Wednesday, February 26, 2014
California couple finds $10 million in rare gold coins while walking dog
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A Northern California couple out walking their dog on their Gold Country property stumbled across a modern-day bonanza: $10 million in rare, mint-condition gold coins buried in the shadow of an old tree.
Nearly all of the 1,427 coins, dating from 1847 to 1894, are in uncirculated, mint condition, said David Hall, co-founder of Professional Coin Grading Service of Santa Ana, which recently authenticated them. Although the face value of the gold pieces only adds up to about $27,000, some of them are so rare that coin experts say they could fetch nearly $1 million apiece.
"I don't like to say once-in-a-lifetime for anything, but you don't get an opportunity to handle this kind of material, a treasure like this, ever," said veteran numismatist Don Kagin, who is representing the finders. "It's like they found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow."
Kagin, whose family has been in the rare-coin business for 81 years, would say little about the couple other than that they are husband and wife, are middle-aged and have lived for several years on the rural property where the coins were found. They have no idea who put them there, he said.
The pair are choosing to remain anonymous, Kagin said, in part to avoid a renewed gold rush to their property by modern-day prospectors armed with metal detectors.
They also don't want to be treated any differently, said David McCarthy, chief numismatist for Kagin Inc. of Tiburon.
"Their concern was this would change the way everyone else would look at them, and they're pretty happy with the lifestyle they have today," he said.
They plan to put most of the coins up for sale through Amazon while holding onto a few keepsakes. They'll use the money to pay off bills and quietly donate to local charities, Kagin said.
Before they sell them, they are loaning some to the American Numismatic Association for its National Money Show, which opens Thursday in Atlanta.
What makes their find particularly valuable, McCarthy said, is that almost all of the coins are in near-perfect condition. That means that whoever put them into the ground likely socked them away as soon as they were put into circulation.
Because paper money was illegal in California until the 1870s, he added, it's extremely rare to find any coins from before that of such high quality.
"It wasn't really until the 1880s that you start seeing coins struck in California that were kept in real high grades of preservation," he said.
The coins, in $5, $10 and $20 denominations, were stored more or less in chronological order, McCarthy said, with the 1840s and 1850s pieces going into one canister until it was filed, then new coins going into the next one and the next one after that. The dates and the method indicated that whoever put them there was using the ground as their personal bank and that they weren't swooped up all at once in a robbery.
Although most of the coins were minted in San Francisco, one $5 gold piece came from as far away as Georgia.
Kagin and McCarthy would say little about the couple's property or its ownership history, other than it's in a sprawling hilly area of Gold Country and the coins were found along a path the couple had walked for years. On the day they found them last spring, the woman had bent over to examine an old rusty can that erosion had caused to pop slightly out of the ground.
"Don't be above bending over to check on a rusty can," he said she told him.
They are located on a section of the property the couple nicknamed Saddle Ridge, and Kagin is calling the find the Saddle Ridge Hoard. He believes it could be the largest such discovery in U.S. history.
One of the largest previous finds of gold coins was $1 million worth uncovered by construction workers in Jackson, Tenn., in 1985. More than 400,000 silver dollars were found in the home of a Reno, Nev., man who died in 1974 and were later sold intact for $7.3 million.
Gold coins and ingots said to be worth as much as $130 million were recovered in the 1980s from the wreck of the SS Central America. But historians knew roughly where that gold was because the ship went down off the coast of North Carolina during a hurricane in 1857.
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Knicks waive World Peace, Udrih
Knicks Cavaliers Basketball
NEW YORK (AP) - Metta World Peace's dream homecoming lasted less than a season, with the New York Knicks waiving the veteran forward and Beno Udrih on Monday after buying out their contracts.
World
Peace finally got his wish to play for the Knicks when he signed last
summer, but he never gained a place in Mike Woodson's rotation and
appeared in just 29 games before asking for his release.
"It
was a childhood dream of mine to play basketball professionally in New
York City, and it has truly been a blessing for that dream to have come
true. However, under current circumstances, my agent and I have agreed
that being bought out would be the best option for me professionally,"
the New York native said in a statement. "I would like everyone to know
that whether I was on the court or off, I could not have been happier
playing for and cheering on this amazing city, my city."
The
moves were announced Monday before the Knicks hosted the Dallas
Mavericks. By getting waived this week, both veterans will be able to
sign with another team and be eligible for the playoffs.
World
Peace, who grew up in Queensbridge and starred at St. John's when he
was still Ron Artest, missed nearly all of January due to a procedure on
his left knee. He played seven minutes Friday in a loss at Orlando, and
then wrote on his Twitter page on Saturday that his agent was working
on a buyout.
Udrih, who also signed last summer, had 12 starts among his 31 appearances.
"We
are disappointed that it did not work out for Beno and Metta here in
New York," Knicks general manager Steve Mills said. "We thank them for
their contributions this season and wish them well."
Woodson
said he and Mills would talk Tuesday about adding players. Woodson said
he thought the Knicks needed a guard to defend on the perimeter, and
another big man with Andrea Bargnani and Kenyon Martin injured.
Budget cuts to slash U.S. Army to smallest since before World War Two
Budget cuts to slash U.S. Army to smallest since before World War Two
Feb 24th 2014 10:16PM
By David Alexander and Andrea Shalal (Reuters) - The Pentagon said on Monday it would shrink the U.S. Army to pre-World War Two levels, eliminate the popular A-10 aircraft and reduce military benefits in order to meet 2015 spending caps, setting up an election-year fight with the Congress over national defense priorities.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, previewing the Pentagon's ideas on how to adapt to government belt-tightening, said the defense budget due out next week would be the first to look beyond 13 years of conflict, shifting away from long-term ground wars like Iraq and Afghanistan.
