Saturday, December 29, 2012

ballsam ? Antiques: Auction Lots, Including Frank Family Letters, to ...

? A 1960s concrete map of the Gettysburg battlefield, studded with light bulbs that flashed to show troop movements, had been chopped up when the government auctioned it in September. The 12-ton topographical piece had been removed from a battlefield visitor center and stashed in trailers, but after preservationists set up a protest Web site, savetheelectricmap.com, the General Services Administration offered it in an online auction, illustrated with a few grainy photos.

Scott Roland, a developer in nearby Hanover, Pa., paid about $14,000 for it, bidding against an unidentified rival. The segments have been hoisted by crane and reassembled at a 1950s brick bank in Hanover, which is being converted into a conference and visitor center. Mr. Roland?s team plans to reactivate the map by next summer, in time for Hanover?s 250th anniversary and the 150th anniversary of Civil War battles in the region. The mechanisms will be rebuilt from scratch. ?The wiring is all cut and ruined,? Mr. Roland said in a phone interview.

? In March furniture historians were surprised to learn that the Centennial Museum at the University of Texas at El Paso had pairs of 1880s gilded chairs from a Vanderbilt home lingering in storage since the 1960s. A luxury-cabinetmaking team in Manhattan, the German-born half-brothers Christian and Gustave Herter, had produced the armchairs, studded with mother-of-pearl, and leafy side chairs for William H. Vanderbilt?s town house on Fifth Avenue.

The museum sold the four for a total of about $363,000 through Charlton Hall Auctioneers in South Carolina. Margot Johnson, a Manhattan dealer specializing in Herter material, acquired them for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. (She kept one armchair for her inventory.) The Met is planning conservation work on the gilding and fringed velvety red upholstery and an exhibition about Herter achievements under Vanderbilt patronage.

? In the 1950s the Austrian-born actor Joseph Schildkraut played Anne Frank?s father, Otto, on screen, and he amassed research files of Frank family letters dating to the 1930s. ?His widow consigned the material to a Doyle New York auction, slated for November, with an estimate of $20,000 to $30,000.

The Anne Frank House in Amsterdam persuaded the family to cancel the auction, and it raised an undisclosed sum in the estimate range to acquire the lot, which also includes movie memorabilia. The paperwork documents that Otto Frank desperately feared Nazism before the war and tried to emigrate through contacts in Britain and the United States.

?It?s an important part of the history of the Frank family,? Teresien da Silva, the head of collections at the Anne Frank House, said in a phone interview. The museum is sorting the archive for Web site postings and exhibitions about the family?s prewar life and movie versions of their story.

? Bradford Edwards, an artist and art collector long based in Vietnam, focused on 1960s Zippo cigarette lighters that belonged to American soldiers. The metal sheaths are engraved with longings for sex, marijuana, enemies? violent deaths, peace and home. Mr. Edwards consigned 282 of them to a June sale at Cowan?s Auctions in Cincinnati (estimated at $30,000 to $50,000 for the group).

When they did not sell, the auction house owner, Wes Cowan, persuaded the Manhattan collector John R. Monsky to spend $35,250 for the lot, so that it would not be broken up. Mr. Cowan said, in effect, ?This is your patriotic duty,? Mr. Monsky said during a recent tour of the collection, which was laid out in neat rows on his dining table, like a military cemetery. ?Each one of them is like a little emotion,? he said, while hunting for a favorite, marked with a peace sign and ?WHY ME.?

He plans to have them mounted for traveling exhibitions, with searchable databases of engravings and owners? biographies.

? Rumors among ?Star Trek? fans had persisted for decades that a huge 1960s prop from the television series had survived. The model for the show?s Galileo shuttlecraft, about 24 feet long, was used for scenes of crews and visitors in transit; assorted villains destroyed it in episode after episode.

The actual wood and metal box ended up left outdoors in Ohio and was badly eroded when it came up for sale in June at Kiki Auctions in Canton, Ohio. Adam Schneider, a management consultant in New York, paid about $70,000 for it, and Master Shipwrights in Atlantic Highlands, N.J., is now restoring it. (Mr. Schneider collects spaceship models from ?Star Trek? sets and displays them at home, complete with reactivated lights glowing in the windows.)

