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            Plan ahead for your online hereafter 
			Asset protection lawyer offers 3 steps 
			to take now 
			Now, you really can live 
			forever, but that's not necessarily a good thing. 
			
			(Click 
			here for the rest of the story.) 
 
			
            Friendship Manor residents are friends in deed 
					
					
					 From left: Malinda Jones, Jerry Berglin, Ruth Miller, 
			Margaret Nelson, Marianee Wessoly, Ruby Glickerman, Lena Gregory, 
			Judy Conover, Larry Martin and Pat Cooper.
 Not pictured: Greta Lane and Rosemary Meyer.
 
			Every baby born at Abraham Lincoln 
			Memorial Hospital leaves with a handmade baby blanket, thanks to the 
			residents of Friendship Manor. Friendship Manor residents have been 
			donating their time and talents to the hospital for this project for 
			close to two years. The volunteers have made approximately 450 
			blankets.
								
				
				
			
			(Click 
			here for the rest of the story.) 
 Social 
			Security column 
            Reflecting on 78 years of Social Security By 
			Carolyn W. Colvin, acting commissioner of Social Security 
			
    
   
			BALTIMORE -- There are special moments 
			when people look back and evaluate a life or an era: birthdays, 
			class reunions, holidays, anniversaries. Time is, after all, simply 
			the stringing together of a number of events, some small, others 
			significant. These events can speed by quickly, but each one can 
			have an effect on the greater whole. A lifetime of seemingly mundane 
			events can pass in what seems like the blink of an eye  until 
			one looks back to examine them and realizes just how much has filled 
			the space.
			(Click here for the rest of the story.) 
 [to top of second 
			column] | 
			Archived 
			articles 
 
			
			 
 
			Study ties higher blood sugar to dementia risk
    
   
            WASHINGTON (AP) 
			-- 
			
    		Higher blood-sugar levels, even those well short of diabetes, seem to raise the risk of developing dementia, a major new study finds. Researchers say it suggests a novel way to try to prevent Alzheimer's disease 
			-- by keeping glucose at a healthy level.(Click 
			here for the rest of the story.)
 
 
            Why everyone needs an 'incapacity plan' 3 experts 
			share tips for protecting yourself & your assets 
			Dementia has become the No. 1 
			cause of disability globally, according to the World Health 
			Organization.  (Click 
			here for the rest of the story.) 
 
			Ready to make the jump? Now's the time for a heartfelt encore 
			Mother of reinvention shares tips for 
			finding work that feeds the soul 
			They're called second acts, 
			encore careers or reinventing yourself -- they're the completely new 
			and different jobs people take in midlife or later.   (Click 
			here for the rest of the story.) 
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