Monday, October 31, 2011

Cain campaign manager: ???Hard to believe??? GOP rival behind sexual harassment story (Daily Caller)

The chief of staff to Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain said Monday that he has ?no clue? who may have been behind the story published Sunday night in Politico claiming two women accused the candidate of inappropriate conduct in the 1990s, which Cain has now denied.

?I have no idea,? chief of staff Mark Block told The Daily Caller. ?No clue. I would find it hard to believe that anybody from another campaign would do that, but then again this is politics. Isn?t it??

Appearing on Fox News on Monday, Cain denied he had ever harassed anyone, though he said he had been falsely accused of doing so. The story published by Politico on Sunday neither named any sources nor identified the two women who the news outlet said ?complained to colleagues and senior association officials about inappropriate behavior by Cain? while he was CEO of the National Restaurant Association.

Block made the comments during a brief conversation with reporters in the hallway of the National Press Club in Washington D.C., where Cain is scheduled to deliver a speech during a Monday lunchtime event.

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Read more stories from The Daily Caller

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Drew Carey on Obama?s obesity initiative: ?You can?t make people be healthy? [VIDEO]

Poll: For economy fix, Americans pick Reagan over Roosevelt

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/dailycaller/20111031/pl_dailycaller/caincampaignmanagerhardtobelievegoprivalbehindsexualharassmentstory

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NBA talks need economic move to end the lockout

FILE - In this file photo taken Oct. 4, 2011, NBA Commissioner David Stern listens during a news conference following NBA labor talks meeting between basketball players and owners in New York. Stern canceled all November games on Friday, Oct. 28, the 120th day of the lockout. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, file)

FILE - In this file photo taken Oct. 4, 2011, NBA Commissioner David Stern listens during a news conference following NBA labor talks meeting between basketball players and owners in New York. Stern canceled all November games on Friday, Oct. 28, the 120th day of the lockout. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews, file)

(AP) ? Anyone who has been to a car dealership, or bought a home, understands how negotiating works.

One side offers a number, the other counters, and they meet somewhere in the middle and make a deal.

That's not the way it's working in the NBA's labor standoff ? even with potentially $2 billion at stake for each side.

Owners and players keep insisting they are ready and willing to make the necessary financial step for an agreement. Yet talks have broken down each of the last two weeks with little movement and the same type of answer: "We're here, they're there, and that's that."

That won't get players back on the court or fans in the seats.

And with both sides so entrenched, it might be a question of when, not if, another round of cancellations will be necessary.

"I don't know," Commissioner David Stern said Friday when asked about the next deadline. "We just had a difficult day. We'll go back, we'll go to the office Monday and see what to do about this big mess."

They could start with a phone call to the players' association to schedule more talks, and the sides likely will meet again soon. But it will remain pointless if neither side is prepared to offer compromise.

Owners are insistent on a 50-50 split of basketball-related income. Players have proposed reducing their guarantee from 57 percent down to 52.5, saying that will transfer more than $1.5 billion to owners over six years.

And when neither side would go further Friday, NBA officials said union executive director Billy Hunter ended the session.

"Billy said, 'My phone is ringing off the hook from agents and players telling me I cannot go under 52 percent' and he said unless you're willing to go there, we have nothing to talk about," Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver said.

The difference between 50 and 52.5 percent is about $100 million annually, based on last season's revenues, or $1 billion over the course of the 10-year agreement the NBA is seeking.

The cost of not making a deal?

"We expect there to be a $2 billion loss for us for the loss of the season, which we will then begin to dig out from under and try to get back, if there were a season's loss," Stern said. "And the players would lose $2 billion. Period."

The losses already have been piling up. Stern said wiping out the preseason schedule, which would have ended Friday, cost the league $200 million. The first month of real games adds another couple hundred million, and Hunter has said missing a month would cost the players about $350 million.

But that's not enough to make players agree to a deal they say would cost them money and limit their options in free agency.

"We think we gave more than enough, and that's what we constantly said to them: 'Look, we did what it was you said you needed, we did it,'" Hunter said. "And now all of a sudden, every time we did it, it's like their eyes got bigger and they wanted more and more and more. So finally we just had to shut it down and just say it can't be."

Stern has made it clear that owners' future proposals could be made with the losses in mind. Players eventually will get their money, just less of it, but the damage to businesses that rely on the game won't be recovered.

"I think it is hard for the average person to understand what it is they're arguing over," said Jim Taggart, the manager of The Four's, an upscale sports bar across the street from Boston's TD Garden. "A lot of the people that work concessions at the Garden come in here, and their pay is budgeted into how they pay their mortgages, how they put their kids through school.

"Events at the Garden are just absolute big business. There's a whole ancillary economy that depends on the Garden, and it's pretty far reaching, all the restaurants and parking garages."

The sides are much closer after three straight days of meetings in consecutive weeks. Besides the BRI split, the list of remaining items is down to just a handful, such as the ability of teams over the luxury tax threshold to use the midlevel exception or participate in sign-and-trade deals.

Those are important to players. The top-spending teams are mostly the ones in the biggest markets, and players want to know teams in the most desired cities won't be prevented from bidding on them.

"What we did not want to do and what we don't want to do is take taxpaying teams completely out of the market for other teams' free agents," union president Derek Fisher of the Lakers said. "We want our midlevel players to be able to sign contracts or at least have the opportunity to sign a contract wherever they would like to play."

There had been a sense of optimism going into Friday after both sides acknowledged progress on the salary cap system over the previous two days. But they hadn't talked about the split, and sure enough, once they did things fell apart again.

Wasted was the meeting room the NBA had reserved through the weekend at a top New York hotel, where it hoped to be announcing a deal by Sunday. The next talks haven't been scheduled, but the sides reconnected quickly after the last breakdown.

"Each time I come here, we've come in thinking we may be here for weeks and we're not going to leave the room," Fisher said. "But sometimes they end and you assume you won't talk again for weeks and you're back the next day."

___

AP Sports Writer Howard Ulman in Boston contributed to this report.

___

Follow Brian Mahoney on Twitter: twitter.com/Briancmahoney.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-10-29-NBA%20Labor/id-f104e8bd7a7f4d61bb988f6727b3a415

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Aspirin Cuts Cancer Rates in People with Hereditary Risk by More ...

