Apple's U.S.-Made Macs Are a Drop in the Bucket — But Could Herald a Job Flood



Apple spent nearly $10 billion this past year on the tools and equipment needed to make its products. In that light, Apple CEO Tim Cook’s promise this week to invest more than $100 million to move production for one of its Mac lines to the U.S. next year sounds paltry.


But even such a small sum could signal something much bigger for the U.S. economy: namely, that moving manufacturing jobs back from China to the U.S. is starting to make financial sense.


For more than a dozen years, Apple has relied on a “designed in the U.S., made in China” strategy. That’s chiefly because the cost of labor in China is so much cheaper. This simple reality has shifted the globe’s economic center of gravity over the past decade. China has become the world’s manufacturing hub.


But that influx of wealth into China hasn’t only meant more money for factory owners and CEOs. Hal Sirkin, a senior partner with The Boston Consulting Group, has spent the past two years examining the phenomenon of “insourcing” — the return of jobs to the U.S. from overseas. When China joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, Sirkin says, the average Chinese worker made 58 cents per hour — a cost that had companies around the world banging on the doors of Chinese factories. Every year since, however, Sirkin says wages in China have risen an average of 15 to 20 percent annually.


“Once labor stops becoming cheap, all of a sudden the equation turns,” he says.


Worker productivity adds another variable that could make the math behind insourcing even more attractive to U.S. companies. Sirkin says American workers are about three times as productive as their Chinese counterparts, even as the Great Recession has kept U.S. wages stagnant. At 58 cents an hour, 10 Chinese workers were still cheaper than a single more productive worker in the U.S. But by 2015, if current trends continue, Sirkin says the wage gap will shrink enough that lower productivity combined with transportation costs will make Chinese workers the more expensive option for making goods to be sold in the U.S.


All that said, a mere $100 million from Apple doesn’t register as a huge vote of confidence in insourcing, nor does the part of its business it’s bringing back home. The Mac lineup is no longer Apple’s main source of revenue, nor is it a growing sector. In its most recent quarter, the company sold just under 5 million Macs, a 1 percent increase from the previous year. In comparison, the company sold 14 million iPads, up 26 percent from the prior year, and just under 27 million iPhones, a whopping 58 percent jump from the same quarter one year ago.


“This is going to impact a very small percentage of the business,” says Tom Dinges, a senior supply chain analyst at IHS.


Dinges says Cook is under a lot of pressure to create more U.S. jobs in the U.S. when so many of its products are sold here, though the company itself says it’s responsible for nearly 600,000 American jobs directly and indirectly. Add the bad publicity Apple has faced following revelations of employee suicides, poor working conditions and low wages at Foxconn factories in China and $100 million starts to seem like a small price for Apple to pay to polish its tarnished corporate image.


But no company gets to be as big as Apple without keeping a sharp eye on global economic trends. Apple has built up an incredibly efficient supply chain overseas, and we won’t be seeing iPhone or iPad factories springing up stateside anytime soon. But even a small move back to the U.S. gives Apple better footing to make further strides if insourcing starts to look like a clearer path to more profits.


And it’s not the only PC maker headed in that direction. Lenovo, the world’s second largest PC maker, has committed to building a manufacturing facility in Whitsett, North Carolina, close to its U.S. headquarters — though this isn’t exactly insourcing, since Lenovo is itself a Chinese company. Google made it’s Nexus Q, albeit a failed device, in the U.S. And server companies like SeaMicro have also opted to manufacture close to home.


In the end, every company will make its own calculations, and the answer won’t always come out the same, says Michael Marks, former CEO of contract manufacturer Flextronics Inc. and a founding partner at Riverwood Capital, a private equity firm. Asia has built up a huge infrastructure over decades supplying the components to make consumer electronics, which makes makes any attempt to manufacture gadgets in the U.S. again a complicated proposition.


At the same time, he says “the balance of power in cost has changed.” Nobody will be making circuit boards or displays in U.S., Marks predicts. But he says bringing all the components together and assembling them for just-in-time delivery to stores and customers could help PC makers stay competitive in the domestic market compared to having a fully assembled machine sit on a boat for a month en route from China.


