A Hairy Issue | SUCCESS magazine Blog

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So, I know you?re wondering, what?s with the mustache? And with Halloween right around the corner, where is the rest of my costume?

Well there isn?t any, because I?m donning this ?stache for a good cause. After October comes Movember?that?s ?M? as in mustache. This year, nearly a million folks across the globe will celebrate facial freedom and raise awareness for men?s health by putting away their razors throughout the 11th month of the year.

Mo Bros and Mo Sistas are uniting yet again to champion medical issues so often neglected by guys themselves, in their eternal quest to appear tough and manly. It?s an effort to change men?s habits and attitudes about the risks they face, educate them and convince them to act on that knowledge, increasing the chance of detection, diagnosis and effective treatment. Last year, these whiskered warriors raised over $126 million, but there is still much work left to bring men?s health concerns to the level of awareness paid to those of women.

Unpleasant as I find it to lather up, grab a pink razor and attack my stubbly legs, the idea of running some rusty old twin-blade over my face and neck five times a week gives me goose bumps, which are at least better than razor bumps. You deserve time off from scraping away that first layer of skin, fellas, and this is just the occasion.

Though my husband is a longtime mustache wearer, and now looks freaky without one, I know another guy in my house who might appreciate the chance to expedite his morning routine for a few weeks. My 17-year-old son, with pale Irish skin and dark brown hair typically has a lot of pruning to do, and I love the idea of him having a daily reminder to take care of himself right under his nose.

So dump the razor next month, guys, encourage your buddies to do the same, and let?s see your ?stache. Post pictures of your push-brooms on our Facebook page to show support.

Ladies, you can get in on the facial hair fun to show your support as well?it?s a lot less painful to shear off your mustache on Photoshop. (See below for some of my hilarious outtakes!)

To register, donate or for more information on the Movember cause, visit?http://us.movember.com/.?

OUTTAKES :

Our graphic designer calls this one "the John Waters." Subtle, yet classy.

This one's called "the Magnum P.I."-- and rightly so!

Source: http://blog.success.com/editors-blog/a-hairy-issue/

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What's Cooking ? Blog Archive ? Hello Home & Family!

Yummyfun + Halloween!

Me and Dr. Harvey Karp in the greenroom

Yesterday I taped an episode of a new show called Home & Family. The episode runs today and has me explaining all sorts of Yummyfun Halloween recipes. They even showed a clip from The Yummyfun Kooking Series ?Spookyfun? episode!!? ?Tis the season! Another guest on the same episode was Dr. Harvey Karp. Dr. Karp wrote a few great books: ?The Happiest Baby on the Block? and ?The Happiest Toddler on the Block?. He is great and it was super nice to get to chat with him all day! Tune in today to see the show!

Source: http://www.yummyfun.com/blog/?p=1695

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Quick and Easy Family Pizza and a Movie Night - My Home Sweet ...

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Dinner-and-a-movie nights are a guaranteed winning combination with my clan. They solidify family bonds; cost much less going out (priced movie popcorn and coke lately?), and feel like a Big Event without leaving home.

They?re the stuff of family memories!

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Saturday night we rented a movie (or two or three) and made pizzas using a new product called Flatout Flatbread Thin Crust Flatbreads Artisan Pizza in Spicy Italian, Rustic White, and Heritage Wheat flavors and threw a party with a mustache theme. [My kids are crazy wild about mustache stuff. I'm not sure how facial hair?fake facial hair?has become a such trend, but it has; we're fans.]

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With 9 of us living here, it?s hard to make everyone happy at mealtime. I just don?t have time to cater to so many tastes. I considered creating a custom pizza with a movie theme, but then I realized that individual crusts means that everyone gets exactly what they want.

I?m a fan of mushrooms. A big fan. (Apparently I failed somewhere along the way because most of my kids don?t like them.) I rarely even buy them because seriously, who wants to hear the complaints? (Not me.)?My pizza had lots of mushrooms. The daughter who?s obsessed with pepperoni got as much as she wanted without others having more than they wanted.

