidents over the last decade, said aviation safety expert John Goglia. They sometimes occur when a pilot becomes incapacitated by a heart attack or stroke, but more often the problem is insufficient cabin pressurization that causes the pilot to pass out, he said.


In 1999, the pilots of a Learjet carrying professional golfer Payne Stewart from Orlando, Florida, to Texas became unresponsive. The plane took a turn and wandered to South Dakota before running out of fuel and crashing into a field west of Aberdeen. Stewart and five others on board were killed. An NTSB investigation blamed the accident on depressurization.



Joan Lowy reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz in New York City; Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo, New York; George M. Walsh in Albany, New York; and Judith Ausuebel at the News Information Research Center in New York contributed to this report.


President Obama Visits Stonehenge

As the last stop on his three-day trip to Estonia and to the NATO Summit in Wales, President Obama visits the prehistoric monument Stonehenge.


Geagea: We must unite to defeat ISIS


BEIRUT: The cancer that ISIS is can still be halted, Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea said Saturday, but only if the world resolves to work together to stop it.


' ISIS is a cancerous tumor that surfaced at first in parts of Iraq and Syria and it's still contained to a certain point and this can be removed only if we join our efforts via an international Arab alliance,' Geagea said during a ceremony to commemorate the LF martyrs.


'If they're trying to intimidate us then do not fear them. ... Those who faced major challenges and the likes of ISIS throughout history should not fear those today,' he said


'We are the sons of the historical Lebanese resistance.'


Geagea also spoke about the presidential election, indirectly criticizing his rival MP Michel Aoun for eyeing the presidency at the expense of the country.


'It is a political crime to cut off the head of the republic in order to occupy that position,' Geagea said


'It is unacceptable to take the country hostage in exchange for the presidency as a ransom.'


He said the only reason Aoun sought to amend the Constitution was 'because he failed to reach the presidency.'


Aoun has proposed that the Constitution be amended so that the people could directly elect the president instead of Parliament.


'Talk of amending the Constitution to bring a strong president is a useless argument because the current mechanism of voting has brought in strong presidents since independence,' the LF leader said.


He also rejected calls for Christians and other Lebanese to arm themselves to confront terrorism, saying such means only force the collapse of the state.


'While we reject all kinds of self-defense, some try to promote for political purpose under the guise of fighting terrorism,' he said


'Christians only carried arms during the Civil War when the state completely collapsed.'


He said the state and its security institutions were still intact and capable of defending its citizens


'Calls for people to carry arms only aim to serve a blow to the state and its institutions, which they have began to do by maintaining a paralysis in the presidency and disrupting Parliament's work.'



A farewell to art: NY eatery's big Picasso to move


For over half a century, the Four Seasons restaurant has been a place where Picasso meets the power lunch.


But the pairing between one of the art legend's biggest paintings and one of New York's most illustrious eateries ends Sunday, when the unusual artwork — a painted stage curtain — is to be eased off its travertine wall and ultimately moved to a museum. The move follows a legal dispute that for a time split some of the city's most prominent preservationists.


As the curtain falls on the long residency of "Le Tricorne," it's taken on a sense of farewell to an elite-yet-accessible New York tradition. Reservations have risen for the painting's final days at the Four Seasons, art students have come to sketch and visitors to snap pictures, and on a recent afternoon, some diners paused to bid adieu to the distinctive painting with the setting to match.


"I was just knocked out by it," said author, movie producer and longtime Four Seasons habitue Howard Kaminsky. "It belongs in a museum, but the great thing was coming across it in a place like this."


Depicting spectators socializing after a bullfight, "Le Tricorne" — or "three-cornered hat" — was painted in 1919 for an avant-garde ballet troupe. By emphasizing spectators in his scene, "Picasso hoped to blur the frontier between stage and auditorium," biographer Sir John Richardson wrote in the third volume of "A Life of Picasso."


"Le Tricorne" has held a prominent spot at the Four Seasons since it opened in 1959 and became the quintessence of A-list, expense-account lunching, serving presidents and princesses, the Dalai Lama and Madonna. (It's unaffiliated with the posh Four Seasons hotel nearby.)


At 19 feet by 20 feet, the curtain is believed to be the biggest Picasso painting in North America. Appraised in 2008 at $1.6 million, it's far from the artist's priciest work. But some fans see the curtain as part of the expansive, sleek ambience that made the landmarked, Philip Johnson-designed Four Seasons "the gold standard in modern restaurant design," as architecture critic Paul Goldberger has described it.


Building owner RFR Holding Corp. concluded last fall that the curtain needed to come down for repairs to the wall behind it. The city Landmarks Conservancy, which owns the painting, sued in March to try to stop the move, saying it could destroy the brittle curtain, never moved since a mid-1970s restoration.


The dispute created a touchy schism in preservation circles: RFR co-founder Aby Rosen, a major art collector, had been honored by the Landmarks Conservancy itself. The suit was settled in June with an agreement to donate the painting to the New-York Historical Society to display, with RFR paying the undisclosed cost of the painstaking move.


It's expected to start shortly after 12 a.m. Sunday, take 12 or more hours and involve more than a dozen scaffold riggers and art movers.


