Monday, December 31, 2012

Obama's Deadly Plan for the Death Tax - Daniel ... - Townhall Finance

In some ways, it would be fun to be a leftist.

No, I?m not talking about living a life of idleness and letting others pay my bills, though I suppose that?s tempting to some people.

And I?m not talking about becoming a Washington insider and using corrupt connections to obtain unearned wealth, though I confess I?m actually friends with some of those people.

Instead, I?m talking about what it must be like to engage in reckless demagoguery and personal smears.

Remember during the presidential campaign when Mitt Romney was ? for all intents and purposes ? accused of causing a woman?s death because of his actions at Bain Capital?

The pro-Obama Super-PAC that produced that ad relied on indirect connections and overlooked some very salient facts that completely disproved even the indirect connections.

But even though the ad was exposed as maliciously false, the folks who put it together probably laughed all the way to the bank.

With this in mind, maybe it?s time to publicly ask why President Obama wants to kill old people.

?Time for your death panel appointment?

This isn?t a blog post about Obamacare, though there certainly are enough horror stories from the United Kingdom to make us fearful of government-run healthcare.

I?m referring instead to what might happen because of Obama?s proposal for a much more onerous death tax, which is part of his class-warfare agenda and would take effect in just a couple of days.

It seems that there?s good evidence this may lead to some premature deaths. CNBC reports.

Many families are faced with a stark proposition. If the life of an elderly wealthy family member extends into 2013, the tax bills will be substantially higher. An estate that could bequest $3 million this year will leave just $1.9 million after taxes next year. Shifting a death from January to December could produce $1.1 million in tax savings. It may seem incredible to contemplate pulling the plug on grandma to save tax dollars. While we know that investors will sell stocks to avoid rising capital gains taxes, accelerating the death of a loved one seems at least a bit morbid?perhaps even evil. Will people really make life and death decisions based on taxes? Do we don our green eye shades when it comes to something this serious? There is good evidence that there is some ?elasticity? in the timing of important decisions about life and death.

And what does that mean? Well, according to some of the academic research, the President is going to have proverbial blood on his hands.

Gans and Leigh looked into another natural experiment. In 1979, Australia abolished its federal inheritance taxes. Official records show that approximately 50 deaths were shifted from the week before the abolition to the week after. ?Although we cannot rule out the possibility that our results are driven by misreporting, our results imply that over the very short run, the death rate may be highly elastic with respect to the inheritance tax rate,? Gans and Leigh write. This isn?t just something peculiar to Australia. Economists Wojciech Kopczuk of Columbia University and Joel Slemrod of the University of Michigan studied how mortality rates in the United States were changed by falling or rising estate taxes. They note that while the evidence of ?death elasticity? is ?not overwhelming,? every $10,000 in available tax savings increases the chance of dying in the low-tax period by 1.6 percent. This is true both when taxes are falling, so that people are surviving longer to achieve the tax savings, and when they are rising, so that people are dying earlier, according to Kopczuk and Slemrod. ?Death elasticity? does not necessarily mean that greedy relatives are pulling the plug on the dying or forcing the sickly to extend their lives into a lower taxed period. According to a 2008 paper from University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Doctor G. Stuart Mendenhall, while tax increases give potential heirs large economic incentives to limit care that would prolong life, distressed patients may ?voluntarily trade prolongation of their life past the end [a low tax period] for large ?nancial implications for their kin.

I?ve previously cited the research from Australia, and also wrote a post about incentives to die in 2010, when the death tax temporarily was abolished, so this research makes sense.

What?s the bottom line?

?based on past reactions to changes in taxes, it at least seems likely that some deaths that might otherwise have occurred shortly after January 1 will occur shortly before. Death may slip in ahead of the tax man for some with estates worth over $1 million.

In the grand scheme of things, I have a hard time feeling anguish about some elderly rich guy dying today rather than one week from now. But there is real data to suggest that Obama?s policies will cause premature deaths.

And these premature deaths will only occur because the President is greedy for more revenue from a tax that shouldn?t even exist. Indeed, it?s worth noting that every pro-growth tax reform plan ? such as the flat tax or national sales tax ? eliminates this pernicious form of double taxation.

Since I?m an economist, I can?t resist a final comment about this tax having a terrible impact on capital formation. This is bad for workers, since it translates into lower wages.

And it?s definitely not good for U.S. competitiveness.

P.S. Whatever you do, don?t die in New Jersey.

P.P.S. It?s a morbid topic, but there is such a thing as death tax humor.

Source: http://finance.townhall.com/columnists/danieljmitchell/2012/12/30/obamas-deadly-plan-for-the-death-tax-n1476094/page/full/

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Neighborhood briefs: Paul Quinn College in Dallas selects fundraising director

Halima N. Leak will be the inaugural executive director for Paul Quinn College?s Center for Fundraising and Philanthropy, scheduled to open in January.

Leak will be formally introduced to the public at Paul Quinn?s Media and Community Appreciation Day on Feb. 25.

Leak has nearly 15 years of experience as both a fundraiser and an educator. She?ll direct a center that will house an innovative academic program.

?When we began our national search, Halima?s name immediately grabbed our attention. To land her out of the gate is a true blessing,? said Michael J. Sorrell, Paul Quinn president.

The center?s programming will be aimed at encouraging the development of a deeper understanding of fundraising and philanthropy through teaching, training and research via professional development opportunities and by facilitating the exchange of resources and ideas related to fundraising and philanthropy.

Staff report

DUNCANVILLE

New uses for city?s field house proposed

In an effort to explore new opportunities for the revitalization of the Duncanville Fieldhouse, the Duncanville City Council has partnered with Northwood University in Cedar Hill for students to develop potential plans to generate profit from the city?s athletic facility on Main Street.

The students presented recommendations to the council about the facility that could attract new business. Some ideas included transforming it into a dance hall, small business incubator facility, apartments and condos or a convention center.

The council plans to share the students? recommendations with the Fieldhouse Task Force, a group of volunteers recently formed to research and present findings and recommendations.

Staff report

OAK CLIFF

Nonprofit group wins awards for film

Caring for the World Films, an Oak Cliff-based nonprofit, has won several awards for its film Hearts in the Himalayas, directed by Oak Cliff resident Debi Lang.

