Posts Tagged ‘Professional’

Professional Women of Orange County, NY Learned Small Business Strategies at NAPW Orange County Chapter Event in February

Thursday, February 28th, 2013


Garden City, NY (PRWEB) February 26, 2013

Members and guests of the NAPW Orange County, NY Local Chapter gathered on February 21st for a professional networking meeting at Cosimos Brick Oven Pizza, 620 Route 211 East, Middletown.

The event was the Chapters official launch meeting and featured guest speaker Myriam Bouchard from the Small Business Development Center that serves the mid-Hudson region. The expert shared her smart strategies for small businesses with the group of professional women.

The launch meeting was originally planned for January but the snow kept everyone from getting together, said NAPW Orange County Local Chapter President Aleen Hosdaghian.

But our February meeting was a great launch that kick started the year and got the Orange County Chapter off to a great start!

The Chapter President opened the meeting with a welcoming introduction and an overview of NAPW. She discussed the goals of the Orange County Chapter, which is to Learn, Network, and Grow. She then turned the meeting over to the speaker, Myriam Bouchard.

Little did we know it was a jazz night at the restaurant! said the President. It added an interesting mix to our launch meeting to have a background jazz band however. With the smooth beats in the background, we learned about handling small businesses from Myriam.

Attendees nibbled on fresh brick oven pizza while listening to how to handle time in a world where people are constantly multitasking.

In her presentation Everything you Need to Know About Your Small Business, Myriam offered attendees a wealth of information, including providing small business resources such as Federal and New York State requirements for small businesses, Aleen said. She shared success stories with the group of professional women and distributed numerous printed materials that were filled with helpful information.

Myriam spoke about how to manage your accounting, and reviewed the Six Cs of Credit:

1.

Baseball Executive’s $1 Million Cent Authenticated, Certified by Professional Coin Grading Service Division of Collectors Universe

Thursday, September 20th, 2012


Santa Ana, California (PRWEB) September 20, 2012

A $ 1 million United States penny recently acquired by a major league baseball team executive has been certified genuine by the world leader in rare coin authentication and grading, Professional Coin Grading Service (http://www.PCGS.com), a division of Collectors Universe, Inc. (NASDAQ: CLCT).

Coin collector Bob R. Simpson, co-chairman of the Texas Rangers baseball club, paid $ 1 million for the finest of only four known 1943-dated Lincoln cents mistakenly struck in the wrong metal at the San Francisco Mint. Cents were supposed to be of zinc-coated steel that year, and those grey-colored 1943 cents are quite common; however, a few pennies were erroneously made of bronze, the metal composition from the previous year.

Simpson purchased the rare 1943-S bronze cent from Legend Numismatics (http://www.LegendCoin.com) of Lincroft, New Jersey after it was successfully acquired by Legend after “determined negotiations” with an East Coast dealer representing the seller who is described only as “a long-time collector,” according to Legend President Laura Sperber.

“The coin was certified PCGS Secure Plus Mint State 62 with brown when it was submitted to us during the recent September 2012 Long Beach Coin, Stamp & Sports Collectibles Expo (http://www.LongBeachExpo.com),” said PCGS President Don Willis. ” The Simpson Collection now contains the finest known bronze cent from each mint, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Denver, including the unique 1943-D bronze cent that PCGS certified after Legend acquired and sold to him for a record $ 1.7 million in 2010.”

PCGS grades coins on a scale of 1 to 70. A coin’s grade, state of preservation, often has a direct relationship to its marketplace value.

When the 1943-S bronze cent was certified genuine by PCGS experts at the Long Beach Expo, it was placed in one of the company’s sturdy transparent holders made of inert materials and sealed with a tamper-evident method that inhibits atmosphere gases and contaminants that might harm coins. Legend President Sperber then personally delivered the coin to Simpson at his Fort Worth, Texas office.

“Mr. Simpson said, ‘It’s a beautiful coin.’ As he held it he reminisced about the 1943 ‘copper’ Lincoln cent he found in change when he was a youngster, but that turned out to be a fake,” said Sperber.

“The United States Mint switched from making cents in bronze to zinc-coated steel in 1943 because copper was a strategic metal needed during World War II. By error, some bronze planchets made it into the hoppers at the Philadelphia, San Francisco and Denver Mints, were struck and released into circulation. These have become the most famous and valuable of all off-metal coin errors,” explained Willis.

In 1944, a few Lincoln cents were mistakenly struck in zinc-coated steel even though the mint resumed cent production using copper alloy. Simpson also owns the finest collection of 1944 cents struck in the previous year’s metal composition.

“Mr. Simpson is thrilled and proud to own the absolute finest set of bronze 1943 and zinc-coated steel 1944 Lincoln cents. He ranks this as one of the highlights of his extraordinary coin collection, and he wants to eventually display the upgraded set at a major coin show. Even though there’s a dollar value for what we paid for the coins in the set, Mr. Simpson and I agree it’s priceless because it can not be duplicated,” said Sperber.

“It’s been a pleasure for PCGS to play a small part in the creation of this unsurpassable set. The finest collections belong in PCGS holders,” said PCGS President Wills.

Information and photos about this all-time finest collection of its kind can be found online in the PCGS Set RegistrySM under the category Lincoln Cents Off-Metal Strikes, Circulation Strikes 1943 – 1944 (http://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistry/alltimeset.aspx?s=80440).

Since its founding in 1986, Professional Coin Grading Service experts have certified over 24 million coins with a total market value of over $ 26 billion. PCGS (http://www.PCGS.com) represents the industry standard in third-party certification. The PCGS Set Registry (http://www.PCGS.com/setregistry) was established in 2001 and now hosts over 58,000 sets.

For additional information about PCGS and its services, visit http://www.PCGS.com or call PCGS Customer Service at (800) 447-8848.