Pole gets 30 years for killing 6 on Channel Island

























LONDON (AP) — A Polish builder who killed six people, including his wife and children, on the British Channel Island of Jersey has been sentenced to 30 years in prison.


Damian Rzeszowski, 31, carried out the knife attack in August 2011 at his home. He was said to have become depressed after his wife admitted to an affair.





















Rzeszowski was convicted of six counts of manslaughter but cleared of murder. On Monday, Judge Michael Birt sentenced him to 30 years in jail for each victim, but the sentences are to run concurrently.


Rzeszowski’s victims were his wife Izabela Rzeszowska, 30; 5-year-old daughter, Kinga; 2-year-old son, Kacper; father-in-law, Marek Gartska, 56; his wife’s friend Marta De La Haye, 34; and her 5-year-old daughter, Julia.


Europe News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Apple software, retail chiefs out in sweeping overhaul

























SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Apple Inc Chief Executive Tim Cook on Monday replaced the heads of its software and retail units in the company’s most sweeping executive shake-up in a decade following embarrassing problems with its new mapping program and unpopular store-related decisions.


Software chief Scott Forstall, who oversaw the launch of the flawed mapping software and much criticized Siri voice-enabled assistant, will leave Apple next year and serve as an advisor to Cook in the meantime.





















Forstall, seen as a polarizing figure inside Apple, had been billed as one of the future candidates to take the top job at Apple. He was the executive behind the panned Apple Maps app that the company announced with much fanfare in summer.


The moves, which come a little more than a year into Cook’s tenure as CEO, were described by Apple as a way to increase “collaboration” across its hardware, software and services business.


“These changes show that Tim Cook is stamping his authority on the business,” Ben Wood, analyst with CCS Insight, said. “Perhaps disappointed with the Maps issues, Forstall became the scapegoat.”


Critics of the maps debacle, which led Cook to apologize to customers, had been calling for Forstall’s head. “Does Apple have a Scott Forstall problem?” Fortune editor Philip Elmer Dewitt wrote on Sept 29.


The moves hand over substantially more responsibility to Cue, the head of Internet Software and Services who helped create the iTunes music store and App Store. The 23-year Apple veteran already is in charge of Cloud services and will take on Apple Maps and Siri.


Apple said a search is underway for a new retail chief to replace John Browett and that the retail team would report directly to Cook. Browett had riled up the retail store staff when he decided to reduce the number of retail employees.


Browett took over as head of Apple’s retail stores earlier this year, replacing Ron Johnson, who went on to become the CEO of JC Penney.


Last week Apple delivered a second straight quarter of disappointing financial results, and iPad sales fell short of Wall Street’s targets, marring its record of consistently blowing past investors’ expectations.


(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Richard Chang)


Internet News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Taylor Swift to co-host Grammy nominations in Nashville

























LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Country-pop star Taylor Swift will co-host the Grammy nominations live on television from Nashville, the capital of country music, the Recording Academy said on Monday.


Swift, 22, who has won six Grammy awards, will join rapper-actor LL Cool J to announce nominees in some of the major categories during a one-hour live telecast on December 5, featuring performances from country artist Luke Bryan and pop-rockers Maroon 5.





















The singer is currently on a touring blitz to promote her latest album, “Red”, and has become an awards show favorite, most recently premiering her new single at the MTV Video Music Awards in September.


Swift’s addition to the roster is part of the Grammy organization’s celebration of country music this year, moving the nominations concert from Los Angeles to Nashville, home to the Grand Ole Opry and dozens of recording studios that have spawned artists such as Swift, Carrie Underwood and Lady Antebellum.


Organizers began televising the nominations in a live show five years ago in a bid to boost TV viewership for the annual Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles in February. This year, 39.9 million viewers tuned in to see British singer Adele sweep the awards with six major wins.


(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Jill Serjeant and Dale Hudson)


Music News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Hurricane Sandy: Tips to Make Tap Water Safe for Drinking

























Oct 29, 2012 7:10pm



If water supply becomes contaminated, you can either boil water for one minute or make water safe with bleach.





