From Targeted News Service (October 28, 2011)

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE, England, Oct. 28 -- Newcastle University issued the following news release:

Research has finally provided proof that taking a regular dose of aspirin reduces the long-term risk of cancer in people with a family history of the disease by around 60 per cent.

The international collaboration, led by researchers at the Universities of Newcastle and Leeds, whose work is published today in The Lancet, reveals that the benefits only become obvious several years after taking the aspirin.

Evidence of the benefits of aspirin has been accumulating for over 20 years but these are the first results from a randomised controlled trial assessing the effect of aspirin on cancer.

Late last year an analysis of people who had taken part in the early aspirin trials to prevent heart attacks and strokes showed that in subsequent years they developed fewer cancers. The missing piece of the jigsaw was a randomised trial specifically looking at its effect on cancer.

Professor Sir John Burn from Newcastle University who led the international research collaboration said: "What we have finally shown is that aspirin has a major preventative effect on cancer but this doesn't become apparent until years later."

The study involving scientists and clinicians from 43 centres in 16 countries followed nearly 1,000 patients, in some cases for over 10 years.

The trial was overseen by Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and funded by the UK Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK, the European Union and Bayer Pharma.

The study focused on people with Lynch syndrome, an inherited genetic disorder which affects genes responsible for detecting and repairing damage in the DNA. Around half of these people develop cancer, mainly in the bowel and womb.

Between 1999 and 2005 a total 861 people began either taking two aspirins (600 mg) every day for two years or a placebo. At the end of the treatment stage in 2007 there was no difference between those who had taken aspirin and those who had not. However, the study team anticipated a longer term effect and designed the study for continued follow-up.

By 2010 there had been 19 new colorectal cancers among those who had received aspirin and 34 among those on placebo. The incidence of cancer among the group who had taken aspirin had halved - and the effect began to be seen five years after patients starting taking the aspirin.

A further analysis focused on the patients who took aspirin for at least two years according to the original design - some 60% of the total - and here the effects of aspirin were even more pronounced: a 63% reduced incidence of colorectal cancer was observed with 23 bowel cancers in the placebo group but only 10 in the aspirin group.

Looking at all cancers related to Lynch syndrome, including cancer of the endometrium or womb, almost 30% of the patients taking the placebo had developed a cancer compared to around 15% of those taking the aspirin.

"What surprised us was that there was no difference in the number of people developing polyps which are thought to be the precursors of cancer. But, many fewer patients who had been taking aspirin years before went on to develop cancers," said Professor Tim Bishop from the University of Leeds, whose team was responsible for the statistical analysis.

Sir John explains: "We have succeeded in showing the benefits of aspirin because we had a lot of long term data and because Lynch syndrome is associated with rapid development of cancer.

"It has also demonstrated how our research community and families with inherited forms of cancer can work together to answer questions important for the whole population.

"Before anyone begins to take aspirin on a regular basis they should consult their doctor as aspirin is known to bring with it a risk of stomach complaints including ulcers," advises Sir John.

"However, if there is a strong family history of cancer then people may want to weigh up the cost-benefits particularly as these days drugs which block acid production in the stomach are available over the counter."

Professor Nick Hastie, Director of the Medical Research Council Human Genetics Unit, said: "Bowel cancer is the second commonest cause of cancer death in the UK, being responsible for 16,000 deaths a year. This landmark study provides the clearest evidence yet that aspirin can help protect against development of this disease. As we learn more about the underlying mechanism of this anti-tumour effect, we will eventually be able to develop new ways of preventing and treating cancer."

The international team are now preparing a large-scale follow-up trial and want to recruit 3,000 people across the world to test the effect of different doses of aspirin. The trial will compare two aspirin a day with a range of lower doses to see if the protection offered is the same.

Information on the next trial can be found at www.capp3.org

Mechanism

The researchers believe the study shows that aspirin is affecting an underlying mechanism which pre-disposes someone to cancer and further study is needed in this area. Since the benefits are occurring before the very early stages of developing a tumour - known as the adenoma carcinoma sequence - the effect must be changing the cells which are predisposed to become cancerous in later years.

One possibility is that a little recognised effect of aspirin is to enhance programmed cell death. This is most obvious in plants where salicylates trigger this mechanism to help diseased plants contain the spread of infection.

"We may be seeing a mechanism in humans whereby aspirin is encouraging genetically damaged stem cells to undergo programmed cell death, this would have an impact on cancer," says Sir John.

Over the course of the clinical trial, funding came from Cancer Research UK, UK Medical Research Council, European Union, Bayer Corporation, National Starch and Chemical Company, The Newcastle Upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Bayer Pharma.

The next trial

To take part in the next trial people can sign up at www.capp3.org

This trial is open to anyone under 60 with Lynch syndrome, and they will be asked to sign up online to be allocated a dosage of aspirin and then report their medical health over several years.

Reference: Long-term effect of aspiring on cancer risk in carriers of hereditary colorectal cancer: an analysis from the CAPP2 randomised controlled trial, The Lancet Online First publication (http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(11)61049-0/abstract), 28 October 2011

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Posted: October 2011


Source: http://www.drugs.com/news/aspirin-cuts-cancer-rates-hereditary-risk-more-than-34540.html

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Matt Damon Launches Water.org Bottle Project

Matt Damon may look like a bad guy with the prison jumpsuit and fake neck tattoos while on set in Vancouver filming Elysium. But don?t be fooled. This week, Matt Damon and Water.org, the charity he co-founded, are launching a water bottle campaign to help some of the 884 million people who lack access to [...]

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Margaret Paul, Ph.D.: Does Your Fear of Failure Stop You?

Failure!

What do you feel when you think about failure? Inadequate? Unworthy? Unlovable? It is so sad that you might have learned to link failure to your value as a person.

Most people who are successful in their work and their relationships have experienced many failures along their road to success. Thomas Edison is often quoted regarding failure:

I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.
Many of life's failures are men who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.
Show me a thoroughly satisfied man, and I will show you a failure.

If Edison has been afraid of failure, or believed that failure meant he was inadequate, he would never have invented the light bulb!

In order to achieve success in any area of your life, you need to redefine failure. Instead of seeing failure as an indication of your inadequacy or lack of worth, you need to see failure as a stepping stone to success. Some of the most financially-successful people experienced repeated failures.

