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  • Maurice Saatchi: No Mad Man
    Maurice Saatchi: "We had a romantic belief that it was possible for individuals to change the world by an act of will - a flat refusal to accept the status quo."
  • Cable concerned over stability of banks
    The Business Secretary, Vince Cable, has expressed concern about the appointment of the investment banker, Bob Diamond, as the new chief executive of Barclays.
  • Google revamps search system
    The search giant launches a system with web links appearing as soon as characters are typed into the query box.
  • Dublin to break up Anglo Irish
    The Irish government has said it will break up the nationalised Anglo Irish Bank.
  • Basketball targets emerging markets
    The National Basketball Association wants to expand the game and are looking at emerging markets such as India and China to push their products.
  • Obama backs company tax breaks
    President Barack Obama is backing new company tax breaks in an attempt to regain the initiative as mid-term polls loom
  • Connaught workers on the future
    Pete Key and Marc Woodcock work for Connaught on a Hull City Council contract, carrying out conversions for tenants with disabilities.
  • Cable: Setting the bar on science funding
    Business Secretary Vince Cable says "the bar will have to be raised" on science funding
  • Retail: "Good news for savvy shoppers"
    High street sales have picked up slightly driven by sales of computers and school uniforms ready for the new academic year.
  • Tube strike brings major delays
    Millions of Londoners have been attempting to travel home amid a major Tube strike affecting nearly all its lines.
  • BP to release oil spill report
    BP is to release an internal investigation into the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the worst ecological catastrophe in recent US history.
  • HP sues Hurd over new Oracle job
    Computer maker Hewlett Packard (HP) has filed a lawsuit against its former head Mark Hurd in an attempt to stop him joining database software maker Oracle.
  • What to do if you get a tax letter
    Nearly six million people who have paid the wrong amount of income tax will start to receive letters from the tax office on Tuesday, letting them know about the errors.