The film won the Award of Merit in the Women Filmmaker category from the Best Shorts Competition. The award was given for Lang?s humanitarian documentary that profiles the work of Himalayan HealthCare, an organization that provides medical care, education and income-generation opportunities to the people of rural Nepal.

The film integrates footage shot during a Mount Everest-size expedition fraught with challenges.

?It is a win not only for me and my team, but also the HHC volunteers and the people of Nepal,? Lang said.

In addition, Media Global News, the media arm of the United Nations, has made the movie its featured documentary on its website, media global.org.

Hearts in the Himalayas also won four Omni Awards for the 2012 season.

Staff report

Source: http://www.dallasnews.com/news/community-news/dallas/headlines/20121229-neighborhood-briefs-paul-quinn-college-in-dallas-selects-fundraising-director.ece

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Sunday, December 30, 2012

Neverending Story iPad / Tablet Cover by GeekifyInc

Have you always wanted to own a copy of The Neverending Story? Now you can! Modern tablets can holds thousands and thousands of books - truly a never-ending supply! Customize your iPad with a cover that will bring back the nostalgic moments of luck dragons, noble warriors, and epic quests. These tablet covers are hand-crafted from high quality leather and suedes and bound with filigree and an auryn on the cover, just like the book we all know and love. These are made to fit the classic iPad, the iPad 2, iPad 3, and iPad Mini. They are a perfect way to protect your tablet and gives it a high level of protection while attracting a lot of attention and comments from friends and passersby.

Please indicate what exact model you have if you wish to place an order, and please allow up to ten days to ship the product. Custom sizes are available for your specific tablet on request, including the Nexus, Asus Transformer, Galaxy, Play Book, Nook HD, HD+, Kindle Fire HD, etc!

Check out our store - we also make Kindle and Nook covers!

**ATTENTION** Due to the high volumes we're experiencing right now and the fact that these are custom made, it's unlikely that we will be able to get any new orders shipped in time for Christmas - they will likely ship on the 28th at the earliest.**


Have any questions? Contact the shop owner.

Source: http://www.etsy.com/listing/95190935/neverending-story-ipad-tablet-cover

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Using Life Insurance in Your Estate Planning

Life InsuranceLife insurance is an important and integral part of estate planning.? Although the life insurance industry has changed significantly in the last 20 years in the products it offers and the purposes for which life insurance can be used, life insurance, in its purest form is specifically intended for estate planning.? Consequently, everyone, no matter their age or net worth, should consider using life insurance as one tool in their estate planning portfolio.

?From my perspective, life insurance is most useful in the following cases (there are more, but these are the top purposes):

  • ?First, people who have smaller sized estates who would like to create one to take care of heirs when they die. Very often, when you have young children, life insurance is a way to be sure the kids are raised and educated even if you?re not there
  • Married couples with over $2 million in net assets or who have a high probability their estate will exceed $2 million. There are interesting ways to reduce the estate tax burden on your estate using life insurance.
  • For single persons, over $1,000,000, or who have a high probability your estate will exceed $1,000,000.
  • People with an existing insurance policy in their estate who would like to remove it for tax purposes.
  • People who own businesses and and have key people they need to insure
  • Anyone with high interest in giving to charity while not reducing inheritance to heirs.
  • People with taxable, yet illiquid estates.
  • People who have businesses in which they have partners or co-shareholders, and desire to have cash to buy-out the heirs should the partner die unexpectedly.
  • My intention in this article is to focus on the situations I deal with the most; primarily, in cases where there are estate taxes that will be due on death.

The Two Tax Systems in America

Anyone who has been actively investing for any period of time understands that we have two tax systems in the U.S.: One for the uninformed, and one for the informed.? Congress relies upon Americans falling into the former category.? Each year many millions of people pay more taxes than they should.? Nowhere is this more true than in the case of estate taxes.

When World War I came along, the Revenue Act of 1916 was born.? Unlike previous estate taxes this tax did not go away.? Interestingly, this tax was not intended to raise extremely large amounts of revenue; its original purpose was to prevent the very wealthy from keeping large concentrations of wealth in the family for many generations.? President Franklin Roosevelt, speaking of the estate tax very bluntly, stated that it was based upon, ?the very sound policy of encouraging a wider distribution of wealth.?? The federal estate tax was thus created to penalize successful people in the United States.? Although the country was built upon basic capitalist concepts such as free trade and the unhindered ability of anyone in American to become successful and wealthy based upon their own personal abilities. In short, the government, through the estate tax, will force the fruits of their labor to be redistributed upon their death.? Need for capital to feed the federal government overcame the social policy against controlling its citizens.? Our government fell into the same routine as governments throughout history, by restricting ownership rights of property based upon social policy rather than revenue policy.

Opponents of the tax challenged it in the U.S. Supreme Court, but the Court held the federal estate tax to be constitutional under Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1 of the United States Constitution, which says:

?The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform thoughout the United States.

?

Because the federal estate tax is not technically a tax on property, the Courts could squeeze its constitutionality into other areas of the Constitution.? Essentially, the Supreme Court was holding that the estate tax is a tax on the privilegeU.S. citizens have to give their property to another.? Because it is not a tax on the property itself, there was no requirement for Congress to attempt to change the Constitution to fit within its strict wording.

In 1935, the redistribution of wealth concept garnered even more support in Congress with a significant rise in the estate tax rates. The nature and character of the estate tax has gone through many changes over the years, with the details changing significantly down to today.? Fortunately, major changes to our tax system in 1986 and in 2001 allow citizens faced with estate taxes to take action to reduce them dramatically.? The burden of taking that action, however, rests with the citizen, and without proper education and planning, doing nothing, or doing the wrong thing, can have significant negative effects for heirs.

?

Estate and Gift Taxation

Currently, the estate taxation system in the United States is what is known as a ?unified? system.? This term came about as a result of Congress integrating gift taxes, estate taxes, generation-skipping taxes and excess retirement accumulations taxes. ?The implication for this is that Congress taxes both gifts during life and transfers to beneficiaries after death under the same system.? As of the writing of this article, estate tax exemptions are set to be on all estates over $1 million in 2013.

?

The Gift Tax

The gift tax is levied on gifts made during lifetime.? Each time a person makes a gift, the gift tax applies.? There are exceptions to this rule which will be explained below.? Federal tax regulations define a gift as a transfer made, during lifetime for less than fair market value.? In order for persons to make a gift, they must relinquish complete control over the gifted asset.

?

