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...chemical commonly found in potato chips and french fries does not increase the risk of cancer, according to a study by the School of Public Health (SPH) and Karolinska Institute of Stockholm...

Author: By Carol P. Choy, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Fried Food Chemical Not Cancer Risk | 1/31/2003 | See Source »

EUROBLUES Cleaning Up Nature abhors a vacuum, and at the moment, markets are not very pleased with the people who make them either. Last week, Stockholm-based Electrolux, the world's largest appliance maker, announced it was eliminating 5,091 jobs worldwide, about 6% of its workforce. Stock markets, which often applaud such "restructuring" moves, instead were sour; one Swedish investment bank even put a rare "sell" recommendation on Electrolux stock. What's ailing the maker of Eurekas and WeedEaters? CEO Hans Straaberg blames heavy competition and certain "under-performing" areas, notably room air conditioners, for which labor and supply...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: High Price to Pay for a Botched Buy | 12/22/2002 | See Source »

...most likely to ’fess up the location of their alleged deadly masterwork. Does Donald H. Rumsfeld—and those in the White House, who the Times notes also approve of this plan—really think his forcibly-abducted songbirds will develop an instantaneous Stockholm Syndrome on American planes and start whistling the “Battle Hymn of the Republic?...

Author: By Simon W. Vozick-levinson, | Title: Defective Defection | 12/10/2002 | See Source »

...bunch of assassins and save the vast majority of nearly 800 hostages, though some 130 of those hostages were killed. Fighting terrorism requires guts and the use of every possible means. Terrorism is a disease that has to be attacked from every conceivable angle. JOSE LUIS BELMAR Stockholm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Dec. 2, 2002 | 12/2/2002 | See Source »

That also jibes with the work of Peter Savolainen of Stockholm's Royal Institute of Technology. Savolainen and his colleagues used MTDNA in their study too--in this case, to see how much the genetic material varied within dog populations. Animals from East Asia turned out to have the most variation, suggesting that this group's MTDNA had been around the longest and had had more time to branch into different subtypes. Presumably, then, the dogs arose there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Mother of All Dogs | 12/2/2002 | See Source »

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