After riggers erect a roughly 18-foot-tall scaffold, the painting will carefully be rolled onto a 20-foot-long, 2-foot-diameter, foam-covered, reinforced cardboard tube, Landmarks Conservancy President Peg Breen said.


Then the canvas — likely 300 to 500 pounds, including the roller — will be nestled in a specially built steel cradle and trucked to the Williamstown Art Conservation Center in Massachusetts for a delicate vacuum-cleaning and repairs to some small tears, she said. It could be several weeks before the painting goes to its new home.


"It's a unique move," Breen said, but "under the circumstances, we're doing everything possible to make sure that it's done well."


Rosen declined to comment on the move or on what might take the curtain's place.


As its days at the Four Seasons grew numbered, the painting has drawn perhaps more attention than ever, with business tycoons snapping selfies and even Vogue magazine photographing rapper Iggy Azalea in front of it this spring. Visitors have been so numerous that co-owner Julian Niccolini moved in a couch to accommodate onlookers.


Still, for an eatery conceived around the ever-changing seasons, it may just be time for something new, he says.


"I always felt that the restaurant is not really something that should stay the same — that's why we change the menu every day," Niccolini said. "When the painting is gone, something else is going to come up that, I'm sure, is going to be spectacular."



Reach Jennifer Peltz on Twitter @ jennpeltz.


Honda recalls 126,000 motorcycles for a 2nd time


Honda Motor Co. is recalling 126,000 motorcycles for a second time because their brakes can malfunction.


The recall covers Honda's GL-1800 motorcycles for model years 2001-2010 and 2012. A problem with the secondary brake master cylinder can cause the rear brake to drag, potentially leading to a crash or fire.


Honda had received 533 complaints through July 24, including reports of eight small fires. There have been no reports of crashes or injuries as a result of the problem.


Honda originally recalled the motorcycles in December 2011 but continued to receive complaints. It says in documents filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration that the "root cause has not been determined" and it is continuing to investigate.


Honda will send a letter to each motorcycle owner explaining how to look for the problem. Motorcycles with the defect can be taken to the dealer for inspection. Owners will get a second letter when repairs and replacement parts are available.



School on probation says it's addressing issues


A school that is among Connecticut's leading producers of teachers says it was addressing deficiencies before state officials put it on probation, and it expects the issues to be resolved within a year.


A three-year probation period for the School of Education at Southern Connecticut State University was unanimously approved Wednesday by the state Board of Education, which cited several deficiencies in the school's teacher programs. The board said the school doesn't adequately assess students' skills before making student teaching assignments, doesn't consistently assess advanced teacher education programs and doesn't appear to give students data and feedback to improve their ability to help other students from diverse populations, among other issues.


Southern bills its School of Education as the largest preparer of education graduates for teaching positions in the state. The school offers more than 30 degree programs serving more than 2,000 full-time and part-time students in undergraduate, master's and doctoral programs.


School officials said a probation period wasn't warranted.


"The reality is that our national accreditation remains in place and our ability to grant degrees at undergraduate and graduate levels is unaffected," SCSU President Mary Papazian said in a statement. "The quality of our faculty in the School of Education remains excellent, and the quality of our curriculum remains outstanding."


The probation was imposed after a visit to the school in March by a team of state education officials and representatives from the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, which accredits Southern's teaching programs. While the national council said the school was meeting its standards, state officials said the school was deficient in meeting state standards.


The university in New Haven will be required to submit progress reports every six months until an on-site review in the spring of 2017.


Southern recently underwent leadership changes, including the hirings of Provost Bette Bergeron and School of Education Dean Stephen Hegedus.


"We are encouraged by the new SCSU leaders' resolve to correct identified deficiencies and we are optimistic that they will succeed in strengthening their critical preparation programs," state Education Commissioner Stefan Pryor said.



Obama Will Put Off Executive Actions On Immigration


Responding to fellow Democrats' concerns in a tight election season, President Obama will delay acting on his own on immigration issues until after November's midterm vote, the White House says. Earlier this summer, the president had pledged to use executive actions to address immigration if Congress did not.


"The reality the president has had to weigh is that we're in the midst of the political season," a White House official says, noting that Obama "believes it would be harmful to the policy itself and to the long-term prospects" for reform if he acted before November.


The goal, the official said, is to shape a new policy "that's sustainable" — something the White House will work toward before the end of 2014.


In June, President Obama said he would act on his own to reshape immigration policies at the summer's end. But since then, NPR's Mara Liasson reports, "he's come under pressure from Senate Democrats running for reelection in red states who are worried about a backlash from Republicans."


Noting that the president has already given some relief to immigrants who entered the U.S. as children, Mara says that Obama will now wait until at least November "to use his executive authority to give temporary deportation relief to immigrants in the country illegally, who meet certain criteria."


The decision to put off further moves "sparked swift anger from immigration advocates," The New York Times reports.


The newspaper adds that Obama's earlier use of executive power "to go around a gridlocked Congress have already sparked a Republican lawsuit alleging that he has abused the executive powers of his office and is building an 'imperial presidency.'"


A lawsuit filed by a group of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents says "they're being asked to violate their own oath by not deporting people that they find to be in the country illegally," as USA Today's Alan Gomez told NPR's David Greene this week.