Our other toppings included fresh pressed garlic; sliced Roma tomatoes; bowls of Mozzarella, cheddar, and a 5-cheese pizza blend; freshly chopped oregano; and pork sausage.

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Flatout Flatbread pizzas are easy to make: pre-bake for 4-5 minutes, add your toppings, and then return to the oven for an additional 3-4 minutes. The back of the packages contain interesting recipes like a Salad Pizza with pears and a Dessert Pizza with hazelnut chocolate spread (Nutella) with raspberries. Yum.

Because they?re quick to make, easy to customize individually, and the kids can do it themselves, I?m sure we?ll be planning a lot of dinner-and-a-movie nights?with Flatout Flatbread pizzas?in the future.

Have you tried them? What?s your favorite family night movie?

Disclosure: I received products and compensation from Flatout Flatbread and The Motherhood for my participation in this review. Thoughts and opinions are my own.

Source: http://myhomesweethomeonline.net/2012/10/quick-and-easy-family-pizza-and-a-movie-night/

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FEATURE-Doctors torn over heart screening for young athletes

NEW YORK, Oct 11 (Reuters Health) - Christopher Storm was a high school freshman and track runner when doctors found an abnormality in his heart. Part of the muscle was thicker than it should have been, making it harder for it to send blood to the rest of his body.

The condition, known as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, is one of the most common causes of sudden cardiac death - when the heart abruptly stops beating.

Storm's disease was caught on an electrocardiogram (ECG), a test of the heart's electrical signals, done by volunteer doctors who visited his school, the Waubonsie Valley High School in Aurora, Illinois, near his hometown of Naperville, as part of a community screening program offered to all students.

"There was nothing - no lightheadedness, no reason for me to believe that anything was wrong," Storm, now 17, said almost two years after that test.

He believes it may have saved his life, but the idea of screening all young athletes for heart conditions is controversial.

Italy and many other European countries already screen teen and adult athletes before they play sports, and some researchers have called for regular testing of U.S. kids and teens as well to try to prevent rare but deadly cardiac arrests. But so far, data haven't definitively shown that screening could reliably weed out only the most at-risk kids and do so at a price that wouldn't break the bank.

Based on Italian data, British researchers have calculated that close to 800 athletes like Storm would have to be kept out of sports, even given available treatment options, for every death prevented.

Not only that, but "you tell them that they're basically walking around with a ticking time bomb," said Dr. Anders Holst, from Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark, adding that the vast majority will be scared unnecessarily.

Sudden cardiac death kills an estimated 100 to 1,000 children in the U.S. every year - an estimate that's so wide because reliable records of the deaths haven't been kept.

Because many young people with heart conditions never have symptoms, the diseases typically aren't caught until after a tragedy.

Wes Leonard was a 16-year-old high school basketball player from Fennville, Michigan, who collapsed after sinking a game-winning shot in March 2011. He was pronounced dead from sudden cardiac arrest due to dilated cardiomyopathy - when the heart becomes weakened and enlarged.

Some experts believe that if more young athletes were screened early on, a number of those deaths could be prevented.

One such proponent is Dr. Joseph Marek, a cardiologist from the Midwest Heart Foundation in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, who directs the screening program that tested Christopher Storm.

"We've identified a good number of kids who had life-threatening conditions who were unaware," Marek said.

QUESTIONS AND LIMITATIONS

Most doctors acknowledge that screening isn't a perfect solution. Although an ECG can run as low as $10, costs add up when millions of kids are screened.

And some results are false positives suggesting abnormalities in actually healthy hearts. In one study, 7 percent of all ECG-screened athletes needed additional testing, which can add up to $2,000 per person.

Even if more invasive tests confirm underlying problems, it's usually impossible to tell which kids would have died as a result and which would never have had any trouble, researchers said.

The evidence supporting ECG screening comes largely from Italy, which implemented a program to screen all teens and adults in organized sports in 1982. (http://reut.rs/JyNuPz).