Even then, insourcing still might not be an unequivocal cause for celebration. If more assembly-line jobs do return to the U.S., Marks says they won’t be like the fabled post-World War II middle-class manufacturing jobs in automaking and aerospace. “A hamburger flipper makes more money at McDonald’s than an assembly line worker would make,” he says. Such factories also won’t be massive 5,000-employee behemoths, he says, since the U.S. — even with its current unempoloyment rate — doesn’t have the labor pool to staff them. Instead, he says the country will see smaller shops more in the range of 100 employees each.


Still, he says insourcing is real. And it will change the job landscape.


“A whole bunch of hundreds turns into thousands,” Marks says. “It’s definitely a useful trend for America.”


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UK’s Kate and William “saddened” by nurse’s death












LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s Prince William and his wife Kate said on Friday they were “deeply saddened” by the death of a nurse who fell victim to a prank call from an Australian radio station seeking details of the duchess’s condition while she was in hospital for morning sickness.


The King Edward VII hospital earlier confirmed the death of the nurse, Jacinda Saldanha.












“Their Royal Highnesses were looked after so wonderfully well at all times by everybody at King Edward VII Hospital, and their thoughts and prayers are with Jacintha Saldanha‘s family, friends and colleagues at this very sad time,” said a statement from William’s office.


(Reporting by Tim Castle; editing by Stephen Addison)


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18 arrested in federal crackdown on gang that operated near USC


Federal authorities on Thursday announced a sweeping racketeering indictment against a Mexican Mafia-controlled gang that operated in an L.A. neighborhood just north of USC and was allegedly involved in at least one slaying, drug sales, extortion and robberies.


Eighteen members of the Harpys gang, also known as the Harpys-Dead End gang, were arrested Thursday morning on charges in three federal indictments resulting from “Operation Roman Empire.”


Those arrested include Vianna Roman, 37, daughter of a Mexican Mafia member, Danny Roman, who allegedly controlled the gang while serving a life sentence at Pelican Bay State Prison.


A total of 29 defendants were named in the racketeering indictment, eight of whom were already in state custody. Among them is Miguel Delgado, 18, accused of committing armed robbery against three USC students.


Federal prosecutors alleged that Vianna Roman and her husband, Aaron Soto, 40, traveled to and from Pelican Bay passing along orders from Danny Roman and collecting taxes to be funneled to him through profits the gang made through dealing in methamphetamine, cocaine, crack cocaine and heroin and through extorting businesses, including swap-meet vendors, via threats of violence.


Members of the gang are suspected in the slaying of one gang member who owed a debt, as well as plotting to kill a witness slated to testify against a gang member in a state court case, according to the indictment.


The gang has previously been targeted by the Los Angeles city attorney’s office in injunctions alleging the gang’s members were engaged in shakedowns, robberies, vandalism and murder. A judge issued a court order in 1998 that barred 30 of the gang’s members from associating with one another in the area.

At the time, one business owner said the Harpys asked for $150 to $180 a month for protection from the gang.


The gang controlled an area southwest of downtown that spanned from Normandie Avenue to Figueroa Street and Washington Boulevard to Jefferson Boulevard. Over the course of the operation, authorities seized 8½ pounds of methamphetamine, approximately one-half pound of heroin, approximately one pound of cocaine, 23 pounds of marijuana and 22 guns, according to a press release from the U.S. attorney's office.


If convicted of the racketeering charges, all but one of the defendants face a maximum sentence of life in prison, prosecutors said.


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T-Mobile Finally Gets the Apple iPhone



Apple’s iPhone is finally coming to T-Mobile USA.


T-Mobile’s parent company, Germany’s Deutsche Telekom, announced Thursday that its U.S. subsidiary has struck an agreement with Apple to sell iProducts in 2013. In a statement issued online, Deutsche Telekom stopped short of specifically naming the iPhone or iPad. But during an investors conference in Germany on Thursday, T-Mobile USA CEO John Legere hoisted an iPhone and said the carrier will sell the wildly popular handset, according to the Los Angeles Times.


The move means the iPhone will be available through each of the top four U.S. carriers, which also include AT&T, Verizon and Sprint. Apple also sells the iPhone through a few smaller, regional carriers such as C-Spire. The move definitely helps T-Mobile.