In the same interview, Grace Meng, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, offered this view:


"I think it's been incredibly troubling to see how the administration has dealt with this crisis. Instead of ensuring that those who are eligible for protection are able to access those processes, we've seen an expansion of family detention, you know, something that the administration actually stopped several years ago because children were being placed in prison-like conditions."


And Gomez added:


"Democrats and Republicans alike would like to see more judges; they'd like to see more prosecutors down there. Right now there are currently over 370,000 immigration cases in court waiting for their day."



If It's Not About Sex, It Must Be About Money — Unless It's About Power



Former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell arrives at federal court in Richmond on Aug. 28.i i



Former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell arrives at federal court in Richmond on Aug. 28. Steve Helber/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Steve Helber/AP

Former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell arrives at federal court in Richmond on Aug. 28.



Former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell arrives at federal court in Richmond on Aug. 28.


Steve Helber/AP


With the stunning conviction of former Virginia GOP Gov. Bob McDonnell and his wife on corruption charges, people are once again posing that age old question: Why do so many politicians get into trouble with the law?


The list of reasons comes as a shock because it's so short. The mighty are laid low by the same three temptations, over and over.


There's sex, of course, which can embarrass anofficeholder into early retirement. Congressman Anthony Wiener left Capitol Hill and lost his bid to be mayor of New York last year with his online torso selfies and salacious tweets. At least two of his former colleagues in Congress have been pilloried for their own peccadilloes since.


But while sex scandals may end or limit careers (at least in states outside Louisiana), they rarely lead to indictments, trials or jail terms. That kind of trouble happens when the politician's downfall is denominated in dollars.


So it was with the McDonnells. They could have had whatever sort of social relationship either of them wanted with Richmond businessman Jonnie Williams; no one would have cared. But their acceptance of loans and gifts valued in six figures led prosecutors to believe Williams was getting something in return — access to the office and powers of the governor.


Prosecutors saw that as "obtaining property under color of official right" and depriving Virginia citizens of "their right to honest services." And they made the jury see it that way too.


The McDonnells' defense tried to change the subject and make the scandal about sex, more or less. They argued that Maureen McDonnell had a "crush" on Williams and that the state's First Couple were not really a couple anymore. You could call it a wink-and-nudge sort of defense.


The implication was that, hey, this was embarrassing and all but, you know, not a crime. If the governor himself didn't do anything wrong, well, no harm no foul. And on the stand, day after day, Bob McDonnell surely seemed to believe this.


But in the end, the jury did not. The jury saw the Rolex and the Oscar de la Renta dresses and the Cape Cod vacation trip and the $50,000 check that was said to be a loan. And that didn't look like a bad marriage, it looked like real money.


It has been said that smart thieves know better than to ever steal anything small. And by that same token, politicians are more likely to be nailed for petty chiseling than for fleecing the federal treasury for billions in pork barrel projects back home.


Stealing money or valuable items for personal use on a human scale is the sort of offense ordinary people can calibrate, understand and resent.


That's what happened to legendary Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski a few years back. The longtime Chicago congressman lost his committee, then his seat and ultimately his freedom because of an investigation that began with his misuse of the House post office (where he got free stamps) and his misappropriation of commemorative chairs. Seriously.


Rostenkowski served years in a federal prison, as did another House member, former Navy aviator Randy "Duke" Cunningham. The Dukester wrote out a price list on a restaurant napkin, detailing what he charged for various favors he could do for defense contractors.


The third and final category of corruption at these levels of power has to do with power itself. While not as common as financial perfidy, these abuses are the most likely to make history.


It was one kind of crime when former Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards sought payoffs for licenses to operate casinos in his state. Edwards, long a colorful rogue, finally went to prison for this. (Out now, he is making a quixotic bid for redemption by running for Congress.)


But it was an offense of another order when Edwards' infamous predecessor, Huey "Kingfish" Long, usurped the powers of the legislative and judicial branches and became a species of potentate. It's hard to know where Long's ambitions might have led had he not been assassinated in 1935.


It has also been observed that Richard Nixon, the only president ever forced to resign, abused his office not to enrich himself but to ensure his re-election and take revenge on political opponents.


Ben Bagdikian, the journalist and author whose years as a Washington Post editor included the Watergate ordeal, once drew this distinction between those events and more run-of-the-mill scandals.


"Politicians who get in trouble are typically using their office to get money; Nixon was using his power to get more power, and that's fascism."



ISIS executes second Lebanese soldier


ISIS executes second Lebanese soldier


An ISIS commander told the Turkish the Anadolu news agency Saturday that his group beheaded a second Lebanese Army...



Pesticide drift is persistent problem for farmers


The cloud of insecticide that drifted from a neighbor's corn field onto the asparagus on Andrew and Melissa Dunham's central Iowa farm cast a shadow over their organic vegetable business.


They say the costs from the incident and resulting loss of organic certification on their asparagus patch for three years will reach about $74,000, and they're now working with the sprayer's insurance company.


"We're a certified organic farm — except for our asparagus," Melissa Dunham lamented.


Pesticide drift is a serious concern for organic farmers and they've come up with several defenses, such as buffer strips. Twelve states are part of a registry of farms that tips off aerial and ground sprayers to areas they need to avoid. The aerial spraying industry and pesticide manufacturers, meanwhile, say they've made big strides in controlling drift through pilot education and new technologies.


