3,658 research outputs found

    Evaluation of a vertical-scale, fixed-index instrument display panel for the X-15 airplane

    Get PDF
    Analog simulation to compare pilot performance in using operational X-15 instrument panel, and vertical scale, fixed index instrument display pane

    Fast Determination of Soil Behavior in the Capillary Zone Using Simple Laboratory Tests

    Get PDF
    INE/AUTC 13.1

    “Save the Land from Uncle Sam”: Using Life Insurance Premium Financing in Estate Planning

    Get PDF
    T he federal estate tax can be particularly destructive to estates where there is a desire to pass on legacy holdings to succeeding generations. The estate lacks adequate cash for families to pay the resulting taxes. Therefore, life insurance premium financing may help families pay the estate taxes. An estate planning strategy utilizes life-insurance-premium financing that generates a ready cash pool to pay estate taxes is not universally applicable, but it can provide a cost-effective option for legacy preservation. Life insurance is often used as part of an estate plan to generate and maintain separate cash reserves to pay death taxes; however, life insurance proceeds may be included in the decedent\u27s estate when calculating estate tax liabilities. The Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust is normally used as an estate planning tool when life insurance coverage is an option; however, difficulties can arise so legal and tax professionals should be well-schooled in the details of the supporting life insurance products, particularly with respect to how the cash value growth of the policy directly affects the end results of the estate plan. Another option is premium financing, which uses loans to help pay the premiums on life insurance policies. While the benefits of premium financing are many, it is the individual landowner who must ultimately weigh the risks and rewards of each financing option and decide whether the rewards tip the scales in favor of this estate planning strategy

    Then You Wink The Other Eye

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/6671/thumbnail.jp

    Dermal and epidermal allergy

    Get PDF

    Roanoke\u27s Collective Public Health Activities

    Get PDF
    Roanoke is addressing problems that confront many small and medium sized cities in the U.S., especially disparities in health and life expectancy between neighborhoods. These disparities are often legacies of decades of racial and economic segregation, resulting in low-income or disinvested communities. Typically, such neighborhoods have fewer parks, higher vacancy rates and less stable affordable housing stock, inadequate public transit systems, too few clinics, too many fast food restaurants and insufficient access to high quality schools. In Roanoke these are the northwest and southeast quadrants, both federally designated Medically Underserved Areas, and characterized by a large proportion of the city’s low-income individuals and families who may be uninsured, underinsured and/or Medicaid recipients
    corecore