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entify investment targets, work with boards and build alliances with other investors, according to the newspaper. The firm invests in 10 to 12 public companies for an average of three to five years, usually taking stakes of between 5% and 15% and working closely with management and boards. The job will allow Myners, who previously was chairman of Gartmore Group, to put into practice his view that both companies and investors benefit when institutional shareholders are more involvHeat stalwart Wade gelling sooner than anticipated. Riley, who won four rings as coach of the "Showtime" Los Angeles Lakers featuring Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul Jabbar, and made the New York Knicks a force with Patrick Ewing, was hired away from the Knicks 16 years ago by new Heat owner Micky Arison, chairman of Carnival cruise lines. Riley spurred an immediate Miami turnaround. Taking over a team that had gone 32-50, Riley led them to a 42-40 mark and a sterling 61-21 record the season after and a trip to the 1997 Eastern Conference finals. He had six winning seasons in a row before two losing campaigns led him to leave the coaching to Stan Van Gundy while he focused on rebuilding as team president. That team struggled to get in gear, and after an 11-10 start in 2006, team president Riley installed himself as coach in place of Van Gundy and steered them to the finals. Dallas and 7-foot German jump shooter Dirk Nowitzki took a 2-0 lead in the championship series before the Heat swept the next four spurred on by Finals MVP Wade. BIG THREE Injuries and age cost that team a long run at the top, and after an NBA worst 15-67 season, Riley turned the coaching reins over to young assistant Erik Spoelstra, ry housing will be made available for up to 18 months. Some people along the Gulf Coast still live in FEMA trailers nearly six years after Hurricane Katrina. Another FEMA spokesman, Bob Josephson, said the agency will consider bringing trailers to Joplin if enough existing housing isn't available. He said every effort will be made to find existing rental units closest to Joplin and that many residents may simply choose to find their own housing options. People who lived in the 8,000 structures smashed in the storm have scattered to the homes of friends and relatives or camped out in emergency shelters in the city. Some may leave town -- New Orleans lost nearly one-third of its population after Katrina. Penny Musgraves is happy -- and almost surprised -- to be alive. But for Musgraves, whose low-income townhouse was ripped away above her head as she protected her cowering 6-year-old daughter, the joy of surviving is beginning to give way to confusion and anxiety about the future. "I'm kind of scared," said the 45-year-old mother, who is unemployed and currently living with her daughter at the Red Cross shelter set up at Missouri Southern State University. "There isn't much low-income housing. I can't rent a place. I don't know what I'm going to do." While many of the survivors had insurance, it could be months, if not years, before they can rebuild. Removing the millions of tons of debris and remaking the city's destroyed infrastructure will likely take well into the summer if not longer. Rebuilding homes can't start until that work is finished. For low-income residents, the Housing Authority of Joplin provides some housing. But it was not known how many, if any, of the homeless it can accommodate. Recent history suggests many people won't be able to wait for the answers to emerge or for the rebuilding to be completed. The current population could drop substantially. New Orleans lost 29 percent of its population after Hurricane Katrina as residents left and settled elsewhere. Greensburg, Kan., which was leveled by a tornado in 2007, lost about half its population even though the town was rebuilt. It dropped from 1,574 before the tornado to 777 in 2010. At the Red Cross shelter, 150 people seemed grateful for the cot, warm food and donations of clothing. Many were trying to figure out where to go next. Ask 64-year-old William Whittenback where his home is, and he has a quick answer. "Plum off the map," the retiree said. Whittenback and his 67-year-old wife, Lorna, narrowly made it through the tornado. The roof of the home they've lived in for 15 years collapsed, leaving Lorna with a massive gash on her forehead and her cheeks black and blue. Every house in their neighborhood was a total loss. The coup