Organic and specialty crop growers are trying to profit off the rising consumer interest in locally grown, natural foods. But those smaller farms are often islands surrounded by a sea of conventionally grown crops that get sprayed with herbicides, insecticides and fungicides.


The Dunhams grow about 20 acres of organic vegetables on their 80-acre Grinnell Heritage Farm, selling directly to consumers and wholesale to some grocers.


Iowa agricultural officials determined this spring that a ground applicator violated several regulations while spraying an insecticide on a neighboring farm last August. Only the asparagus was affected, Melissa Dunham said, but since they can't market it as organic again until 2017, they can't charge wholesale customers as much for it.


Any organic farm next to a conventional farm is at risk, so farmers typically have buffer systems, said Nate Lewis, senior crop and livestock specialist with the Organic Trade Association. There are as many buffer strategies as there are farms, he said. An organic apple orchard in Washington state could sell fruit from its first three rows of trees as conventional or Midwest corn and soybean farmers might just mow down their first few rows of plants.


The Dunhams maintain a 30-foot buffer strip of shrubs along the affected side of their farm. They've posted no-spray signs and listed their farm on Iowa's sensitive crops registry. But the precautions weren't enough. Fortunately, Melissa Dunham said, no customers in their spring community-supported agriculture (CSA) program accepted their offer of refunds.


"They were more sympathetic and angry, actually, that there were no penalties," she said.


Practical Farmers of Iowa recently began circulating a detailed brochure for farmers and rural residents on how to protect themselves from drift, recognize when it's happened and what to do then. The group's fruit and vegetable growers say drift is one of their top concerns, energy and horticulture coordinator Liz Kolbe said.


Better pilot training and sprayer technology have led to significant reductions in pesticide drift, said Andrew Moore, executive director of the National Agricultural Aviation Association. The association offers a program across the country on safety and drift issues. He said it contributed to a 26 percent drop in confirmed drift instances between when it debuted in 1999 and 2003 alone.


But it's hard for crop dusters to avoid vulnerable farms if they don't know where they are. Enter Driftwatch, which Purdue University launched in 2008. Producers can register their farms, while applicators can check the website's interactive map and sign up for email notifications. Twelve states and the Canadian province of Saskatchewan are part of DriftWatch, while Iowa and some other states maintain their own registries.


"I think for the states that have been in it a while it is making a huge difference," said Reid Sprenkel, president and CEO of FieldWatch, the nonprofit that runs DriftWatch.


Organic farmers also worry about a new Dow AgroSciences weed control system awaiting federal approval called Enlist — partly because it uses 2, 4-D, an old herbicide that's been prone to drift. Pesticide Action Network organizer Linda Wells said 2, 4-D is "notoriously volatile" and particularly harmful to grapes and tomatoes.


Enlist kills weeds that are becoming resistant to glyphosate, better known as Roundup. The company has given the 2, 4-D in Enlist Duo herbicide a different chemical structure, and customers must agree to use an advanced type of spray nozzle, said Damon Palmer, commercial leader for Enlist in the U.S.


The combination reduces volatility and drift by around 90 percent, he said.


"We've got a solution here that will allow corn and soybean farmers to farm next to specialty crop and organic growers as well," Palmer said.



New Jersey gas prices up slightly over last week


Motorists are seeing slightly higher prices at the pumps in New Jersey.


AAA Mid-Atlantic says the average price of a gallon of regular gasoline in the state on Friday was $3.27, up 2 cents from last week. But that's still lower than the price from a year ago, when motorists were paying $3.51.


The price increase ends an eight-week stretch where gas prices had fallen in New Jersey.


The national average price on Friday was $3.44, the same price as last week. But that's still lower than the national average from a year ago, when motorists were paying $3.59.


Analysts say gas prices will likely stay stable or decrease in the coming weeks, now that the summer travel season has come to an end.



Nebraska rural attorney program to launch soon

The Associated Press



The state is preparing to launch its latest program intended to attract lawyers to rural Nebraska communities where there is a such a scarcity of practicing attorneys, some residents have to drive more than 100 miles to find one.


The Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy is expected to begin taking applications for the Rural Practice Loan Repayment Assistance Program next month and to make its first payments in January.


Under the program, law school graduates who commit to serving at least three years in underserved Nebraska communities can get up to $6,000 a year to repay student loans. The program's board is considering paying for up to seven years in underserved communities, for a total of $42,000 in student loan repayment, said Jim Mowbray, chief counsel for Nebraska Commission on Public Advocacy and a member of the loan repayment program's board.


"I'm anxious to see what this program will do," Mowbray said. "It's getting very difficult in rural Nebraska. I'll go into communities where there might be only one lawyer in that county."


Of the state's 93 counties, there are 12 with no practicing attorney, according to the Nebraska State Bar Association. Twenty-one other counties have three or fewer attorneys.


"They're having this problem throughout the Midwest — Kansas, the Dakotas, Iowa," said Mike Fenner, president of the Nebraska State Bar Association and a law professor at Omaha's Creighton University.


But in western Nebraska, where one can drive in some places for more than 50 miles without coming across a town, the shortage is particularly stark, he said.