Galileo?s metal frame and landing gear are salvageable, but the shell and trapezoidal sliding doors will have to be largely replaced. Mr. Schneider is researching every detail, down to the paint used on the original exterior lettering, he said during a recent tour of the shipwrights? workshop. He plans to donate the vehicle to a museum. ?It?s a fabulous children?s exhibit, in the right hands,? he said.

? No one is sure who made a little blue glass creamer now on view at the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, N.Y. But it was probably produced in Philadelphia and definitely after 1794, the date on an American penny rattling around in the creamer?s hollow base. In August it sold for $82,600 at Northeast Auctions in Manchester, N.H. The consignor?s family had acquired it in the 1860s, and the penny?s date may have commemorated an original owner?s birthday or anniversary.

Corning owns other glass vessels with coins sealed inside, but American pieces are extraordinarily rare. The museum also invested in another major blue glass object this year: a profile of Akhenaten molded around 1340 B.C. (it cost about $332,000 at Christie?s in London in April), now on view with a glass head, most likely of his forebear Amenhotep II.

Source: http://ballsam.com/?p=938

sean young arrested matt kenseth bridge to nowhere primary results dale earnhardt jr michigan primary school shooting

So who?s in for the SD06 special election? (Offthekuff)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273568350?client_source=feed&format=rss

mayweather vs cotto shumpert hopkins hopkins dear john derrick rose torn acl pacers

Couples wed as gay marriage comes to Maine

Robert F. Bukaty / AP

Steven Bridges, left, receives a wedding ring from Michael Snell, early Saturday at City Hall in Portland, Maine.

By NBC News wire services

PORTLAND, Maine - Gay and lesbian couples exchanged their vows early Saturday as Maine's new same-sex marriage law took effect a minute after midnight.

Among them were Steven Bridges and Michael Snell, who held a commitment ceremony six years ago but wanted to make their marriage official under state law.

"It's historic. We've waited our entire lives for this," said Bridges, a retail manager, who's been in a relationship with the Snell, a massage therapist, for nine years. Bridges, 42, and Snell, 53, wore lavender and purple carnations on black T-shirts with the words "Love is love."

With Snell's two adult daughters looking on, they exchanged their vows in the city clerk's office after getting the first marriage license issued to a same-sex couple in Portland. They said they'll hold another ceremony with friends this summer, after the weather warms up.

Voters approved gay marriage in November, making Maine and two other states the first to do so by popular vote. A law is already in effect in Washington state; Maryland's takes effect Tuesday.?

Nine of the 50 U.S. states plus the District of Columbia, have now legalized gay marriage. Another 31 states have passed constitutional amendments banning it.

In Portland, a half dozen couples huddled with friends and family in freezing temperatures outside the building before the doors to the city clerk's office were opened at 10 p.m. local time.


"We've been together for 30 years, and never thought that this country would allow marriages between gay couples," said Roberta Batt, 71, an antiques dealer and retired physician with silver hair and round eyeglasses. She planned to marry her longtime partner, Mary, who stood nearby.

"We're just very thankful to the people of Maine, and I hope the rest of the country goes the way this state has," she added.

Suzanne Blackburn and Joanie Kunian, of Portland, were among those in line to get their license at midnight, but they didn't plan to wed immediately. One of their grandchildren wanted them to get married on Valentine's Day.

"I don't think that we dared to dream too big until we had the governor's signature," Blackburn said. "That's why it's so important, because it feels real."

Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

In Bangor, the city clerk's office was planning to be open on Saturday from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m. for residents to obtain marriage licenses. The Brunswick town clerk's office was set to be open from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday by appointment. As of midday on Friday, five same-sex couples had booked appointments, the office said.

Robert F. Bukaty / AP

Sarah Dowling, left, speaks Nov. 1 at a gay marriage rally, accompanied by her partner of 18 years, Linda Wolfe, and their daughter, Maya Dowling-Wolfe, in Portland, Maine. Dowling and Wolfe planned to marry after a law allowing same-sex marriage took effect at 12:01 a.m. Saturday.

More lavish same-sex weddings are being booked starting in the spring at the On the Marsh Bistro in Kennebunk, said owner Denise Rubin.