“If we do see Apple products being sold through T-Mobile, I do think that would be a nice boost for their portfolio in 2013,” said Hughes de la Vergne, a smartphone analyst with the Gartner research firm. “Right now, T-Mobile is the only national carrier that doesn’t sell any Apple products. And with Android truly dominating their portfolio, it’s limited consumer choice over there.”


The pact between Apple and T-Mobile also will bring the iPhone up to retail par with Samsung’s Galaxy S III and Galaxy Note II smartphones, which were previously the only handsets offered by each of the big four carriers.


Samsung is Apple’s biggest rival in smartphone sales and the Galaxy lineup is the Korean company’s answer to the iPhone. The competition between the two companies is one of the major reasons they’re waging a patent war in courtrooms, each trying to get the other’s phones and tablets removed from store shelves.


“I don’t think you can say that Samsung selling their phones across all four carriers is the one thing that pushed Apple to work out a deal with T-Mobile,” De la Vergne said. “But the expansion of the iPhone across major carriers and smaller carriers like C-Spire and Cricket and Virgin over the last couple years; when you’re competing with Android for developer mindshare and Samsung has its devices sold in so many places, the competition between Apple and Android and Samsung is certainly an aspect of all this.”


The deal also could help T-Mobile move from a lagging fourth-place carrier to a company vying for the third spot in the U.S., he said.


“T-Mobile has been in an uphill battle the last couple years,” De la Vergne said. “AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon, they’ve all got a nice lead when it comes to selling the iPhone and having deployed 4G LTE networks. T-Mobile will still need to overcome that, but if they can get an iPhone on store shelves and a have an LTE network up and running, they’ll be in a much better position to challenge Sprint for third place among U.S. carriers.


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mtvU honors Frank Ocean, wounded Pakistani teen












NEW YORK (AP) — The mtvU network is honoring a rap superstar who detailed his love for another man and a Pakistani girl shot for her education advocacy as its Man and Woman of the Year.


Frank Ocean, who earned six Grammy nominations Wednesday, published a letter online about his first love, a man, just as his “channel ORANGE” disc was being released. MtvU on Thursday called it “an incredibly brave move for an artist on the verge of superstardom.”












Fifteen-year-old Malala Yousufzai (mah-LAH’-lah YOO’-suf-ZAY’) blogged about her support of education for girls in Pakistan. For that, Taliban militants stormed her school bus and shot her in the head and neck, but she survived.


The mtvU network is geared toward college students and is seen on more than 750 campuses.


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Well: Running in Reverse

This column appears in the Dec. 9 issue of The New York Times Magazine.

Backward running, also known as reverse or retro running, is not as celebrated as barefoot running and will never be mistaken for the natural way to run. But a small body of science suggests that backward running enables people to avoid or recover from common injuries, burn extra calories, sharpen balance and, not least, mix up their daily routine.

The technique is simple enough. Most of us have done it, at least in a modified, abbreviated form, and probably recently, perhaps hopping back from a curb as a bus went by or pushing away from the oven with a roasting pan in both hands. But training with backward running is different. Biomechanically, it is forward motion’s doppelgänger. In a study published last year, biomechanics researchers at the University of Milan in Italy had a group of runners stride forward and backward at a steady pace along a track equipped with force sensors and cameras.

They found that, as expected, the runners struck the ground near the back of their feet when going forward and rolled onto the front of their feet for takeoff. When they went backward though, they landed near the front of their feet and took off from the heels. They tended to lean slightly forward even when running backward. As a result, their muscles fired differently. In forward running, the muscles and tendons were pulled taut during landing and responded by coiling, a process that creates elastic energy (think rubber bands) that is then released during toe-off. When running backward, muscles and tendons were coiled during landing and stretched at takeoff. The backward runners’ legs didn’t benefit from stored elastic energy. In fact, the researchers found, running backward required nearly 30 percent more energy than running forward at the same speed. But backward running also produced far less hard pounding.

What all of this means, says Giovanni Cavagna, a professor at the University of Milan who led the study, is that reverse running can potentially “improve forward running by allowing greater and safer training.”

It is a particularly attractive option for runners with bad knees. A 2012 study found that backward running causes far less impact to the front of the knees. It also burns more calories at a given pace. In a recent study, active female college students who replaced their exercise with jogging backward for 15 to 45 minutes three times a week for six weeks lost almost 2.5 percent of their body fat.