Here is how:


If tap water is clear:


1. Add eight drops of household unscented liquid bleach to one gallon of water.


2. Mix well and wait 30 minutes or more before drinking.


If tap water is cloudy:


1. Add 16 drops of unscented household liquid bleach to one gallon of water.


2. Mix well and wait 30 minutes or more before drinking.


In addition:


  • Never mix bleach with ammonia or other cleaners.

  • Open windows and doors to get fresh air when you use bleach.

For more information, go to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.



SHOWS: World News

Health News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Steve Jobs’ ‘Sorcerer’s Apprentice’ Is Out at Apple

























Apple (AAPL) today announced the departure of Scott Forstall, the company’s senior vice president of its mobile operating system, iOS. The departure was abrupt, but perhaps not entirely unexpected. Forstall had been a longtime and talented member of Apple’s executive team, but as Bloomberg Businessweek reported in a cover story last year, he was also a polarizing figure within the company. He was not without internal rivals and enemies: As we said in our 2011 article, Jonathan Ive, Apple’s design chief, and Bob Mansfield, the company’s head of technology, would rarely take meetings with him unless the Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, was also present.


Forstall is a talented, able performer at various who brought a tremendous amount of energy to many product rollouts at Apple. Which is why his absence from the recent iPad Mini announcement raised some eyebrows. At any major release of a new iOS device, Forstall would have been expected to speak to journalists who gathered in San Jose last week.





















Overseeing iOS put Forstall in a tremendous position of power, as Apple’s mobile operating system has increasingly been where the action is in new Apple products and services, but his tenure had plenty of speed bumps. The company’s rollout of iCloud has been better than the previous attempts with Mobile Me and .Mac—iCloud has generated complaints about how hard it is to configure. Forstall was an early supporter of Apple’s purchase of Siri, which led to the voice-activated assistant of the same name—Siri’s been criticized for reliability issues. Add to that the recent Maps issue, in which CEO Cook had to release an apology to Apple customers. It’s quite possible that Forstall, for all his agreed-upon talent and dedication to the company, had little to defend himself with when an reorganization was proposed and he had few friends in the executive suite in Cupertino.


Being demanding or prickly is fine when you’re doing everything right (or, in Steve Jobs’s case, when it’s your company). But if things start to go south on you, it can leave you awfully exposed, with few people leaping to your defense or aid (ask A-Rod). Maybe nice guys finish last, but at least they finish.


Businessweek.com — Top News



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Citigroup is fined $2 million over Facebook IPO

























NEW YORK (AP) — Citigroup has paid a $ 2 million fine and fired a junior analyst after the employee leaked confidential information about Facebook‘s initial public offering to a popular tech blog.


The charges were brought by the top securities regulator in Massachusetts, who has a history of aggressive enforcement actions against banks. The regulator, Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin, announced the charges Friday. Citi agreed to the settlement and admitted to the events detailed in the consent order.





















Citi was part of the team of banks that helped underwrite the deal that made Facebook a public company in May. When a bank helps underwrite such a deal, it has information about a company that the broader investing public does not have. The bankers who underwrite the deal are not supposed to act on that information or share it with any favored clients, because it would give them an unfair advantage over the public.


Galvin’s office noted in the order that securities laws required that members of Facebook’s underwriting syndicate “refrain from disseminating written research or other written content about Facebook until 40 days after the IPO.”


The arrangements can also bring accusations of conflicts of interest; banks not only help companies go public or do other deals, they also have units that provide research on the companies. The research is supposed to be impartial, but the banks have a stake in how a company does if it is helping it with underwriting.


According to Galvin’s office, a junior analyst in Citigroup’s San Francisco office was assigned to help research Facebook. On May 2, the junior analyst sent an email to two employees at the technology website TechCrunch.com, with proprietary information about Citigroup’s research on Facebook.


“I am ramping up coverage on FB and thought you guys might like to see how the street is thinking about it (and our estimates),” the junior analyst wrote to two TechCrunch writers. “…This, of course is confidential.”