After 20 to 25 years of collecting data, Dr. Gaetano Thiene from the University of Padua Medical School and his colleagues say they've shown that screening and disqualifying some athletes saved lives.

In the Veneto region the number of young athletes, male and female, dying of sudden cardiac arrest fell from one in 28,000 each year to one in 250,000, according to a 2006 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

By law, Italians aren't eligible for competitive sports until their hearts are cleared by a doctor.

Thiene said about 1 percent of Italian athletes are disqualified and referred for treatment based on ECG and other test results.

WHEN NOT IN ROME

Many doctors question whether the Italian results can be applied to the U.S. population.

For one, ECG screening is less accurate in non-Caucasians, according to Dr. Charles Berul, chief of cardiology at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, D.C.

The rate of sudden cardiac death in Americans is also lower, matching that of Italians who have already passed screening tests.

The early Italian figures "might have just been a blip to begin with," said Dr. Anne Dubin, a pediatric cardiologist at Stanford University and the Children's Heart Center in Palo Alto, California.

"Or it could be that there are certain genetic rhythm problems that are inherent in Italy that we have here but not to the same extent," she said.

Other European countries have followed Italy's lead and implemented ECG screening for young athletes. A study group for the European Society of Cardiology determined the evidence warrants such tests.

Danish cardiologists broke from the European Society of Cardiology on screening, according to Holst of Copenhagen University Hospital.

He compared ECGs to prostate-specific antigen tests for prostate cancer. U.S. and European doctors intuitively thought PSA tests would save lives long before there was much evidence, he said. Yet recent reports, including one from a U.S.-wide trial, have suggested the harm of over-treatment may not be worth any small potential screening benefit.

FINDING ANSWERS

Researchers would need a "gold standard" trial - in which young athletes are randomly assigned to get ECGs or not - to determine if screening is worthwhile, Holst said.

That would require a huge number of athletes and decades of follow-up.

"It's not feasible in my view," he said.

"I'm afraid I don't have any clue as to how we are going to get a definitive answer. But until we one day might get that, I think we should just step down."

Cardiologist Dr. Robert Myerburg from the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine doesn't support waiting for persuasive data.

"I think we ought to implement (screening)," he said. "Some number of deaths can be prevented as we're going along, as we're doing the research."

Organizing a federal screening program probably isn't realistic in the United States, Myerburg said, but individual states can start screening high school athletes, he suggested.

Marek, from the Midwest Heart Foundation, said communities can sponsor in-school screening if local cardiologists are willing to volunteer to save money.

Without them, adding an ECG screening program to a traditional history and physical would cost $117 per athlete, or about $69,000 per "quality" year of life saved, according to the National Institutes of Health. The bar for cost-effectiveness is typically considered to be $50,000 per quality life-year saved.

Using a lower ECG price, Stanford researchers said screening could be cost-effective. According to their model, if the 3.7 million student-athletes deemed to be potentially at risk were screened, 183,000 would be referred for further testing. One in six of those would get results confirming a heart problem. The cost would be just under $43,000 per life-year saved.

Depending on the particular abnormality, treatment can include heart medications, surgery or exercise restrictions only.

For Christopher Storm's condition, doctors placed an implantable cardioverter defibrillator and pacemaker in his chest to keep his heartbeat regular.

He's allowed to exercise as long as his heart rate stays below 155 beats per minute. He can't run competitively but plays pick-up basketball with his friends, who let him stay on one half of the court.

"The biggest thing for me is, I'm always hearing about the athletes who collapse on the court or on the field... from the exact same thing that I have," Storm said.

The American Heart Association recommends a physical and history only for kids starting sports.

"I certainly understand the desire to want to do something, but we need to be cautious about that," said Dr. Jonathan Kaltman, a medical officer at the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute in Bethesda, Maryland.