And it aids in balance training — backward slow walking is sometimes used as a therapy for people with Parkinson’s and is potentially useful for older people, whose balance has grown shaky.

But it has drawbacks, Cavagna says — chiefly that you can’t see where you’re going. “It should be done on a track,” he says, “or by a couple of runners, side by side,” one facing forward.

It should be implemented slowly too, because its unfamiliar motion can cause muscle fatigue. Intersperse a few minutes periodically during your regular routine, Cavagna says. Increase the time you spend backward as it feels comfortable.

The good news for serious runners is that backward does not necessarily mean slow. The best recorded backward five-kilometer race time is 19:31, faster than most of us can hit the finish line with our best foot forward.

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Steven A. Cohen Is Absent at Art Basel Miami Beach


Katie Orlinsky for The New York Times


Art Basel's V.I.P. opening at the Miami Beach Convention Center on Wednesday, seen through Olafur Eliasson's work, "Your Shared Planet."







MIAMI BEACH — The opening of Art Basel Miami Beach, under way here this week, looked like the start of the most glamorous doorbuster sale in history, with hundreds of V.I.P.’s streaming into the convention center wearing high-end resort casual, ready to rummage through more than 200 of the world’s most prestigious galleries.




Among the shoppers were prominent collectors like Peter Brant, the newsprint executive, who strolled with the actor Owen Wilson. At the Gagosian Gallery booth, P. Diddy gave a hug to the casino mogul Steve Wynn beside a $2 million sculpture by Roy Lichtenstein.


But one notable titan of this realm was missing: Steven A. Cohen, the hedge fund billionaire, who in less than six years has acquired one of the market’s richest troves, with works by Manet, Monet, Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol and Damien Hirst, to cite just a few.


In recent weeks, his name has surfaced with the legal troubles of Mathew Martoma, whom federal prosecutors have accused of insider trading while working at Mr. Cohen’s firm in Connecticut, SAC Capital Advisors. Mr. Cohen has not been charged with any wrongdoing, but there has been speculation that the government hopes to leverage the case against Mr. Martoma into charges against Mr. Cohen.


Does that possibility worry luminaries in the art world? A quick survey of gallerists, advisers and collectors suggests it depends on whom you ask. Plenty of people doubt that Mr. Cohen will ever be in genuine jeopardy and others think that even if he is, the art market now has so many well-heeled players that the absence of one buyer wouldn’t have a notable impact.


Then there were the gallery owners who had sold works to Mr. Cohen. As a general rule, the more business they have conducted with the man, the more worried they are likely to be.


“It’s disconcerting,” said Timothy Blum, co-owner of Blum & Poe, a gallery in Los Angeles. “We’re talking about a lot of liquid,” he added, meaning money. “A lot of liquid. I’ve never calculated it out, but he’s responsible for a significant percent of our business.”


For Mr. Blum and other elite gallery owners, there is sincere dread at the notion, however remote, that Mr. Cohen may one day be sidelined. Known in the securities world for astounding investment returns and an occasionally volcanic temper, he is described by dealers as the ideal collector — warm, dedicated, eager to take home the best pieces and unafraid to spend what it takes.


“We would absolutely hate to have him not active in the market, I can wholeheartedly say that,” said David Zwirner, who owns a gallery that bears his name in the Chelsea section of Manhattan. “This man is a friend of mine. I called him last week — ‘How are you? What’s going on?’ I think the art world is rooting for him. I’m rooting for him. I wish he were here right now.”


Two years ago, Mr. Cohen arrived at Mr. Zwirner’s booth in the opening minutes of the V.I.P. preview day and dropped $300,000 on a work by Adel Abdessemed, an Algerian-born artist who lives in Paris. Within the hour, Mr. Cohen had reportedly spent an additional $180,000 at Blum & Poe for a work by Tim Hawkinson called “Bike.”


The fair didn’t officially open until Thursday, but on Wednesday the convention center was already radiating an air of unabashed opulence. Cavernous, and crammed with product, the place is a kind of Costco for the rich, where the prices range from a low of a few thousand dollars to a high of “we don’t give out that information.” Women pushing carts handed out free flutes of Ruinart Champagne, the official Champagne of Art Basel Miami Beach.