"We support it wholeheartedly," she said. "We look forward to being part of a whole new wave of wonderful thinking."

The tide of public opinion has been shifting in favor of allowing same-sex marriage. In May, President Barack Obama became the first U.S. president to say he believed same-sex couples should be allowed to get married.

A Pew Research Center survey from October found 49 percent of Americans favored allowing gay marriage, with 40 percent opposed. The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review two challenges to federal and state laws that define marriage as a union between a man and a woman.

Just a day after Washington became the latest state to allow gay couples to marry, the U.S. Supreme Court will take a serious look at same-sex marriage for the first time ever. NBC's Pete Williams reports.

The nation's highest court said this month it will review a case against a federal law that denies married same-sex couples the federal benefits that heterosexual couples receive. It also will look at a challenge to California's ban on gay marriage, known as Proposition 8, which voters narrowly approved in 2008.

Washington state's law legalizing same-sex unions took effect on Sunday, December 9, and Maryland's law takes effect on January 1, 2013.

This article includes reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

More content from NBCNews.com:

Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

?

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/12/29/16225220-gay-marriage-comes-to-maine-couples-wed-when-law-takes-effect-after-midnight?lite

neville george lucas numerology the game new hampshire primary hue jackson coachella 2012 line up

Friday, December 28, 2012

First Alien Earth Planet to Be Found in 2013?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/first-alien-earth-planet-to-be-found-in-2013/

ryan o neal dark knight rises trailer dark knight rises trailer vince young vince young evan longoria ryan seacrest

Husband Of Slain Officer Arrested in Wisconsin

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/12/husband-of-slain-officer-arrested-in-wisconsin/

lottery numbers mega millions lottery jackpot winning numbers mega millions megamillions drawing olbermann mega millions march 30

Bush spokesman says ex-president's fever rising

HOUSTON (AP) ? A "stubborn" fever that kept former President George H.W. Bush in a hospital over Christmas has gotten worse, and doctors have put him on a liquids-only diet, his spokesman said Wednesday.

Jim McGrath, Bush's spokesman in Houston, had said earlier in the day that the fever had gone away, but he later corrected himself.

"It's an elevated fever, so it's actually gone up in the last day or two," McGrath told The Associated Press. "It's a stubborn fever that won't go away."

Doctors have run tests and are treating the fever with Tylenol, but they still haven't nailed down a cause, McGrath said. Doctors also have put Bush on a liquid diet, though McGrath could not say why.

The bronchitis-like cough that initially brought Bush to the hospital on Nov. 23 has improved, McGrath said. The 88-year-old is now coughing about once a day, he said.

Bush was visited on Christmas by his wife, Barbara, his son, Neil, and Neil's wife, Maria, and a grandson, McGrath said. Bush's daughter, Dorothy, will arrive Wednesday in Houston from Bethesda, Md. The 41st president has also been visited twice by his sons, George W. Bush, the 43rd president, and Jeb Bush, former governor of Florida.

Bush and his wife live in Houston during the winter and spend their summers at a home in Kennebunkport, Maine.

The former president was a naval aviator in World War II ? at one point the youngest in the Navy ? and was shot down over the Pacific. He achieved notoriety in retirement for skydiving on at least three of his birthdays since leaving the White House in 1992.

___

Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bush-spokesman-says-ex-presidents-fever-rising-194812748.html

michigan primary results olympia snowe davey jones dead monsanto boston weather dr seuss birthday jennifer garner

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Iraq: New protests break out in Sunni heartland

RAMADI, Iraq (AP) ? Thousands of Iraqi demonstrators massed in a Sunni-dominated province west of Baghdad Wednesday, determined to keep up the pressure on a Shiite-led government that many accuse of trying to marginalize them.

It was the third major protest in less than a week in Anbar, Iraq's largest province, once the heart of the deadly Sunni insurgency that erupted after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

The unrest is part of a larger picture of sectarian conflicts that threaten the stability of the country, a year after the last U.S. troops left.

The demonstrations follow the arrest last week of 10 bodyguards assigned to Finance Minister Rafia al-Issawi, who comes from Anbar and is one of the central government's most senior Sunni officials. The case is exacerbating tensions with Iraq's Sunnis, who see the detentions as politically motivated.