"We need to be able to confidently say that we're doing more good than harm before launching a screening program that's going to affect many, many lives." (Editing by Ivan Oransky, Prudence Crowther and Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/feature-doctors-torn-over-heart-screening-young-athletes-154253832--sector.html

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Business Marketing scams Google

Beware of bogus phone calls from so called business marketing companies offering you the earth from anything from ?100 per month upwards with Google adwords ,unlimited clicks ,listings here there and everywhere .? Ive had a spate of calls from boastful types normally called Dan with an Essex accent pumping on about how good they are and deal with all the so called big boys sniff sniff?. Such a bore when you listen to them babble on in there own little world of grand self confidence, especially when they call themselves Google business or something high end and dynamic, and supposedly are an official Google partner ,which itself I a complete and utter lie . Do Google do ever anything about this kind of thing ??

One such company who I asked to confirm their name and address got all defensive and bumbled some none existent address in Maidstone , that took about 5 mins to get out of the guy as he seemed very reluctant to tell me his address. You could hear his brain whizzing away thinking how do I get out of this !! so then he promptly put me on hold and I got some pipe music. So I called the number back and got someone answering without saying who it was so I said id missed a call and was then given the name creative marketing direct , so I asked him are you called Google business and after a slight delay he said yes that?s one of our names. So I asked him his address and again all coy and defensive then I got Manchester and asked me why I was asking and where this was going ?? so told him someone had called and told me lies which he then denied and wanted to know who I was.

So look out for

Creative Media Solutions

Creativeve Marking direct
Google business
Or anything with google in it and sounds to good to be true.

Also search engine easy also in manchester

look out for the number 01622808802 guy called Kevin

Offering a share of traffic divided by the big boys 1ST PAGE LISTING

COST ?399 PER YEAR

Source: http://www.van-man-removals.com/business-marketing-scams-google/

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Small Businesses Need to Up the Ante on Information Security Now ...

TORONTO, ONTARIO ? (Marketwire) ? 10/11/12 ? For small businesses, staying current and ahead of the curve is essential for their company?s survival. There are many successes to be championed during this year?s Small Business Week (October 14-20), but results from the second annual 2012 Shred-it Information Security Tracker prove that small businesses need to take better safety precautions today to protect themselves and their customers from theft and fraud tomorrow.

Making up 98 per cent of the companies in Canada(1), small businesses are a key driver in today?s economy. Still, for many, information security is not high on the priority list. This year?s Security Tracker shows that while more than three-quarters (76 per cent) of small businesses are at least somewhat aware of their legal requirements surrounding storing, keeping and disposing of confidential data, 42 per cent do not have an established protocol on how to adhere to these regulations and nearly one-third (31 per cent) have never trained their staff on information security procedures.

When it comes to personnel, nearly half (47 per cent) do not have an employee directly responsible for managing data security issues. What?s even more alarming is that this number is up from 34 per cent last year?even though overall awareness of regulations has actually improved since 2011 (76 per cent compared to 73 per cent).

?Companies of all sizes are tightening their belts, and small businesses in particular may be having difficulty allocating staff and other resources to information security,? says Bruce Andrew, VP Marketing, Shred-it. ?However, making information security part of day-to-day operations is a valuable investment that, at the end of the day, protects both the business? reputation and its bottom line.?

The fact that companies are not focused on information security issues could be attributed to a perceived lack of risk. Even though a data breach can cost an organization money, reputation and clients, many small businesses do not feel that they would be affected. In fact, just 12 per cent of respondents said that they believed that lost or stolen data would result in severe financial and reputational damage, and six-in-ten (61 per cent) felt that such a breach would not significantly impact the business at all. However, as fraudsters continue to employ more sophisticated methods of theft, the future looks grim for those who are lax about prevention.

?While the risk of a data breach may seem small, the ramifications can be devastating even if they aren?t apparent right away,? says Andrew. ?At Shred-it we recommend conducting a risk assessment to determine what security policies and protocols already exist, where improvement is required and where the company may be most vulnerable.?

