Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Teen loses cancer battle days after Adrian Peterson surprise call

ROCHESTER, NY -- Blake Cognata, a Fairport High School teen battling a rare form of cancer, has died, the family confirmed Saturday morning.

Cognata would have turned 18 Monday.

The family has asked that others respect their privacy while they mourn the loss.

Cognata was on the minds of many people in the Rochester area this week after he was hospitalized last weekend when his condition worsened. His story was thrust into the national spotlight Monday when he received a call from star NFL player Adrian Peterson. A social media movement led to the Minnesota Vikings star calling Cognata to give him words of encouragement while he rested at Strong Memorial Hospital.

Since, the school and community rallied around Cognata. At a hockey game Tuesday against rival Pittsford, students wore yellow to show their support. Fairport has postponed today's game against Webster Schroeder, which was scheduled for 3 p.m. A make-up date has not been announced.

Sunday's fundraiser, set up earlier this week in the form of boot-camp style fitness training sessions to benefit Cognata's family, is on as scheduled, according to Julie Earl, the owner of F.I.T. She and fellow East Rochester fitness trainers reached out to Fairport athletes asking what they could do for the family and the ideas of the training sessions emerged. The classes filled up quickly.

Cognata, 17, was battling Ewing's sarcoma, a disease that attacks the bones that was diagnosed on Feb. 1. He was forced to stop playing football and lacrosse at Fairport High School.

A Facebook page devoted to the Fairport High School football team expressed condolences Saturday morning. The message, "Rest in peace Blake. You will be missed #62. Watch over your Fairport Family. Once A Raider ... Always A Raider," was posted at 10 a.m.

All week on Twitter, friends and family members offered support, using hashtags such as #staystrongblake and #findyourstrong.

Even those that did not know Cognata wanted to show their support.

"I actually did not know him personally but heard about him from a couple of my friends from Fairport," said Kayli O'Keefe, 18, of Pittsford.

The Harley-Allendale Columbia senior urged people at her school to wear yellow shirts Friday.

"Being it someone so young, it just really hit us," she said. "Harley is a school that has people from all over Rochester and we really wanted to show our support for Fairport and Blake ... I'd say at least two-thirds of the high school wore yellow that day."

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50454519/ns/local_news-minneapolis_st_paul_mn/

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Mass. lawyer: Told prosecutor Swartz suicidal

This Dec. 8, 2012 photo provided by ThoughtWorks shows Aaron Swartz, in New York. Swartz, a co-founder of Reddit, hanged himself Friday, Jan. 11, 2013, in New York City. In 2011, he was charged with stealing millions of scientific journals from a computer archive at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in an attempt to make them freely available. He had pleaded not guilty, and his federal trial was to begin next month. (AP Photo/ThoughtWorks, Pernille Ironside)

This Dec. 8, 2012 photo provided by ThoughtWorks shows Aaron Swartz, in New York. Swartz, a co-founder of Reddit, hanged himself Friday, Jan. 11, 2013, in New York City. In 2011, he was charged with stealing millions of scientific journals from a computer archive at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in an attempt to make them freely available. He had pleaded not guilty, and his federal trial was to begin next month. (AP Photo/ThoughtWorks, Pernille Ironside)

BOSTON (AP) ? A lawyer who formerly represented Internet freedom activist Aaron Swartz on hacking charges said Monday he told federal prosecutors about a year ago that Swartz was a suicide risk.

Swartz, 26, was found dead of an apparent suicide in his New York apartment Friday.

Andrew Good, a Boston attorney who represented Swartz in the case last year, said he told federal prosecutors in Massachusetts that Swartz was a suicide risk.

"Their response was, put him in jail, he'll be safe there," Good said.

A spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz declined comment.

"We would like to respect the family's privacy," said Christina DiIorio-Sterling. "We don't think it's appropriate to discuss the case at this time."