Protesters turned out Wednesday near the provincial capital Ramadi, 115 kilometers (70 miles) west of Baghdad. The city and nearby Fallujah were the scenes of some of the deadliest fighting between U.S. troops and Iraqi insurgents.

Demonstrators gathered along a highway linking Baghdad with neighboring Jordan and Syria. They held banners demanding that Sunni rights be respected and calling for the release of Sunni prisoners in Iraqi jails. "We warn the government not to draw the country into sectarian conflict," read one. Another declared: "We are not a minority."

Al-Issawi made an appearance at the rally, arriving in a long convoy of black SUVs protected by heavily armed bodyguards. He condemned last week's raid on his office and rattled off a list of grievances aimed at Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government.

"Injustice, marginalization, discrimination and double standards, as well as the politicization of the judiciary system and a lack of respect for partnership, law and constitution ... have all turned our neighborhoods in Baghdad into huge prisons surrounded by concrete blocks," he declared.

Iraq's majority Shiites rose to power following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated regime, though the country's minority Sunni Arabs and Kurds do hold some posts in the government.

Many Sunnis see the arrest of the finance minister's guards as the latest in a series of moves by the Shiite prime minister against their sect and other perceived political opponents. Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, one of the country's highest-ranking Sunni politicians, is now living in exile in Turkey after being handed multiple death sentences for allegedly running death squads ? a charge he dismisses as politically motivated.

"This sit-in will remain open-ended until the demonstrators' demands are met, and until the injustice against ends," cleric Hamid al-Issawi told The Associated Press at the protest. He accused al-Maliki's government of trying to create rifts between Sunnis and Shiites.

"These practices are aimed at drawing the country into a sectarian conflict again by creating crisis and targeting prominent national figures," the cleric said.

Al-Maliki has defended the arrests of the finance minister's guards as legal and based on warrants issued by judicial authorities. He also recently warned against a return to sectarian strife in criticizing the responses of prominent Sunni officials to the detentions.

In a recent statement, the prime minister dismissed the rhetoric as political posturing ahead of provincial elections scheduled for April and warned his opponents not to forget the dark days of sectarian fighting "when we used to collect bodies and chopped heads from the streets."

The political tensions are rising at a sensitive time. Iraq's ailing President Jalal Talabani is incapacitated following a serious stroke last week and is being treated in a German hospital. The 79-year-old president, an ethnic Kurd, is widely seen as a unifying figure with the clout to mediate among the country's ethnic and sectarian groups.

Also Wednesday, the United Nations mission to Iraq said its monitors have determined that a hospital that treated a member of an Iranian exile group who died this week at a refugee camp near Baghdad did not consider his health condition serious enough to warrant hospitalization when he arrived for treatment in November.

An organization representing the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq exile group on Monday accused Iraqi authorities of preventing 56-year-old Behrooz Rahimian from being hospitalized, and alleged that the U.N. failed to take sufficient steps to intervene. Iraq considers the MEK a terrorist group and wants its members out of the country.

The U.N. mission in Baghdad said in a statement Wednesday that it "does not have any indication so far that treatment was obstructed by the Iraqi authorities." It noted that representatives for the refugee residents told U.N. monitors that Rahimian "appeared to be in good condition until the time of his death."

___

Associated Press writers Adam Schreck and Sinan Salaheddin contributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraq-protests-break-sunni-heartland-094604805.html

lsu vs alabama college football college football ncaa football brian van gorder blazing saddles lsu alabama

Hoops: Working out takes circular route - The Orange County Register

When Karl Lagerfeld introduced his ridiculously oversize hula hoop beach bag at a Chanel runway show in the fall, he inadvertently struck a pop-cultural chord.

Among the most talked about accessories to emerge from that season's shows, the beach bag seemed to have tapped into a newfound affection for the hula hoop, as a fashion statement and an exercise device.

Lynette Whiting, a.k.a. Lynette Hoopstasy, shows off an Astral Atomic Hoop hula hoop with rotating color LED's that she uses for shows as she demonstrates a hooping around her hand off the body exercise that is good for the arms by pushing back and forth and not straining the wrist for a great upper arm workout.