He cautioned, however, that the country needed to be clear-eyed about the risks posed by lower budget levels, which would challenge the Pentagon to field a smaller yet well-trained force that could cope with any adversary, but might not be able to respond simultaneously to multiple conflicts.
"We ... face the risk of uncertainty in a dynamic and increasingly dangerous security environment," Hagel said. "Budget reductions inevitably reduce the military's margin of error in dealing with these risks, as other powers are continuing to modernize their weapons portfolios."
The cuts come as the Pentagon is attempting to absorb nearly a trillion dollars in reductions to projected spending over a decade. A two-year bipartisan budget deal in December eased some of the pressure on the department, but still cut its planned spending by $31 billion in 2014 and another $45 billion in 2015.
The Pentagon's budget for the 2015 fiscal year beginning in October is an estimated $496 billion, about the same amount as the current fiscal year. Beginning in 2016, the department's budget is slated to assume even larger spending cuts, an event Hagel said could jeopardize national security.
Defense analysts said the budget priorities sketched out by Hagel would begin to move the Pentagon in the right direction on issues like military compensation reform and eliminating waste but could have difficulty winning support from lawmakers facing mid-term elections to Congress.
"Congress always modifies the president's budget request. They will again. The question is will they do it in small ways or large ways," said Kathleen Hicks, a former senior defense official who is now an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank.
"I think the personnel pieces are the trickiest for them," she added, saying the challenge for the Pentagon was judging "in advance what is most likely to be accepted, particularly in a mid-term election year, and what is off the table."
The proposed cuts ran into resistance from senior lawmakers in both houses of Congress.
Representative Buck McKeon, the Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said it would be "foolish" to change military benefits before a report on the issue next year, while Senator Carl Levin, the Democratic head of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said the Pentagon would have "heavy challenge" convincing lawmakers to retire the A-10 fleet.
Hagel said the Pentagon plans to reduce the size of the Army to between 440,000 and 450,000 soldiers. The Army is currently about 520,000 soldiers and had been planning to draw down to about 490,000 in the coming year.
A reduction to 450,000 would be the Army's smallest size since 1940, before the United States entered World War Two, when it counted a troop strength of 267,767, according to Army figures. The Army's previous post-World War Two low was 479,426 in 1999.
"We chose further reductions in troop strength and force structure in every military service - active and reserve - in order to sustain our readiness and technological superiority and to protect critical capabilities," Hagel said.
Despite a congressional rebuff of Pentagon efforts to reform personnel costs in recent years, the defense chief announced a series of new steps to try to curb military and civilian personnel spending, which now makes up about half its budget.
Hagel said the department would seek a 1 percent raise in pay for military personnel but would slow the growth of tax-free housing allowances, reduce the annual subsidy for military commissaries and reform the TRICARE health insurance program for military family members and retirees.
Todd Harrison, a defense budget analyst with the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments think tank, said the Pentagon was heading in the "right direction with military compensation reform," and that notions of keeping faith with troops were about more than just pay.
"Keeping faith also means ensuring our troops are the best trained and equipped in the world," Harrison said, adding that the proposed reforms sought to balance tradeoffs between pay and benefits and training and modernization.
"The clear message is that if Congress chooses to ignore these reforms again, it will force additional cuts in training and modernization which will break faith with the troops," he said.
Hagel also said the Pentagon would eliminate the Air Force fleet of A-10 "Warthog" close air support planes, which are much beloved by ground troops, in order to ensure continued funding of the new long-range bomber, the Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter and a new aerial refueling tanker.
In a reversal of an earlier decision, he said the Pentagon decided to retire the 50-year-old U-2 spy plane in favor of the unmanned Global Hawk system after success in reducing the operating costs of the newer plane.
The defense secretary added the Pentagon had decided to build only 32 of its new Littoral Combat Ships, down from the 52 originally planned. He said the funds would be plowed back into developing a fast, new, more lethal ship similar to a frigate.
Monday, February 24, 2014
TODAY's 'Love Your Selfie' series explores our body image obsessions
Every day too many of us wake up unhappy with the way we look. TODAY wants to change that!
With the "Love Your Selfie" series, kicking off Saturday, Feb. 22, TODAY will examine the obsession with body image and how we can join together to feel more positive about ourselves. TODAY's anchors will take an honest and revealing look at how they feel about their own body image.
TODAY
In this special series, Matt Lauer, Savannah Guthrie, Al Roker, Natalie Morales, Willie Geist, Kathie Lee Gifford, Hoda Kotb, Carson Daly, Tamron Hall, Lester Holt, Erica Hill, Jenna Wolfe and Dylan Dreyer will peel back the layers of their own insecurities, and will share the stories of people who are transforming the traditional definitions of beauty.
TODAY
Next up, on Wednesday, actress Cameron Diaz and Maria Shriver talk about how we feed our body and the habits we pass down through the ages.
On Thursday, supermodel Naomi Campbell talks about photo-shopping and airbrushing in fashion magazines and the messages this sends to regular people.
TODAY
TODAY invites viewers to join the conversation and celebrate every shape, size, and age by sharing selfies on social media using #LoveYourSelfie or by uploading images here.
Submitted photos may be featured throughout TODAY’s coverage. As part of the Love Your Selfie series, TODAY.com will feature galleries of selfies and original essays.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. wins Daytona 500 after long rain delay: 5 things you need to know
56th Daytona 500
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Five things to know about the rain-delayed Daytona 500, NASCAR's signature event that finished under the lights Sunday at Daytona International Speedway:
___
HENDRICK
DOMINATION: Richard Childress Racing garnered attention last week. Joe
Gibbs Racing grabbed headlines this week. Hendrick Motorsports left
Daytona International Speedway with the only prize that really mattered.
Dale
Earnhardt Jr. won his second Daytona 500 and first in more than a
decade Sunday night, overcoming rain and wrecks to end a 55-race drought
with a victory under the lights at the famed speedway where his father
died in a last-lap crash at the 2001 race.