To further help secure the future, Shred-it recommends keeping in mind the 3 Ps of information security:

PREVENTION

When considering information security, organizations should focus on prevention, not reaction. Ultimately, being aware of potential risks and taking steps to mitigate them costs a business far less than having to go into recovery mode when a breach occurs.

POLICY

Small businesses should develop and implement information security protocols and policies that are easily understood and applicable to all levels of staff. For example, companies should consider enacting a ?shred-all? policy where all unneeded documents are placed into locked consoles to be shredded. Also, businesses should enact policies regarding their electronic data. These policies may include restricting computer and file access to necessary personnel only and mandating that computer hard drives and photocopier memories are physically destroyed before being thrown out.

PERSONNEL

One of the most effective ways to protect a business from theft and fraud is to ensure that there is at least one staff member within the organization who is directly responsible for managing data security issues and is regularly training staff on protocols and procedures.

About Shred-it:

Shred-it is a world-leading information security company providing document destruction services that ensure the security and integrity of our clients? private information. The company operates 140 service locations in 16 countries worldwide, servicing more than 150,000 global, national and local businesses, including the world?s top intelligence and security agencies, more than 500 police forces, 1,500 hospitals, 8,500 bank branches and 1,200 universities and colleges. For more information, please visit www.shredit.com.

About the 2012 Security Tracker:

Ipsos Reid conducted a quantitative online survey of two distinct sample groups: 1001 small business owners in Canada (all of which have fewer than 100 employees), and 100 C-suite executives working for businesses in Canada with a minimum of 100 employees.

Data are unweighted as the sample universe is unknown and statistical margins of error are not applicable for non-probability samples. However, an unweighted probability sample of this size in each country would yield results that are considered accurate to within 3.1 percentage points, 19 times out of 20. The fieldwork was conducted between April 13th and 20th, 2012.

(1) Small Business Statistics, July 2012, Industry Canada, http://www.ic.gc.ca/eic/site/061.nsf/eng/02713.html

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Contacts:
Shred-it
Katarina Kristanic
905.491.2250
katarina.kristanic@shredit.com
www.shredit.com

On behalf of Shred-it
Emily Abrahams
416.642.7948
eabrahams@golinharris.com

Source: http://www.nearshorejournal.com/2012/10/small-businesses-need-to-up-the-ante-on-information-security-now-to-ensure-a-prosperous-future/

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How to Recognize and Avoid Apartment Rental Scams | A Renter ...

The apartment search can be an exhausting one. You likely spend your time looking at apartment after apartment with various rental agencies, real estate agents, landlords, and through your own online searches. After all of your hard work trying to find the perfect place, all you need is to fall victim to an apartment rental scam. Scammers know that people looking for apartments can be highly emotional and vulnerable while apartment searching and even take advantage of people who are in a time-sensitive situation and need to find an apartment as quickly as possible.

Here are some red flags to be on the lookout for on your apartment search.

They ask you to send money without offering to meet or show the apartment in person.? This has happened to me before while looking at apartments on Craigslist. I have found apartments on the site that had great pictures and seemed legit. I found one that I was very interested in and after emailing back and forth with the landlord, they asked me to send money for an application fee. I loved the apartment in the pictures so much that I actually considered it but after hearing about Craigslist scams, I emailed back saying I would like to see the apartment in person first. I never got a response back. Moral of the story: Don?t pay for anything before getting a look at it with your own eyes. Don?t rely on pictures or promises from someone over email. If they don?t let you see it first, it probably doesn?t exist.

They ask you to pay too many upfront fees or a high security deposit. A security deposit is usually between a month and a month and a half?s worth of rent. If you?re asked to pay an excessive fee or they ask for your money before a lease is signed, be wary; they probably just want to take your money and run.

They seem too eager to rent the apartment. Pay attention to the landlord?s behavior. Do they really want you to rent the apartment? Do they offer to waive an application fee and security deposit? Do they not ask for any information about you regarding your credit score, background check, or employment history? All of those are standard practice when renting an apartment and if the landlord is being pushy and dismissing all of those, watch out because they could be trying to scam you.