  • Walt Disney was a high school drop out who suffered bankruptcy and repeated financial and business disasters.
  • Milton Hershey, chocolate maker and founder of the famous Hershey Foods Corp., found success only after filing for bankruptcy for his first four candy companies.
  • Henry Ford filed for bankruptcy for the first car company he started. He didn't succeed until he started his third company, Ford Motor Company.
  • After P.T. Barnum, American showman, went bankrupt, he joined forces with circus operator James A. Bailey to found Barnum and Bailey's Greatest Show on Earth.
  • Quaker Oats went bankrupt three times, as did Wrigley from Wrigley's Gum. Pepsi-Cola went bankrupt twice. Other famous companies that also went bankrupt are Birds Eye Frozen Foods, Borden's,? and Aunt Jemima.
  • Albert Einstein did poorly in elementary school, and he failed his first college entrance exam at Zurich Polytechnic.
  • Winston Churchill had a lifetime of defeats and setbacks before becoming prime minister of England at age 62. All of his greatest accomplishments and contributions came when he was a senior citizen.
  • Sir Laurence Olivier, one of the greatest actors of the 20th century, tripped over the door sill and fell headfirst into the floodlights the very first time he had ever set foot on the professional stage.
  • Woody Allen flunked motion picture production at New York University and the City College of New York and failed English at NYU.
  • Astronaut Ed Gibson flunked first and fourth grades.
  • Lucille Ball was once dismissed from drama school for being too quiet and shy.

If these successful people had been afraid of failure, they would never have offered their talents to the world. They were able to go on to success because they saw failure as a learning opportunity, rather than as an indication of their inadequacy.

Are you ready to change your concept of failure? Are you ready to let go of worrying about what failure says about you and just learn from it? Are you ready to free your soul to do what you really want to do?

If the fear of failure is stopping you from doing what you really want to do, I encourage you to change your concept of failure. I encourage you to let go of your old way of seeing failure and start to envision failures as learning opportunities on the way to success. Just as Thomas Edison did, I encourage you to see every failure as a step forward.

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Follow Margaret Paul, Ph.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/innerbonding

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/margaret-paul-phd/fear-of-failure_b_1032331.html

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Gov't considers testing anthrax vaccine in kids

WASHINGTON (AP) ? A government advisory panel is considering whether the anthrax vaccine should be tested in children.

Health experts worry that terrorists could one day use the potentially deadly bacteria in an attack on the United States.

There's plenty of vaccine stockpiled just in case, and it's been widely tested on adults.

But since it's never been tested on youngsters, the question is whether to do research now so doctors would know if and how well children respond to the shots ? or just wait and, if there is an attack, offer the vaccine experimentally at that time.

That question is before the National Biodefense Science Board on Friday. The board gives advice to the Department of Health and Human Services on preparations for chemical, biological and nuclear emergencies.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-10-28-Anthrax%20Vaccine/id-118496b8f34749629a6525f054ecdce6

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

Experts Design 'Toolkit' to Help Spot Teens With Mental Health Issues (HealthDay)

FRIDAY, Oct. 28 (HealthDay News) -- Because many adolescents with mental health problems are never diagnosed and treated, an expert team has come up with a "toolkit" aimed at identifying those kids and getting them the right help.

"One in 10 youths have a mental health condition that is severe enough to impair functioning, either at home, school or in the community," said Gary Blau, chief of the child, adolescent and family branch of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Blau spoke at a Friday news conference to unveil the toolkit, which appeared online simultaneously in Pediatrics. Although the journal is published by the American Academy of Pediatrics, that organization has not endorsed the toolkit. SAMHSA provided partial funding for the project.

"This toolkit will allow pediatricians, teachers and others that could help get the word out to families we can close the gap so the three out of four children with mental health disorders who aren't identified do get identified," said Dr. Peter Jensen, who was the lead investigator on the project.

About half of mental health disorders manifest themselves by the time a child has turned 14, and 75 percent manifest by age 24, Blau said.

Yet treatment is often years away for that child, added Lisa Hunter Romanelli, an assistant professor of clinical psychology in psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons in New York City.

"That is too long in the life of a child," said Romanelli, who is also executive director of the nonprofit REACH Institute, whose mission is to shorten the length of time it takes for effective interventions to reach teens. Jensen is president and CEO of the institute.

Researchers convened over a period of several years to analyze data collected from more than 6,000 children and parents to identify the most common symptoms of mental health disorders and to see if children with these troubling signs were receiving appropriate care.

This information was then translated into warning signs that are written in "crisp, easy-to-understand language," said Jensen, who is vice chair of research in the department of psychiatry and psychology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. "They don't sound like mental health jargon. It was deliberate, to make them as parent-friendly as possible."

Because differentiating a true mental health disorder from the inevitable ups and downs of adolescence is difficult, the authors chose to focus on the more severe end of the mental health spectrum.

"We realized there was a potential for harm for parents to worry when they didn't need to be worried," said Jensen. "So we decided to target not the 15 percent or so who have these problems, but the 8 percent who are at the more severe end."

If your child has any of these 11 warning signs, he or she may have a mental health disorder and should be referred to treatment as soon as possible:

  • Feeling very sad or withdrawn for two or more weeks
  • Seriously trying to harm or kill themselves, or making plans to do so
  • Sudden overwhelming fear for no reason, sometimes with a racing heart or fast breathing
  • Involved in multiple fights, using a weapon, or wanting badly to hurt others
  • Severe out-of-control behavior that can hurt the teenager or others
  • Not eating, throwing up, or using laxatives to lose weight
  • Intense worries or fears that get in the way of daily activities
  • Extreme difficulty in concentrating or staying still that puts a teenager in physical danger or causes school failure
  • Repeated use of drugs or alcohol
  • Severe mood swings that cause problems in relationships
  • Drastic changes in behavior or personality

"This data substantiates what we already knew, that there are warning signs of significant mental illness, but children and adolescents aren't getting help because health care providers don't share the same language," said Dr. Abigail Schlesinger, medical director of outpatient behavioral health services at Children's Hospital Pittsburgh.

"This toolkit will help mental health providers and others on the front lines, such as teachers, people in the juvenile justice system [and] parents speak the same language," added Schlesinger, who was not part of the research team.