"It's
obviously very significant (when) any Earnhardt wins at Daytona,"
second-place finisher Denny Hamlin said. "It's a significant day for
their family and great for the race team."
Oscar nominees swag bags revealed + a giveaway
The Oscars is Hollywood's biggest night, and not just because of the golden statues and star-filled red carpet. The enviable swag bags Academy Awards nominees receive for just being nominated are in a league of their own! The bags are so special in fact that each swag bag is worth over $80,000!
We shared with you the amazing swag bags Grammy nominees picked up back stage, and the same A-List company, Distinctive Assets, is behind the official Oscar nominees gift bags as well!
Filed with new technology, lust-worthy beauty products, cool gadgets, and tasty treats, this year's gift bag is truly a rising star.
Click through the gallery above to check out 20 of the gifts in this year's swag bags!
To share the A-List love with our readers, today and tomorrow only on Twitter, we're giving away 4 select items from the gift bag! Enter for a chance to win a Narrative Clip automatic camera, a Makeup Studio by Diane Capt beauty set, a Blossom Blends tea collection, and a Chocolatines Savory Wine Flight Pairing with a total approximate retail value of $513.95.
It's easy to enter, follow @AOL on Twitter and retweet 1 of 10 promotional tweets for a chance to win the 4 select items from the gift bag!
Official rules:
• Open to legal residents of 50 United States and the District of Columbia who are 18 and older.
• To enter, retweet (true retweet, quoted retweets will not be counted) 1 of our 10 tweets stating "Retweet for a chance to win 4 luxury items from the official #Oscars nominee gift bag &! Rules: [LINK] #AOLGiveaway"
• Contest begins on February 23rd, 2014 at 12PM PM EST and ends on February 24th, 2014 at 11:59PM EST.
• You may enter up to 10 times.
• 1 winner will be selected in a random drawing at the end of the contest.
• 1 randomly selected winner will win (1) Narrative Clip automatic camera, (1) Makeup Studio by Diane Capt beauty set, (1) Blossom Blends tea collection, and (1) Chocolatines Savory Wine Flight Pairing. The total value of the Prize(s) under this Agreement is $513.95.
Aspen socialite accused of car bombing her ex-husband
An Aspen socialite is on trial for first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder after her ex-husband died from a bomb planted in his car. The crimes happened back in 1996. "Good Morning America" has more on the case that took 17 years to come to trial.
'Prosecutors say 56-year-old Pamela Phillips was accustomed to a lavish lifestyle.'
They say while she was married to real estate developer Gary Triano, she was treated to fancy cars and homes. After their divorce, the fortune began to dwindle.
Phillips allegedly hired a former boyfriend to kill her former husband with a car bomb.
Prosecutors allege Phillips' motive was to collect on Triano's $2 million life insurance policy.
According to the Arizona Daily Star, prosecutors accuse Phillips of paying Ronald Young $400,000 to kill her ex-husband. Young fled after Triano's death, but was arrested in 2005. In 2010, he was tried and convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree murder.
Authorities also found documents making Phillips, who had moved abroad, an additional suspect.
'Authorities say she knew she was wanted, and through her attorneys said she would be turning herself in. She never did. She was arrested and extradited,' KVOA reports.
At the time, a judge found Phillips unfit to stand trial. But now, years later, the trial is underway and one man who was with Triano right before he died is taking the stand. Here's KGUN.
'Luis Ruben Lopez and Triano played a round of golf at the La Paloma Country Club. Lopez said he shook triano's hand in the parking lot, said goodbye and walked to his car. That's when he heard the explosion,' KGUN reported.
Triano died almost immediately from the planted pipe bomb. Phillips has pleaded not guilty, and the trial is expected to last six weeks.
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Petition to Split California Into Six States Gets Green Light
A venture capitalist who feels colossal California is too unwieldy to govern is proposing to split it into six separate states, and Secretary of State Debra Bowen has given him the green light to start collecting petition signatures.
Tim Draper filed a ballot initiative in December stating that because of recent social and economic changes California has become “nearly ungovernable.”
He proposed dividing California into six states. San Diego and Orange County would make up “South California.” “West California” would include Los Angeles and Santa Barbara, while Bakersfield, Fresno and Stockton would make up the larger “Central California.” San Francisco and San Jose would be in the new “Silicon Valley.” “North California” would include the Sacramento area, and “Jefferson” would be home to the Redding and Eureka areas.
“California as it is is ungovernable,” Draper told ABC News today. “It is more and more difficult for Sacramento to keep up with the social issues from the various regions of California. With six Californias, people will be closer to their state governments, and states can get a refresh”.
Brendan Nyhan, Assistant Professor of Government at Dartmouth College, isn’t sold on the idea. “Splitting California into six states would raise all sorts of concerns about the partisan balance of the senate. I can’t imagine this would ever go anywhere” said Nyhan.
Nyhan says a plan like this would surface many issues. Things like water policy, agricultural policy, and even the electoral college would all change if this plan were to take action.
The plan aims to settle California’s financial issues after the separation of the states. If things can’t be resolved, each state would receive a portion of the state’s debts based on the newly created state’s population.
If the federal government approves creating six new states, “all tax collections and spending by the existing State of California would end, with its assets and liabilities divided among the new states,” Secretary of State Debra Bowen said in a statement on Tuesday.
That would leave decisions regarding taxes and public spending of the new states up to its elected leaders.
If California were its own separate country, it would have the eighth-largest economy in the world.
In order to make this plan a reality, Draper needs to start collecting signatures in order to qualify the petition for a ballot. He needs the signatures of 807,615 registered voters in 150 days, making his deadline July 18, 2014.
“We are going to put together a grass roots effort to get signatures,” Draper said. “It looks very promising since there are already several movements to create new states here”.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
WELP THAT WAS FAST!! Janet Jackson Is DIVORCING Her Billionaire Arab Husband!!!