STEVEN GEORGES, FOR THE REGISTER

ADVERTISEMENT

Where to go hooping

Finding a place to hula hoop, and hoop hard, in Orange County is like a aiming at a moving target. There's no 24 Hour Hooping Fitness gym, open all night. Instead, there are hooping communities and Facebook pages and Meetup pages. Once you're in that community, you'll be able to find out who teaches what, where, and then you can go swinging.

Here are a few people who teach classes:

Lynette Whiting, aka Lynette Hoopstasy, Thursdays (8 p.m.) and Fridays (7 p.m.) at Strong Studios, 9929 Walker Street in Cypress, 714-404-0002. No classes this week. Drop-in class, $15 for one or $50 for a pack of five.

Other classes/instructors:

?Hooping From the Heart, every Sunday at Lantern Bay Park in Dana Point, noon.

Kay Braun, hoopenchantment.com

?Melodye Wintemute, hula4u.com

?Andrea Alfi, andrea.alfi@gmail.com

More places to hoop it up

Free Hoopjam Sundays, by The Walking Hoop and Hoopdance Fitness, on the third Sunday of every month at Salt Creek Beach near the Ritz-Carlton in Dana Point, 8 a.m.

Groups

?South Orange County Hoopers. Hooper extraordinaire Ashley Pintek says the group usually meets Sundays at Salt Creek, with times and locations available on the group's Meetup page, or by calling 949-482-5601.

?OC Hoopers Facebook page, Facebook.com/groups/OCHoopers

?Hoop City, Hoopcity.ca

?Hooping.org

Anderson Cooper, on his talk show, "Anderson Live," presented a mock version of the bag ? a quilted white case with handles made of actual hula hoops ? to his co-host, Alexa Chung.

Hula hoops have received other celebrity endorsements. Christie Brinkley was photographed hula-hooping in Times Square on Oct. 5 for World Smile Day, an event that promotes acts of kindness. Jimmy Fallon challenged Michelle Obama to a hula-hooping contest on "Late Night With Jimmy Fallon" in February, after she was photographed hooping on the White House lawn at her Healthy Kids Fair. And Marisa Tomei professed her love of hula-hooping on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" in 2010, saying it "shimmied everything into place" for her role as a stripper in the film "The Wrestler."

Veteran hula-hoopers have long stood by its aerobic virtues.

"A lot of people are interested in hooping for its health benefits, which might get them hooked, but it's also such a fun way to do cardio," said Bex Burton, a hula hoop instructor who founded Sense of Motion, a Brooklyn-based company that teaches hula-hooping, Pilates and yoga.

Lynette Whiting, also known as Lynette Hoopstasy, holds classes on Thursdays (8 p.m.) and Fridays (7 p.m.) at Strong Studios, 9929 Walker Street in Cypress (714-404-0002). Classes won't be held this week but will resume next week. It's a drop-in class (no sign-up necessary), and the cost is $15 for one or $50 for a pack of five.

Whiting, 24, took up hooping in college and has been teaching it for several years, having learned from the experts at Hoopnotica in Venice. She says she used to work at a gym and "would see people come in and just punishing themselves. I felt bad. I wanted to do something that was fun."

Many of her pupils now are parents of kids who take dance classes at Strong Studios. Some of her students swear they cannot, no matter how hard they try, hula hoop.

"It just makes me feel so happy when I see they're doing it, and they can't believe they're doing it," she said.

The key is getting the right-size hoop. Adult beginners should start with a larger hoop, say 40 to 44 inches in diameter. These are heavier than the kids' toys, and it doesn't take much hip action to get them going. As hoopers get better, they can work their way down to a 30-incher (a standard child size is 28 inches).

Whiting supplies the hoops, or students can bring their own. She doesn't use weighted ones, because in her class, hoopers are using them on their necks and bellies, and if a weighted hoop conks into you, it can hurt.

Whiting, who lives in Buena Park, believes in hooping so much that she's doing her grad-school dissertation on the psychological benefits of hoop dancing.

As with any exercise trend, accessories have proliferated.

"We just got in a beautiful prototype of a goatskin-covered hula hoop ? it's dark black leather with a nice grip," said Gabriella Redding, founder of Hoopnotica. In addition to selling hoops, fitness videos and other accessories, Hoopnotica certifies 300 instructors a year to teach what it calls hoop dance.