The Estate Tax

The estate tax is a transfer tax levied after death.? Congress requires that an estate tax return be filed, and any taxes due and owing be paid within nine months of the date of death.? We will discuss this issue in depth below.

Under current rules, if the gross estate exceeds $1,000,000 (2013 ? we don?t know what will happen as Congress changes the laws), estate taxes will be due and owing.? If there were taxable gifts made after 1976, that $1,000,000 threshold is reduced by the amount of those taxable gifts made.

The personal representative, or in the case of a revocable living trust, the Trustee, has responsibility for filing the estate tax return, form 706, and paying the taxes, in cash, within nine months of the date of death.

?

The Estate Tax Rates

The federal estate tax rates are extremely high, and the brackets are fairly small between rate increases.? For paying estates, every dollar over $1,000,000 is taxed at 41% or higher, up to a rate of 50%.? In addition, there are penalties for giving too much to generations that are more than one generation below yours, and for IRA accounts that are too large.

?

?Key Question:? If your estate will owe taxes, how will they be paid?

When it comes time for your estate to have to pay taxes, the key questions to be answered is how will they be paid?? The four ways estate taxes may be paid are:

1. Cash

If your estate has enough liquid assets, your estate will pay cash, within 9 months to the IRS.

2. Forced Sale

If your estate does not have enough cash, the system will require that your best assets (the most marketable) be sold to raise the money for taxes, once again, within 9 months.? The primary problem with this method is that if the asset does not have a published market value, buyers who are aware the property, business, etc. is being sold to pay taxes will probably seize the opportunity to pay less than what would otherwise be fair market value.

3. Borrow

Your personal representative may have to mortgage property in order to keep the property and still have enough money to pay taxes.? The cost of borrowing will reduce the amount ultimately destined for the heirs.? If you own a family farm and it consists of more than 25% of your estate, or if you own a closely held business and it consists of more than 35% of your estate, the government may be willing to loan the estate the money to pay off your estate tax bill.

4. ?Tax? Insurance

A life insurance policy that is either owned by your children or an irrevocable life insurance trust, will provide estate tax free liquidity, and will actually reduce your estate?s share of the cost for estate taxes.

In the situation where you are insurable, very often a life insurance policy becomes an opportunity to deeply discount your estate taxes.? In fact, the entire cost of estate taxes can be traded for the cost of premiums on a life insurance policy.? If you do not own the policy, the proceeds are not includable in your taxable estate and are therefore not taxed.? Additionally, the proceeds from a life insurance policy are not income taxable to the recipients.? The result is that the actual cost of paying off the IRS is usually dramatically reduced. On the next page is a chart illustrating just how dramatically the cost of taxes is decreased using life insurance.

There is another benefit to using life insurance.? If your estate is not very liquid; for instance, if much of your estate is a business or hard to sell property, the proceeds of the life insurance policy are immediately available to pay the taxes. This eliminates the requirement to sell the assets quickly, which increases your estate?s chances of selling the property at a much higher value.

?Financing Your Estate Tax Liability Assuming $1,000,000 Estate Tax Assessment

?Borrowing: ?????????????????????????? From a Bank (10% interest for 15 years):: $1,972,107

????? ????????? ?? ???????????????????????????? From the Government (IRC Section 6166): $1,443,459

Liquidating Assets: ???????????? Non-liquid $1,428,571

Liquid assets: $1,000,000

Purchasing Life Insurance: Term*: $538,240

Permanent: $229,247

Second to Die: $106,195

*These are for illustration purposes only: Have your Life insurance professional quote you premium costs (Assumptions: Preferred policy for 55 year old couple, assuming an 8% net rate of return)

?

Second to Die Policies

For married couples, there can be an even more cost-effective way to use life insurance as ?tax? insurance.? Many life insurance companies now offer a life insurance policy which is based on both lives, and only pays-off at the second death.? Because the entire purpose of ?tax? insurance policies is to provide the cash for taxes at the second death, this is a perfect product for estate planning.? The benefit to you is the fact that the premiums are generally lower than other policies, and even if one spouse is not insurable, very often the underwriters will still issue a policy.

?

The Advantages of Owning Life Insurance Inside an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust

In order for life insurance death benefits to avoid inclusion inside your estate for estate tax purposes, the insured cannot be the owner of the policy.? If the insured is the owner, then the entire death benefit of the policy will be included in the net value of the estate.? Consequently, if the owner of the policy is someone other than the insured, it will not be included in the estate.

It is possible for the owners of the policy to be the children of the insured.? This strategy has some potential problems associated with it.? First, if the child goes through a divorce, the cash value of the policy may be subject to the divorce proceedings, and could be awarded to the in-law spouse.? Second, if the child is sued or goes through bankruptcy, a creditor could potentially get the cash value.? Third, if the child is the owner of the policy, the insured will be gifting the premium dollars to the child to pay for the policy.? Very often when faced with the choice of paying for life insurance premiums or orthodontist bills, mortgage payments or toys, the policy premium lapse.? This is one policy that the insured wants to be very careful not to allow to lapse.

If any of these situations concern the client, an irrevocable life insurance trust may be one solution.? The irrevocable life insurance trust (known to estate planners as the ?ILIT?, pronounced eye-lit) is an irrevocable trust specifically set up to hold the insurance policy. A Life Insurance Trust, frequently called a Special Family Trust, plays a unique role.? It not only enables the proceeds from life insurance policies to be available for taxes and other expenses at the time of the insured?s death, but keeps the proceeds from ever being taxable upon either the insured?s death or the surviving spouse?s death. A Life Insurance Trust is one of the most popular estate planning tools for individuals facing estate taxes.

How It Is Set Up

A Trustor cannot be a Trustee of the Life Insurance Trust.? Usually a trusted friend, an accountant, or the eventual beneficiaries (e.g. your children) will be the Trustee of the Trust.? Trustors will make contributions to the Life Insurance Trust and the Trustee has the authority to purchase policies and to pay the premiums on these policies.? By making the Trustee of the Life Insurance Trust the owner of the life insurance policies, it prevents the policies from being taxed in the estate of the insured. If however, if you die within three years of transferring an existing policy to the Trust, the proceeds will be includable in your taxable estate.? When purchasing a new policy for the Trust you should wait until the Trust is signed and then the Trustee can purchase the policy with money you contribute to the Trust.? The Trustee will be listed on the application as owner of the policy, as Trustee for the Trust.