Swartz was facing a potentially lengthy prison sentence after being indicted in Boston in 2011 for allegedly gaining access to academic articles from a computer archive at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The charges carried a maximum penalty of decades in prison.

Swartz's most recent attorney, Elliot Peters, said prosecutors told him two days before Swartz's death that Swartz would have to spend six months in prison and plead guilty to 13 charges if he wanted to avoid going to trial.

Peters said he and prosecutors had talked repeatedly about making some sort of plea deal, but had failed to come to any agreement. Then last Wednesday, Peters brought up the possibility of a deal again. He said he told prosecutors "that we should find a way to resolve the case that didn't destroy Aaron's life."

Peters said prosecutors made it clear their position had not changed: they wanted Swartz to plead to 13 counts and the government would seek six months of prison time or some "slightly lesser" amount of time.

Elliot said they rejected the deal and he believed they would win the case at trial, which was scheduled to begin in April.

Prosecutors dismissed the charges against Swartz on Monday.

Ortiz and the lead prosecutor in the case, Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen Heymann, filed a brief written notice in court, saying the case was being dismissed because of Swartz's death. Such filings are routine when a defendant dies before trial.

Swartz's family says his suicide was "the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach."

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/495d344a0d10421e9baa8ee77029cfbd/Article_2013-01-14-Swartz-Prosecution/id-973ac77431d04eab8c64715841b353db

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BEAUTIFUL BRANDS Partner Program: Behind the Hype

Beautiful Brands International (BBI) claims that its franchise development ?partnership? program can turn a small business into a ?franchise leader? and an ?international multi-unit success!?

Franchise & restaurant industry publications regularly publish excited BBI announcements that they have signed a new frozen yogurt, or sushi, or casual dining concept that they are going to make the next franchise sensation(!).

A while back, UnhappyFranchisee.Com began to notice that many of these BBI ?partner brands? (21 so far, by our count) are not heard from again after the initial press release frenzy.

In fact, these BBI partner brands are listed proudly in the Beautiful Brands portfolio list for a while, then seem to be quietly replaced by new brands that are going to be the next franchise sensations.

So we compiled the list (see below) of the small companies that BBI has identified as their partner brands within the past three years.

And we set out to find out how many of the 21 partners are now franchise leaders who have attained international multi-unit success.

Crusty CroissantBBI CEO David Rutkauskas recently stated ?We have major plans to add at least 12 new brands in 2013.?

We wondered: What is the status of the 21 brands who signed up as Beautiful Brands partners (and paid the upfront development fee ? currently $50K we are told)?

We?ve found evidence that more than half have either left the BBI partnership program without selling franchises, or are no longer in business.

Of the 8 currently listed as partners, only two appear to have sold franchises through BBI.

Here?s our best guess as to the status of the 21 partner brands:

  • 2 are current partners being promoted and selling franchises (CherryBerry, SmallCakes).
  • 3 are listed as current partners but haven?t sold any franchises through BBI (Ludger?s, Roxberry, NYPD Pizza).
  • 3 are current partners/newbies in development (Fresco, Hard Knox Pizza, Yard Sheriff).
  • 6 seem to have dropped the BBI partnership and are franchising on their own (Greenz, Sonny Bryan?s, In The Raw Sushi, Sushi Freak, Blazing Onion, Top That! Pizza).
  • 2 seem to have dropped the BBI partnership and are back running single-unit restaurants (Caf? Ole, Caz?s Chowhouse).
  • 5 seem to be out of business altogether (Dixie Cream Donuts, Crust Croissant, The Bread & Butter Bistro, St. Michael?s Alley, Le Beau Rouleau)