People in western Nebraska's Logan County have to drive more than 100 miles in any direction to reach a practicing attorney, Fenner said.


The significance of that distance hit him when he recently had to drive about 130 miles to get to a speaking engagement at the University of South Dakota in Vermillion.


"And I thought, what if I had to go to Vermillion to get medical care?" Fenner said. "I can tell you, I'd get a whole lot less medical care.


"The same thing is happening with these folks in western Nebraska. You're going to get a whole lot less legal care if you have to drive more than 100 miles to get it."


Most young attorneys fear that moving to rural Nebraska will mean a much lower income, Fenner said. But attorneys "can make a lot of money in rural Nebraska," he said, especially when one considers the lower cost of living in areas outside of Omaha and Lincoln. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the median house value in 2010 in Omaha was nearly $133,000 and more than $142,000 in Lincoln. Comparatively, the median house value in the small western Nebraska city of Sidney was about $100,000.


For two years, the state bar has been sending busloads of law students from the University of Nebraska and Creighton into rural Nebraska for two-day tours, where the students meet with town leaders, real estate agents, school officials and health care workers to give them a firsthand look at the opportunities they would have as attorneys in a rural setting.


"It's not that young lawyers don't want to move there; they don't know they want to move there," Fenner said. "They see that they can have a really terrific and varied law practice. They're not going to get stuck in a windowless office in some big law firm working on one antitrust case for a year."


The effort appears to be paying off. Fenner said in the first year, two law students accepted summer clerkships in rural Nebraska, and two other law school grads accepted permanent positions in western Nebraska.


Mowbray and others hope the loan repayment program also will draw new blood to rural communities.


The Legislature provided $500,000 for the program this spring, and the program's board has decided to limit overall payments to $150,000 each year for the first three years. It hopes to garner more state funding and private donations for the program in the coming years, Mowbray said.



Movie theater coming to McComb


A Missouri-based movie theater company plans a nine-screen luxury theater complex in McComb.


The Enterprise-Journal reports (http://bit.ly/1lIplgf) B&B Theatres' theater would be located near the Interstate 55 south McComb exit.


The company has similar complexes in Missouri, Oklahoma, Florida, Kansas and Texas.


The company is working with RBR Land Co. of McComb on the development.


"We met with several different theater companies, and these guys came to look at it and thought it would be a good location," said Shawn Lowery with RBR.


B&B Theatres president Bob Bagby said in a news release the theater will include stadium seating with leather-style reclining seats, concession stands, a Christie digital projection and 3D REAL-D technology in some auditoriums. All auditoriums will feature Dolby 7.1 digital surround sound and wall-to-wall curved screens.


"We still have a lot of details to work out before construction can begin, but assuming we can work out all of the details in a reasonable time frame, we hope to open the new theater in the fall of 2015," Bagby said.


Plans also call for an in-theater restaurant known as the Marquee Bar and Grille, which will feature a bar and lounge near the theater's lobby. In the lounge, patrons will be able to order food, cocktails, beer and wine and take food and drinks into any of the nine auditoriums.


B&B Theatres is a family-owned business that opened in 1924. It is now the 16th largest theater chain in North America and has 239 screens.


McComb has been without a movie theater since June 2004.



White House: Obama to delay immigration action


Abandoning his pledge to act by the end of summer, President Barack Obama has decided to delay any executive action on immigration until after the November congressional elections, White House officials said.


The move instantly infuriated immigration advocates while offering relief to some vulnerable Democrats in tough Senate re-election contests.


Two White House officials said Obama concluded that circumventing Congress through executive actions on immigration during the campaign would politicize the issue and hurt future efforts to pass a broad overhaul.


The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the president's decision before it was announced, said Obama made his decision Friday as he returned to Washington from a NATO summit in Wales.


They said Obama called a few allies from Air Force One to inform them of his decision, and that the president made more calls from the White House on Saturday.


The officials said Obama had no specific timeline to act, but that he still would take his executive steps before the end of the year.


In a Rose Garden speech on June 30, Obama said he had directed Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and Attorney General Eric Holder to give him recommendations for executive action by the end of summer. Obama also pledged to "adopt those recommendations without further delay."


Obama faced competing pressures from immigration advocacy groups that wanted prompt action and from Democrats worried that acting now would energize Republican opposition against vulnerable Senate Democrats. Among those considered most at risk were Democratic Sens. Mark Pryor of Arkansas, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana and Kay Hagan of North Carolina.


Obama advisers were not convinced that any presidential action would affect the elections. But the officials said the discussions around timing grew more pronounced within the past few weeks.


Ultimately, the advisers drew a lesson from 1994 when Democratic losses were blamed on votes for gun-control legislation, undermining any interest in passing future gun measures.


White House officials said aides realized that if Obama's immigration action was deemed responsible for Democratic losses this year, it could hurt any attempt to pass a broad overhaul later on.


Immigration advocates blasted Obama and Senate Democrats over the decision, saying both have shown a lack of political will.


"We are bitterly disappointed in the president and we are bitterly disappointed in the Senate Democrats," said Frank Sharry, executive director of America's Voice. "We advocates didn't make the reform promise; we just made the mistake of believing it. The president and Senate Democrats have chosen politics over people, the status quo over solving real problems."