What Happens When the Insured Dies

The beneficiary of the life insurance proceeds is the Trustee of the Life Insurance Trust so that the Trustee then has the cash which is usually needed to pay taxes.? However, the Life Insurance Trust cannot directly pay estate taxes.? The Trustee has the authority to lend money to the Trustee of your Living Trust or to buy assets from your Living Trust.? The end result is that the liquid cash needed to pay taxes is available to the Trustee of your Living Trust without having to sell significant portions of hard assets to raise the necessary cash.? The assets in the Life Insurance Trust are then distributed as you have directed, usually the same as in your Living Trust.

Types of Insurance Policies

One of the most popular types of policies for a Life Insurance Trust is a ?second-to-die? policy that just pays out when the second spouse dies; these are less expensive than policies on one life.? If a policy on one life is used and the insured predeceases the other spouse then the Trustee of the Life Insurance Trust has the discretion to make distributions to the surviving spouse.

Withdrawal Rights

Your Trust may also contain the option of giving withdrawal rights (sometimes referred to as ?Crummey? powers, named after the Crummey family involved in the case) to the beneficiaries so that contributions made by Trustors to the Trustee to pay premiums do not use up any of Trustors? estate tax lifetime exemption.? Crummey power holders are notified by the Trustee each year regarding what contributions Trustors have made to the Trust that year, then the power holders have the option of making a pro-rata withdrawal of the Trustors? contribution.? The power holders nearly always choose not to make such a withdrawal so that the Trustee can make the premium payment.

As you can see, the goal is to have the cash available to pay taxes while circumventing the IRS?s desire to take a portion of those funds for taxes. Life Insurance Trusts have been in effect for many years and can be a very effective tool in achieving your goals.

?

The Bottom Line: What Do You Want?

Proper estate planning is much more than mass producing wills and probating estates.

Proper estate planning is a process in which professionals, including an attorney who concentrates his or her practice on estate planning, spends significant time with you, asking the right questions, in order to understand your needs, your concerns and the objectives for your estate.

When you and your attorney reach a mutual understanding of those needs, the attorney will prepare the highest quality legal documents that will assure your control of your property while you are alive, that you and your loved ones are taken care of if you become disabled, and enable you to give what you have to whom you want, the way you want, and when you want, at the same time saving every last tax dollar, professional fee, and court cost possible.

Whether you want to plan using life insurance or not should be your decision, based upon your particular circumstances and personality.? There is no one right answer for anyone.? Having an estate planning attorney help you through the process, however, will be an important investment of your time.

In an age of increasing complexity and specialization, it is good advice to seek a competent estate planning attorney rather than someone who does estate planning part-time.? Many practitioners will offer free initial consultations and will quote flat fees for their services.? If you do not know an estate planning attorney, you can find them by asking friends and relatives, your local estate planning council, your financial planner, stockbroker or insurance agent, or by contacting your local estate planning council.

If you have an interest in talking with a life insurance professional, and do not have a relationship with one, let me know. I?m happy to make a referral.

?

Source: http://markalbertson.com/life-insurance-estate-planning/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=life-insurance-estate-planning

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2012 review: The year in life science

Read more: "2013 Smart Guide: 10 ideas that will shape the year"

The last 12 months have brought more insights into life's origins on Earth ? as well as a prediction about its ultimate fate. We've learned more about life's extremes thanks to biologists working in the driest desert, in the coldest continent ? and to a certain Hollywood director's trip into the deepest ocean trench on the planet.

It's also been a year that has taught us more about our species' origins, from the origin of art to the earliest evidence of medicine. Here are 10 more of our favourite stories of 2012.

Eats bark, fruit and leaves: diet of ancient human
Australopithecus sediba, a 2-million-year-old member of the human family, had a diet unlike other known hominins

Buried microbes exist at limit between life and death
Sediment 30 metres below the Pacific seafloor is so nutrient-poor that microbes barely fuel their cellular functions ? yet they may be thousands of years old

Prions point to a new style of evolution
A form of evolution that involves neither genetic nor epigenetic changes to the DNA has been seen in yeast

Was humanity born in the mother of all plagues?
Early in human evolution, our ancestors switched off two key genes. Doing so may have allowed us to fight off an epidemic of bacterial disease

First land plants plunged Earth into ice age
When the first simple mosses colonised the land, they unleashed vast ice sheets and triggered a mass extinction

Biological clock began ticking 2.5 billion years ago
An enzyme found in nearly all forms of life runs on a 24-hour clock and dates back to a pivotal moment in evolution

Chinese human fossils unlike any known species
The newly described Red Deer Cave people show an unusual mixture of modern and primitive features. Where did they come from?

Reptile grew feather-like structures before dinosaurs
Some 80 million years before the first feathered dinosaurs, Longisquama grew impressive structures using the same genes

DNA could have existed long before life itself
The idea that life began with RNA ? simpler than DNA ? looks less certain now that a DNA-like molecule has been made from basic compounds

Captured: the moment photosynthesis changed the world
For the first time, geologists have found evidence of how modern photosynthesis evolved 2.4 billion years ago

If you would like to reuse any content from New Scientist, either in print or online, please contact the syndication department first for permission. New Scientist does not own rights to photos, but there are a variety of licensing options available for use of articles and graphics we own the copyright to.

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Saturday, December 29, 2012

With lowest vaccination rate in Canada, Quebecers urged to get flu shot

CTV Montreal
Published Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012 2:10PM EST
Last Updated Saturday, Dec. 29, 2012 2:20PM EST

MONTREAL?With cases of influenza spiking during the holidays, health authorities reminded Montrealers on Saturday that it isn?t too late to go get vaccinated against the flu.

Quebec is the province with the lowest level of vaccination in Canada, with only 27 per cent of Quebecers getting the shot.

With numerous handshakes and close greetings exchanged during the holidays between friends and family, the flu virus has a near-perfect way to travel. Vaccinations are still being offered at local CLSCs and people with small children, the elderly or those with chronic diseases are urged to get vaccinated.

The vaccination is free for those in at-risk groups.

?With files from The Canadian Press.

Source: http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/with-lowest-vaccination-rate-in-canada-quebecers-urged-to-get-flu-shot-1.1095282

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Stores' pain, shoppers' gain: Where the sales are

Robyn Beck / AFP - Getty Images

Shoppers look for post-Christmas bargains Dec. 26 at a mall in Los Angeles.