More information

The U.S. National Institute of Mental Health has more on child and adolescent mental health issues.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111029/hl_hsn/expertsdesigntoolkittohelpspotteenswithmentalhealthissues

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Writer Isaacson on Steve Jobs: 'I just listened' (AP)

NEW YORK ? Steve Jobs told Walter Isaacson he wanted him to write his biography because he's good at getting people to talk. Jobs, it turns out, didn't need much prodding, secretive as he was about both his private life and the company he founded.

"I just listened," said Isaacson, whose book, "Steve Jobs" (Simon & Schuster) went on sale Monday. Jobs, who died Oct. 5 at 56 after a long struggle with pancreatic cancer, was a man full of deep contradictions, a product of 1960s counterculture who went on to found what is now the world's most valuable technology company, Apple Inc.

In an interview with The Associated Press Wednesday, Isaacson said Jobs was a compelling storyteller with "fascinating stories." Sometimes, the author would hear him tell those tales two or three times, often with slight variations. But through more than 40 conversations with Jobs, as well as interviews with his family, close friends, co-workers and rivals, Isaacson painted a rich portrait of a complex, sometimes conflicting figure.

Isaacson began work on the book in 2009 after Jobs' wife, Laurene Powell, told him that if he was "ever going to do a book on Steve, you'd better do it now." It was just after Jobs had taken his second medical leave as CEO of Apple, in January of that year. His third leave, which began in January 2011, would be his final one.

"He was not sick through much of this process," Isaacson said, when asked about what it was like to be working on the book and speaking with Jobs' family while he was ill.

"We took long walks," he said. "Every evening, he would have dinner around the kitchen table with his wife and kids. He didn't go out socializing or to black-tie dinners. He didn't travel much. Even though he was focused on his work, he was always home for dinner."

Those who see Jobs as the iconic CEO first might be surprised to read about his devotion to his family. It wasn't always evident. As a young man, Jobs denied paternity of his first daughter, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, for years after Lisa was born in 1978. The two later reconciled.

Isaacson said he was most surprised by the intensity of Jobs' emotions.

"Sometimes I'd look up and there would be tears running down his cheek," Isaacson said.

Jobs told him he was always moved by "artistic purity." Sometimes, it was the design of a product, or even the creation of an advertisement that would move him to tears. Other times, it happened as he talked about a person who meant a lot to him. For his 20th wedding anniversary with Powell, Jobs wrote her a letter that he read to Isaacson from his iPhone. By the end, Isaacson said, he was crying uncontrollably.

"Years passed, kids came, good times, hard times, but never bad times," Jobs wrote in the note. "Our love and respect has endured and grown."

Those around Jobs referred to his ability to influence the perception of those around him as his "reality distortion field." Though on the surface it sounds similar, this was far more complex than someone who is lying or deluding himself. As Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak puts it in the book: "You realize that it can't be true, but he somehow makes it true."

The "reality distortion field" was Jobs' way of getting people to do what they thought was impossible, Isaacson said. An example was how he'd tell an engineer working on the Macintosh that he could save 10 seconds on the time the computer needed to boot up if he just wrote better code.

"And the guy would say `no you can't,'" Isaacson said.

Jobs then asked the engineer if he could do it if it would save a life. And so the engineer did; he wrote better code and he shaved not 10 but 28 seconds off the Macintosh's boot-up time.

While writing the book, Isaacson said he came to understand the connection between Jobs' temperamental behavior and his artistic passion.

"I have a strong emotional respect for Steve," he said. "And it helped me put in perspective ... the tales of him being hard on people. Because I knew it was all in the context of getting people to do the impossible. Which he did."

Isaacson didn't spend time shadowing Jobs, though he did spend an afternoon at the design studio of Jony Ive, the chief designer at Apple who worked on the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad. It was Ive who came up with the idea of making the first iPod, including its headphones, pure white. In the afternoons, Isaacson said Jobs would walk around Ive's studio and touch all the new prototypes that were laid out there.

"He was a very tactile person," Isaacson said. "He loved to fondle the prototypes."

Isaacson spent a long afternoon in that studio and doing so "realized what a serene experience it was. Quiet, with new-age jazz playing softly. The leaves from the trees outside casting dancing silhouette shadows on the tinted windows. And even small products like power adapters being lined up for inspections."

Can Apple continue to thrive without Jobs?

"Yeah, I think that his great creation was not any one product but a company in which creativity was connected to great engineering," Isaacson said. "And that will survive at least while the current people who trained under Steve are there."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111026/ap_on_hi_te/us_tec_isaacson_steve_jobs

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How states fared on unemployment aid applications (AP)

The number of people seeking unemployment benefits dipped slightly last week, though not by enough to suggest that hiring is picking up.

Weekly applications for unemployment benefits declined 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 402,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. That's the fourth drop in six weeks.

Here are the states with the largest increases and decreases. The state data is for the week ended Oct. 15, one week behind the national data.

States with the biggest drops:

California: Down 8,942, due to fewer layoffs in the service industries

New York: Down 7,273, due to fewer layoffs in transportation, services, and public administration

Texas: Down 3,489, no reason given

Pennsylvania: Down 3,258, no reason given

Georgia: Down 2,740, due to fewer layoffs in the trade, service, manufacturing and healthcare industries

Illinois: Down 2,525, no reason given

States with the biggest increases:

Wisconsin: Up 1,193, no reason given

South Carolina: Up 1,189, due to layoffs in manufacturing

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/economy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111027/ap_on_bi_ge/us_unemployment_benefits_glance

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Friday, October 28, 2011

ANA's Boeing 787 Dreamliner touches down after first international flight (video)

All Nippon Airways' Boeing 787 Dreamliner marked the end of its first international flight today, touching down in Hong Kong. The dreamy flying machine took off from Tokyo and arrived to what looks like quite the crowd, including some folks from Engadget Chinese, who were on-hand at Hong Kong International Airport to snap the 787 from every angle and grab some video of the pilots discussing the aircraft. Check that out after the break.

Continue reading ANA's Boeing 787 Dreamliner touches down after first international flight (video)

ANA's Boeing 787 Dreamliner touches down after first international flight (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Oct 2011 09:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Prices too good to be legal | Mike Aldax | Crime | San Francisco ...

This isn?t the type of pop-up store Home Depot likely has in mind.

Authorities are probing a large-scale theft ring after a recent police sting at a Daly City house uncovered heaps of merchandise stolen from Home Depot.