Beautiful Brands Partner List (as of 1/13/13) by Date Joined

BBI ?Partner? Brand Partnership Announced Principal (s)/Owner(s) Still BBI Partners?* Notes
1) Dixie Cream Donut Co. 11/21/08 Jason Bond NO Only US unit closed, Middle East partner is suing
2) The Crusty Croissant 3/5/09 Sean & Kristie Savage NO Out of Business
3) Greenz Salads 4/5/09 Casie Caldwell NO Franchising, 3 units, No franchises sold by BBI
4) Caz?s Chowhouse 7/21/09 Jeff & Amy Castleberry NO Single unit, no franchises
5) Sonny Bryan?s BBQ 9/27/09 Brent Harman NO Franchising.? None sold by BBI.
6) Caf? Ole 8/20/09 Candy Dunn & Paula Underwood NO Single unit, no franchise info on website
7) The Bread & Butter Bistro 10/09 (?) ? NO No info could be found
8) St. Michael?s Alley 11/09 (?) ? NO Original SMA rest. is closed
9) In The Raw Sushi 12/14/09 Greg & Tara Hughes NO 4 locations, franchising
10) Le Beau Rouleau Crepes and Croissants 2/10 Sean & Kristie Savage NO TM registered by Crusty Croissant.
11) Blazing Onion Burger Company 4/5/10 David and Lorri Jones NO 5 locations, not franchising yet
12) Top That! Pizza 11/2/10 Jeff and Lori Walderich NO Franchising, 9 locations, none sold by BBI
13) Smallcakes A Cupcakery 1/4/11 Jeff & Brandy Martin YES 8 locations, 6 cobranded locations
14) CherryBerry frozen yogurt 6/22/11 Dallas and Robyn Jones YES 108 locations, 9% closed in 2012
15) Ludger?s Bavarian Cakery 9/7/11 Chris & Allison Dickens YES 1 location, franchising
16) Roxberry Juice Co. 12/1/11 Brad Davis YES Franchising, 8 locations, none added since partnering with BBI
17) Fresco Italian Kitchen 12/13/11 Dean & Jill Bastian YES Prototype to franchise was to open 2012
18) Sushi Freak 2/9/12 Michael Broder & Jenifer Duarte NO Franchising, 1 location, none sold by BBI
19) NYPD Pizza 11/1/12 Paul Russo YES 7 locations still open, 21 or more may have closed in recent years.
20) Hard Knox Pizza 11/11/12 Dean & Jill Bastian YES Franchising, 1 unit, 1st franchise top open Spring, 2013
21) Yard Sheriff 12/13/12 Shannon Watterson*** YES 1 unit, lawn mowing & weeding

* We have put this list together from information compiled from publicly available sources.? We have asked BBI for confirmation or correction, but have not heard back yet.? If you are considering joining the Beautiful Brands partnership program ? or writing about it ? please do you own investigation.? If you know of details we got wrong ? please post a correction below.

** as of 1/13/13

*** Also President of BBI?s PR firm

Also read our posts about:

Beautiful Brands

CherryBerry

Camille?s Sidewalk Cafe

We have contacted Beautiful Brands for verification of the accuracy of this information, and to solicit any statements, reactions, corrections or rebuttals.? So far, they have not responded.

ARE YOU FAMILIAR WITH THE BEAUTIFUL BRANDS PARTNERSHIP PROGRAM OPPORTUNITY OR BBI FRANCHISE OPPORTUNITIES??

PLEASE SHARE A COMMENT BELOW.

Contact UnhappyFranchisee.com

TAGS: Beautiful Brands, Beautiful Brands partners, BBI partners, Beautiful Brands International, David Rutkauskas, franchise consultants, franchise development, franchise development firms, franchise developers, franchise sales companies, Unhappy Franchisee, CherryBerry, CherryBerry Frozen Yogurt, Smallcakes Cupcakery,

The post BEAUTIFUL BRANDS Partner Program: Behind the Hype appeared first on Unhappy Franchisee.

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Insight: How SandRidge Energy's CEO adapted the Chesapeake playbook

(Reuters) - For 17 years, Tom Ward and Aubrey McClendon teamed up to build Chesapeake Energy Corp into the second-largest natural gas producer in the United States.