By Martha C. White

Sluggish holiday sales might give retail industry investors a headache, but they could prove to be a boon to consumers?hunting for post-holiday bargains.

The early data on how much Americans spent this holiday is mixed. A MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse report said retail sales in the two months before Christmas ticked up only 0.7 percent, well below the 2 percent growth it forecasted for this year, and even further from the 4 percent growth rate predicted by the National Retail Federation. NRF president and CEO Matthew Shay told CNBC in an after-Christmas interview that he still expected holiday season sales to come in at 3.5 to 4 percent higher than 2011 ? not terrible, but not on par with last year?s 5.6 percent growth.
?
?It seems like sales didn?t turn out as well as what we expected going into the holiday,? said Joe Feldman, managing director and senior research analyst at Telsey Advisory Group.

That growth was unevenly distributed across the sector, though, and Feldman said there are more clear winners ? and losers ? this time than is typical. Analysts say discount retailers like Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Costco and the TJX family of brands did well. Online giant Amazon.com said the season was its ?best ever.?

Part of the reason for the mixed message is that shoppers?waited until the last minute to do their shopping. A mid-December survey published by Visa Inc. indicated that 73 percent of consumers still hadn't finished shopping, and a new Gallup poll found a spike in consumer spending in the days immediately before Christmas. Shay told CNBC he expected online shopping and post-Christmas gift cards sales (since shoppers usually spend more than the amount on the card) to bolster the final figure.

But some stores have already thrown Hail Mary passes. Shay said ?retailers were sensing that the market was getting tougher,? which drove them to offer more promotions even before Christmas.

Lindsay Sakraida, features director at dealnews.com, said that the site had twice as many of the deep discounts it classifies as ?Editor?s Choice? sales this year than it did last year.

?I think some of the middle-tier department stores... Kohl?s and JCP, we?re hearing a lot of markdown activity there,? said R.J. Hottovy, a senior retail analyst at Morningstar. Anxiety about the fiscal cliff dampened shoppers? enthusiasm, especially at the high end, he said.

?What we?re hearing is that luxury sales were somewhat weak compared to expectations this holiday season. For better or worse, they?ve really been driving the recovery since the last recession,? Hottovy said.?Bloomingdale?s (owned by Macy?s Inc.) has after-Christmas sales of up to 75 percent off, and Neiman Marcus is advertising 40 percent off sale items through Friday on its website.?This is the same discount the high-end retailer offered last year, Sakraida said, although this year, it?s coming a couple of days earlier.

Hottovy called Superstorm Sandy a ?convenient excuse? for retailers confronting lower sales, but he added that unusual weather patterns across the country including strong storm systems in the West and Midwest could have had an effect on sales. Feldman said the late onset of seasonally cold weather in the Northeast contributed to lower demand for winter clothes and sportswear.

?Outerwear will be at 75 percent off plus an additional 10 percent,? Marshal Cohen, chief industry analyst at NPD Group, said via email. ?Also some sportswear will see similar deals.?

Specialty apparel stores, especially those that focus on women?s clothes, offered some of the biggest discounts. Ann Inc.?s Loft stores offered 50 off everything except for new arrivals. Feldman said Aeropostale and Chico?s stores began advertising discounts of 60 percent off right after Christmas.

In electronics, tablets and e-readers like Kindle Fire, which Amazon said was its best-selling product of the season, were popular, but consumers were lukewarm when it came to bigger electronics.

?Big-screen TVs didn?t seem to be as big a driver as in the past,? Feldman said. Even though retailers like Best Buy, Wal-Mart and Amazon did aggressive price-matching,?a round-up of after-Christmas big-screen sales on HDGuru.com showed discounts of nearly 60 percent on some models.

"Best Buy just didn?t see great traffic this year,? Hottovy said. "I think that?ll show up when we start to see the final numbers." Consumers, he said, shifted to buying more on Amazon.com or directly through manufacturers this year.

Stacey Widlitz, S.W. Retail Advisors, predicts which retailers will have a lucky year in 2013.

?

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Source: http://lifeinc.today.com/_news/2012/12/28/16216447-stores-pain-is-shoppers-gain-where-the-biggest-sales-are?lite

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Friday, December 28, 2012

Fiscal cliff negotiations update: Biden, Congress to receive pay increases ? no other news to report (Michellemalkin)

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10 Things to Know for Friday

FILE - In this Sept. 14, 1990 file photo, U.S. Army Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia, answers questions during an interview in Riyadh. Schwarzkopf died Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012 in Tampa, Fla. He was 78. (AP Photo/David Longstreath, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 14, 1990 file photo, U.S. Army Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, commander of U.S. forces in Saudi Arabia, answers questions during an interview in Riyadh. Schwarzkopf died Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012 in Tampa, Fla. He was 78. (AP Photo/David Longstreath, File)

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky. walks to the Senate floor on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Clark Aposhian, President of Utah Shooting Sport Council, demonstrates with a plastic gun, rear, while Joanna Baginska, 4th grade teacher from Odyssey Charted School, in American Fork, using a 40 cal. Sig Sauer during concealed-weapons training for the teachers Thursday, Dec. 27, 2012, in West Valley City, Utah. The Utah Shooting Sports Council offered six hours of training in handling concealed weapons in the latest effort to arm teachers to confront school assailants. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and stories that will be talked about Friday:

1. WHO COMMANDED DESERT STORM

"Stormin' Norman" Schwarzkopf, who commanded the U.S.-led coalition that drove Saddam Hussein's forces out of Kuwait in 1991, dies at 78.

2. WHERE THERE'S STILL NO SIGN OF COMPROMISE

Democrats and Republicans remain snarled across a partisan divide, showing no sign of reaching a deal to avoid year-end tax increases and spending cuts.

3. THEY'RE DITCHING THE STOCK MARKET

With distrust of Wall Street growing, ordinary Americans are selling off stocks for a fifth year in a row.

4. WHY HE WANTS TO PACK A GUN

English teacher Kevin Leatherbarrow favors carrying a weapon to school, saying "we're sitting ducks" in the event of an attack like the one that occurred in Newtown, Conn.

5. DEMANDING AN INVESTIGATION

Egypt's chief prosecutor orders a probe into allegations that opposition leaders committed treason by inciting supporters to overthrow President Morsi.

