AP – People wear surgical masks as a precaution against infection inside a subway in Mexico City, Friday, …

ATLANTA – As reports of a unique form of swine flu erupt around the world, the inevitable question arises: Is this the big one?

Is this the next big global flu epidemic that public health experts have long anticipated and worried about? Is this the novel virus that will kill millions around the world, as pandemics did in 1918, 1957 and 1968?

The short answer is it’s too soon to tell.

“What makes this so difficult is we may be somewhere between an important but yet still uneventful public health occurrence here — with something that could literally die out over the next couple of weeks and never show up again — or this could be the opening act of a full-fledged influenza pandemic,” said Michael Osterholm, a prominent expert on global flu outbreaks with the University of Minnesota.

“We have no clue right now where we are between those two extremes. That’s the problem,” he said.

Health officials want to take every step to prevent an outbreak from spiraling into mass casualties. Predicting influenza is a dicey endeavor, with the U.S. government famously guessing wrong in 1976 about a swine flu pandemic that never materialized.

“The first lesson is anyone who tries to predict influenza often goes down in flames,” said Dr. Richard Wenzel, the immediate past president of the International Society for Infectious Diseases.

But health officials are being asked to make such predictions, as panic began to set in over the weekend.

The epicenter was Mexico, where the virus is blamed for 86 deaths and an estimated 1,400 cases in the country since April 13. Schools were closed, church services canceled and Mexican President Felipe Calderon assumed new powers to isolate people infected with the swine flu virus.

International concern magnified as health officials across the world on Sunday said they were investigating suspected cases in people who traveled to Mexico and come back with flu-like illnesses. Among the nations reporting confirmed cases or investigations were Canada, France, Israel and New Zealand.

Meanwhile, in the United States, there were no deaths and all patients had either recovered or were recovering. But the confirmed cases around the nation rose from eight on Saturday morning to 20 by Sunday afternoon, including eight high school kids in New York City — a national media center. The New York Post’s front page headline on Sunday was “Pig Flu Panic.”

The concern level rose even more when federal officials on Sunday declared a public health emergency — a procedural step, they said, to mobilize antiviral medicine and other resources and be ready if the U.S. situation gets worse.

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials say that so far swine flu cases in this country have been mild. But they also say more cases are likely to be reported, at least partly because doctors and health officials across the country are looking intensively for suspicious cases.

And, troublingly, more severe cases are also likely, said Dr. Richard Besser, the CDC’s acting director, in a Sunday news conference.

“As we continue to look for cases, we are going to see a broader spectrum of disease,” he predicted. “We’re going to see more severe disease in this country.”

Besser also repeated what health officials have said since the beginning — they don’t understand why the illnesses in Mexico have been more numerous and severe than in the United States. In fact, it’s not even certain that new infections are occurring. The numbers could be rising simply because everyone’s on the lookout.

He also said comparison to past pandemics are difficult.

“Every outbreak is unique,” Besser said.

The new virus is called a swine flu, though it contains genetic segments from humans and birds viruses as well as from pigs from North America, Europe and Asia. Health officials had seen combinations of bird, pig and human virus before — but never such an intercontinental mix, including more than one pig virus.

More disturbing, this virus seems to spread among people more easily than past swine flus that have sometimes jumped from pigs to people.

There’s a historical cause for people to worry.

Flu pandemics have been occurring with some regularity since at least the 1500s, but the frame of reference for health officials is the catastrophe of 1918-19. That one killed an estimated 20 to 50 million people worldwide.

Disease testing and tracking were far less sophisticated then, but the virus appeared in humans and pigs at about the same time and it was known as both Spanish flu and swine flu. Experts since then have said the deadly germ actually originated in birds.

But pigs may have made it worse. That pandemic began with a wave of mild illness that hit in the spring of 1918, followed by a far deadlier wave in the fall which was most lethal to young, healthy adults. Scientists have speculated that something happened to the virus after the first wave — one theory held that it infected pigs or other animals and mutated there — before revisiting humans in a deadlier form.

Pigs are considered particularly susceptible to both bird and human viruses and a likely place where the kind of genetic reassortment can take place that might lead to a new form of deadly, easily spread flu, scientists believe.

Such concern triggered public health alarm in 1976, when soldiers at Fort Dix, N.J., became sick with an unusual form of swine flu.