Her is what they say:
Janet Jackson's marriage to super-wealthy Arab businessman Wissam Al Mana has collapsed, and a source says bitter divorce battle over his billion dollar fortune could be about to explode . . .
"She confided to a few close friends and (her mother) Katherine that she's preparing to leave him. And she's begun calling friends at all hours crying and saying how miserable she is. . .
Janet is getting set to challenge the prenup and demand a flat lump sum payout from his fortune.
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Capital One Might Come A'Knocking On Your Office Door
Capital One has run a series of clever ads with the tagline, "What's in your wallet?" Now it appears the company has tried to lay the groundwork so it can ask about your Capital One account via your regular phone or cell with fake caller ID, text message, or fax "with any frequency" and even showing up unannounced at home or work, according to the Los Angeles Times.
It's a set up for aggressive collection activities that could become a potential nightmare, particularly if the process involves your work life. Not many companies would be happy to field a series of messages or visits over a personal financial matter.
The issue arose with a new credit card agreement that affects consumers who have been issued a Capital One card. Here is the communications section that explains the company says it has:
We may contact you from time to time regarding your Account. We may contact you in any manner we choose unless the law says that we cannot. For example, we may:The section goes on to say that the company can use information they obtain from you or others to find you, that it may record conversations, and, unless prohibited by law, it can "modify or suppress caller ID and similar services and identify ourselves on these services in any manner we choose." In other words, Capital One might make you think you were picking up the phone for Joe's Pizzeria down the street.
(1) contact you by mail, telephone, email, fax, recorded message, text message, or personal visit;
(2) contact you using an automated dialing or similar device ("Autodialer");
(3) contact you at your home and at your place of employment;
(4) contact you on your mobile telephone;
(5) contact you at any time, including weekends and holidays;
(6) contact you with any frequency;
(7) leave prerecorded and other messages on your answering machine/service and with others; and
(8) identify ourselves, your relationship with us, and our purpose for contacting you even if others might hear or read it.
In 2012, a federal class action lawsuit claimed that Capital One had used "illegal credit and collection practices," according to ABC News. That same year, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reportedly fined Capital One $210 million for using high pressure tactics to sell consumers into add-on credit card services and for misleading them about the benefits, according to Forbes.
One reason for all the specificity in the agreement is that when it comes to debt collection and associated communications, there are some significant protections for consumers, according to the Federal Trade Commission.
For example, debt collectors are generally restricted to calling only between 8am and 9pm. The collector "may not communicate, in connection with the collection of any debt, with any person other than a consumer, his attorney, a consumer reporting agency if otherwise permitted by law, the creditor, the attorney of the creditor, or the attorney of the debt collector," which means a limit on the types of messages that could be left. If the collector "knows or has reason to know that the consumer's employer prohibits the consumer from receiving such communication," it is forbidden to try reaching the consumer at work -- and telling the collector that you are not allowed to receive collection calls at work might be enough to trigger that clause.
However, these factors only come into play if the consumer has not given prior consent or if a court has given permission. Being a card holder with Capital One would likely mean that the agreement would act as that consent.
Filed under: Company News
President Obama Sends Handwritten Apology To Art History Professor
President Obama took an unprovoked swing at art history degree-holders last month, insinuating to audiences in a post-State of the Union tour that "skilled manufacturing" was a better career path than art history. Now, after weeks of angry responses from journalists and citizens, Obama has apologized, in the form of a handwritten letter to art historian Ann Collins Johns.
The University of Texas professor was just one of the many irked by Obama's January 2014 remarks in Wisconsin. His exact words: “I promise you, folks can make a lot more potentially with skilled manufacturing or the trades than they might with an art history degree."
Johns was quick to act, turning to the White House website to voice her own defense of art history. She recounted that post, issued on January 31, in a statement to Hyperallergic:
I am relatively sure that my email was not so much one of outrage at Obama's statement, but rather a 'look what we do well' statement. I emphasized that as art historians, we challenge our students to think, read, and write critically. I also stressed how inclusive our discipline is these days (even though my own specialty is medieval and Renaissance Italy). So I'd like to see this whole series of events in a very positive light.Johns didn't save the original post, because, as she explained to The Huffington Post, "who ever thinks that she's going to get a hand-written letter from the President?!" But her expectations were shattered when Obama answered her words, sending her a personalized apology on February 12.
The letter reads:
Ann --Johns emphasized her respect for the president, stating to Huff Post that she thinks "Obama's done an amazing job under the grimmest of circumstances."
Let me apologize for my off-the-cuff remarks. I was making a point about the jobs market, not the value of art history. As it so happens, art history was one of my favorite subjects in high school, and it has helped me take in a great deal of joy in my life that I might otherwise have missed.
So please pass on my apology for the glib remark to the entire department, and understand that I was trying to encourage young people who may not be predisposed to a four year college experience to be open to technical training that can lead them to an honorable career.
Sincerely,
Barack Obama
"I also very much appreciate the message that he was trying to convey that day -- that we need young people to take our manufacturing jobs and feel as though this is an honorable path," she added. "But I felt it was important for him to know that art history is no longer just the purview of 'the girls with pearls' (as we called it when I was an undergrad, a long time ago)."
Let us know what you think of Obama's note in the comments.
5 things to know about the Powerball jackpot
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)
-- Wednesday's Powerball drawing carries an estimated $400 million
jackpot. If no one matches all the numbers, the prize potential will
grow before the next drawing on Saturday. Here are five things you
should know about Powerball payouts and your odds of winning.
---
GROWING INTO RECORD
TERRITORY: The estimated $400 million jackpot is the sixth-largest in
U.S. lottery history. Impressive, but it may not hold that record in a
few years ... or even a few months. More than half of the 10 largest
lottery jackpots have been reached since 2012. That's because major game
changes to Powerball and Mega Millions have created larger jackpots in
shorter periods of time. So if it seems like we were all just talking
about the large, growing jackpot, it's because we were.
