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Behind One Gate, Two Paths. Motoko Rich and others.

by Rich, Motoko; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 29Business. Publisher: New York Times, 2005ISSN: 1522-3191;.Subject(s): 401(k) plans | Brain -- Research | Corporations -- Corrupt practices | Economics -- Psychological aspects | Employee Retirement Income Security Act (1974) | Employee stock options | Pension trusts | Pensions -- Law and legislation | Retirement | Retirement communities | U.S. Dept. of Labor | WorkDDC classification: 050 Summary: "In the past, the phrase 'active adult communities' conjured up places where residents could choose from a menu of every conceivable pastime, from tennis to canasta to shuffleboard, living out their final decades in something akin to a cruise ship on land. Work never entered into the picture. But across the country, these communities are being reshaped by the growing ranks of residents who either move there while they are still working or return to work--full or part time--after retirement. Fueled by financial necessity, boredom or the desire for personal fulfillment, people...are turning communities that were originally set up to promote the notion of a permanent vacation into places that revolve around a busy mix in which career concerns coexist with golf and boccie ball." (NEW YORK TIMES) This series of articles provides information about pensions, retirement communities and money management for those who have retired or are thinking about retirement.
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REF SIRS 2006 Business Article 29 (Browse shelf) Available

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.

Originally Published: Behind One Gate, Two Paths, April 12, 2005; pp. G1+.

"In the past, the phrase 'active adult communities' conjured up places where residents could choose from a menu of every conceivable pastime, from tennis to canasta to shuffleboard, living out their final decades in something akin to a cruise ship on land. Work never entered into the picture. But across the country, these communities are being reshaped by the growing ranks of residents who either move there while they are still working or return to work--full or part time--after retirement. Fueled by financial necessity, boredom or the desire for personal fulfillment, people...are turning communities that were originally set up to promote the notion of a permanent vacation into places that revolve around a busy mix in which career concerns coexist with golf and boccie ball." (NEW YORK TIMES) This series of articles provides information about pensions, retirement communities and money management for those who have retired or are thinking about retirement.

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