Do you have a written income plan for retirement?
Think you
have your golden years covered? Get it in writing! says expert
financial planner
"Age 85 is a bad time to go
broke," says expert retirement planner Jeff Gorton. Personal
savings, various investments and, yes, Social Security may prove to
be short of what you'd expected.
(Click
here for the rest of the story.)
How to fly when you're driving solo
Thriving
without a partner
For everyone -- even people in
an ideal relationship with a lifelong partner -- there will be times
when you are alone, says serial entrepreneur Susan Alpert.
(Click
here for the rest of the story.)
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.)
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column] |
Archived
articles
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.)
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.
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here for the rest of the story.)
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