They ask for too much personal information online. When corresponding with someone online about an apartment, make sure not to give out all of your information unless you?ve met them in person and seen the apartment and are ready to sign a lease. If they ask for your social security number or bank account number online, DO NOT give it to them. That?s true for any situation, including apartment searching.

You?re just not feeling it. Trust your gut. If something doesn?t feel right, it probably isn?t.?

Source: http://www.williampaid.com/blog/index.php/2012/10/how-to-recognize-and-avoid-apartment-rental-scams/

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Meet The Three Most Fund-able Health Companies From The DC To VC Showcase

Screen shot 2012-10-10 at 8.34.17 PMToday, Morgenthaler Ventures and Health 2.0 concluded its "DC to VC" startup showcase, a nationwide contest that aims to find the most promising and "fund-able" young businesses in health IT looking for funding. From hundreds of applicants, twelve finalists were chosen to pitch their ideas on stage at the Health 2.0 Conference in San Francisco in front of a crowd of 350+ VCs, angel investors and entrepreneurs.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/_rqBaI1FjJs/

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Turkish parliament extends mandate for incursions into northern Iraq

ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey's parliament on Thursday renewed a mandate for another year allowing the government to send troops into northern Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish rebel fighters, despite objections from Baghdad.

The parliamentary motion permits the government to "send members of the Turkish armed forces, with the aim of doing away with the threat of terrorism and attacks, in cross-border operations in Iraq's northern region where the PKK has built its nest", the CNNTurk news channel cited the mandate as saying on its website.

The mandate was first passed in 2007 and has been extended every year since, permitting the army to conduct operations across the southeastern border against the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), an armed separatist group with bases in northern Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region.

The past few months have seen some of the heaviest fighting between Turkish forces and the PKK since the PKK took up arms in 1984, with Turkish fighter jets and attack helicopters bombarding the rebels on both sides of the Iraqi border.

Relations between Turkey and Iraq have cooled sharply in recent months over mutual charges of sectarianism, and Baghdad this month asked Turkey to stop attacking the PKK on its territory.

But the PKK's hideouts are out of Baghdad's reach, in the virtually impassable mountainous north of Iraqi Kurdistan, which has been autonomous since 1991 and has its own armed forces, who are responsible for defending Iraq's border with Turkey.

Turkey most recently sent ground forces into Iraq in 2008 and has an estimated 1,000 troops based there under an agreement with Iraq dating from the 1990s.

The PKK, listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the European Union and the United States, aims to carve out a homeland in southeastern Turkey for an estimated 15 million ethnic Kurds. More than 40,000 people, mainly Kurds, have died in almost three decades of violence.

Separately, the Turkish parliament last week authorized the government to send troops into Syria, Turkey's southern neighbor, in response to shelling by President Bashar al-Assad's forces into Turkish territory that killed civilians.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan, a vocal critic of Assad's crackdown on a popular uprising, has accused Syria's government of backing the PKK in its recent escalation of attacks.

(Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/turkish-parliament-extends-mandate-incursions-northern-iraq-214934189.html

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Julius Baer eyes 1,000 job cuts after Merrill deal

(AP) ? Swiss private bank Julius Baer says it plans to cut about 1,000 jobs from Merrill Lynch's wealth management operations outside the United States following a deal to buy the unit from Bank Of America.

The Julius Baer Group based in Zurich said in a statement Tuesday its target for reducing staff is "by 15 percent to 18 percent" from approximately 5,700 in 50 locations worldwide ? anywhere from 855 to 1,026 jobs.

The Swiss private banking group has agreed to pay 860 million francs ($879 million) to buy those operations from BofA. The bank says the deal, which is expected to close by early 2013, will boost its assets by about 40 percent, adding around 81 billion francs to the assets it manages.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-09-Switzerland-Julius%20Baer-Merrill%20Lynch/id-3094b1d3a13548d7b3dee8540ee6c90c

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