---
ROLLING, ROLLING,
ROLLING: Each drawing without a winner rolls the jackpot over and makes
it more lucrative. The current jackpot began its ascent at the end of
2013. That means it's rolled over more than a dozen times without a top
prize winner. If no one strikes it big on Wednesday, the jackpot only
gets bigger.
---
LET'S SAY YOU WIN:
Hold off on that beachfront mansion. Financial experts agree that you
should forego large vanity purchases and instead set up annuities and
long-term trusts for descendants.
---
YOU COULD BE A WINNER
EVEN IF YOU DON'T WIN THE JACKPOT: You don't have the main Powerball
number on your ticket? Don't fret and keep your eyes on those other five
numbers. Match those and you could win a $1 million secondary prize or a
$2 million secondary "Power Play" prize if you paid an extra dollar
when you bought the ticket. More than 1,000 ticketholders have won these
secondary prizes since 2012. Not a bad deal.
---
BUT REALLY, YOU'RE NOT
GOING TO WIN: Odds of winning it all are about 1-in-175 million.
Officials over the years have noticed the trend that the larger the
jackpot, the more interest in the top prize and a surge in players. But
remember your odds of winning a jackpot of $40 million is the same as if
it were the current estimated $400 million. That's because every time
you play, you're still looking to match all five white balls and the red
Powerball. The odds of winning don't change as the jackpot escalates,
and they change very little even if you buy 10 tickets instead of one.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Health Care Law Is 'An Answer To A Prayer' For Some Older Americans
CHICAGO (AP) - For many older Americans who lost jobs during the recession, the quest for health care has been one obstacle after another. They're unwanted by employers, rejected by insurers, struggling to cover rising medical costs and praying to reach Medicare age before a health crisis.
These luckless people, most in their 50s and 60s, have emerged this month as early winners under the nation's new health insurance system. Along with their peers who are self-employed or whose jobs do not offer insurance, they have been signing up for coverage in large numbers, submitting new-patient forms at doctor's offices and filling prescriptions at pharmacies.
"I just cried I was so relieved," said Maureen Grey, a 58-year-old Chicagoan who finally saw a doctor this month after a fall in September left her in constant pain. Laid off twice from full-time jobs in the past five years, she saw her income drop from $60,000 to $17,800 a year. Now doing temp work, she was uninsured for 18 months before she chose a marketplace plan for $68 a month.
Americans ages 55 to 64 make up 31 percent of new enrollees in the new health insurance marketplaces, the largest segment by age group, according to the federal government's latest figures. They represent a glimmer of success for President Barack Obama's beleaguered law.
The Great Recession hit them hard and for some its impact has lingered.
Aging boomers are more likely to be in debt as they enter retirement than were previous generations, with many having purchased more expensive homes with smaller down payments, said economist Olivia Mitchell of University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. One in five has unpaid medical bills and 17 percent are underwater with their home values. Fourteen percent are uninsured.
As of December, 46 percent of older jobseekers were among the long-term unemployed compared with less than 25 percent before the recession.
And those financial setbacks happened just as their health care needs became more acute. Americans in their mid-50s to mid-60s are more likely to be diagnosed with diabetes than other age groups, younger or older, accounting for 3 in 10 of the adult diabetes diagnoses in the United States each year. And every year after age 50, the rate of cancer diagnosis climbs.
The affordable coverage is "an answer to a prayer really," said Laura Ingle, a 57-year-old Houston attorney who had been denied coverage repeatedly because she has sarcoidosis, an autoimmune disease. She recently had back surgery for a painful condition that's been bothering her for months.
One night in September, 64-year-old Glenn Nishimura woke up with wrenching pain that sent him to the emergency room. It was his gallbladder. A doctor recommended surgery.
Instead, Nishimura went home. A consultant to nonprofit groups, he was self-employed and uninsured.
"I checked myself out because I had no idea what this was going to cost," the Little Rock, Ark., man said. "They didn't want me to go, but they didn't stop me."
Nishimura lost his coverage after leaving a full-time position with benefits in 2007, thinking he could land another good job. The recession ruined that plan. After COBRA coverage expired, he was denied coverage because of high blood pressure and other conditions.
He made it until September without a major illness. A second night of gallbladder pain and a chat with a doctor persuaded him to have the surgery. After getting the bills, he negotiated the fees down to $12,000, which he considered "a big hit, but it could have been worse." The average cost of a gallbladder removal in Arkansas was listed at three times that. Nishimura dipped into his savings to cover the bill.
In December, he chose a bronze plan on the new insurance marketplace that costs him $285 a month after a tax credit. The deductible is $6,300, so he hopes he doesn't have to use his coverage. He can get on Medicare in April, just in time for his annual checkup.
"Now there's the peace of mind of knowing the limits of my obligation if I have catastrophic health needs," he said.
Dr. Bernd Wollschlaeger said he's noticed a recent increase in patients in this age group at his family practice in Miami. Lots of them have untreated chronic conditions that have progressed to an advanced stage.
"Many have delayed necessary treatments due to costs and expect a total and quick workup on their first visit," he said, adding they want referrals to specialists and tests including colonoscopies and mammograms.
The abundance of older patients signing up is no surprise to the Obama administration, which conducted internal research last year that showed the "sick, active and worried" would be the most responsive to messages urging them to seek coverage.
Signing up younger, healthier enrollees is seen as more difficult, but crucial to keeping future insurance rates from increasing. The administration said those age groups may put off enrolling until closer to the March 31 deadline.
"We have always anticipated that those with more health needs would sign up early on, and that young and healthy people would wait until the end," administration spokeswoman Joanne Peters said.