One of the TechCrunch employees wrote back: “There’s no way I can publish this doc from an anonymous source, right?”


A minute later, the junior analyst replied: “My boss would eat me alive.”


The analyst and the TechCrunch employees were friends, according to Galvin’s office. The junior analyst and one of the employees had gone to Stanford together. According to Galvin’s office, “they keep in touch using social media and all live in the Bay Area.”


Citigroup fired the junior analyst in late September, after Galvin’s office subpoenaed the bank. A subpoena is a request for information and does not necessarily imply wrongdoing.


The bank told Galvin’s office that the junior analyst acted alone. In addition to agreeing to the $ 2 million fine, Citi also agreed to review its policies for overseeing analysts’ communications, and to strengthen compliance training for the analysts.


“We are pleased to have this matter resolved,” Citigroup spokeswoman Sophia Stewart said. “We take our internal policies and procedures very seriously and have taken the appropriate actions.”


Galvin has a long history of suing top players in the banking industry. He was involved in a landmark settlement in 2003 that accused major banks, including Citi’s Salomon Smith Barney unit, of publishing fraudulent research reports about the companies it was working for, and allowing investment bankers working for the companies to influence the opinions of the research analysts covering them.


In the consent order issued Friday, Galvin said the penalty “should serve as a warning to the industry as a whole.”


This is the first penalty that Galvin’s office has issued over the Facebook public offering. A spokesman declined to say if there could be more.


Separately, Galvin’s consent order also implicates the junior analyst’s boss, a senior analyst, for other conduct.


The consent order didn’t name the senior analyst but gives enough information to identify him as Mark Mahaney, Citi’s well-known and influential managing director of Internet research, a frequent commentator to journalists and a person who boosted Citigroup’s research profile.


The consent order does not implicate Mahaney in the Facebook misconduct. But it does say that separately, he sent emails with his private, unpublished opinion about YouTube’s financial results to a reporter at a French business magazine, Capital.


Later, when a communications employee told him he’d need to get approval to talk to the Capital reporter, Mahaney said that he wouldn’t respond to the reporter’s questions even though he already had.


Later, he wrote to the communications employee, “This could get me in trouble. Shoot.”


Citigroup confirmed that Mahaney is no longer at the bank. A source familiar with the matter, who wasn’t allowed to speak on the record about personnel matters, said Mahaney had been fired because he misled the bank about his communications with the French magazine.


Social Media News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Massachusetts closes third pharmacy since meningitis outbreak

























BOSTON (Reuters) – Massachusetts regulators shut down a pharmacy on Sunday after a surprise inspection raised concerns about the sterility of its drugs, in the third such closure since a deadly meningitis outbreak caused by contaminated drugs from another pharmacy in the state.


The latest pharmacy to be closed, Infusion Resource, is not affiliated with New England Compounding Center, the company linked to the outbreak, officials said.





















Infusion Resource in Waltham was closed after inspectors last week found “significant issues” and “expressed concerns for the sterility of products,” said Madeleine Biondolillo, director of the state’s Bureau of Healthcare Safety and Quality.


No contaminated drugs were found at Infusion Resource, but 40 patients and their doctors were asked to return any medications they received from the company, she said.


Massachusetts regulators have come under fire after contaminated drugs from NECC, based in Framingham, were cited as the cause of the outbreak which has so far killed 25 people and sickened another 337 in 18 states.


The state is conducting inspections of all compounding pharmacies which handle sterile medications in the wake of the deadly national meningitis outbreak.


The two pharmacies shut down earlier were NECC itself, which was closed on October 3, and a sister company of NECC, called Ameridose, that closed voluntarily for inspections on October 19.


Bernard Lambrese, CEO of Infusion Resource, said in a statement he wanted to reassure “patients and the general public of the safety, purity and efficacy” of solutions produced at his company’s Waltham pharmacy. “Patient safety is something we take very seriously,” he said.