The big-box chain already had been investigating thefts from its stores, many in the Sacramento area. It found some items on Craigslist ?at substantially reduced prices,? according to San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe.

An agent for the company contacted the seller about a Rheem-brand water heater that is sold exclusively at Home Depot. The agent arranged to meet at a home in Daly City on Oct. 13.

There, the agent stumbled upon a makeshift mini-Home Depot being run out of a garage. ?Contractor types? were coming and going from the home, buying stolen items on the cheap, Wagstaffe said.

The sting also uncovered two more homes with garages stocked with mostly Home Depot goods, Wagstaffe said. In all, $100,000 worth of the retailer?s property was recovered.

One of the homes also housed a marijuana processing operation, with tens of thousands of dollars worth of pot packaged for sale, Wagstaffe said.

The alleged seller, 35-year-old Jimmy Mak, was arrested following the sting operation. On Tuesday, he pleaded not guilty to felony possession of stolen property and drugs.

Authorities believe Mak is just one part of a larger theft ring.

?We don?t know precisely where Jimmy Mak fits into the big picture,? Wagstaffe said.

Mak is out of custody after posting $80,000 bail. He is next scheduled to appear for a Superior Court review conference Jan. 5. A preliminary hearing is set for Jan. 24.

Prosecutors believe the operation flourished not only due to Craigslist, but word of mouth about the cheap prices.

?If you see something for sale that?s at an unbelievable price, there?s usually a reason for it,? Wagstaffe said.

Home Depot agents say they use tracking numbers to identify the company?s products. The items in the garages were still in their boxes, with the cargo sheets still attached, Wagstaffe said.

maldax@sfexaminer.com

Source: http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/crime/2011/10/prices-too-good-be-legal

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Just who knew that Kenya would launch its attack on Somalia?

Somalia's president has condemned Kenya's surprise 10-day-long attack onto Somali soil. Uganda has praised it, and the US and French governments claim no involvement.

Kenya?s military operation into Somalia is now well into its second week, with tough battles ahead in the Islamist-held town of Afmadow and the port city of Kismayo, and few signs that this incursion will have an early exit.

Skip to next paragraph

But the Kenyan attack, which appears to have caught Kenya?s Western allies and even the Somali government by surprise, has gathered support from other regional powers in East Africa, who argue that the time has come to finish off the Al Qaeda-affiliated Somali group, Al Shabab, once and for all.

In the past week, leaders including the African Union?s Jean Ping and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) regional group have endorsed Kenya?s operation, in stark contrast to the Western-backed Somali president, Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, who condemned the presence of Kenyan troops on Somali soil. But while it is still unknown how long the operation had been planned, and who had been informed in advance, it has become clear that Kenya?s military advance into Somalia is a long-term commitment, with uncertain ? but powerful ? consequences.

?We have been aware of what Kenya is doing,? said the spokesman for Uganda People?s Defense Forces, Felix Kulayigye, quoted by the Nairobi newspaper, the East African. Uganda, which provides some 6,000 troops for the 8,000-strong African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia (AMISOM) has been pushing its fellow African Union members for some time to contribute troops, arguing that Uganda and Burundi should not bear the burden alone.

Taking on Al Shabab, Mr. Kulayigye added, ?is a regional issue, an African issue.?

If Kenya is beginning to coordinate its military actions with those of its regional partners ? including Uganda and perhaps Ethiopia, which invaded Somalia briefly in 2006 ? then it is doing so without explaining its larger goals to the Kenyan people themselves.

With two Kenyan battalions, serving under a mission called Operation Linda Nchi (Protect the Nation) and slowly descending on Kismayo, Kenyan authorities have largely gone quiet on the public information front.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/tOtWsPesyfo/Just-who-knew-that-Kenya-would-launch-its-attack-on-Somalia

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

UN condemns US embargo of Cuba ? again (AP)

UNITED NATIONS ? The U.N. General Assembly voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to condemn the U.S. embargo against Cuba for the 20th year in a row.

The final tally was 186-2, with only Israel joining the United States as it did last year. The small Pacific nations of Palau, Micronesia and the Marshall Islands abstained as they also did last year.

Last year's tally for the symbolic measure was almost identical, 187-2, with three abstentions.

Envoys for Vietnam, Russia, Nicaragua and many other countries, as well as the 120-member Nonaligned Movement, spoke Tuesday in favor of the measure calling for the end of the American embargo against the Caribbean country.

"The only consequences of the sanctions are the deterioration of the living standard of the Cuban population, creation of artificial barriers to its economic growth and infringement on the rights and interests of third countries," Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said.

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez said that the sanctions have caused direct economic damages of close to $1 trillion to the Cuban people over nearly half a century.

The United States has not eased the embargo in the nearly three years since President Barack Obama's election raised hopes for a change in policy, he added.

"Despite the false image of flexibility that the current U.S. administration intends to portray, the blockade and the sanctions remain intact," Rodriguez told the assembly.

"Why doesn't President Obama's administration take care of the U.S. problems and leave us Cubans alone to solve ours in peace?"

The United States has made clear it is not prepared to lift the sanctions entirely until the communist-run nation makes more far-reaching political and economic changes.

American Ambassador Ronald D. Godard, U.S. Senior Area Adviser for Western Hemisphere Affairs, said the embargo is a bilateral issue and "not appropriately a concern of this assembly."

Godard said the sanctions represent "just one aspect of U.S. policy toward Cuba, whose overarching goal is to encourage a more open environment in Cuba and increased respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111025/ap_on_re_us/un_un_cuba_embargo

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Video: Obama to unveil new plan to fix mortgage crisis (cbsnews)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/152661964?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Pot Can Mimic Brain Changes Seen in Schizophrenia (HealthDay)

TUESDAY, Oct. 25 (HealthDay News) -- Marijuana causes disruptions in concentration and memory similar to those that occur in people with schizophrenia, according to a new study.

U.K. researchers measured the electrical activity from hundreds of neurons in the brains of rats given a drug that mimics the effects of cannabis, the psychoactive ingredient of marijuana.

The effects of the drug on individual brain regions were subtle but the drug completely disrupted the coordinated brain waves across the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex. Both of these brain structures are essential for memory and decision-making and play a key role in schizophrenia.