The two Oklahoma City energy men were a study in contrasts. CEO McClendon was brash and aggressive; company president Ward came across as steady and soft-spoken.

When Ward left in 2006 to start his own natural-gas company a few miles away, however, he borrowed from the Chesapeake playbook. At SandRidge Energy Inc, Ward adopted some of the same idiosyncratic business practices deployed by McClendon.

At Chesapeake, McClendon intertwined his personal financial deals with the company he runs.

Similarly, Ward has melded his own financial interests with those of publicly traded SandRidge more than many of the company's shareholders may know, an examination of court documents, Oklahoma state records and Securities and Exchange Commission filings shows.

Like McClendon, Ward has faced criticism from shareholders and others for running a public company like a private firm, drawing large paychecks and bonuses even during periods when his company struggled.

In 2008, Ward received personal loans from the chairman of Bank of Oklahoma - one of SandRidge's key lenders. He also took the unusual step of opening the company's books for the lender's review of that personal deal. The mixing of personal and corporate roles posed a potential conflict of interest for the CEO, analysts say.

Now, the question is whether Ward will be forced to change his ways as McClendon was earlier this year, when shareholders shook up Chesapeake's board and stripped him of his job as chairman following a series of Reuters reports. On Monday, Chesapeake said it was not awarding McClendon, who remains CEO, a bonus for 2012.

Two large SandRidge shareholders - hedge fund TPG-Axon Capital and investment firm Mount Kellett Capital - have been pressing to replace Ward and the board and to put the company up for sale.

"There is constant intermingling of the personal and the private" between the CEO and SandRidge's business, said Dinakar Singh, founder of TPG-Axon, which owns 6.7 percent of SandRidge.

Greg Dewey, a spokesman for SandRidge, declined to respond to questions from Reuters on Ward's transactions or on any similarities between SandRidge and Chesapeake. But he stressed that "in each case, we have followed our own internal guidelines and we know the (Securities and Exchange Commission) rules very well and have followed those."

In addition to borrowing $75 million from Bank of Oklahoma's chairman, Ward also collected $67 million from SandRidge by selling back his personal interests in a controversial corporate perk: stakes in the company's wells. McClendon, too, had a similar incentive at Chesapeake.

SandRidge has also paid nearly $28 million more to Ward or firms linked to him or his family, according to SEC filings. (SEE FACTBOX)

Those payments are in addition to the more than $116 million Ward has received in compensation as CEO since 2007. Between 2007 and 2011, Ward made more than $7 million more than the two men who served as CEO of Chevron, a company more than 60 times the size of SandRidge by market capitalization. (Compensation data for 2012 is not yet available for Chevron.) Ward's pay included $4.2 million for accounting services related to his personal and family finances.

In each case, SandRidge disclosed the benefits that Ward has drawn, and nothing is illegal about the compensation packages. But some analysts and shareholders question why Ward earns so much, given the company's size and stock price. As natural gas prices plummeted, SandRidge shares fell from a high of $69 in July 2008 to about $7 today.

Some corporate-governance experts don't see a problem. "As long as it's disclosed, I think it's fine," said David Larcker, an accounting professor at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business.

Others say Ward's transactions raise questions about how SandRidge is being run and create the risk he is putting his own interests ahead of the company's.

"The number of related-party transactions (SandRidge) reports is out of proportion to the size of the company," says Paul Hodgson, an independent corporate-governance consultant.

Ward's compensation has drawn the attention of California pension fund CalSTRs, which owns 880,000 SandRidge shares and is in talks with the company over executive pay.

"We believe that compensation at this point is too high relative to the stock performance," said CalSTRS spokesman Ricardo Duran. "Our standard throughout our portfolio is to, wherever possible, link executive compensation to performance. We feel that standard's not being met."

PARALLEL PATHS

Ward and McClendon, who began working together in their 20s, co-founded Chesapeake in 1989 with 10 employees and $50,000 in cash. The two Oklahoma natives were "land men," traveling back roads to lease promising acreage for drilling.