Lauren Smith, interim commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, told reporters the ongoing state-wide inspections are part of “a series of aggressive and necessary actions to protect public safety and enhance oversight of this industry” following the national meningitis outbreak.


The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said on Friday it found “greenish black foreign matter” and other contaminants in an injectable steroid produced by NECC. It also found that vials from the same bin of the steroid contained what appeared to be a “white filamentous material,” according to the report released by the FDA following inspections of the facility in October.


(Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and Christopher Wilson)


Medications/Drugs News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Economy ‘shows signs of optimism’


























There is “reason for some optimism” for the UK economy, the Bank of England’s deputy governor Charlie Bean has said.





















He cautioned against “getting over-excited” after new GDP data showed the recession was over – pointing out the Olympics had given a one-off boost.


But Mr Bean said there were “signs of progress” from the eurozone and banking crises and inflation should be lower.


Labour said families were still being squeezed but ministers reject claims austerity policies were hitting growth.


Last week’s official gross domestic product figures, which measure the value of everything produced in the country, showed the economy grew by 1.0% in the three months from July to September.


It had been in recession for the previous nine months and has still not recovered the levels of output seen before the financial crisis in 2008.


‘The right path’


Speaking on the Murnaghan show on Sky News, Mr Bean said: “The big picture here is of an economy that has been bumping along the bottom for two years.


Continue reading the main story

The statistics are one thing, how people feel is another”



End Quote Chuka Umunna Shadow business secretary


“We do think there is reason for some optimism going forward. Some of the headwinds we have been struggling against in the past couple of years will be abating somewhat.


“Most particularly, we have seen a big squeeze on households’ real spending power… Going forward, that squeeze should not be so intense.”


Labour’s shadow business secretary Chuka Umunna told the programme families and businesses were still struggling.


Official GDP figures showed the UK economy had contracted by 6.4% between the start of 2008 and the middle of 2009, and had since recovered about half of that lost output. The level of output in the third quarter of 2012 was almost exactly the same as it had been in the third quarter of 2011.


“It is good news that, with the help of the Olympics and after the longest double-dip recession since the Second World War, we saw a positive number last week,” Mr Umunna said.


“But I think the statistics are one thing, how people feel is another… All we saw last week was essentially things going back to the position we were in last year.”


Interviewed on the BBC’s Sunday Politics, Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander accepted the impact of the eurozone crisis and commodity price rises meant “growth has been much slower than we would have liked over the last two to three years”.


But he added: “We knew when we came into office that they were going to be difficult but I don’t think that means that the path we chose was wrong…


“If we hadn’t gone for the austerity programme that we did – the deficit reduction, the spending reductions and so on – then our economy would have been in a much worse position.”


BBC News – Business



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The Fastest (and Slowest) Growing U.S. Cities
















Bloomberg Rankings identified the 10 U.S. cities with more than 300,000 residents that had the greatest population gains and losses from 2010 to July 1, 2011. We ranked the cities (in ascending order) on their percentage change in population.


The average population growth for U.S. cities with more than 300,000 residents was 1.5 percent during this period. The 10 fastest-growing cities expanded by an average 3.1 percent—which, in the case of Austin, Tex., meant an additional 30,221 residents. The 10 cities on the rise also had an average unemployment rate of 8.0 percent, just shy of the national rate of 8.1 percent, and a foreclosure rate of 0.16 percent, slightly higher than the 0.15 percent national average. The 10 cities at the bottom of the list averaged only 0.1 percent growth, and four of them declined in population from 2010 to 2011. They had an average unemployment rate of 8.4 percent and a foreclosure rate of 0.19 percent, both well above the national rates.












Businessweek.com — Top News



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Gadgets add complexity to brutal bank layoffs
















LONDON (Reuters) – In the high-tech, gadget-addicted world of investment banking, layoffs are becoming more complex and brutal as firms try to stop sensitive data leaving with employees.


Sackings are usually swift, with bankers escorted out, a few belongings thrown into boxes and Blackberries and phones disabled the minute they get their marching orders.