Due to the "decoupling" of the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, the rats were unable to make accurate decisions while attempting to find their way through a maze, the University of Bristol researchers said.

"Marijuana abuse is common among sufferers of schizophrenia and recent studies have shown that the psychoactive ingredient of marijuana can induce some symptoms of schizophrenia in healthy volunteers. These findings are therefore important for our understanding of psychiatric diseases, which may arise as a consequence of 'disorchestrated brains' and could be treated by re-tuning brain activity," lead author Matt Jones said in a university news release.

The study appears Oct. 25 in the Journal of Neuroscience.

"These results are an important step forward in our understanding of how rhythmic activity in the brain underlies thought processes in health and disease," study first author Michal Kucewicz said.

More information

The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse has more about marijuana.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/diseases/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111025/hl_hsn/potcanmimicbrainchangesseeninschizophrenia

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Listing of the Week: Life inside a guitar

You can live like a rock star in a place like this.

By Zillow

7 Montagel Way, Shoal Creek, Alabama
For sale: $17.9 million

You would expect that someone who owned a home with guitar-shaped landscaping to be an avid guitarist, or perhaps a collector, or at least some sort of music buff.

The owner of this prime piece of Alabama real estate is none of the above,? but Larry House, the former CEO of MedPartners, a physician? management company.

"The guitar was just a whimsical, great idea," explains listing agent Pam Ausley. "You know he just thought it up; he didn't make a lot of it but it's gotten a lot of attention."

According to Ausley, the guitar shaped grounds are just "a small part" of a house she likens to Versailles.

The home was built and designed by House in 1997 for a reported $26 million. House hired International Fine Arts Conservation Studios (IFACS), who worked on the Buckingham Palace, to install much of the detailing.

Listed for $17.9 million, the home has 55,000 square feet of living space and features high-end finishes like marble floors, mahogany floors and doors as well as gold and silver-leafing and hand-painted frescoes.

The home sits on 27 park-like acres and has equestrian trails, four pastures, indoor and outdoor arenas as well as a six-stall barn with attached living quarters. Located just 25 minutes outside Birmingham, and two hours from Atlanta, Ausley describes the surrounding Shoal Creek area as a mix between a? national park and a resort with access to some of the best golfing in the country.

With 15 bedrooms, 22 bathrooms, a 13-car temperature-controlled garage, a? 25-seat home theater, a full-sized commercial elevator, and a?? 2,000-bottle wine cellar, Ausley says the home has gotten a little too big for House.

"Their kids are grown, and they?re just ready to do something different," she said. "He knows it's not the best time to sell; he's just ready."

Even with current low mortgage rates, this Shoal Creek home has a pretty pricey monthly payment. According to data from the Zillow Mortgage Marketplace, with a 20 percent down payment on a 30-year-loan, the monthly payment will be $75,044.

The listing agent likes the mansion to Versailles.

When building this, the details obviously mattered.

The home is in park-like setting.

At 55,000 square feet, you'll have plenty of room to spread out.

Source: http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/10/21/8431314-listing-of-the-week-alabama-mansion-with-guitar-shaped-grounds

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Gaddafi unburied, Libyans manoeuvre for new era (Reuters)

MISRATA, Libya (Reuters) ? Muammar Gaddafi's body lay still unburied as Libya's new men of power wrangled over its fate and a formal announcement the war was over, a move the outgoing premier said on Saturday should mean free elections in the middle of next year.

Mahmoud Jibril, an expatriate academic who has been prime minister in the Western-backed rebel government, confirmed he was stepping down and that the coming days would be a critical test of how the new leadership and Libya's six million people could handle their freedom after 42 years at Gaddafi's whim.

In Misrata, the once besieged city whose rebel fighters are pushing claims for a big stake in a "reborn", oil-rich Libya, they guarded the market cold store where, for a second day, the curious and the relieved filed in to view the fallen strongman, whose surprise capture and killing in his home town of Sirte on Thursday sparked joy -- and renewed jockeying for influence.

Gaddafi's surviving family, in exile, have asked that his body, and that of his son Mo'tassim, be handed over to tribal kinsmen from Sirte. Officials with the National Transitional Council (NTC) said they were trying to arrange a secret resting place that would avoid loyalist supporters making it a shrine.

In Benghazi, Libya's second city and seat of the revolt in February, leaders were preparing a formal declaration on Sunday that the whole country was "liberated", a move that starts the clock ticking on a plan to install a transitional government, draft a constitution and institute full democracy by 2013.

The announcement has been expected, and delayed, since Thursday, amid arguments over whether Benghazi or the capital Tripoli, captured in August, should have the honour.

ANARCHY

Anarchy has been a defining characteristic of the disparate movement that fought Gaddafi for eight months across vast tracts of desert and Jibril, criticised by some in the anti-Gaddafi forces, made clear at an international business conference in Jordan that progress would require great resolution:

"First, what kind of resolve the NTC will show in the next few days," he said. "And the other thing depends mainly on the Libyan people - whether they differentiate between the past and the future ... I am counting on them to look ahead and remember the kind of agony they went through in the last 42 years."

For some, there are encouraging signs, notably that the two-month gap between the fall of Tripoli and the death of Gaddafi has not seen fighting between different factions. Comparisons with Iraq after Saddam Hussein are tempered by the absence of the sectarian divide which has ravaged that country.

However, as in Iraq, there are vast energy resources at stake and a host of international powers keen to exploit them.

In a thinly populated country that was only united in the 1930s under Italian colonial rule, regional enmities may thrive, as well as differences between Islamists and secularists and ethnic tensions between Arabs and Berbers.

"THE CAKE IS NOW"

In Misrata, where Gaddafi's body lay, bearing bullet wounds that many assume were inflicted by fighters from the city who found him hiding in a storm drain, one field commander voiced his concern that trouble was brewing:

"The fear now is what is going to happen next," he said, speaking to Reuters privately.

"There is going to be regional in-fighting. You have Zintan and Misrata on one side and then Benghazi and the east ... There is in-fighting even inside the army.

"The cake is now and everybody wants to take a piece."

For Misratans, who endured months of bloody siege but fought off Gaddafi's army and played an important role in taking Tripoli, the body of the fallen strongman is only the latest trophy of war to be brought back to the city. Fighters had previously brought back statues and other emblems of Gaddafi's rule, seized from Tripoli.