Sales at the 7-year-old company have grown an average of 30 percent each year and passed the $1 million mark last year, Redding said. Buyers include Stefan Pildes, a founder of Groovehoops, a hoop performance troupe in New York that offers classes at the 14th Street YMCA. Every Monday, about 30 students, ranging in age from 10 to 50, learn hoop tricks like the Swim and Walking the Dog.

"One of my constant quotes in class is if you're giggling, you're doing it correctly," Pildes said. "It's not about how graceful you are, or what trick you can do. It's about finding the joy in your workout."

Some students compare it to yoga.

"I can get into the groove. It's very meditative," said Geetika Agrawal, 34, an associate creative director at a digital agency in Manhattan. "I've started taking formal workshops and lessons so I can learn tricks."

Die-hard hoopers also are taking their passion outdoors, to concerts and giant group hoop sessions called "hoop jams" set to music. Devotees can be spotted in the subway with oversize hoop bags.

"Everyone is in their own hoop world at hoop jams," said Jenni Schwartz, 32, a graphic and Web designer in Manhattan. "But it's friendly at the same time, so I know I can always ask someone to teach me a new skill."

In Los Angeles, workplaces are embracing hooping as a healthy alternative to smoke breaks or trips to the vending machine.

Dina Strada, the manager of employee events at DreamWorks Animation, encourages the staff to take hoop breaks twice a day for 15 minutes. About 10 to 15 people partake, she said.

"Even on days where we're so crazed with work, we force each other to take a quick break," Strada said. "On really busy days, I can hoop and respond to emails at the same time."

Register writer Landon Hall contributed to this report.


Source: http://www.ocregister.com/articles/hoop-381748-hula-hooping.html

living social Earthquake Costa Rica Clinton speech Michael Strahan Griselda Blanco Michelle Obama Speech eva longoria

Local Family Spends Holiday Volunteering - Back to Home

The holidays aren't joyous for everyone. Especially when you don't have a roof over your head or food in your stomach.

The holidays are a time most people spend with loved ones. But one family is spending it helping those in need.

Dick Pariset and his family celebrated Christmas with a few extra people this year. But they weren't at home. They were at Matt Talbot Kitchen & Outreach, preparing and serving a holiday meal to those who normally wouldn't have one.

"It makes you feel pretty good. These folks have a really nice meal, an abundance of food. I'm a farmer, so what would be better than helping people eat a nice meal," Pariset said.

Dick, his wife Jerry, and their daughter, son-in-law and grandson from Colorado spent Tuesday scooping steaming potatoes and ham for someone other than themselves. They say they feel lucky to have gotten the opportunity.

"Generally on Christmas day, they have a bunch of people who that's just their day to volunteer. They said 'man that would be wonderful, because we could be with our family for a change,'" Pariset said.

Volunteering runs in the family. Jerry Pariset helps out at Matt Talbot every week and 13-year-old Dominic isn't new to the organization either. It's the second time he's joined his grandparents there.

"It's something you can do for somebody else. Christmas is the perfect time to do that," Pariset said.

The Matt Talbot Kitchen made enough food to serve about 150 people. Surprisingly, they say the holidays aren't their busiest season.

Matt Talbot staff say they had so many volunteers they had to turn some away. They just hope the volunteering spirit lasts all year.

Source: http://www.1011now.com/home/headlines/Family-Spends-Holiday-Volunteering-184761871.html

varez ward solar storms uganda the parent trap invisible children kony 2012 space weather sunspots

Storm brings white Christmas, tornado threat to central U.S.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A major winter storm brought a rare white Christmas to the southern U.S. plains on Tuesday, contributing to a 21-vehicle pile-up that shut down a major highway in Oklahoma, thousands of power outages and the death of a Texas man.

The storm system surging east from Kansas and the Texas Panhandle included tornados and severe thunderstorms along its southern fringe, from southeastern Texas to Alabama, the National Weather Service said.

The service reported a tornado warning for the Mobile, Alabama area late Tuesday afternoon.

CenterPoint Energy reported more than 20,000 customers without power in the Houston area Tuesday afternoon.

The storm is expected to expected to evolve into a blizzard from Arkansas to southern Illinois Tuesday night, with snowfall of up to a foot in some areas, according to Accuweather.com.