Some of the aging boomers were determined to get coverage in the marketplace, despite repeated problems and frustration with the federal website.
The hours spent online and over the phone paid off for real estate agent Greg Burke and his beautician wife, Pat. The empty-nesters qualified for a tax credit that will lower their monthly health insurance premiums by nearly half.
The Burkes, from Akron, Ohio, are among the 38 percent of marketplace enrollees in the state between 55 and 64 years old. He's 61 and had a knee replaced six years ago.
They will now spend $250 a month for health insurance, "a huge savings," Greg Burke said. Their deductibles also dropped from $2,500 each to $750 each, meaning they will pay less out of pocket.
In Miami, licensed practical nurse Marie Cadet, who is 54, often works double shifts to make ends meet for herself and her 12-year-old daughter. She had been paying more than $150 a month for health insurance, with a $3,000 deductible. In effect, she paid most medical costs out of her own pocket, including about $80 a month for blood pressure medicine.
After choosing a plan from the marketplace, Cadet's monthly payment dropped to $86 a month, with the government kicking in $300. Her deductible fell to a more affordable $900.
"Now," Cadet said, "I'm not scared anymore."
Meryl Davis, Charlie White Win Ice Dancing Gold For U.S., Edging Canada's Tessa Virtue, Scott Moir
SOCHI, Russia (AP) - Meryl Davis and Charlie White won the gold medal in ice dance Monday, the first Olympic title in the event for the United States.
Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada, the 2010 champions, took silver. Russia's Elena Ilinykh and Nikita Katsalapov captured bronze.
Davis and White won silver in Vancouver, but in the four years since have overtaken the Canadians, their training partners in Detroit.
The Americans scored 116.63 points in the free dance to finish with 195.52, 4.53 ahead of Virtue and Moir.
Davis and White started skating together in 1997, and on the biggest day of their career, they were nearly flawless. When the music from "Sheherazade" ended with White on a knee, Davis rested her head on White's back in exhausted elation.
"That in itself justified 17 years of hard work," White said of their performance.
As the music swells over the final minute of the program, their feet are in nonstop motion yet every movement is intricately choreographed. Their lifts are a blur as White spins across the ice with Davis held aloft.
They now have one medal of each color after winning bronze in the new team event in Sochi.
Virtue and Moir became the first North Americans to win Olympic ice dance gold at their home Olympics in Vancouver. Their free dance to Russian classical music Monday told the story of their partnership, which also stretches back to 1997.
In a performance at times tender and others triumphant, Moir kisses her hand at the start and several times throughout the program.
Ilinykh and Katsalapov were just ninth at last year's world championships but are now the latest Olympic ice dance medalists from Russia. She's only 19; he's 22. The home fans start cheering when the first few notes are played from "Swan Lake" in their free dance.
France's Nathalie Pechalat and Fabian Bourzat were fourth.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk Met With Apple Executives: Report
Two of the world's most innovative companies may have discussed working together or even joining forces, according to a San Francisco Chronicle report.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk met with Adrian Pierca, Apple’s head of mergers and acquisitions, last spring as analysts were suggesting Apple acquire the electronic carmaker, the Chronicle reported Sunday, citing an unnamed source.
“While a megadeal has yet to emerge (for all of its cash, Apple still plays hardball on valuation), such a high-level meeting between the two Silicon Valley giants involving their top dealmakers suggests Apple was very much interested in buying the electric car pioneer,” the report said.
(Read the full story from the San Francisco Chronicle here.)
Apple didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Huffington Post. Tesla declined to comment.
Apple and its CEO Tim Cook spent much of last year fighting off concerns from analysts and investors that the company had lost its innovative edge. While the company added new technologies to many of its products in recent years, Apple hasn’t launched a new product in a new category since 2010, when the iPad first came out, according to USA Today.
Acquiring Tesla could ease some of those worries. Nothing says “IT’S THE FUTURE” quite like a car that runs on electricity with a fancy touchscreen that tells drivers where they can charge up next. And Musk, a co-founder of PayPal, has become somewhat of a Silicon Valley darling, unveiling ideas like the Hyperloop -- an idea for an elevated transit system that could get people from San Francisco to Los Angeles in just 30 minutes -- to much fanfare.
In addition, if Apple acquired Tesla, the tech giant would get the added benefit of bringing an innovative leader like Musk into the fold. "You could strike up a partnership and obtain a new iconic partner to lead Apple's innovation drive," Ahmad wrote.
Apple isn't the only tech giant to explore the auto world. Google has a project in the works for driverless cars that would keep people safer on the road.
Musk has signaled in the past that an Apple buy isn't out of the realm of possibility. "They do have a lot of cash," he told Bloomberg in an interview in May.
This story was updated after Tesla declined to comment.
Sunday, February 16, 2014
Pa. woman admits Craigslist killing in interview
SUNBURY, Pa. (AP) - A Pennsylvania woman charged along with her newlywed husband in the murder of a man they met through Craigslist admitted to the slaying in a jailhouse interview with a newspaper and said she has killed more than 20 others across the country, claims police said they are investigating.
In an interview with the Daily Item in Sunbury, Pa., 19-year-old Miranda Barbour said she wants to plead guilty to killing Troy LaFerrara in November. She also said in the interview that she has killed at least 22 other people from Alaska to North Carolina in the last six years as part of her involvement in a satanic cult.
"I feel it is time to get all of this out. I don't care if people believe me. I just want to get it out," Barbour told the newspaper for a story published Saturday night (http://bit.ly/1f7fvOH).
Sunbury police Chief Steve Mazzeo told the newspaper that investigators have been in contact with the FBI and law enforcement in several other states.
"From information we gathered and from information gathered from her interview we are seriously concerned and have been in contact with the proper authorities," Mazzeo said.
Lawyers for the couple did not immediately return messages from The Associated Press left at their offices Saturday night. An FBI spokesman referred questions to its Philly office, but an email message wasn't immediately returned.