Cristina Jimenez, managing director of United We Dream, said the decision was "another slap to the face of the Latino and immigrant community."


"Where we have demanded leadership and courage from both Democrats and the president, we've received nothing but broken promises and a lack of political backbone," she said.


Partisan fighting erupted recently over how to address the increased flow of unaccompanied minors from Central America at the U.S. border with Mexico. The officials said the White House had not envisioned such a battle when Obama made his pledge June 30.


Obama asked for $3.7 billion to address the border crisis. The Republican-controlled House, however, passed a measure that only gave Obama a fraction of what he sought and made it easier to deport the young migrants arriving at the border, a provision opposed by Democrats and immigration advocates. In the end, Congress adjourned without a final bill.


The number of minors caught alone illegally crossing the Mexican border into the United States has been declining since June. That decrease and Congress' absence from Washington during August has taken attention away from the border for now.


Still, the dispute over how to deal with the surge of Central American border crossers threatened to spill over into the larger debate over immigration and the fate of 11 million immigrants in the United States who either entered illegally or overstayed their visas and have been in the U.S. for some time.


The Democratic-led Senate last year passed a broad overhaul of immigration that boosted border security, increased visas for legal immigrants and a provided a path to citizenship for immigrants illegally in the country.


But the Republican-controlled House balked at acting on any broad measure and House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, informed Obama earlier this year that the House would not act in 2014. That led Obama to declare he would act on his own.


During a news conference Friday in Wales, Obama reiterated his determination to act on his own even as he avoided making a commitment on timing. He also spelled out ambitious objectives for his executive actions.


Obama said that without legislation from Congress, he would take steps to increase border security, upgrade the processing of border crossers and encourage legal immigration. He also said he would offer immigrants who have been illegally in the United States for some time a way to become legal residents, pay taxes, pay a fine and learn English.


"I want to be very clear: My intention is, in the absence of ... action by Congress, I'm going to do what I can do within the legal constraints of my office, because it's the right thing to do for the country," he said.


The extent of Obama's authority is a matter of debate among legal experts and in Congress. Some Democrats say it would be best for Obama to let Congress act.


But pro-immigrant groups called on Obama to stick to his end-of-summer deadline and weighed in with a strongly worded appeal to him on Friday.


"Being a leader requires making difficult and courageous decisions," said the letter, whose signers included the National Council of La Raza and the League of United Latin American Citizens. "It is your time to lead, Mr. President."


---


Associated Press writer Erica Werner contributed to this report.



Reno transit workers, company reach tentative deal


Reno-area public bus system workers and their employer have reached a tentative contract agreement.


The Regional Transportation Commission announced the development in a news release Friday, saying it ensures there will be no service disruptions for riders.


The RTC says negotiations have been assisted by a federal mediator, and the next step is for Teamsters Local 533 members to vote on the agreement.


The previous agreement ended June 30 between the union and MV Transportation, the Texas-based contractor managing the system.


RTC Executive Director Lee Gibbons says his agency is "pleased a tentative agreement has been reached and looks forward to the union vote on the offer."


A previous offer from MV Transportation was rejected by union members.


Local 533 has represented RTC drivers and support personnel for 25 years.



Movie theater coming to McComb


A Missouri-based movie theater company is planning to open a nine-screen luxury theater complex in McComb.


The Enterprise-Journal reports (http://bit.ly/1lIplgf ) B&B Theatres operates similar movie theaters in Missouri, Oklahoma, Florida, Kansas and Texas.


Its McComb theater would be located near the Interstate 55 south McComb exit.


The company is working with RBR Land Co. of McComb in the development.


B&B Theatres president Bob Bagby says in a news release the theater will include stadium seating with leather-style reclining seats, concession stands, a Christie digital projection and 3D REAL-D technology in some auditoriums. All auditoriums will feature Dolby 7.1 digital surround sound and wall-to-wall curved screens.


Bagby says there are still some details to be worked out.



Old motel to be adapted for industrial housing


The former Glostonian Motel will soon be the site of a housing complex for workers drawn to southwest Mississippi by the area's booming wood pellet and oilfield industries.


The Enterprise-Journal (http://bit.ly/1uoSMEc ) reports the development on Mississippi Highway 33 would be called Loblolly Lodge.


It would have a total of 64 guest rooms, a restaurant and a meeting room.


Owner Renee Priest says the property has been idle for years.


Priest's plans include renovation of the existing 16-room motel, followed by reworking the main building to house a restaurant, meeting room, administrative offices and a laundry.


The development's final phase would be to add 12 modular buildings to create 48 guest rooms. Each building would have four rooms with kitchenettes.



US delivers another arms shipment to Lebanese Army



BEIRUT: The U.S. delivered weapons and ammunition to the Lebanese Army Friday evening as part of Washington's promise to help support the military in its battle against radical groups.


According to an Army statement, the shipment was delivered in the presence of a number of military officers in line with the U.S. aid program to the military as well as bilateral agreements.


The handover took place at the Rafik Hariri International Airport.


A source at the American Embassy had told The Daily Star that 1,500 M16s, more than 450 anti-tank guided missiles and 60 mortars delivered by the U.S. military last week were worth nearly $9 million.


A further estimated $11 million of military aid, including undetermined heavy weapons, was to be delivered to the Army by “early September."