Ward, 53, grew up in the tiny town of Seiling, Oklahoma. He became Chesapeake's operational brain. McClendon, born into the state's wealthy Kerr family, became its financial wizard.

Chesapeake prospered by being first to snap up acreage in emerging oil and gas plays.

For years at Chesapeake, Ward and McClendon enjoyed an unusual corporate incentive. They received up to a 2.5 percent stake in the profits of every well the company drilled, as long as they paid 2.5 percent of the costs.

Chesapeake had disclosed the existence of this perk. But last year, Reuters reported significant facts that Chesapeake hadn't divulged: McClendon had arranged to borrow more than $1 billion to finance his acquisition of these well stakes, used the stakes themselves as collateral, and obtained most of the financing from a company that was also an investor in Chesapeake. In response to the resulting outcry, the company cut short the perk.

Ward left Chesapeake in early 2006 to begin his own firm, buying into a private energy company in Texas. He renamed that company SandRidge Energy and took it public the following year.

At SandRidge, Ward initiated a more-lucrative version of the perk, raising the maximum stake to 3 percent, as disclosed in SEC filings.

A Reuters review of SEC filings and court documents shows Ward's well perk at SandRidge provided a safety net when he faced a severe personal financial crunch.

By 2008, Ward had borrowed heavily from Wachovia and other lenders. He had pledged holdings of SandRidge stock as collateral for those loans. When the global financial crisis struck, those shares plunged in value. According to documents filed in 2010 shareholder lawsuit against SandRidge, Ward's lenders issued a so-called margin call, which typically requires a borrower to put up more cash or face the liquidation of his collateral.

In October 2008, Ward raised cash by selling his stakes in SandRidge wells back to the company for $67 million, according to SEC filings. A Reuters analysis of costs incurred by Ward between 2006 and 2008 for the well program show he made an estimated $19 million on the deal.

The payout to the CEO came at a time when SandRidge was itself in financial distress. By the end of 2008, the company had just $636,000 in cash on hand, according to the company's annual report.

KAISER TO THE RESCUE

Despite the big payout, Ward wasn't out of the woods. The same month, he did another deal that potentially mingled his personal and corporate interests, this time with George Kaiser, chairman and majority shareholder of BOK Financial, parent company of Bank of Oklahoma.

Kaiser's Bank of Oklahoma has been a lender to SandRidge and was recently among a group that entered into a $1.75 billion credit agreement with the energy company, according to an SEC filing.

Kaiser did not respond to several requests for comment for this story.

In a suit filed in federal court in Oklahoma in December 2010, a SandRidge shareholder alleged that Ward improperly profited from a series of transactions with Kaiser.

Those transactions, Ward's attorneys wrote in response to the suit, came at a time when the SandRidge chief "was facing unexpected economic difficulties." This crunch, they wrote, involved "an upcoming repayment obligation on a credit line with Wachovia Bank and other creditors that was secured, in part, by Mr. Ward's SandRidge stock."

At the time, Ward had pledged at least 25 million SandRidge shares as collateral for a personal credit line from Wachovia and others, according to an SEC filing. The filing did not say how large the loan was, or what it was needed for. But the SandRidge shares were worth about $45 apiece, or some $1.1 billion in total when he pledged them to the banks in August 2008. By late October, the shares had fallen to less than $10, or around $240 million in total.

As the shares plunged in value, the lenders called on Ward to post more collateral. That same October, he turned to Kaiser, borrowing $75 million from him and a charitable trust Kaiser controlled. The deal gave Kaiser warrants granting him the right to buy a substantial interest in SandRidge, using shares then owned by Ward, according to an SEC filing.

SandRidge stock continued to fall between October and December 2008. Ward realized he would need to renegotiate the terms of the $75 million loan from Kaiser, according to a court document filed by Ward's attorneys.