Will Ferrell, the comedian, was one of handful of celebrities in the crowd. Wearing mirrored aviator sunglasses and sporting a green shirt with “Ireland” emblazoned on the back of the neck, he said he already knew what he wanted.


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Typhoon in Philippines leaves nearly 300 dead, hundreds missing

Deadly flooding in the Philippines from a typhoon has claimed dozens of lives.









As Typhoon Bopha veered west from the Philippines on Wednesday, disaster officials continued their grim tally in its wake, counting nearly 300 deaths from the overpowering storm.

The storm knocked over trees, destroyed homes and triggered devastating floods, including an unexpected burst of water in Compostela Valley province that swept away soldiers and swamped emergency shelters that had been believed to be safe. Nearly half of the storm deaths occurred in that province, according to government counts released Wednesday.


As of Wednesday evening in the Philippines, disaster relief officials had only identified 26 of the 274 people who were known to be killed.








PHOTOS: Typhoon Bopha


The death toll is feared to grow still higher as rescuers search battered areas caked with mud and strewn with the wreckage of collapsed homes. Downed electrical wires and damaged bridges have hindered crews from reaching some villages. Hundreds more people remain missing.


Dead bodies lay side by side in the village of New Bataan after the typhoon barreled on, leaving distraught villagers to search the corpses for friends and family. As he studied the dead, Juniper Serato told the Philippine Daily Inquirer that he was looking for six missing family members, including his parents.


He stopped after spotting a friend. “I know him,” he told the paper.


Others tried to find their loved ones online, using a Google website to submit information about people and search reports for names of friends and family. Twitter hash tags #rescuePH and #reliefPH helped connect Filipinos seeking help.


More than 217,000 people were affected by the deadly storm, known in the Philippines as Pablo, including more than 167,000 people seeking help at government evacuation centers, according to disaster officials. The typhoon stranded nearly 4,400 passengers in ports across the Philippine archipelago, scuttled scores of flights and cut off power and clean water to some parts of the islands.


Though heavy storms hit the Philippines every year, they usually batter the northern and central stretches of the country, not the southern islands where Bopha struck. The powerful storm came less than a year after Typhoon Washi slammed the south, claiming more than 1,200 lives.


Aid agencies and government officials said the memory of Washi had spurred families to leave their homes hours before the latest storm struck. Paul del Rosario, humanitarian coordinator for Oxfam in the Philippines, praised government efforts.


Those preparations, “plus the cooperation of affected residents, indeed saved lives,” Del Rosario said in a statement issued Wednesday by the nonprofit.


But the United Nations humanitarian office said food, water and shelter were badly needed as the storm cleared. Many displaced families are camping out in the open in areas sullied with mud. The typhoon also stripped some mountainsides of vegetation, raising fears that farms could be crippled in the aftermath of the typhoon.


ALSO:


Police actions questioned after Mexican inauguration protests

Israel moves forward with controversial West Bank development


Indian Olympic officials defy IOC, pick corruption suspect as leader





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Add an HTML5 Webcam to Your Site With Photobooth.js







The big web development news for 2013 is shaping up to be WebRTC, a set of APIs being developed by Mozilla, Google and others at the W3C that allows web developers to access device hardware — your camera, microphone, accelerometer and so on. Even now hardly a day goes by without a new demo showcasing WebRTC in some way.

The latest WebRTC hotness to catch our eye is developer Wolfram Hempel’s Photobooth.js, a JavaScript library for working with a device’s camera. Photobooth.js allows users to take pictures directly on your website, for example, to add an avatar. It also acts a bit like the OS X Photobooth app, offering real-time adjustments for hue, saturation and brightness (one word of warning, hue can really slow down Firefox).


Want to add a Photobooth-style camera app to your site? Just download Photobooth.js and add this code to your page:



myPhotobooth = new Photobooth( document.getElementById( "container" ) );

That’s it. Of course there’s a little more to do if you actually want to do something with your newly instantiated Photobooth — like capture images or resize and save them. But Photobooth.js makes the whole process pretty simple; see the documentation for more details.