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against Barbour and her husband, 22-year-old Elytte Barbour. Authorities said Miranda Barbour, a petite woman with long brown hair, told investigators she met the 6-foot-2, 278-pound victim after he responded to her Craigslist ad offering companionship for money.
Police allege in court papers that Elytte Barbour told investigators they committed the crime because they wanted to kill someone together. The couple, who were married in North Carolina and moved to Pennsylvania about three weeks before the crime, told police Miranda Barbour stabbed LaFerrara in the front seat of her car while her husband held a cord around his neck.
She said in the interview that she doesn't want to get out of jail and that she would kill again if she were released.
Miranda Barbour offered little detail on the murders she claimed to have participated in in Alaska, Texas, North Carolina and California. She claims she joined a satanic cult in Alaska when she was 13 before moving to North Carolina. Online records for the woman that the newspaper identified as Barbour's mother show her as having lived in both Alaska and North Carolina.
Last week, a judge granted a lawyer's request to have a forensic psychiatrist evaluate Miranda Barbour. The judge earlier approved a psychiatrist to evaluate Elytte Barbour.
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Ice storm causes deaths, power outages, and traffic jams in the South
Tim Ballisty
ATLANTA
(AP) -- Small armies of utility workers labored to turn the lights -
and the heat - back on for hundreds of thousands of Southerners as a
winter storm that left them without power threatened major cities
further up the East Coast.
The
Deep South remained a world of ice-laden trees and driveways early
Thursday after several unusual days of sleet and snow brought by a
powerful system that could bring more than a foot of snow to such
metropolises as Philadelphia, Washington and Boston.
At
least 12 deaths across the South have been blamed on the stormy weather
and nearly 3,300 flights nationwide were canceled with another day of
complicated air and road travel ahead Thursday, particularly in the
Northeast.
Drivers
in and around Raleigh, N.C., became snarled Wednesday in huge traffic
jams and abandoned cars in scenes reminiscent of motorist woes in
Atlanta during a storm two weeks earlier. In Atlanta, many streets were
eerily quiet this storm, with drivers heeding dire warnings to stay off
the roads. State troopers say they worked more than 200 crashes in
Georgia.
For
some on slick, snow-covered interstates in North Carolina, commutes
that should take minutes lasted hours after many got on the highways
just as soon as snow and sleet began at midday.
And
in South Carolina, more accustomed to occasional hurricanes, some could
only relate the damage from ice-snapped tree limbs to that of bygone
Hurricane Hugo. Even normally balmy Myrtle Beach, where millions of
visitors cavort each summer, cars were coated in thick ice that also
frosted palm trees and kiddie rides by the shore.
"I
hate driving on this," grumbled South Carolina resident Mindy Taylor,
43, on her way for rock salt, kitty litter or anything else to melt the
ice. "Hopefully it'll warm up by the weekend and it will all melt. I'm
ready for Spring."
In
Alabama, forecasters gleefully spoke of weekend temperatures reaching
the 60s after inches of snow or sleet in its northern parts.
The
snow, sleet and freezing rain that iced Southern highways also knocked
out electricity to more than half a million homes and business as it
advanced Thursday up the Interstate 95 corridor to the winter-weary
Mid-Atlantic states.
Some
Southerners who two weeks ago reveled in the so-called "snow jam"
sounded tired this time of sleet and ice encasing highways, trees and
even the tombstones of a cemetery replete with Confederate graves.
Bethany
Lanier, 32, was walking in a mostly empty square in the Atlanta suburb
of Decatur with Lindsay Futterman, a 30-year-old charter school teacher
as they debated whether to get a drink at a pub.
If
classes are canceled Friday, the charter school students will have
missed nine days of school. To make up days, administrators have
canceled a three-day break.
"Now, we're out because we have cabin fever," Lanier said as Futterman added: "It's kind of annoying now."
Many
Southerners took to makeshift sleds on the ice and snow, with at least
seven people hospitalized in sledding accidents just in Georgia. Four
people were hurt sledding in a kayak that crashed into a pole, said Fire
Chief Ricky Pruit in Cleveland, Ga. One victim suffered leg injuries,
another was knocked unconscious and lost several teeth and the other two
refused treatment, he said.
Ice
combined with wind gusts up to 30 mph snapped tree limbs and power
lines. More than 200,000 homes and businesses lost electricity in
Georgia, South Carolina had about 245,000 outages, and North Carolina
around 100,000. Some people could be in the dark for days.
As he did for parts of Georgia, President Barack Obama declared a disaster in South Carolina, opening the way for federal aid.
For
the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast, the heavy weather was the latest in
an unending drumbeat of storms that have depleted cities' salt supplies
and caused school systems to run out of snow days.
Washington,
D.C., could see around 8 inches of snow, as could Boston. New York City
could receive 6 inches. The Philadelphia area could get a foot or more,
and Portland, Maine, may see 8 or 9 inches.
In
Atlanta, which was caught badly unprepared by the last storm, area
schools announced even before the first drop of sleet fell that they
would be closed on Tuesday and Wednesday. Schools were also closed for
Thursday. Many businesses in the corporate capital of the South shut
down, too.
The
scene was markedly different from the one Jan. 28, when thousands of
children were stranded all night in schools by less than 3 inches of
snow and countless drivers abandoned their cars after getting stuck in
bumper-to-bumper traffic for hours and hours.
"I
think some folks would even say they were a little trigger-happy to go
ahead and cancel schools (Tuesday), as well as do all the preparation
they did," said Matt Altmix, who was out walking his dog in Atlanta on
Wednesday. "But it's justified."
North
Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory urged people to charge their cellphones and
find batteries for radios and flashlights because the storm could bring
nearly a foot of snow in places such as Charlotte.
