20594007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- Ralph Shaffer.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 20594008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Daffynition@@@@1@1@@oe@2-2-2013 20594009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Tithing: Obedience to one-tenth Commandment.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 20594010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@-- Len Elliott.@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 20595001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Wives May Not Benefit When Men Do Chores@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 20595002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@WHEN HUSBANDS take on more housework, they tend to substitute for chores done by the kids rather than by the wife.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 20595003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Rand Corp. researchers Linda Waite and Frances Goldscheider analyzed a large sample of married women with at least one child at home between the ages of six and 18.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 20595004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The women indicated which family member usually did various household chores and the approximate share each did.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 20595005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Not unexpectedly, wives, whether working or non-working, did by far the most -- about 80% of the shopping, laundry and cooking, and about two-thirds of housecleaning, washing dishes, child care and family paper work.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 20595006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Only for yardwork and home maintenance did women do less than half.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 20595007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the researchers found that while children's household tasks eased the mother's burden appreciably, the husband's helping hand "appears to lighten the children's load almost on a one-for-one basis and to reduce the wife's responsibility only modestly."@@@@1@37@@oe@2-2-2013 20595008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@This pattern was particularly evident among more highly educated couples.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 20595009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In these families, husbands took on 80% more chores than in couples with only grammar school education.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 20595010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But the kids with highly educated parents did 68% less housework than those in less-educated families.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20595011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"It is clear," Ms. Waite says, "that most of the effect of increasing education has been to shift who is helping the wife/mother.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 20595012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Her share decreases, but only slightly."@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 20595013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Nursing Home Patients Apt to Be Private Payers@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 20595014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@FAR FEWER elderly nursing home residents bankrupt themselves than was previously believed, two recent studies declare.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20595015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@State governments place very low ceilings on how much property people may own or how much income they may keep if they want welfare help on medical bills.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 20595016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Conventional wisdom has long held that anywhere from one-fourth to one-half of all elderly long-term care patients are obliged to spend themselves into poverty before qualifying for Medicaid assistance.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 20595017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But separate reports from Joshua Weiner and Denise Spence of the Brookings Institution and Korbin Liu of the Urban Institute find that "a surprisingly small proportion" -- only about 10% -- of residents start out as private payers but "spend down" to Medicaid levels in a single nursing home stay before they die or are discharged.@@@@1@56@@oe@2-2-2013 20595018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@(Another one-third are already on Medicaid when they enter the nursing homes, a considerably higher proportion than the analysts anticipated.)@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 20595019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But a remarkably high percentage -- over half -- are private payers throughout their stay, even a fairly lengthy one.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 20595020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@About one-third pay out of their own pockets, while the rest are covered throughout by Medicare, private insurers or the Veterans Administration.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 20595021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Both reports are based on several thousand patients sampled in a 1985 nationwide government survey.@@@@1@15@@oe@2-2-2013 20595022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Brookings and Urban Institute authors caution, however, that most nursing home stays are of comparatively short duration, and reaching the Medicaid level is more likely with an unusually long stay or repeated stays.@@@@1@34@@oe@2-2-2013 20595023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, they note, those who manage to pay their own way often do so only by selling their homes, using up life savings or drawing heavily on children and other relatives.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 20595024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Reagan Era Young Hold Liberal Views@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 20595025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@THE REAGAN generation young men and women reaching political maturity during Ronald Reagan's presidency -- are firmly liberal on race and gender, according to NORC, the social science research center at the University of Chicago.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 20595026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Many political analysts have speculated that the Reagan years would produce a staunchly conservative younger generation.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20595027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@NORC's most recent opinion surveys find the youngest adults indeed somewhat more pro-Reagan and pro-Republican than other adults.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20595028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But, says chief investigator Tom Smith, this "does not translate into support for conservatism in general or into conservative positions on feminist and civil rights issues."