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Lebanese Army kills Syrian gunman in brief clash on border



HERMEL, Lebanon: Three gunmen shot at a Lebanese Army unit in a border town, prompting soldiers to fire back, killing one of them.


The three, two Syrians and one Lebanese, were on a motorcycle when they shot at an Army Intelligence unit at the entrance of the eastern town of Al-Qaa. The Army briefly clashed with the gunmen, killing a Syrian.


The Lebanese, a man from the northeastern town of Arsal, and the other Syrian were detained.


The second Syrian was slightly wounded in the clash



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Lebanese captured soldiers contact families, demand action


BEIRUT: A Lebanese minister Saturday succeeded in partially opening a vital road that has been blocked by relatives of a captured soldier while two of the soldiers contacted their families by phone and asked them maintain pressure on the government.


Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi visited the protesters in Qalamoun and voiced his solidarity with the family of Ibrahim Samir Mgheit, who is among at least 23 soldiers and policemen captured by ISIS and the Nusra Front.


The minister asked the relatives to partially open the international highway in both ways to facilitate the movement of traffic between Beirut and the northern city of Tripoli.


Meanwhile, Prime Minister Tammam Salam said the government's only priority was to secure the release of the captured men, who were taken during battles between Lebanese Army and militants from Syria on Aug. 2


Lebanon will not be defeated in front of the challenges facing it particular the wave of terror,” Salam said during his meeting with a delegation at the Grand Serail.


He stressed on the importance of Lebanese standing in solidarity with each other “so that we can confront the current challenges, primarily the crisis of the captured Lebanese soldiers.”


A local television station reported that soldiers Pierre Geagea and George Khazaqah contacted their families and asked them to block roads and hold protests for their release.


In videos posted by both the Nusra Front and ISIS, the two groups holding the soldiers, the troops along with the policemen have asked their families to block roads to pressure the government to negotiate with militants or else they would be killed.


Families of the captured men took to the streets and blocked several vital roads in the country including the Qalamoun road. The protests escalated after ISIS executed one of the captives.


ISIS and Nusra Front handed over their demands to a Qatari delegation that visited them Friday.


The Qatari mediation came a day after the government rejected the militants’ primary demand to swap the hostages with Islamist detainees held in Roumieh Prison.



Housing bias dispute could return to Supreme Court


It's not easy to prevent the Supreme Court from deciding an issue once it's agreed to hear a case.


But over the past two years, civil rights advocates have managed to do just that.


They coaxed settlements in housing discrimination cases weeks before scheduled oral arguments.


Their goal was to remove any chance that court conservatives might undermine a legal doctrine the Obama administration and others have used.


In "disparate impact" cases, plaintiffs rely on statistics to show that seemingly neutral housing or lending practices can disproportionately harm racial minorities, even if there's no proof of intent to discriminate.


The court could decide as early as this month whether to take up a new case. Texas officials are accused of racial bias for steering low-income housing into mostly black neighborhoods.



Egypt to try Morsi for leaking secrets to Qatar


Egypt's top prosecutor says ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi will be tried for leaking national security secrets to Qatar during his turbulent year in office.


In a statement released Saturday the prosecutor said Morsi and two of his assistants leaked classified documents, including information on military deployments, to Qatari intelligence. The alleged leaks occurred as popular anger rose against Morsi, eventually culminating in mass protests demanding his resignation.


The prosecutor said eight others, including a senior Al-Jazeera executive in Qatar, cooperated to deliver the secrets in exchange for $1 million.


The prosecutor called it "the biggest treason and espionage case in the country's history." Morsi, imprisoned since his July ouster, is already facing three trials, including on charges of cooperating with foreign militant groups. He faces a possible death penalty.



Rai: Israel seeks regional divisions to justify presence


Lebanon's Arabic Press Digest - Sept.6, 2014


The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest to Daily Star readers.



Iron Dome would not cope with Hezbollah missiles: report


BEIRUT: Israel’s Iron Dome Defense System would not be able to cope with Hezbollah’s precision rockets in any future war, an officer in the Israeli army has said, while warning that the next conflict with the resistance group would be “very violent.”


In a report broadcast by Israel’s Channel 2, Col. Dan Goldfus said that Israelis needed to know that a war with Hezbollah would be “a whole different story,” than the recent war Israel waged on Gaza.


“We will need to move quickly and flexibly,” he said.


The report said that Israel estimated that Hezbollah had about 100,000 rockets, with most of them hidden in south Lebanon but with long-range missiles in Beirut capable of carrying large warheads of up to 1 ton.


The missiles in Beirut are equipped with precision guidance systems and can reach all of Israel, which would make it difficult for the Iron Dome missile defense system to deal with them as successfully as the less sophisticated rockets used by Hamas during the Gaza war.


The report also spoke of repeated concerns that Hezbollah had dug tunnels along the border with Israel, saying residents had reported noise under their houses.


Goldfus did not rule out the possibility of Hezbollah digging tunnels, saying that the Israeli army was concerned over the matter in light of recent tunnels unearthed and later destroyed by Israel in Gaza.


