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<div>Cant view our Advertisement because of images being off? <a href="http://www.faqzone.eu/l/lt6BDFYR6063WKLO210UAPYYG/236N679D1223QNJN10VRABHI51381741XKQXNT2917928891"> Go ahead and browse me.</a></div>
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Heidi Shierholz,
an economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute. The Labor Department
says there are still more than three unemployed people for every job
opening.Cynthia Marriott gave up her job search after an interview in October
for a position as a hotel concierge."They never said no," she says.
"They just never called me back."Her husband hasn't worked full time since
2006. She cashed out her 401(k) after being laid off from a
job at a Los Angeles entertainment publicity firm in 2009. The couple
owes thousands in taxes for that withdrawal. They have no health insurance.She
got the maximum 99 weeks' of unemployment benefits then allowed in California
and then moved to Atlanta.Now she is looking to receive federal disability
benefits for a lung condition that she said leaves her weak and
unable to work a full day. The application is pending a medical
review."I feel like I have no choice," says Marriott, 47. "It's just
really sad and frightening"During the peak of her job search, Marriott was
filling out 10 applications a day. She applied for jobs she felt
overqualified for, such as those at Home Depot and Petco but never
heard back. Eventually, the disappointment and fatigue got to her."I just
wanted a job," she says. "I couldn't really go on anymore looking
for a job."Young people are leaving the job market, too. The participation
rate for Americans ages 20 to 24 hit a 41-year low 69.6
percent last year before bouncing bac
just have a patchwork of bills with
no consistency, said Sean Johnson, the Maryland State Teachers Associations
managing director of legislative and legal affairs.Johnson acknowledged
some issues are best decided on a local level but not in
this case, in which some workers pay for union representatives to negotiate
fair pay and benefits while others do not.Right now, 24 states have
right-to-work statues, which prohibit unions from requiring employees to
join or pay dues as a condition of employment, according to the
National Right to Work Foundation.The right to work has been on the
march for several decades, said Greg Mourad, vice president for the Right
to Work Committee. And Maryland is moving in the wrong direction in
relation to the rest of America.He also said the recent efforts by
governors in Indian and Michigan that made their states right to work
states stunned a lot of people.Mourad said the key points are employees
want freedom in the workplace and employers want to open businesses where
they can treat their employees fairly and they wont be forced to
join unions. The new Maryland legislation is an extension of 2009 legislation
passed by the Assembly -- at the request of the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal Employees that requires all state workers
except teachers to pay the fees.Right now, teachers in Baltimore City and
nine of the states 23 counties already pay the fee, as do
all other state employees
city,
origins or previous ownership history," she wrote.On Friday, The Washington
Post reported that Fuqua's 84-year-old mother, who operated an art school
for decades in Fairfax County under the name Marcia Fouquet, is an
artist who specialized in reproducing paintings from Renoir and other masters.
The Post said Fouquet had artistic links to Baltimore in the 1950s,
when the painting was stolen, and graduated from Goucher College with a
fine arts degree in 1952.A man who identified himself as Fuqua's brother,
Owen M. Fuqua, told the Post that the painting had been in
the family for 50 or 60 years and that "all I know
is my sister didn't just go buy it at a flea market."The
man later retracted his story, and ultimately said it was another person
using his name who gave the initial interview.Efforts by the AP Friday
to reach Martha and Owen Fuqua Friday were unsuccessful. Martha Fuqua's
lawyer did not return a call Friday seeking comment.The FBI has an
ongoing investigation, according to spokeswoman Lindsay Godwin.Meanwhile,
U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema ordered all parties seeking to claim
ownership of the painting to make their case in written pleadings later
this month.
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