6. STORM REACHES NORTHEAST

A muted version of a winter storm that has killed more than a dozen people in its journey across the eastern half of the country hits New England.

7. WHAT COULD DISRUPT EAST COAST SHIPPING

If 14,500 longshoremen strike, ships that move much of American commerce would be unable to use most major ports on the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico.

8. RIDING SHOTGUN, VIA TWITTER

Virtual ridealongs, a new approach to informing the public about what law enforcement officers do, are taking hold at police departments across the U.S. and Canada.

9. CONSUMER CONFIDENCE FALLS

It was driven down by fears of sharp tax increases and government spending cuts set to take effect next week.

10. BUSH SENIOR STILL IN HOSPITAL

A spokesman says former President George H.W. Bush remains in intensive care at a Houston hospital.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-12-27-AP-10-Things-to-Know-Friday/id-3f5355cfb7b049a9b88b2a67b9762710

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Obama thanks EPA's Jackson for service on environment

To a black ESPN sports analyst, this is the critical question: Is Robert Griffin III, aka RG III, the black rookie sensation Washington Redskins quarterback, "a brother, or is he a cornball brother?" What has RG III done or said to raise a suspicion about his bona fides as a black person? More importantly, what does this have to do with appreciating ? or choosing not to appreciate ? Griffin as an athlete?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/obama-thanks-epas-jackson-environment-154446842.html

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Meaning on the Brain: How Your Mind Organizes Reality

They called him "Diogenes the Cynic," because "cynic" meant "dog-like," and he had a habit of basking naked on the lawn while his fellow philosophers talked on the porch. While they debated the mysteries of the cosmos, Diogenes preferred to soak up some rays - some have called him the Jimmy Buffett of ancient Greece.

Anyway, one morning, the great philosopher Plato had a stroke of insight. He caught everyone's attention, gathered a crowd around him, and announced his deduction: "Man is defined as a hairless, featherless, two-legged animal!" Whereupon Diogenes abruptly leaped up from the lawn, dashed off to the marketplace, and burst back onto the porch carrying a plucked chicken - which he held aloft and shouted, "Behold: I give you... Man!" I'm sure Plato was less than thrilled at this stunt, but the story reminds us that these early philosophers were still hammering out the most basic tenets of the science we now know as taxonomy: The grouping of objects from the world into abstract categories. This technique of chopping up reality wasn't invented in ancient Greece, though. In fact, as a recent study shows, it's fundamental to the way our brains work. Chunks of reality At the most basic level, we don't really perceive separate objects at all - we perceive our nervous systems' responses to a boundless flow of electromagnetic waves and biochemical reactions. Our brains slot certain neural response patterns into sensory pathways we call "sight," "smell" and so on - but abilities like synesthesia and echolocation show that even the boundaries between our senses can be blurry. Still, our brains are talented at picking out certain chunks of sensory experience and associating those chunks with other stimuli. For instance, if you hear purring and feel fur rubbing against your leg, your brain knows to associate that sound and feeling with the fluffy four-legged object you see at your feet - and to group that whole multisensory chunk under the heading of "cat." What's more, years of cat experience have taught you that it makes no sense to think of a cat as if it were a piece of furniture, or a truck, or a weather balloon. In other words, an encounter with a cat carries a particular set of meanings for you - and those meanings determine which areas of your brain will perk up in the presence of a feline. But where's the category "cat" in the brain? And where's it situated in relation to, say, "dog" or "giraffe" ...or just "mammal?" A team of neuroscientists led by Alexander Huth at UC Berkeley's Gallant lab decided they'd answer these questions in the most thorough way possible: By capturing brain responses to every kind of object they could dig up. Chunks in the brain Those Gallant lab folks are no slouches - you might remember them as the lab that constructed "mind videos" of entire scenes from neural activity in the visual cortex. This time, though, the lab's ambitions were even broader. A research team led by Alex Huth showed volunteers hours of video footage of thousands of everyday objects and scenes - from cats and birds to cars and thunderstorms - as the subjects sat in an fMRI scanner. Then the researchers matched up the volunteers' brain activity not only to each object they saw, but also to a whole tree of nested object categories: A taxonomy of the brain's taxonomy. A vision of a "continuous semantic space," where thousands of objects and actions are represented in terms of others. Huth's team collected volunteers' reactions to more than 1,300 objects and categories, and arranged these brain responses not only into a tree of object and action categories, but into a map of response gradients across the whole surface of the brain. And as you can see from the color gradients in that tree diagram to the right (which is also available as an interactive online app), the relationships among our brains' categories are multidimensional. Objects may be more or less "animal-like," more or less "man-made," and so on - and in fact, the researchers say they expect to find more subtle response dimensions that gauge an object's size and speed. Association and meaning All this talk of "dimensions of association" points back to a far more profound idea about how our brains work: We understand the meaning of an object in terms of the meanings of other objects - other chunks of reality to which our brains have assigned certain characteristics. In the brain's taxonomy, there are no discrete entries or "files" - just associations that are more strongly or more weakly correlated with other associations. And that idea itself raises deeper quandaries: If associations define what an object or action "is," as some neuroscientists have argued, then why does the concept of meaning - semantic representation - need to enter the picture at all? Instead of being a special type of mental function, might "meaning" itself simply be another word for "association?" The answer to that question won't be a simple one to find, at least for the foreseeable future. "I don't think it's possible to make a conclusive claim about that from fMRI data," says Jack Gallant, the lab's director; "and anyone who tells you otherwise is mistaken." A single three-dimensional pixel - an fMRI voxel - represents the activity of around one million neurons, Gallant explains; and at that resolution, it's impossible to say what exactly the neural activity is encoding. Meaning could depend on association, association might depend on semantic coding, or the relationship between the two might be more nuanced than we can conceive right now. Whatever that relationship turns out to be, the implication remains: In our brains, meaning and association go hand-in-hand. In the brain, even our most abstract concepts depend on our own real-world experiences. That's an idea that's infuriated Plato and his followers far more than Diogenes' plucked chicken - but as Diogenes demonstrated on that long-ago morning, real-world evidence trumps speculation in the end. ? Follow Scientific American on Twitter @SciAm and @SciamBlogs. Visit ScientificAmerican.com for the latest in science, health and technology news.
? 2012 ScientificAmerican.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/meaning-brain-mind-organizes-reality-123700369.html