Jibril, who said he planned to step down as previously announced now that fighting was over, described Gaddafi's death as leaving him feeling personally "relieved and reborn".

Libya now needed a vision to unite people behind and to diversify the economy away from oil and gas exports: "We need to seize this very limited opportunity," he said. "We should use this time properly to build an alternate economy as fast as possible."

Gaddafi's family and international human rights groups have urged a inquiry into how Gaddafi, 69, was killed, when gory cellphone video footage showed him alive but being beaten and taunted by his captors on Thursday. Jibril said on the day that Gaddafi was killed in "crossfire" when his supporters opened fire on the ambulance that was taking him to hospital.

But an ambulance driver in Sirte told Reuters that the former leader was already dead by the time he picked him up.

His death marked the end of what might have been another Arab dynasty, although his son and heir-apparent Saif al-Islam was still at large. NTC officials believe he escaped from Sirte.

Despite the qualms of some abroad, few Libyans are prepared to spare much of a thought for how Gaddafi met his end.

But some have expressed unease at the way his body has been treated - Muslim custom dictates it should have been buried by sundown on Thursday - and at other aspects that touch on matters of religion and respect for the dead.

DAUGHTER'S CALL

One senior figure among the fighters in Misrata told Reuters that he was ashamed of the way one man broke the news of his death to Gaddafi's own daughter, Aisha, who happened to call on a satellite phone that was found when he died.

"Aisha called and one of the revolutionaries answered her," the commander said. "He said: 'It's over. Abu Shafshufa died'."

Using a nickname derived from Gaddafi's distinctive long ringlets - approximately 'Old Fuzzhead' - had been an affront to decency, he added: "It's shameful. It is his daughter."

Aisha, her mother and two of her brothers fled to Algeria after the fall of Tripoli. Aisha gave birth on the day she arrived. The government in Algiers angered the NTC by refusing to send them back. But an Algerian newspaper on Saturday quoted official sources saying that, following the death of the head of the family, they might now reconsider.

In a statement on a Syria-based pro-Gaddafi television station, the ousted dictator's family asked for the bodies of Gaddafi, his son Mo'tassim, and others: "We call on the UN, the Organisation of the Islamic Conference and Amnesty International to force the Transitional Council to hand over the martyrs' bodies to our tribe in Sirte and to allow them to perform their burial ceremony in accordance with Islamic customs and rules," the statement said.

At an understated and thinly attended news conference late on Friday, NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said the Western alliance had taken a preliminary decision to call a halt to Operation Unified Protector on Oct. 31.

Like other Western officials, Rasmussen expressed no regrets in public about the gruesome death of the deposed Libyan dictator, who was captured alive by the forces of the National Transitional Council but was brought dead to a hospital.

"We mounted a complex operation with unprecedented speed and conducted it with the greatest of care," Rasmussen said. "I'm very proud of what we have achieved."

The NATO operation, officially intended to protect civilians, effectively ended on Thursday with French warplanes blasting Gaddafi's convoy as he and others tried to escape.

(Additional reporting by Taha Zargoun and Tim Gaynor in Sirte, Barry Malone, Yasmine Saleh and Jessica Donati in Tripoli, Brian Rohan in Benghazi, Jon Hemming and Andrew Hammond in Tunis, Samia Nakhoul in Amman, Christian Lowe in Algiers, Tom Pfeiffer at Dead Sea, Jordan, David Brunnstrom in Brussels; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Tim Pearce)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/india/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111022/india_nm/india600580

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What you should know about accident insurance | Insurance Types

Each and every day all over the world are happening all kinds of accidents and due to the truth that nobody is protected from them there are available all kinds of accident insurances. And if you suffer from accidents often it is far better to have such insurance to get positive aspects from those accidents.

There are available numerous kinds of insurance policies for personal and business uses. The individual insurance sorts are:

- Vehicle insurance

- Property insurance

- Life insurance

- Accident insurance

- Tourist insurance

And as for the company, the insurance policies are:

- Vehicle insurance

- Property insurance

- Life insurance

- Cargo insurance

- Tourist insurance

Very typically, even at the safest places like our residence and workplace, we are not protected against unforeseen events and accidents. To feel comfortable and secure wherever we are, choose the policy of accident insurance, which will give you protection against a wide range of claims arising from domestic or industrial accidents.

Accident insurance, provides you with a reliable insurance protection and a number of additional benefits, including the use of insurance as an additional insurance protection for life insurance.

Accident insurance includes the following types:

- Individual accident insurance

- Accident insurance for debts

- Accident insurance for athletes

- Accident insurance for students

The individual accident insurance is directed towards each and every person but there is an age limitation for that. It is regarded as from the age of 14 to 69. The period of the insurance is chosen by you and it could be from 1 month to 1 year and from 1 year to five years.

The accident insurance for debts is carried out by the insurance agency to defend the person who has taken credit from a bank. This ensures this individual for period of time from 1 month to five years. This type of insurance covers the case of death of the debtor in the period of the insurance.

The next type of insurance is the insurance for athletes. This policy ensures the athlete from all kinds of injuries and accidents during a period of time of 1 month to 1 year. The athlete ought to not be older than 59 years and should be invented in a sport activity. The policy covers the circumstances of death, permanent disability due to accident and temporary disability from accident for far more than 21 days.

And the last type of accident insurance is done to insure all students. This sort of insurance is intended not only for students from universities and high schools but for kids in schools and kindergartens. This is the greatest way to secure your small kid from injuries and accidents.

If you are willing to safeguard yourself or your youngsters then pick the right insurance for you and be safe.

The word for accident insurance that the Danes use is Ulykkesforsikring d?kning. If you want to get one you really should visit this really resourceful Danish internet site. You can translate it with Google Translator if you don?t know Danish. If you would like to read about the right vehicle accident insurance coverage, click here.

Source: http://www.falundafa-rochester.org/what-you-should-know-about-accident-insurance.htm

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Friday, October 21, 2011

Even The Sweatiest of Fingers Won't Slip Off this Cooler Master Gaming Keyboard [Gaming]

If the stresses of virtual combat are leaving your palms clammy and your keyboard covered in sweat, Cooler Master wants you to know they don't think that's gross. Instead, they've created a new specially coated mechanical keyboard so your slippery fingers don't miss a single keystroke. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/lKzzMWzJqdA/even-the-sweatiest-of-fingers-wont-slip-off-this-cooler-master-gaming-keyboard

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Revealed ? the capitalist network that runs the world

AS PROTESTS against financial power sweep the world this week, science may have confirmed the protesters' worst fears. An analysis of the relationships between 43,000 transnational corporations has identified a relatively small group of companies, mainly banks, with disproportionate power over the global economy.

