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Editors Note: Friends wonder privately how someone so well educated could be in economic free fall, Elizabeth White wrote in a column for PBS Next Avenue. At fifty-five, she has learned how to fake cheeriness and to appear to be engaged, but her pho
stanley cup ne doesnt ring with opportunities anymore. The article about the growing number of women facing retirement and struggling to make ends meet hit a nerve, receiving thousands of likes and comments on Facebook. People resonated with the reality White faced herself. She had had a comfortable upper-middle-class lifestyle and a good-paying job, but after a failed entrepreneurial endeavor and the Great Recession, she was facing a stark reality. She was broke.In Fifty-Five, Unemployed, and Faking Normal, White offers advice to those baby boomers who, instead of facing cushy retire
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stanley cup the topic, tune in to tonight Making Sen$e segment, which airs every Thursday on the PBS NewsHour. Kristen Doerer, Making Sen$e EditorI have been fortunate. I have been poor for quite a long time now, so Im pretty good at it. The simple no-frills life is fine by me. 鈥?DebieMillions of us are trying to wrap our brains around futures that look nothing like the ones we imagined. How do we walk up that hill Its about letting go of what used to be and figuring out what we need to do and to change now so that we Marm Syria misses deadline for chemical weapons destruction
NEW YORK AP 鈥?A company that has performed hundreds of property appraisals for Donald Trump has been held in contempt of court for missing a deadline to turn over documents in the New York attorney generals civil investigation into the former presidents business practices.Manhattan Judge Arthur Engoron said late Tuesday that real estate services firm Cushman Wakefield had shown a willful failure to comply with Attorney General Letitia James subpoenas, including for records pertaining to Trumps suburban聽Seven Springs Estate,聽a Wall Street office bui
stanley cup lding and a Los Angeles golf course.Engoron ordered Cushman Wakefield to pay a fine of $10,000 per day, beginning Thursday, for each day that it fails to fully comply with James subpoenas. The same judge聽recently lifted a contempt order for Trump聽after a two-month legal fight over his slow response to a subpoena for documents in James probe.Engoron, in a written order posted to the court docket Wednesday morning, appeared incensed that Cushman Wakefield had asked for him for more time after missing a June 27 deadline that hed set for the company to turn over subpoenaed documents. Cushman Wakefield has only itself to blame if it chose to treat the looming deadlines cavalierly, Engoron wrote, noting that each delay only prejudices James in
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stanley cup tion and, indirectly, the people of New York State. Cushman Wakefield said it will appeal Engorons ruling.In a written statement, the company said the judge