Accuweather.com senior meteorologist Kristina Pydynowski warned on the website that travel will be "extremely treacherous, if not impossible, as the snow clogs roads, such as interstates 24, 55 and 57, and the blowing snow severely lowers visibility."

The snowstorm will shift Wednesday to the eastern Great Lakes and northeast, she said.

Southern Indiana is under a blizzard warning starting early Wednesday morning, according to National Weather Service meteorologist Crystal Pettet. Indianapolis could see its biggest snowfall in four years, with a possibility of 10-12 inches of snow.

"Conditions should be pretty bad in time for rush hour," said Pettet.

A 25-year-old Texas man was killed Tuesday when a tree fell across a road in Harris County, in the Houston metropolitan area, according to Thomas Gilliland of the county's sheriff's office.

A tornado destroyed a building 13 miles southeast of Crockett, Texas, and a bank lost a section of its roof, according to Accuweather.com.

Freezing drizzle overnight led to 10 separate collisions on Interstate 40 at Oklahoma City just before 3 a.m., said Trooper Betsy Randolph, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Highway Patrol.

The 21-vehicle pile-up included three tractor-trailers and shut down the westbound lanes for about five hours, she said. Twelve people were taken to hospitals, and troopers are checking on the severity of their injuries.

In a rare taste of Christmas snow, Oklahoma City was forecast to get 3 to 6 inches of the white stuff on Tuesday. The city's biggest Christmas snowfall was 6.5 inches in 1914, and measurable amounts have been recorded only a handful of times on the date.

The FlightAware website, which tracks flight delays, reported departure delays of 40 minutes from Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport at 5 p.m. local time and 32 minutes from Chicago/O'Hare International Airport.

San Francisco International Airport had delays for inbound flights of over an hour due to low clouds.

Ahead of the storm's path, parts of eastern West Virginia are under a winter storm warning. Ice accumulations of up to half an inch are expected in higher elevations, the National Weather Service said.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson and Mary Wisniewski; Editing by Sandra Maler and Todd Eastham)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/storm-brings-white-christmas-tornado-threat-central-u-163807019.html

Barbara Palvin Yahoo Fantasy Football Nick Foles Auguste Rodin Breaking Amish Indianapolis explosion mike brown

Hundreds of flights canceled as storm pounds eastern U.S

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A powerful winter storm forced the cancellation of about 200 U.S. flights on Thursday, snarling holiday travel as heavy snow and high winds pummeled the northeastern United States.

The National Weather Service forecast 12 to 18 inches of snow for northern New England as the storm moved northeast out of the lower Great Lakes, where it dumped more than a foot of snow in parts of Michigan.

The storm front was accompanied by freezing rain and sleet. The Ohio River Valley and the Northeast were under blizzard and winter storm warnings.

Snow will fall in northern New York, Vermont and New Hampshire at up to 2 inches an hour, with winds gusting to 30 mph (48 km per hour), the weather agency said.

About 200 U.S. airline flights scheduled for Thursday were canceled a day ahead of time, according to FlightAware.com, a website that tracks flights.

American Airlines had the most canceled at about 30. A total of about 1,500 U.S. flights were canceled on Wednesday.

New York state activated its Emergency Operations Center late on Wednesday to deal with the first major storm of the season.

Governor Andrew Cuomo warned the heads of seven utilities they would be held accountable for their performances. Utilities near New York City were criticized for lingering outages after Superstorm Sandy devastated the region in October.

The storm comes as New York state has seen little snow during autumn and winter. Buffalo, New York, was 23 inches below normal for the season before the storm, said Bill Hibbert, a National Weather Service meteorologist.

"We're short and even this big snow isn't going to make it up for us," he said.

The storm dumped record snow in north Texas and Arkansas before it swept through the U.S. South on Christmas Day and then veered north. The system spawned tornadoes and left almost 200,000 people in Arkansas and Alabama without power on Wednesday.

At least five people were killed in road accidents related to the bad weather, police said.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson and Neale Gulley; Editing by Paul Simao)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/winter-storm-hits-eastern-u-snarls-holiday-travel-011551802.html

internet blackout jessica capshaw seattle times seattle times walker recall censor pipa and sopa