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Kupa X15 Windows 8 tablet gets production ready, now on sale starting at $1,100

Kupa X15 Windows 8 tablet gets production ready, now on sale starting at $1,100

When we first saw the Kupa UltraNote back at MobileCon 2012, the convertible Windows 8 slate had all the markings of a reference design: NFC, fingerprint scanner, LTE, digitizer and Intel Core i7 processor. But production realities change things some, and now that this particular tab is finally on sale, a few of its specs have been swapped out. Starting at $1,100 and rebadged as the X15, this 10.1-inch slate still reps a 1,920 x 1,200 IPS display, dual 1.3-megapixel front-facing / 5-megapixel rear cameras, support for WiFi a/b/g/n and Bluetooth 4.0, as well as up to 128GB SSD, but now comes in four configurations. Most notably, its allotment of DDR3 RAM's been doubled to 8GB across the board, although users seeking that previously announced Ivy Bridge Core i7 will have to opt for the high-end Ultra model as the lesser Elite, Pro and Lux builds all feature an Intel Core i5. LTE support seems to have been dropped altogether in favor of HSPA+ connectivity on the Ultra and Lux units. If you're interested in what Kupa's selling here, you'll need to contact the company directly -- there's no easy link on its site to simply purchase the X15 tablet outright.

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Source: Kupa

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/1OnPhEK1fDU/

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Former National Security Advisers Defend Chuck Hagel (Atlantic Politics Channel)

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Five Ways To Become Financially Fit in 2013 - Faith and Finance

Post image for Five Ways To Become Financially Fit in 2013

It may be hard to believe, but 2013 is almost here. And with a new year approaching, most of us take this time to reflect on what we?ve done this past year, as well as think about what we?d like to accomplish next year.

For many of us, part of what we?d like to do next year is?improve our financial?lives. Does that describe you?

Do you want to be in a better position in December 2013 than you are in December 2012? If so, here are five ways to get your finances in better shape.

Get Out of Debt

Getting dragged down by?debt can lead to heartache, pain, stress, and relational tension. In order to relieve yourself of these burdens, and before you can build wealth and increase your net worth, you?ve got to get out of the financial bondage of debt.

Dave Ramsey popularized an extremely effective way to free yourself from debt, and that method is called the Debt Snowball. To learn more about the Snowball, check out this post on how to accelerate your Snowball.

Max Out Your 401k

If you work for a company, you probably have access to a 401k plan as part of your benefits package. For most employees, this is the best, most effective way to build long-term wealth.

As Tim mentioned in this post, you can contribute up to $17,500 to your 401k?in 2013. The good thing about this amount is that it doesn?t include any employer match.

So any money that your company matches can be thought of as a bonus. It?s free money that?ll help you improve your finances even faster.

Max Out Your Roth IRA

If you?re really committed to becoming financially fit, you may already have planned out your?budget?to max out your 401k,?and yet still have money left over to invest. If so, another great wealth-building tool you can take advantage of is the Roth IRA.

In the same?post mentioned above, Tim noted that you can contribute up to $5,500 to your IRA in 2013.

Do you know how much wealth can you expect to build by maxing out both your 401k and Roth IRA? Let?s say you invest $23,000 every year, for the next?twenty years.

Using the historical stock market average return of 8 percent, and ignoring taxes for the moment, this is how much wealth you?ll have accumulated at the end of those twenty years: $1,052,525. This demonstrates the incredible power of disciplined investing.

Earn More

While you should definitely seek to cut unnecessary expenses, it?s impossible to spend less than nothing. Cutting costs will only take you so far on your journey to become financially fit. But on the other hand, there?s no upper?limit on how much you can earn.

Tim has great ideas on how you?can earn more money?on the side ? so there?s no need to quit your day job. You?ll definitely find something you can do to bring in extra money. Once you start bringing in extra income, you can use it to pay off your debts faster, or invest it to build even more wealth.

Give More

It?s nice to be able to get your finances in order and build wealth. But I think it?s even better to be in a position to?bless others?with that wealth you accumulate.

Kiva is a site that allows you to do exactly that. By making a small loan, you can play a part in fighting poverty by helping entrepreneurs create better opportunities for themselves.

Best of all, with an over 98 percent repayment rate, you?ll most likely get all your money back. Then you can make another loan to help yet another entrepreneur. It?s truly a gift that keeps on giving.

What are you going to do to become more financially fit in 2013?

Did You Like This Article?

If so, consider joining over 1,500 people who are learning how to make more money in our FREE 10-day Financial Freedom eCourse. Just enter your name and email below:

Source: http://www.faithandfinance.org/five-ways-to-become-financially-fit-in-2013/

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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Paris is divided over the revival in horses for main courses | The Times

It was the food of the poor during the French Revolution, when starving commoners devoured the horses of the aristocracy.

But horse meat could be the new flavour of 2013 for well-heeled ?bobos? or bourgeois bohemians.

The French tradition of eating horses has largely died out, but there are signs of it making a comeback, especially in chic Parisian restaurants where some sophisticated diners delight in breaking a taboo.

Walk into the Taxi Jaune restaurant, near the Pompidou Centre, and you might mistake it for a riding club bar. Pictures of horses are everywhere. But a closer look reveals that

Source: http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/life/food/article3640548.ece

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95% The Central Park Five

All Critics (58) | Top Critics (25) | Fresh (55) | Rotten (3)

Expect your blood pressure to rise during The Central Park Five.

The doc is rife with smart or wrenching or shameful moments. The fresh interviews with the accused, now men, are invaluable.

As grim a portrait of the criminal justice system as can be imagined.

How could this second crime have occurred? The film asks that question but only partly answers it, and in the process it raises an even more troubling one.

"The Central Park Five" is worth seeing, both for the ways it's timeless and for the ways it encapsulates an era.

What's amazing about listening to them speak now, often through tears, is the absence of bitterness.

Puts the crime and the times in sharp perspective.

Burns and company conduct a thorough, riveting investigation that does a far better job of assessing the tragedy than the justice system did two decades before. Of course, hindsight is an advantage we all take for granted.

It's a gripping story that comes in a well-crafted package.

A heartbreaking expose' about a rush to judgment which ruined five, innocent young lives.

Exclusive interviews with former heads of Israel's counter terrorism agency reveal insiders' analysis about the country's policies. Fascinating. Frightening.