But weeks of trawling through old emails and planning software lockdowns now precede and follow the job cuts that are happening in thousands, adding a new layer of indignity to the process.


“It used to be that you would take away any access to the building and maybe prevent someone from lifting their Rolodex,” said Stephen Bonner, a former Barclays executive now a partner in the information protection business at consultancy KPMG.


“Now there is extensive compliance, with for example reviews of the last six months of email activity, for signs of a large amount of material being sent to personal accounts.”


Companies have to make sure they can block access to work systems that employees may be using on their own computers, while occasionally calling in lawyers to ask fired staff to destroy data they may have already downloaded.


The crackdown has taken on new relevance after a series of banking scandals such as the rigging of Libor interest rates. Records of emails and voice mails underpinned a case by regulators against Barclays for manipulating Libor, which was settled in June.


Layoffs in banking have long been a particularly brutal affair, justified by firms because of the sensitive information handled by deal advisers and traders.


Anecdotes abound about the half-eaten sandwiches left behind by colleagues called to a meeting with their manager and human resources, never to return. Those allowed to collect their belongings often do so with a security escort.


More bankers are likely to get a taste of the dismissal procedures in the coming months as economic woes hurt revenue.


Deutsche Bank and Nomura <8604.T> have been among those shrinking headcount again recently, with layoffs at major players adding up to well over 130,000 since 2011.


PRACTICE RUN


With hundreds of bankers sometimes leaving on the same day in big redundancy rounds, the huge IT operations take meticulous planning, sometimes with unnerving consequences for staff.


One analyst laid off last year along with his team said their Blackberries stopped working for 15 minutes a week before they were unexpectedly laid off. In retrospect they believed it had been a practice run.


“That made us feel a bit sick,” the former analyst said, speaking on condition of anonymity.


But recurring incidents of data theft, and other breaches and scandals mean banks will likely only step up their checks.


“I’ve never yet run one investigation during a round of redundancies where we haven’t found things that were concerning for the company,” Bonner at KPMG said.


A former Goldman Sachs computer programmer was recently charged with stealing a high-frequency trading code from the firm before leaving for a job at a start-up.


Systems sweeps can extend to looking for signs of downloads onto memory sticks in the months before an employee’s departure.


Banks store valuable client data in relationship management systems for example, listing intimate details of their every transaction, which junior bankers could try to take with them.


While preventing these breaches is not always possible, banks will notify each other if they believe former employees have taken data they were not entitled to and collaborate between firms, Bonner said.


As in other industries, there is also the risk that a disgruntled, fired employee will return to his desk and send off angry company-wide emails — but worse can happen too.


A computer programmer at U.S. mortgage association Fannie Mae was convicted in 2010 for planting a computer virus designed to destroy all the data on its servers the day he was fired.


WEDDED TO GADGETS


Most bankers do leave on good terms, however — usually a condition to getting a generous redundancy payout.


But although many concede big packages are the trade-off for working in such a cut-throat world, the impersonal format of layoffs is still tough, and dependence on technology such as Blackberries has made things worse.


Being suddenly cut off from the systems so many are wedded to can exacerbate the feelings of worthlessness and bereavement people experience during redundancy, psychologists say.


“People are handed these gadgets and tools…and it becomes entrenched in their way of being,” said Michael Sinclair of the City Psychology Group. “It’s what they do at night times, and it’s about ‘who am I’.”


The lack of a human connection in banking redundancies can add to the problem, he said, as does the stigma attached to seeking counseling, which can be seen as a weakness.


But the large scale of redundancies at banks and their frequency, correlated to cycles of rising and falling markets, make it unlikely they will be handled any differently, despite efforts to give employees and managers more training to cope since the 2008 financial crisis.


“The only other way in is the more personal way, and I don’t know how one could do that,” said Kirsty Tifft from The Career Psychologist, who previously worked in finance, including at Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch.


“Once you go down that route, you have to invest a lot of time. When hundreds of people leave on the same day, it’s hard to see how that could be managed.”


(Editing by Anna Willard)


Gadgets News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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