The study's assumptions have attracted some criticism, but complex systems analysts contacted by New Scientist say it is a unique effort to untangle control in the global economy. Pushing the analysis further, they say, could help to identify ways of making global capitalism more stable.

The idea that a few bankers control a large chunk of the global economy might not seem like news to New York's Occupy Wall Street movement and protesters elsewhere. But the study, by a trio of complex systems theorists at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, is the first to go beyond ideology to empirically identify such a network of power. It combines the mathematics long used to model natural systems with comprehensive corporate data to map ownership among the world's transnational corporations (TNCs).

"Reality is so complex, we must move away from dogma, whether it's conspiracy theories or free-market," says James Glattfelder. "Our analysis is reality-based."

Previous studies have found that a few TNCs own large chunks of the world's economy, but they included only a limited number of companies and omitted indirect ownerships, so could not say how this affected the global economy - whether it made it more or less stable, for instance.

The Zurich team can. From Orbis 2007, a database listing 37 million companies and investors worldwide, they pulled out all 43,060 TNCs and the share ownerships linking them. Then they constructed a model of which companies controlled others through shareholding networks, coupled with each company's operating revenues, to map the structure of economic power.

The work, to be published in PloS One, revealed a core of 1318 companies with interlocking ownerships (see image). Each of the 1318 had ties to two or more other companies, and on average they were connected to 20. What's more, although they represented 20 per cent of global operating revenues, the 1318 appeared to collectively own through their shares the majority of the world's large blue chip and manufacturing firms - the "real" economy - representing a further 60 per cent of global revenues.

When the team further untangled the web of ownership, it found much of it tracked back to a "super-entity" of 147 even more tightly knit companies - all of their ownership was held by other members of the super-entity - that controlled 40 per cent of the total wealth in the network. "In effect, less than 1 per cent of the companies were able to control 40 per cent of the entire network," says Glattfelder. Most were financial institutions. The top 20 included Barclays Bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co, and The Goldman Sachs Group.

John Driffill of the University of London, a macroeconomics expert, says the value of the analysis is not just to see if a small number of people controls the global economy, but rather its insights into economic stability.

Concentration of power is not good or bad in itself, says the Zurich team, but the core's tight interconnections could be. As the world learned in 2008, such networks are unstable. "If one [company] suffers distress," says Glattfelder, "this propagates."

"It's disconcerting to see how connected things really are," agrees George Sugihara of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, a complex systems expert who has advised Deutsche Bank.

Yaneer Bar-Yam, head of the New England Complex Systems Institute (NECSI), warns that the analysis assumes ownership equates to control, which is not always true. Most company shares are held by fund managers who may or may not control what the companies they part-own actually do. The impact of this on the system's behaviour, he says, requires more analysis.

Crucially, by identifying the architecture of global economic power, the analysis could help make it more stable. By finding the vulnerable aspects of the system, economists can suggest measures to prevent future collapses spreading through the entire economy. Glattfelder says we may need global anti-trust rules, which now exist only at national level, to limit over-connection among TNCs. Bar-Yam says the analysis suggests one possible solution: firms should be taxed for excess interconnectivity to discourage this risk.

One thing won't chime with some of the protesters' claims: the super-entity is unlikely to be the intentional result of a conspiracy to rule the world. "Such structures are common in nature," says Sugihara.

Newcomers to any network connect preferentially to highly connected members. TNCs buy shares in each other for business reasons, not for world domination. If connectedness clusters, so does wealth, says Dan Braha of NECSI: in similar models, money flows towards the most highly connected members. The Zurich study, says Sugihara, "is strong evidence that simple rules governing TNCs give rise spontaneously to highly connected groups". Or as Braha puts it: "The Occupy Wall Street claim that 1 per cent of people have most of the wealth reflects a logical phase of the self-organising economy."

So, the super-entity may not result from conspiracy. The real question, says the Zurich team, is whether it can exert concerted political power. Driffill feels 147 is too many to sustain collusion. Braha suspects they will compete in the market but act together on common interests. Resisting changes to the network structure may be one such common interest.

The top 50 of the 147 superconnected companies

1. Barclays plc
2. Capital Group Companies Inc
3. FMR Corporation
4. AXA
5. State Street Corporation
6. JP Morgan Chase & Co
7. Legal & General Group plc
8. Vanguard Group Inc
9. UBS AG
10. Merrill Lynch & Co Inc
11. Wellington Management Co LLP
12. Deutsche Bank AG
13. Franklin Resources Inc
14. Credit Suisse Group
15. Walton Enterprises LLC
16. Bank of New York Mellon Corp
17. Natixis
18. Goldman Sachs Group Inc
19. T Rowe Price Group Inc
20. Legg Mason Inc
21. Morgan Stanley
22. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc
23. Northern Trust Corporation
24. Soci?t? G?n?rale
25. Bank of America Corporation
26. Lloyds TSB Group plc
27. Invesco plc
28. Allianz SE 29. TIAA
30. Old Mutual Public Limited Company
31. Aviva plc
32. Schroders plc
33. Dodge & Cox
34. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc*
35. Sun Life Financial Inc
36. Standard Life plc
37. CNCE
38. Nomura Holdings Inc
39. The Depository Trust Company
40. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance
41. ING Groep NV
42. Brandes Investment Partners LP
43. Unicredito Italiano SPA
44. Deposit Insurance Corporation of Japan
45. Vereniging Aegon
46. BNP Paribas
47. Affiliated Managers Group Inc
48. Resona Holdings Inc
49. Capital Group International Inc
50. China Petrochemical Group Company

* Lehman still existed in the 2007 dataset used

Graphic: The 1318 transnational corporations that form the core of the economy

(Data: PLoS One)?????????

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/19677222/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cmg212283540B50A0A0Erevealed0E0Ethe0Ecapitalist0Enetwork0Ethat0Eruns0Ethe0Eworld0Bhtml0DDCMP0FOTC0Erss0Gnsref0Fonline0Enews/story01.htm

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