"Stay
smart. Don't put your stupid hat on at this point in time. Protect
yourself. Protect your family. Protect your neighbors," McCrory said.
In
a warning issued early Wednesday, the National Weather Service called
the storm across the South "catastrophic ... crippling ... paralyzing
... choose your adjective."
Meteorologist Eli Jacks noted that three-quarters of an inch of ice would be catastrophic anywhere.
However,
the South is particularly vulnerable: Many trees are allowed to hang
over power lines for the simple reason that people don't normally have
to worry about ice and snow snapping off limbs.
Three
people were killed when an ambulance careened off an icy West Texas
road and caught fire. On Tuesday, four people died in weather-related
traffic accidents in North Texas, including a Dallas firefighter who was
knocked from an I-20 ramp and fell 50 feet. In Mississippi, two traffic
deaths were reported as well as in North Carolina.
Also, a Georgia man apparently died of hypothermia after spending hours outside during the storm, a coroner said.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Entrepreneur to Launch an “Adult School” Speaking Tour
Entrepreneur to Launch an “Adult School” Speaking Tour
Author, Entrepreneur and
Motivational Speaker James Thomas Sr. to visit area Adult Schools to
speak to students about the benefits of owning a business and why they
should always “Expect To Win.”
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
James Thomas Sr.
That was more than 30 years ago and not only did he get a bank job, he has owned several successful businesses. Today he is the President and CEO of BEM Media Group, Inc. a multimedia company that sells entertainment, information and motivational products and “The Red Letter Agency PR Firm, a Corporate, Entertainment and Sports PR Firm, in addition to being a highly sought after Motivational Speaker and Author.
Not one to rest on past success, Mr. Thomas is always searching for opportunities to encourage and motivate others. “I was passing a local high school and there was a sign outside advertising their “Adult School” and it hit me, to my knowledge no one has ever done a speaking tour targeting adult school students. I made a couple of phone calls and found the principles of these schools very enthusiastic about having a speaker come in so I decided to launch the “Expect to Win” Tour.” Stated Mr. Thomas
The “Expect to Win” program is designed to teach students that not only should they strive to win but if they remain focused and work hard, they should “Expect to Win.”
Mr. Thomas shares personal stories of obstacles he faced growing up in South Central Los Angeles, overcoming incarceration, a failed marriage, and lack of funding to become a speaker who has brought his message of faith and encouragement to audiences around the country.
The “Expect to Win” Adult School Tour is scheduled to begin in March with 10 stops throughout the state of California.
If your Adult School or College is interested in having Mr. Thomas visit your school contact Lisa at 562-547-2524
Major Snowstorm to Slam into Northeast Wednesday Night
By
AccuWeather
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2014Peggy Udden, of Norwood, Mass., shovels her driveway in Norwood, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
A storm bringing heavy ice and snow to the interior South will reach the Northeast Wednesday night and Thursday with heavy snow, gusty winds and disruptions to travel and daily activities.
The same storm set on disrupting flights at the major hubs of Atlanta, Dallas and Charlotte, N.C., in the South will take a tour of the Northeast before Valentine's Day. Airports from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York City and Boston will experience trouble with this storm.
Flight delays and cancellations are possible throughout much of the nation well away from and ahead of the storm, due to aircraft and crews being displaced.
A swath of heavy snow is projected by AccuWeather.com to reach from portions of western and central Virginia, the West Virginia mountains and northern Maryland to southeastern and central Pennsylvania, northern New Jersey, southeastern New York and central New England.
This includes the I-81 corridor in Virginia, Maryland and part of Pennsylvania, as well as I-77 inNorth Carolina and Virginia and I-87 in New York.
The storm will start as accumulating snow throughout the I-95 corridor and most coastal areas in the Northeast.
According to Chief Meteorologist Elliot Abrams, "While some rain can mix in along some of the I-95 cities, this will be a major storm throughout the corridor with enough snow to make for slippery roads and difficult travel."
Even though the storm will move much faster through the Northeast, when compared to the South, it has the potential to bring a foot of snow in a swath north and west of the track of the center of the system. This is most likely in the northern and western suburbs of the I-95 cities in the mid-Atlantic and New England.
The system will track in such a way that part of the I-95 corridor will experience a change from snow to rain or to a mix of rain and snow. Such a scenario would result in added weight to the snow. The weight and increasing winds near the coast could bring down trees and power lines.
Inland from the coast, where the precipitation falls as all snow, the storm will garner enough wind to cause blowing and drifting snow at the height of and in the immediate wake of the storm.
According to Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity, "In some areas from parts of Virginia, northeastward to New England, it may seem like a blizzard at times."
The storm is not likely to spare coastal areas, I-95 cities and their northern and western suburbs from heavy precipitation.
Folks from the Atlantic coast up to the Appalachians of the mid-Atlantic and New England should prepare for a classic nor'easter.
As the storm strengthens Thursday into Thursday night, enough onshore wind may be generated to cause minor flooding at times of high tide from New Jersey to Maine. The highest astronomical tides typically occur a day or so before the full moon, which happens to be on Friday, Valentine's Day. Water levels are likely to run about 2 feet above published levels.
RELATED:
AccuWeather.com Winter Weather Center
South Interactive Radar
Is the Northeast Running Out of Road Salt?
Prior to the arrival of the southern storm, most of the Northeast will be free of accumulating snow and will remain quite cold through the day Wednesday.
As of Tuesday midday, PECO was reporting that approximately 2,100 utility customers were still without power in the wake of the ice storm that hit southeastern Pennsylvania on Feb. 5, 2014.
There is the possibility of the power being knocked out in some of the same communities that were hit a week earlier.
For folks looking for a break in the cold, wintry pattern, a change to milder, less stormy weather is possible beginning around Feb. 17 or 18.
However, cold weather and storms may once again fight back toward the end of the month.
PHOTOS ON SKYE: Winter Storm Bears Down on US
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