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Men Not Working, and Not Wanting Just Any Job

Alan Beggerow has stopped looking for work. Laid off as a steelworker at 48, he taught math for a while at a community college. But when that ended, he could not find a job that, in his view, was neither demeaning nor underpaid.

So instead of heading to work, Mr. Beggerow, now 53, fills his days with diversions: playing the piano, reading histories and biographies, writing unpublished Western potboilers in the Louis L’Amour style — all activities once relegated to spare time. He often stays up late and sleeps until 11 a.m.

“I have come to realize that my free time is worth a lot to me,” he said. To make ends meet, he has tapped the equity in his home through a $30,000 second mortgage, and he is drawing down the family’s savings, at the rate of $7,500 a year. About $60,000 is left. His wife’s income helps them scrape by. “If things really get tight,” Mr. Beggerow said, “I might have to take a low-wage job, but I don’t want to do that.”

By LOUIS UCHITELLE and DAVID LEONHARDT

Full Story: http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/31/business/31men.html?ei=5094&en=f82d5d3f9f822e4f&hp=&ex=1154404800&adxnnl=1&partner=homepage&adxnnlx=1154323778-JlK/6zlgvYzsmy41YdpH9w

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