Federal officials vaccinated 40 million Americans. The pandemic never materialized, but thousands who got the shots filed injury claims, saying they suffered a paralyzing condition and other side effects from the vaccinations.

To this day, health officials don’t know why the 1976 virus petered out.

Flu shots have been offered in the United States since the 1940s, but new types of flu viruses have remained a threat. Global outbreaks occurred again in 1957 and 1968, though the main victims were the elderly and chronically ill.

In the last several years, experts have been focused on a form of bird flu that was first reported in Asia. It’s a highly deadly strain that has killed more than 250 people worldwide since 2003. Health officials around the world have taken steps to prepare for the possibility of that becoming a global outbreak, but to date that virus has not gained the ability to spread easily from person to person.

By Zack O’Malley Greenburg, Forbes.com

Apr 3rd, 2009

Looking for a better way of life? Start your search with these places.

The beer at Gritty McDuff’s might be enough to lure people to Portland, Me. Established in 1988, the downtown pub offers a smattering of small-batch ales brewed on the premises in addition to usual tavern treats. From the patio, customers can enjoy a pint along cobblestone streets or retire to the copper-topped bar for a second round.

Tasty microbrews aren’t the only reason to like Portland. Thanks to high marks in five key quality of life metrics, Portland tops this year’s list of America’s Most Livable Cities.

In Depth: America’s Most Livable Citiescity.jpg“It’s a very easy place to live,” says Leon Perrin, 31, a manager at Gritty’s. “It’s small, so getting around isn’t too much of a hassle. And it’s a beautiful place throughout all four seasons.”

Perrin, who has lived in Maine for 20 years, is one of 513,000 residents living the good life in the Portland metropolitan area. The region earned high marks for income growth and culture; it also has low levels of crime and unemployment. Residents can afford the relatively high cost of living because of a 6.3% income growth rate over the past five years.

Bethesda, Md., and Des Moines, Iowa., round out the top three, followed by Bridgeport/Stamford, Conn., and Tulsa, Okla.

Behind the Numbers

To form our list, we looked at quality of life measures in the nation’s largest continental U.S. metropolitan statistical areas–geographic entities defined by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget for use by federal agencies in collecting, tabulating and publishing federal statistics. We eliminated areas with populations smaller than 500,000 and assigned points to the remaining metro regions across five data sets: Five-year income growth per household and cost of living from Moody’s Economy.com, crime data and leisure index from Sperling’s Best Places, and annual unemployment statistics from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Modesto, Calif., ranks as the worst metro area with more than 500,000 residents. This crime-wracked enclave in the Central Valley demands the same moderately high cost of living as Portland with a third of the job growth and nearly three times the unemployment. Modesto ranked fifth on our roundup of the nation’s most miserable cities earlier this year.

Denver, Colo., No. 11 on the list, ranks in part for its culture rank (19 of 379) and 4.4% income growth (77 of 379). The crime rating of Cambridge, Mass.’ crime rating (29 of 379) helped it to No. 7 on our list. And though Little Rock, Ark., landed at 15, it boasts a 6% income growth rate (18 of 379) and a 5.4% unemployment rate (59 of 379.)

To be sure, Portland isn’t perfect either. Its 5.9% unemployment rate is much lower than Modesto’s, but it’s still double its 2007 unemployment rate of 3.7%.

“There are less jobs to go around, but our main industry of tourism hasn’t been affected much,” says Perrin. “People are still coming to Portland.”

Residents remain optimistic that their easy-living city will retain its desirability.

“Portland draws so many people because it has a strong arts, cultural, contemporary music and foodie scene,” says Janis Beitzer, executive director of Portland’s Downtown District. “It’s a place where people set their own pace of life and work.”

In Depth: America’s Most Livable Cities

America’s Top 5 Most Livable Cities

1. Portland, Maine
Metro Area: Portland/South Portland/Biddeford
Metro Population: 513,000
Income Growth: 6.3% (No. 8 of 379)
Cost of Living Index: 102.1 (No. 290 of 379)
Culture Index: 76 (No. 90 of 379)
Crime per 100,000: 2,611 (No. 55 of 379)
Unemployment: 5.9% (No. 29 of 379)

2. Bethesda, Md.
Metro Area: Bethesda
Metro Population: 1,171,000
Income Growth: 4.4% (No. 79 of 379)
Cost of Living Index: 128.2 (No. 364 of 379)
Culture Index: 93 (No. 26 of 379)
Crime per 100,000: 2,710 (No. 68 of 379)
Unemployment: 4.2% (No. 66 of 379)

