"Stellar Picks: A Community Choice Exhibition" to open at WCU - The Cherokee One Feather theonefeather.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theonefeather.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NextEra Energy's $5.4 billion retirement plan for employees has suffered about half a billion dollars in losses this year as outsized bets on company stock soured, reflecting ongoing risks of corporate 401(k) policies that encourage concentrated positions in company shares. America’s largest renewable power company is among several U.S. energy and utility companies, including Exxon and Southern Company, that continue to promote big, concentrated bets on company stock in worker retirement plans. A Reuters analysis of retirement policies and stock performance data, along with interviews with retirement and finance experts, show a small but prominent corner of Corporate America still plays a risky game with company stock in employee benefit plans even after high-profile corporate implosions like the $63 billion Enron collapse.
March 1, 1945-Feb. 23, 2023 David Dean Nuese passed Feb. 23, 2023, at Pleasant View Home, in the care of Traditions Hospice. He was 77 years 11 months and 27
Morris Museum of Art Debuts New Jackson Cheatham Exhibit
Jack Cheatham, Untitled from The Perfect Ditch series, 2004. Etching/aquatint. Courtesy of the artist.
By Jennifer McKee
“The Perfect Ditch Series: Prints by Jackson Cheatham” is now on display at the Morris Museum of Art.
The exhibition, which features 11 pristinely crafted etchings, is on view through April 25.
Born in Columbia, Tennessee in 1945, Cheatham studied with Keith Rasmussen and Norman Wagner at the Atlanta College of Art, where he earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. Afterward, he attended the Lamar Dodd School of Art at the University of Georgia, earning his Master’s degree.
NEW YORK — Young and eager, Harry Rosado never had trouble finding a job.
Fresh out of high school, he was hired as a sales associate in Midtown Manhattan at Journeys and then at Zumiez, two fashion stores popular with young shoppers. He moved on to Uncle Jack’s Meat House in Queens, where he earned up to $300 a week as a busser.
Then Rosado, 23, was laid off in March when the steakhouse shut down because of the pandemic. He was called back after the steakhouse reopened, but business was slow. In August, he was out of work again.
New York City has been hit harder by the economic crisis set off by the pandemic than most other major American cities.