@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 20595029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Answers to a dozen questions in the 1986, 1987, 1988 and 1989 national surveys reveal that men and women in the 18 to 24 age bracket are considerably more liberal on race and gender than were the 18 to 24 year olds in NORC's polling in the early 1970s and early 1980s.@@@@1@52@@oe@2-2-2013 20595030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They were also as liberal or more liberal than any other age group in the 1986 through 1989 surveys.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20595031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For example, 66% of the 18 to 24 year olds in the four latest surveys favored an "open housing" law prohibiting homeowners from refusing on racial grounds to sell to prospective buyers.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 20595032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@That compares with 58% of the similar age group in the 1980 through 1982 surveys and 55% in the 1972 through 1975 surveys.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 20595033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Asked whether they agreed or disagreed with the claim that men are emotionally better suited to politics than women, 70% of the Reagan generation disagreed, compared with under 60% of younger men and women in the earlier years.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 20595034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Odds and Ends@@@@1@3@@oe@2-2-2013 20595035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@SEPARATED and divorced men and women are far more likely to be smokers than married persons, the Centers for Disease Control discovers. . . .@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 20595036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Graduate students are taking longer than ever to get their doctor of philosophy degrees, the National Research Council says.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20595037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It estimates the time between college graduation and the awarding of a Ph. D. has lengthened by 30% over the past 20 years, with the average gap now ranging from about 7.4 years in the physical sciences to 16.2 years in education.@@@@1@42@@oe@2-2-2013 20596001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@October was an edgy month for the practitioners of glasnost, the official Soviet policy of allowing more candor from the nation's media.@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 20596002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@For one of the superstars of glasnost, Vitaly Korotich, editor of the trail-blazing weekly Ogonyok, Friday, Oct. 20 was a somersaulting day that turned from tension to elation.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 20596003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He had been summoned to the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party, after he finished his lunch at the Savoy Hotel, an unlikely prelude to a bureaucratic brow-beating: Eight-foot-tall Rubenesquely naked ladies float on their canvases toward a ceiling teeming with cherubs, all surrounded by gilt laid on with a pastry chef's trowel and supported by marble corinthian columns whose capitals are fluting fountains of gold.@@@@1@67@@oe@2-2-2013 20596004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Why had Mr. Korotich been called?@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 20596005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I told my driver," he said, "that he was taking my butt to the Central Committee so they can . . ." whack, whack, whack his hand made vigorous spanking gestures on his left palm. "@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 20596006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They feel the need from time to time to `educate' me."@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20596007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And indeed, as he later reported, that was the import of the meeting.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 20596008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Anxious allies of President Mikhail Gorbachev are cautioning media leaders to take it easy, to be careful not to do anything that could be used by Mr. Gorbachev's opponents.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 20596009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The government is nervous.@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 20596010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@According to Mr. Korotich, who was present, Mr. Gorbachev's publicized tongue-lashing of the press on Oct. 13 was more of a plea: "Be careful boys; use good judgment.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 20596011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@We're standing in gasoline, so don't smoke!"@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 20596012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@U.S. and northern European diplomats confirm Mr. Korotich's assessment that glasnost is in no immediate danger.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20596013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In fact, a very high-ranking Soviet official told an American official at a diplomatic dinner that no change in the policy was contemplated.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 20596014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The day after that conversation at the residence of the U.S. ambassador, the Brezhnevite editor of Pravda, Victor Afnasjev, was replaced by a college classmate of Mr. Gorbachev's.@@@@1@28@@oe@2-2-2013 20596015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Brezhnevite holdovers have more to fear from Mr. Gorbachev than the verbal spanking he gave to the press.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20596016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At the end of the very week in which Mr. Korotich was called to the Central Committee, Ogonyok was again demonstrating its independence by printing a poll that showed that 35% of the Soviet population, a plurality, believed that Mr. Gorbachev's economic reforms, perestroika, would result in only insignificant change.@@@@1@50@@oe@2-2-2013 20596017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A good measurement of the popularity of ice-breaker journals like Ogonyok is circulation.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 20596018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@When Mr. Korotich took it over in 1986, it sold 250,000 copies; today it sells 3.4 million.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 20596019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Pravda, meanwhile, has retained only 57% of its 1986 readership.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 20596020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Glasnost has made celebrities of men like Mr. Korotich.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 20596021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Prevented by the Communist Party from getting on its slate of nominees for the new Supreme Soviet, he stood as an independent candidate for Congress from his native Ukraine and won with 84% of the vote.@@@@1@36@@oe@2-2-2013 20596022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The same evening that he was summoned for a warning from the Party, he was cheered by thousands of his supporters at a rally of what can only be called the Korotich party.