"The Central Park Five" is a sobering indictment of racism and vigilante justice, yet it is constrained by a PBS-style deference to the very system it critiques.

You can't help but wonder why this film wasn't made 20 years ago, when it could have saved these men some time behind bars.

What keeps the film from being an impossible downer is the guts and spirit and smart words of the Central Park Five, four of whom, now freed, are interviewed at length.

A miscarriage of justice on this scale would have been tragic had it resulted from an honest mistake - but, as this meticulously researched movie makes clear, honesty had little to do with it.

The [documentary] team builds a solid story from the time of the crime through the release from prison those wrongly accused and railroaded into confessing to a crime they did not commit.

The result is both compelling and infuriating.

The Central Park Five provides background drawn from contemporary media images, including crime scene footage accompanied by a detective's grisly description, as well as reflections by those involved.

Not only gripping and heartbreaking, but terrifying.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_central_park_five_2012/

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Newspaper publishes gun owners' names and addresses

A newspaper in New York has received a wave of criticism from its readers after publishing the names and addresses of all of the individuals with handgun or pistol permits in its coverage area.

Hundreds of residents in New York's Westchester and Rockland counties were surprised to find their names and addresses listed on a map posted by The Journal News on Sunday. Users can click any dot on the map to see which of their neighbors has a permit for a gun.

The map sparked more than 500 comments from readers within a day of its appearance on the website, many of them voicing outrage at the paper's decision to make the information public.

"This is CRAZY!! why in the world would you post every licensed gun owner information?? What do you hope to accomplish by doing this. This is the type of thing you do for sex offenders not law abiding gun owners. What next? should i hang a flag outside my house that says I own a gun? I am canceling my subscription with your paper today!!!" said commenter Curtis Maenza.

"How about a map of the editorial staff and publishers of Gannett and Journal News with names and addresses of their families?," wrote commenter George Thompson.

All of the names and addresses were compiled through public records. The paper also requested the information from Putnam County, which is still compiling the records for publication, according to The Journal News' website.

In a statement to ABC News, The Journal News said its readers "are understandably interested to know about guns in their neighborhoods," because of the conversation about gun control on its website after the shooting in Newtown, Conn., last week.

"We obtained the names and addresses of Westchester and Rockland residents who are licensed to own handguns through routine Freedom of Information law requests. We also requested information on the number and types of guns owned by permit holders, but officials in the county clerks offices in Westchester, Rockland and Putnam counties maintained that those specifics were not public record," the statement read.

"New York's top public-records expert, Robert Freeman, disagrees," it added.

The paper declined to answer further questions about the map.

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/newspaper-publishes-gun-owners-names-addresses-215214269--abc-news-topstories.html

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Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Authorities: Storm blamed for man's death in Texas

NEW ORLEANS (AP) ? Freezing rain and sleet made for a sloppy Christmas morning trek in parts of the nation's midsection on Tuesday, while residents along the Gulf Coast braced for thunderstorms, high winds and tornadoes.

Winds toppled a tree onto a pickup truck in the Houston area, killing the driver. Icy roads already were blamed for a 21-vehicle pileup in Oklahoma, where authorities warned would-be travelers to stay home. Fog blanketed highways, including arteries in the Atlanta area where motorists slowed as a precaution. In New Mexico, drivers across the eastern plains had to fight through snow, ice and low visibility.

At least two tornadoes were reported in Texas, though only one building was damaged, according to the National Weather Service. More than 180 flights nationwide were canceled by midday, according to the flight tracker FlightAware.com. More than half were canceled by American Airlines and its regional affiliate, American Eagle.

American is headquartered and has its biggest hub at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

Meanwhile, a blizzard watch was posted for parts of Indiana and western Kentucky for storms expected to unfold Tuesday amid predictions of up to 4 to 7 inches of snow in coming hours. Much of Oklahoma and Arkansas braced under a winter storm warning of an early mix of rain and sleet forecast to eventually turn to snow.

Some mountainous areas of Arkansas' Ozark Mountains could get up to 10 inches of snow, which would make travel "very hazardous or impossible" in the northern tier of the state from near whiteout conditions, the National Weather Service said.

Elsewhere, areas of east Texas and Louisiana braced for possible thunderstorms as forecasters eyed a developing storm front expected to spread across the Gulf Coast to the Florida Panhandle.

The holiday may conjure visions of snow and ice, but twisters this time of year are not unheard of. Ten storm systems in the last 50 years have spawned at least one Christmastime tornado with winds of 113 mph or more in the South, said Chris Vaccaro, a National Weather Service spokesman in Washington, via email.

The most lethal were the storms of Dec. 24-26, 1982, when 29 tornadoes in Oklahoma, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee and Mississippi killed three people and injured 32; and those of Dec. 24-25, 1964, when two people were killed and about 30 people injured by 14 tornadoes in seven states.

Quarter-sized hail reported early Tuesday in western Louisiana was expected to be just the start of a severe weather threat on the Gulf Coast, said meteorologist Mike Efferson at the weather service office in Slidell, La. Tornado watches were in effect across southeastern Texas and southern Louisiana.

Storms along the Gulf Coast could bring winds up to 70 mph, heavy rain, more large hail and dangerous lightning in Louisiana and Mississippi, Efferson said. Furthermore, warm, moist air colliding with a cold front could produce dangerous straight-line winds.

The storm was moving quickly as it headed into northeast Louisiana and Mississippi into the late afternoon and early evening, said Bill Adams at the weather service's Shreveport, La., office.

In Mississippi, Gov. Phil Bryant urged residents to have a plan for any severe weather.

"It only takes a few minutes, and it will help everyone have a safe Christmas," Bryant said.

In Alabama, the director of the Emergency Management Agency, Art Faulkner, said he has briefed both local officials and Gov. Robert Bentley on plans for dealing with a possible outbreak of storms.

No day is good for severe weather, but Faulkner said Christmas adds extra challenges because people are visiting unfamiliar areas and often thinking more of snow than possible twisters.

In California, after a brief reprieve across the northern half of the state on Monday, wet weather was expected to make another appearance on Christmas Day. Flooding and snarled holiday traffic were expected in Southern California.

___

AP Business Writer Daniel Wagner in Washington and Associated Press Writer Ramit Plushnick-Masti in Houston contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/authorities-storm-blamed-mans-death-texas-185028448.html

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