3. Des Moines, Iowa
Metro Area: Des Moines
Metro Population: 553,000
Income Growth: 4.2% (No. 91 of 379)
Cost of Living Index: 90.2 (No. 165 of 379)
Culture Index: 68 (No. 121 of 379)
Crime per 100,000: 3,854 (No. 193 of 379)
Unemployment: 5.0% (No. 48 of 379)

4. Stamford, Conn.
Metro Area: Bridgeport/Stamford/Norwalk
Metro Population: 897,000
Income Growth: 4.1% (No. 107 of 379)
Cost of Living Index: 142.0 (No. 372 of 379)
Culture Index: 97 (No. 11 of 379, tie)
Crime per 100,000: 2,307 (No. 26 of 379)
Unemployment: 6.5% (No. 115 of 379)

5. Tulsa, Okla.
Metro Area: Tulsa
Metro Population: 910,000
Income Growth: 4.9% (No. 50 of 379)
Cost of Living Index: 90.6 (No. 171 of 379)
Culture Index: 72 (No. 105 of 379)
Crime per 100,000: 4,462 (No. 250 of 379)
Unemployment: 5.6% (No. 21 of 379)

Click here for the full list of America’s Most Livable Cities

Billionaire Clusters

April 7, 2009

by Duncan Greenberg
Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Want to become a billionaire? Up your chances by dropping out of college, working at Goldman Sachs or joining Skull & Bones.

Are billionaires born or made? What are the common attributes among the uber-wealthy? Are there any true secrets of the self-made?

 

More from Forbes.com:In Depth: Billionaire Clusters

The 2009 Billionaire List

The Next Billionaire Boom

 

We get these questions a lot, and decided it was time to go beyond the broad answers of smarts, ambition and luck by sorting through our database of wealthy individuals in search of bona fide trends. We analyzed everything from the billionaires’ parents’ professions to where they went to school, their track records in the early stages of their careers and other experiences that may have put them on the path to extreme wealth.

Our admittedly unscientific study of the 657 self-made billionaires we counted in February for our list of the World’s Billionaires yielded some interesting results.

First, a significant percentage of billionaires had parents with a high aptitude for math. The ability to crunch numbers is crucial to becoming a billionaire, and mathematical prowess is hereditary. Some of the most common professions among the parents of American billionaires (for whom we could find the information) were engineer, accountant and small-business owner.

 

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Consistent with the rest of the population, more American billionaires were born in the fall than in any other season. However, relatively few billionaires were born in December, traditionally the month with the eighth highest birth rate. This anomaly holds true among billionaires in the U.S. and abroad.

More than 20% of the 292 of the self-made American billionaires on the most recent list of the World’s Billionaires have either never started or never completed college. This is especially true of those destined for careers as technology entrepreneurs: Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Michael Dell, Larry Ellison, and Theodore Waitt.

Billionaires who derive their fortunes from finance make up one of the most highly educated sub-groups: More than 55% of them have graduate degrees. Nearly 90% of those with M.B.A.s obtained their master’s degree from one of three Ivy League schools: Harvard, Columbia or U. Penn’s Wharton School of Business.

Goldman Sachs has attracted a large share of hungry minds that went on to garner 10-figure fortunes. At least 11 current and recent billionaire financiers worked at Goldman early in their careers, including Edward Lampert, Daniel Och, Tom Steyer and Richard Perry.

Several billionaires suffered a bitter professional setback early in their careers that heightened their fear of failure. Pharmaceutical tycoon R.J. Kirk’s first venture was a flop–an experience he regrets but appreciates. “Failure early on is a necessary condition for success, though not a sufficient one,” he told Forbes in 2007.

According to a statement read by Phil Falcone during a congressional hearing in November, his botched buyout of a company in Newark in the early 1990s taught him “several valuable lessons that have had a profound impact upon my success as a hedge fund manager.”

Several current and former billionaires rounded out their Yale careers as members of Skull and Bones, the secret society portrayed with enigmatic relish by Hollywood in movies like The Skulls and W. Among those who were inducted: investor Edward Lampert, Blackstone co-founder Steven Schwarzman, and FedEx founder Frederick Smith.