The revised deal, renegotiated on Christmas Eve in Tulsa, was complex. It included the payment to Kaiser of 8.9 million SandRidge shares, worth some $50 million at the time, and a warrant giving Kaiser the right to buy more shares in the future.

It also came with an unusual condition. Ward agreed to open SandRidge's financial records to Kaiser, to "facilitate (Kaiser's) due diligence investigation of the issuer for a limited period of time following the sale," according to the deal's agreement.

James Cox, a law professor at Duke University, said he has never come across another situation in which a public company's books and records were opened as part of a private deal.

"Access is being provided for no apparent corporate purpose," Cox said.

The shareholder and SandRidge agreed to dismiss the suit on November 9, 2012, court documents show. The company later disclosed that Ward agreed the same day to pay SandRidge $5 million to settle a lawsuit. It declined to say whether the payment was related to the Kaiser suit.

Lingering anger over SandRidge's big 2008 payout to Ward is one reason some shareholders say they have recently called for the CEO's ouster.

Ward and SandRidge are fighting back. On November 19, the company's board unanimously approved resolutions that make it more difficult for the company to be taken over.

Now, hedge fund TPG-Axon is soliciting support from other shareholders to replace the board. No deadline has been set for that solicitation. TPG-Axon hasn't said how much support it has garnered so far.

(Reporting by Michael Erman in New York, Anna Driver in Houston and Brian Grow in Atlanta; Editing by Patricia Kranz and Blake Morrison)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-sandridge-energys-ceo-adapted-chesapeake-playbook-100332103--finance.html

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UPS abandons $6.9 billion deal for TNT Express

FILE - In this Feb. 21, 2012 file photo a TNT delivery truck is seen behind a closed gate in Hoofddorp, near Amsterdam, Netherlands. United Parcel Service Inc. has ditched its euro5.2 billion (US$6.9 billion) takeover of TNT Express NV after learning that European regulators would reject the deal in its current form. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 21, 2012 file photo a TNT delivery truck is seen behind a closed gate in Hoofddorp, near Amsterdam, Netherlands. United Parcel Service Inc. has ditched its euro5.2 billion (US$6.9 billion) takeover of TNT Express NV after learning that European regulators would reject the deal in its current form. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 21, 2012 file photo a TNT employee operates a delivery truck in Hoofddorp, near Amsterdam, Netherlands. United Parcel Service Inc. has ditched its euro5.2 billion (US$6.9 billion) takeover of TNT Express NV after learning that European regulators would reject the deal in its current form. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

FILE - In this March 19, 2012 file photo Scott Davis, CEO of UPS, elaborates on the planned merger between UPS and TNT Express during a press conference in Amsterdam. United Parcel Service Inc. has ditched its euro5.2 billion (US$ 6.9 billion) takeover of TNT Express NV after learning that European regulators would reject the deal in its current form. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, FILE)

FILE - In this March 19, 2012 file photo Scott Davis, CEO of UPS, elaborates on the planned merger between UPS and TNT Express during a press conference in Amsterdam. United Parcel Service Inc. has ditched its euro5.2 billion (US$ 6.9 billion) takeover of TNT Express NV after learning that European regulators would reject the deal in its current form. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 21, 2012 file photo a TNT truck leaves the main depot in Hoofddorp, near Amsterdam, Netherlands. United Parcel Service Inc. has ditched its euro5.2 billion (US$6.9 billion) takeover of TNT Express NV after learning that European regulators would reject the deal in its current form. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

UPS scrapped plans to grow in Europe through the acquisition of Dutch delivery company TNT Express because European regulators were getting ready to reject the $6.9 billion deal.

It would have been the largest acquisition in UPS history.

UPS had offered in March to buy TNT, Europe's second-largest delivery company, to better compete with Europe's largest, Deutsche Post's DHL. Regulators objected, saying the deal would reduce competition in the market for express delivery of small packages in Europe. UPS said Monday that it had proposed "tangible remedies," but after meeting with regulators on Jan. 11, the Atlanta company told TNT it saw no prospect of the deal being approved.