@@@@1@33@@oe@2-2-2013 20596023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But as astounding as the changes that have already occurred are, there is a fragility to glasnost.@@@@1@17@@oe@2-2-2013 20596024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Censorship isn't a Marxist invention.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 20596025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The czars were no civil libertarians.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 20596026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@As late as the 1890s, the Russian government prevented any coverage of famines.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013 20596027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It even directed newspapers not to publish anything that might stain the honor of the Turkish sultan's wives.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20596028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So glasnost is not a value woven with steel threads into the fabric of Russian society.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20596029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is an admirable public relations program initiated by a single political leader during a four-year blink of history.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20596030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is public relations of the highest sophistication, that recognizes that credibility is enhanced by honesty -- up to a point.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 20596031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@What is that point?@@@@1@4@@oe@2-2-2013 20596032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Will Ogonyok begin a series of reports analyzing the failures of perestroika?@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 20596033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I'd be destroying myself," replies Mr. Korotich, who then asks, "What would that accomplish?@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 20596034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@" His answer reveals his vulnerability -- it also draws the line that Soviet society must cross to enter the normal dialogue of Western culture.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 20596035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@It is the line beyond which the press can report not only on the bankruptcy of factories but on the failures of even admirable leaders.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 20596036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Ayers is editor and publisher of the Anniston, Ala., Star.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20597001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A state trial judge in Illinois gave preliminary approval to a proposed settlement of a suit against a Bank of New York Co. unit, Irving Trust Co., over the interest rates on Irving's former One Wall Street Account money-market deposit accounts.@@@@1@41@@oe@2-2-2013 20597002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Judge Albert Green, in Cook County Circuit Court in Chicago, also recognized the suit, filed last May by Robert and Cynthia Langendorf, as a class action covering thousands of Irving customers.@@@@1@31@@oe@2-2-2013 20597003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The plaintiffs accused Irving of paying less interest than promised in a marketing brochure.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 20597004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Irving maintained -- and still does -- that its actions were proper under its account agreements with customers.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20597005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Under the proposed settlement, customers with valid claims -- to be submitted by Dec. 15 -- will receive "valuable bank services," such as credit cards with reduced finance charges, for two years.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 20597006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Larry Drury, attorney for the plaintiffs, valued the settlement at between $6 million and $8 million.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20597007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A Bank of New York spokesman in Manhattan, Owen Brady, said, "That's the maximum, outside figure.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20598001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Federal Reserve critics used to complain of "stop and go" monetary policies.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 20598002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@They claimed that the Fed would first give a green light to the economy by making credit readily available and then turn on the red and bring growth to a screeching halt.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 20598003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But under Alan Greenspan that has changed.@@@@1@7@@oe@2-2-2013 20598004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A supremely cautious man, the Fed chairman is forever blinking yellow.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20598005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Indeed, his caution has become legendary within the government.@@@@1@9@@oe@2-2-2013 20598006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@He fusses endlessly over economic statistics, dissecting them in dozens of ways, probing for hours in search of potential problems.@@@@1@20@@oe@2-2-2013 20598007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@After thoroughly digesting reams of information, he often concludes that more data are needed, and when he finally decides to act, his movements sometimes seem excrutiatingly small.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 20598008@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Such caution was evident after the recent Friday-the-13th stock market plunge.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20598009@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Some Bush administration officials urged Mr. Greenspan to make an immediate public announcement of his plans to provide ample credit to the markets.@@@@1@23@@oe@2-2-2013 20598010@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But he refused, claiming that he wanted to see what happened Monday morning before making any public statement.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20598011@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Greenspan's decision to keep quiet also prompted a near-mutiny within the Fed's ranks.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 20598012@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A "senior Fed official" spoke on Saturday after the market swoon to both the Washington Post and the New York Times, saying the Fed was prepared to provide as much credit as the markets needed.@@@@1@35@@oe@2-2-2013 20598013@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The statement angered Chairman Greenspan, but it was greeted with applause by the Bush administration and the financial markets.