Parents Had Math-Related Careers

The ability to crunch numbers is normally a key to becoming a billionaire. Often, mathematical prowess is hereditary. Some of the most common professions among the parents of American billionaires for whom we could find that information were engineer, accountant and small-business owner.

September Birthdays

Of the 380 self-made American tycoons who have appeared on the Forbes list of the World’s Billionaires in the past three years, 42 were born in September–more than in any other month. Maybe that’s because September is the month the Forbes list of the 400 richest Americans is published.

Tech Titans Who Dropped Out of College

Forget everything your guidance counselor told you: You don’t have to go to college to be successful. More than 20% of the self-made American moguls on the most recent list of the World’s Billionaires never finished college. Many of them made their fortunes in tech. Among them: Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Michael Dell, Larry Ellison, (Oracle) and Theodore Waitt (Gateway).

Skull and Bones

Several current and former billionaires rounded out their Yale careers as members of Skull and Bones, the secret society portrayed with enigmatic relish by Hollywood in movies like The Skulls and W. Among those who were inducted: investor Edward Lampert, Blackstone co-founder Steven Schwarzman and FedEx founder Frederick Smith.

Goldman Sachs

A stint at investment bank Goldman Sachs is a prime credential for becoming a finance billionaire. Of the 68 self-made American billionaires that derive their fortunes from finance, at least eight cut their teeth in Goldman’s investment banking, trading, or asset management divisions. The company’s crown jewel: its “risk arbitrage” unit, which launched the careers of billionaires Edward Lampert and Daniel Och, as well as former billionaires Tom Steyer and Richard Perry.

Click here for the full list of billionaire clusters.

Copyrighted, Forbes.com. All rights reserved.

 

Best-Kept-Secret Careers 5 Emerging Professions That Fly Under the Radar by Patricia Cecil-Reed, FindtheRightSchool.com

The world around us is changing, and our economy along with it. A challenging economy may usher in change a bit more quickly than we might like, but out of the ashes, new fields arise. Green energy, better health care — it seems there may be some silver linings around those dark clouds. Apply your interests to one of these rising fields, and you may be able to follow your career dreams to the top. Here are some up-and-coming careers in today’s hottest fields. They may fly under the radar for now, but that’s likely to change in the future. Digital Technology

There are plenty of career opportunities to explore in the field of digital technology, with the exponential growth of the Internet, computers at work and home, and gaming — both online and with game systems like PS3 and X-Box. Data Miner: This career tops the U.S. News & World Report’s list of ahead-of-the-curve careers. Data miners use statistics to evaluate and predict future customer behavior. Many of today’s data miners work mostly with data collected from the Internet, making their profession a valuable component of digital technology. Annual Salary: $70,760 is the mean annual salary. The top ten percent can earn over $100,000. Career Training: A bachelor’s degree in information science, computer science, or management information systems (MIS) may be an asset in this field. Training in statistics is a plus for data miners. Environmentalism and Green Careers President Obama plans to create 5 million “green collar” jobs during his presidency. Could one of them be right for you? Environmental Engineer: Solving the problems of coal pollution and developing better hybrid cars — these are just two of the many problems our generation faces that environmental engineers will help us solve. Our focus in the coming decade will likely be much more on improving the world around us and preserving its resources. Perhaps this is why, in the field of engineering, environmental engineers are expected to see the most job growth between now and 2016. Average Salary: $74,820 is the mean annual salary for environmental engineers. Career Training: A bachelor’s degree in engineering is often a basic requirement for entry-level positions. A degree program might involve special training in environmental engineering, as well as courses in mathematics, science, and computers. Globalization Increasingly, businesses deal with clients, companies, and contacts all across the globe. This creates new needs for trained professionals with specialization in the global market, whether in business, marketing, or social relations. Accent-Reduction Specialist: Accent and speech training is no longer just a need for anchormen and actors. According to U.S. News and World Report, accent-reduction specialist is the number one best-kept-secret career. Many businesses today deal with contacts around the country and the world. Corporations increasingly need accent-reduction specialists to train employees (from phone representatives in India to corporate managers in Alabama) in unaffected speech. Average salary: $63,740 is the mean annual salary for jobs like this one. Career Training: Speech therapists or ESL teachers are most likely to hold this job. A master’s degree and licensure in speech-language pathology or ESL training are common requirements. Health Care It’s no secret that health care careers are on the rise. With baby-boomers aging, new technologies developing in the field, and Obama’s plans for health care in the coming years, this field is expected to generate three million new jobs between now and 2016 –that’s more than any other industry. Surgical Technologist: Also known as “scrubs” or “operating room technicians,” surgical technologists assist in the OR before, during, and after an operation. They play a key role in the functioning of an operating room by preparing equipment, the OR area, and patients for procedures. Job growth for this profession is “much faster than average,” according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, with 24 percent growth expected between now and 2016. Average Salary: $38,800 is the mean annual salary for surgical technologists. Career Training: The common path to becoming a surgical technologist is to complete a nine- to 24-month training program resulting in a certificate, diploma, or associate’s degree. Technicians With the recession, Americans are more likely to tighten their belts and repair the appliances and automobiles they already own instead of buying new ones. This means careers for technicians should be steady. Auto Mechanic: Job growth for mechanics is above average, due not only to economic factors, but also because of a growing population (meaning more drivers and more cars on the road) and current mechanics expected to retire. Average Salary: $36,480 is the mean annual salary for mechanics. Career Training: Vocational school or community college after high school is often necessary for auto mechanics. Earning a certificate or associate’s degree may make job competition easier.