UPS CEO Scott Davis said in a statement Monday that he was "extremely disappointed" with the stance taken by regulators. Shares of United Parcel Service Inc., the world's largest package delivery company, rose 1.7 percent to close at $79.24 Monday.

Analysts said UPS could still pursue smaller acquisitions and also might boost its dividend or take some other action to reward shareholders.

TNT shares plunged in Europe. Although it will receive a $265.5 million (?200 million) breakup fee from UPS, TNT faces an uncertain future on its own. The 42 percent drop in its share price wiped off nearly ?2 billion from its market value.

The European Commission, which would not comment, must publish its review of the deal by Feb. 5.

The Commission reviews major corporate mergers and acquisitions to ensure they do not hurt fair competition in the market. It has the power to block deals or to demand concessions, such as the sale of business parts, to safeguard market balance.

UPS had earmarked $5 billion in cash for the purchase of TNT. Sterne Agee analyst Jeffrey Kauffman said he expected the company to now use some of that for dividends or share buybacks. He said UPS could also pursue smaller acquisitions, especially in Asia.

Jim Corridore, equity analyst for S&P Capital IQ, said UPS can still "build a stronger network in Europe through smaller acquisitions and internal growth."

Before UPS jumped in, some analysts thought rival FedEx Corp. might make an offer for TNT, but FedEx executives said in March they had no plans to do so.

U.S. analysts don't expect FedEx to reconsider in the near-term because it's in the midst of a major restructuring of its Express air cargo service.

FedEx declined to comment. Its shares rose $1.02 to close at $98.42.

__

Koenig reported from Dallas. Sterling reported from Amsterdam.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-01-14-UPS-Europe/id-c252b4cbc8b443d1b1a073a0ec3f590a

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5 Financial Situations Where Bankruptcy Makes Sense | AllmandLaw

January 14th, 2013 by Reed Allmand

Bankruptcy

Deciding to file bankruptcy can be confusing.? People often choose not to file because of misleading information, lack of understanding and fear of not knowing what will happen in the future.? These factors have been known to make financial situations even worse since debtors put off the filing process.? Upon gaining a better understanding of how the process can improve their finances, many wish they had filed sooner.? So when does it make sense to file bankruptcy? Consulting with a bankruptcy attorney or financial expert can shed light on whether the decision to file is the best solution.? If you find yourself in any of the following situations, filing might make sense.

  1. Medical debt from illness or injury:? While there are options in negotiating payment arrangements, medical facilities have been known to pursue legal action in collecting unpaid medical bills including filing a lawsuit or garnishing wages.
  2. Pending foreclosure:?Chapter 7 bankruptcy may temporarily halt a foreclosure or pending sale, giving homeowners more time to develop a solution.? Chapter 13 bankruptcy can help homeowners get caught up on defaulted mortgage payments through a repayment plan.
  3. Mounting consumer debt:? Consumers struggling to make payments on financial obligations due to becoming ill, income reduction or exhausted other financial options may see filing as a way to gain control of their finances, while preventing the need to liquidate retirement funds.
  4. Divorce debts: ?Bankruptcy can be a solution when a spouse may not be able to afford repaying debt upon divorce.? Chapter 13 may help create a manageable repayment plan if debt cannot be discharged under Chapter 7.
  5. Job loss or changes in income:? Even those who have found a new job can still find it difficult to get caught up on payments such as a vehicle or home loan.

?

Reference:?http://www.bankrate.com/finance/debt/5-money-jams-bankruptcy-can-fix-1.aspx

About Reed Allmand

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Allmand's vision is rooted in his own financially precarious childhood in Abilene "My father always had difficulty holding a job and supporting our family, so after my parents divorced when I was 12, my sister and I got jobs to help make ends meet," he recalls. "I remember what it felt like as a child to worry that our car would be repossessed or home foreclosed on."

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