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20598014@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And, while the mutinous Fed member hasn't gone public, some Fed governors, most notably Vice Chairman Manuel Johnson, are known to have disagreed with the chairman's decision to remain silent.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 20598015@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Ironically, the anonymous official's comments have earned some plaudits for Mr. Greenspan, who is mistakenly seen as the source.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20598016@unknown@formal@none@1@S@At a hearing last week, Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut told Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady that "Chairman Greenspan's" announcement over the Oct. 13 weekend was a "very important statement."@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 20598017@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Mr. Brady hesitantly replied that he wasn't sure whether Mr. Greenspan "made a statement himself, or whether that was a newspaper report."@@@@1@22@@oe@2-2-2013 20598018@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Fed chairman's caution was apparent again on the Monday morning after the market's plunge, when the central bank took only modest steps to aid the markets.@@@@1@27@@oe@2-2-2013 20598019@unknown@formal@none@1@S@A surprisingly small amount of reserves was added to the banking system.@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 20598020@unknown@formal@none@1@S@And, by the end of that week, the key federal funds interest rate, which is largely controlled by the Fed, had settled at 8.75%, barely changed from the level of just under 9% that prevailed the previous week.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 20598021@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Bush administration officials appear increasingly concerned that Mr. Greenspan is cautious to a fault.@@@@1@14@@oe@2-2-2013 20598022@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Signs of growing weakness in the economy, paired with indications that inflation is staying well under control, have caused them to wonder why the Fed chairman is so grudging in reducing rates.@@@@1@32@@oe@2-2-2013 20598023@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Those concerns aren't expressed in public.@@@@1@6@@oe@2-2-2013 20598024@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In fact, the administration and the Fed have been going out of their way in the past two weeks to dispel any impression that they are at odds, fearing stories about an administration-Fed split added to the stock market's jitters.@@@@1@40@@oe@2-2-2013 20598025@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Still, the split is there.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 20598026@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The administration's concerns are understandable.@@@@1@5@@oe@2-2-2013 20598027@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The economy is showing signs of weakness, particularly among manufacturers.@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 20598028@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Exports, which played a key role in fueling growth over the last two years, seem to have stalled.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20598029@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Factory payrolls and production fell in September, and the auto industry and housing are in a severe crunch.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20598030@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But Mr. Greenspan remains reluctant to loosen policy, partly because he faces a phalanx of presidents of regional Fed banks who oppose credit easing.@@@@1@24@@oe@2-2-2013 20598031@unknown@formal@none@1@S@In addition, the chairman has a wary eye aimed a year or two down the road.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20598032@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Inflation may be stable at the moment, running at about 4.5%.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20598033@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But if the Fed eases too soon, Mr. Greenspan fears, prices may begin to accelerate again next year.@@@@1@18@@oe@2-2-2013 20598034@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Moreover, if the Fed holds tight, it may be able gradually to reduce inflation, moving toward the zero-inflation goal that the Fed chairman embraced in testimony to Congress last week.@@@@1@30@@oe@2-2-2013 20598035@unknown@formal@none@1@S@So far, Mr. Greenspan's cautious approach to policy has served both him and the nation well.@@@@1@16@@oe@2-2-2013 20598036@unknown@formal@none@1@S@His hand on the monetary tiller seems one reason why the economy next month seems highly likely to begin an unprecedented eighth year of peacetime growth without a recession.@@@@1@29@@oe@2-2-2013 20598037@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"We've gotten through two stock market crashes, and we've gone through an election without any major problems," says David Hale, an economist of Kemper Financial Services.@@@@1@26@@oe@2-2-2013 20598038@unknown@formal@none@1@S@"I think you have to give Greenspan a good rating."@@@@1@10@@oe@2-2-2013 20598039@unknown@formal@none@1@S@But such caution is no guarantee against mistakes.@@@@1@8@@oe@2-2-2013 20598040@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The Fed's reluctance to ease credit now could be laying the groundwork for a new recession, perhaps starting early next year.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 20598041@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If that happens, Chairman Greenspan could well become an open target.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20598042@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Already, Congress is toying with legislation to curb the Fed's independence.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20598043@unknown@formal@none@1@S@If the economy turns down, such proposals could gain strong momentum.@@@@1@11@@oe@2-2-2013 20599001@unknown@formal@none@1@S@The following issues were recently filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission:@@@@1@12@@oe@2-2-2013 20599002@unknown@formal@none@1@S@ECI Environmental Inc., initial offering of 1.1 million shares, of which ECI will sell 990,000 and co-founders will sell 110,000 shares, via Oppenheimer & Co.@@@@1@25@@oe@2-2-2013 20599003@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Fastenal Co., proposed offering of 400,000 common shares by holders, via Robert W. Baird & Co. and William Blair & Co.@@@@1@21@@oe@2-2-2013 20599004@unknown@formal@none@1@S@First Capital Holdings Corp., proposed offering of $275 million of floating rate senior notes, via Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20599005@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Industrial Funding Corp., initial offering of common stock, via Alex. Brown & Sons Inc. and Piper Jaffray & Hopwood.@@@@1@19@@oe@2-2-2013 20599006@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Parametric Technology Corp., initial offering of 1.7 million common shares, of which 1,365,226 shares will be sold by the company and 334,774 shares by holders, via Alex Brown & Sons, Hambrecht & Quist and Wessels, Arnold & Henderson.@@@@1@38@@oe@2-2-2013 20599007@unknown@formal@none@1@S@Union Camp Corp., shelf offering of up to $250 million of debt securities.@@@@1@13@@oe@2-2-2013