By BRIAN STELTER
Published: April 1, 2009

In a case of piracy that some analysts called unprecedented, untold thousands of people watched a version of “X-Men Origins: Wolverine” online Wednesday, a full month before its scheduled theater release.

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The premiere of “X-Men Origins: Wolverine,” starring Hugh Jackman, is set for May 1, but many people watched a version online Tuesday. Its distributor did not know how the copy was leaked.

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Trailer: ‘X-Men Origins: Wolverine’
The film’s distributor, 20th Century Fox, said it did not know how the unfinished copy of the comic book adaptation was leaked onto the Internet. The copy was missing many special effects and included temporary sound and music. Nonetheless, it circulated widely online beginning late Tuesday, even prompting some viewers to publish reviews, favorable and unfavorable, of the hotly anticipated film. “Wolverine” stars Hugh Jackman in the title role and is set to open on May 1.

The troubling leak — which some people initially dismissed as an April Fool’s Day prank — occurred at a time when media companies are working harder than ever to curtail digital piracy of content. Illicit recordings of films usually appear on the Internet shortly after their theater debuts, but leaks before the premiere dates are rare. Hollywood studios spend millions of dollars to track every step of the film production process to avoid such potentially costly leaks.

Eric Garland, the chief executive of the file-sharing monitoring firm BigChampagne, called the widespread downloading of “Wolverine” a “one-of-a-kind case.” “We’ve never seen a high-profile film — a film of this budget, a tentpole movie with this box office potential — leak in any form this early,” he said.

The studio, a unit of the News Corporation, spent the day demanding that copies of the film be removed from the largely anonymous swath of Web sites that swap movie files. But the copies propagated at such a swift rate that the digital cops could not keep up. BigChampagne estimated the digital film copy had been downloaded in the low hundreds of thousands of times in its first 24 hours on the Internet.

The studio said the F.B.I. and the Motion Picture Association of America were both investigating the film’s premature distribution.

“The source of the initial leak and any subsequent postings will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” the company said, adding “the courts have handed down significant criminal sentences for such acts in the past.”

Media companies use watermarks and other technological strategies to identify the sources of leaks.

“Wolverine” is not the first film to receive an unintended preview on the Internet. Another superhero film, 2003’s “Hulk,” showed up as a download about two weeks before its release. But the major studios hoped they had learned enough since then to keep it from happening again.

Mr. Garland said the existence of the illicit file could theoretically depress the box-office receipts for the film, but he emphasized that the online viewers would be only a tiny percentage of the total audience. The “other fear is bad word of mouth,” he said. As twisted as it may seem, “you would rather have a very high-quality version of the film leak than a premature working version of the film leak, because it’s not your best work.”

In the case of “Wolverine,” some of the computer-generated scenes were missing and other parts were unedited. The studio noted that some fan Web sites condemned the leak. But other Internet users downloaded the file and weighed in with reviews.

“This is bad bad news for Fox,” a movie blog called In GOB We Trust said on Wednesday, asserting that negative comments about the film would reduce its box-office prospects. But the blog reviewed the film anyway, saying that the creators decided to “dumb it down and essentially make a cartoon.”