In any future war, Goldfus said: “We will have to use considerable force” to quickly prevail over the Hezbollah, “to act more decisively, more drastically." - with Anadolu



Weekly Address: Time to Give the Middle Class a Chance


Vice President Biden Delivers the Weekly Address

Vice President Joe Biden tapes the Weekly Address in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Sept. 5, 2014. September 5, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)




In this week’s address, the Vice President discusses our continued economic recovery, with 10 million private sector jobs created over 54 straight months of job creation. Yet even with this good news, too many Americans are still not seeing the effects of our recovery.


As the Vice President explains, there’s more that can be done to continue to bolster our economy and ensure that middle class families benefit from the growth they helped create, including closing tax loopholes, expanding education opportunities, and raising the minimum wage.


Transcript | mp4 | mp3


Greek premier eyes growth for 1st time in 8 years


Greece's economy is expected to expand in the third quarter for the first time in eight years, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said Saturday.


In a speech in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki, Samaras hailed what he said was an "unprecedented success" in getting the heavily indebted country out of its deepest ever financial crisis.


"In a couple of years, we have made more reforms than in previous decades," he said, referring to his tenure as prime minister.


Before agreeing to support a coalition government with the socialists in November 2011, conservative leader Samaras had opposed many of the austerity measures he later embraced wholeheartedly.


Samaras promised a 30 percent reduction in the taxation of heating oil, reversing a measure imposed in 2012 which failed to bring added revenue and adversely affected the environment. He also said he would lighten the burden of a much decried property tax based on property values from before the crisis.


The Greek premier also said he will set up a development fund to help small and medium firms and will cut power prices for industries.


Samaras said it is impossible to bring wages and pensions up to pre-crisis levels but promised raises for military and police personnel, seen as a conservative-friendly constituency.


Samaras was speaking at the opening of the Thessaloniki International Fair, a traditional venue for Greek leaders to announce the coming year's economic policy.


The Greek premier also hailed what he said was a success in reforming health, social security and education by cutting excessive spending and combatting fraud.


Anti-government protests, a usual staple of the Thessaloniki fair, will take place Saturday but are expected to be milder than in previous years. Nonetheless, 4,000 policemen are ready and there has been a ban on protests near the fair grounds.



Biden promotes economics for nation's middle class


Vice President Joe Biden says the August jobs report, which underwhelmed many economists, is another step forward in the nation's economic recovery.


The economy generated only 142,000 jobs, the fewest in eight months.


In the weekly White House radio and Internet address, Biden says job growth continues but warns that the wages of middle-class Americans are being left behind other indicators of economic growth.


Biden says it's long past time to, quote, "cut the middle class back into the deal."


He says doing that requires a fair tax structure that values paychecks as much as unearned income and inherited wealth.


In the Republican address, the GOP candidate for Senate in Alaska, Dan Sullivan, says the federal government is an obstacle to progress in his state — and calls that a national problem, too.


---


Online:


White House address: http://1.usa.gov/1fxQMoK


Republican address: http://bit.ly/1myUoWD



UNIFIL organizes friendly football game with victims of land mines



TEIR DIBA, Lebanon: Korean peacekeepers organized a friendly football match with victims of land mine explosions in south Lebanon in a bid to give them some hope to overcome their tragedies.


The Korean contingent with the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon organized the football match with the Lebanese Welfare Association for the Handicapped at the former's headquarters in Deir Diba.


The head of the Korean contingent said the purpose of the game was to bring people together and enjoy a friendly game.


The game also seeks to raise awareness about land mines and their victims. Prior to the start of the game, the Korean contingent presented a traditional military parade that included a tae kwon do performance.


From 1978 to 2000, Israel left behind tens of thousands of mines planted along the border and in farms. In 2006, Israel also dropped thousands of cluster bombs on various southern towns and villages.


UNIFIL, the Lebanese Army and several Lebanese organizations work to clear the southern region of land mines that have killed many people and wounded hundreds including peacekeepers and landmine sweepers.



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Equating Iran with Islamists ignorance: Hezbollah


BEIRUT: Equating the radical movements with Wilayat al-Faqih is pure ignorance and stems from disappointment that such extremist groups are unable to destroy the resistance group, Minister of State Mohammad Fneish said Saturday.


“Some of the stances by people in Lebanon represent either complete ignorance or disappointment because the Takfiri forces failed in achieving those people’s goals and wishes,” Fneish, awho represents Hezbollah in the Cabinet, said during a ceremony in south Lebanon.


“We accept people discussing with us the issue of Wilayat al-Faqih if they knew what they were talking about and the achievements it has made in Lebanon’s interest,” he said.


“We also accept discussions about our behavior, which is derived from our commitment to the Wilayat as well as our beliefs and understandings.”


Under the Wilayat al-Faqih doctrine, which was introduced in Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the supreme ayatollah, or highest religious authority, has final say in political matters as well as religious.


Supporters of the March 14 coalition have ridiculed Hezbollah’s role in Syria to fight the rise of radical groups such as te Nusra Front and ISIS, saying that both the party and the Islamist forces seek to establish similar goals.


“Equating between the criminal, takfiri forces and Wilayat al-Faqih is pure ignorance and represents their rage because they have lost bets on Israel and these takfiri forces destroying the resistance,” Fneish said.


Hezbollah has remained evasive about its adherence to Wilayat al-Faqih and support for the establishment of an Islamic state in Lebanon inspired by that doctrine.