Photobooth.js works in current versions of Chrome, Firefox, Opera, and any other browser that supports the WebRTC getUserMedia method. You can see a complete list of browsers that support getUserMedia over on caniuse.


Hempel’s code is available on GitHub (BSD license) and can be used as a standalone app or a JQuery plugin.








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Jazz pianist Dave Brubeck dead at 91












NEW YORK (Reuters) – Jazz pianist Dave Brubeck, whose choice of novel rhythms, classical structures and brilliant sidemen made him a towering figure in modern jazz, has died at the age of 91, his longtime manager and producer Russell Gloyd said on Wednesday.


Brubeck died of heart failure on Wednesday morning after he fell ill on his way to a regular medical exam at Norwalk Hospital, in Norwalk, Conn., a day short of his 92nd birthday, Gloyd said.












His Dave Brubeck Quartet put out one of the best selling jazz songs of all time: “Take Five,” composed by alto saxophonist Paul Desmond. Like many of the group’s works, it had an unusual beat — 5/4 time as opposed to the usual 4/4.


“We play it differently every time we play it,” Brubeck told The Philadelphia Inquirer in 2005. “So I never get tired of playing it. That’s the beauty of jazz.”


“Take Five” was the first million-selling jazz single.


Dressed in a suit and horn-rimmed glasses and living a clean-cut lifestyle in the 1950s, Brubeck did not fit the stereotype of a hipster jazzman and his music was not nearly as brooding as that coming from East Coast be-bop players.


Despite his innovative approach, some critics interpreted Brubeck’s popularity as a sign of un-coolness, but his fans were undeterred.


Brubeck was born in Concord, California, on December 6, 1920. His father was a rancher and as a teenager Brubeck was a skilled cowboy. But his mother, a music teacher who had five pianos in the house, saw that he took up piano at age 5.


At the College of the Pacific in Stockton, California, he planned to be a veterinarian, but within a year he was majoring in music and playing jazz in nightclubs.


“After my first year in veterinary pre-med I switched to the music department … and that was at the advice of my zoology teacher,” Brubeck said in a Reuters interview. “He said ‘Brubeck, your mind is not here, with these frogs and formaldehyde. Your mind is across the lawn at the conservatory. Will you please go over there.’”


Brubeck later met the co-director of a weekly campus radio show, Iola Marie Whitlock, and they eventually married.


After graduation, Brubeck studied under French composer Darius Milhaud and played in a U.S. Army jazz band during World War Two.


In the late 1940s, he moved to the San Francisco Bay area, where he headed an experimental jazz octet. He formed a trio in 1950 and the following year expanded to a quartet with Desmond, who he had known since the war.


Brubeck injected classical counterpoint, atonal harmonies and modern dissonance into his music, hinting at composers such as Debussy, Bartok, Stravinsky and Bach.


The group built an enduring fan base by taking its subdued bluesy brand of classically influenced jazz to colleges.


As a leading figure in the West Coast jazz scene, which also included Gerry Mulligan and Chet Baker, Brubeck was featured in a Time magazine cover story in 1954. Some critics and black musicians, who felt jazz was a central part of black culture, resented the story about the prominence of a white artist.


In the article Brubeck said Milhaud had told him “if I didn’t stick to jazz, I’d be working out of my own field and not taking advantage of my American heritage.”


Brubeck disbanded the quartet in 1967 after nearly 17 years to concentrate on composing. He wrote several choral works, all religiously influenced.


He later began performing jazz regularly again and appeared with his sons, Darius, a composer and pianist; Chris, who played electric bass and trombone; and drummer Danny. They were billed as Two Generations of Brubeck.


In February 1989 Brubeck, who had a history of heart problems, underwent triple-bypass surgery but kept playing. Well into his 80s, he still put on some 80 shows a year. He had a pacemaker implanted in October 2010.


Actor-director Clint Eastwood, a jazz fan, announced plans to make a documentary on Brubeck in 2007. Eastwood also was named chairman of the Brubeck Institute at the University of the Pacific, designated as the home of his papers, private recordings and other memorabilia.


Brubeck and his wife, who also was his agent and lyricist, had two other sons, Matthew, a cellist, and Michael, and a daughter, Catherine. The couple lived in Wilton, Connecticut.


(Reporting by Christine Kearney; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)


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