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                                NOVEMBER 2014
                                  
                                
                                   
                                  
                                “No one is
                                   useless in this world who lightens the burdens of
                                   another.” 
                                       
                                - Charles Dickens   
                                
                                   
                                  
                                
                                
                                RECIPE Pecan & Walnut
                                Pie 
                                  
                                
                                
                                1¼ cups light corn syrup  
                                
                                
                                ½ cup packed dark brown sugar  
                                
                                
                                ¼ cup granulated sugar  
                                
                                
                                3 large eggs  
                                
                                
                                2 tbsps. unsalted butter, melted  
                                
                                
                                2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract  
                                
                                
                                ¼ teaspoon kosher salt  
                                
                                
                                1 cup pecan halves  
                                
                                
                                1 cup walnut halves  
                                
                                
                                1 piecrust, fitted into 9" pie plate  
                                
                                
                                 
                                  
                                
                                
                                First, heat oven to 350° F. Next, whisk together corn syrup,
                                brown & granulated sugars, eggs, butter, vanilla and salt in a large bowl.
                                Then, mix in pecans and walnuts. Place the pie plate on a rimmed baking sheet. Fill
                                with the nut mixture and bake until the center is set. Let cool completely before
                                serving.   
                                
                                 
                                  
                                
                                BRAIN TEASER Feathered
                                Factoid. What bird, which
                                sometimes roosts in trees, is the only breed of poultry native to the Western
                                Hemisphere?*  
                                
                                 
                                  
                                
                                DID YOU KNOW? 
                                There’s plenty of room up north  
                                Alaska has a population density of just 1.0 person per square mile. If
                                   New York City was populated that lightly, only 16 people would live in
                                   Manhattan.4  
                                
                                 
                                         
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                                HAVE YOU TAKEN YOUR 2014 RMD YET?  
                                Owners of traditional IRAs
                                   who are in their seventies have to take mandatory annual withdrawals from those
                                   IRAs by December 31 of each year; exceptions are only made for first-timers. A
                                   new report from Fidelity Investments, however, suggests that too many of these
                                   retirees are going to push the deadline.    
                                     
                                In the hubbub of the
                                   holiday season, there is the chance that a mandatory IRA withdrawal will be
                                   forgotten. According to the Treasury Inspector General, up to 250,000 IRA owners
                                   forget to take Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) per year. Fidelity recently
                                   looked at 750,000 traditional IRAs requiring 2014 RMDs and found that 68% of
                                   their owners had taken only partial RMDs or less. In fact, 56% hadn’t withdrawn
                                   a penny from their accounts yet.     
                                    
                                Nonchalance or
                                   forgetfulness on the part of the IRA owner can lead to a missed RMD; also, some
                                   people just don’t open their mail regularly. Inherited IRAs are routinely
                                   subject to RMDs, but many heirs don’t realize it. Lastly, when a new IRA is
                                   opened during a given year, the financial institution hosting the account isn’t
                                   required to tell the new accountholder about RMDs until the next year. Taking an
                                   RMD on time is crucial and saves the traditional IRA owner from a tax penalty
                                   equal to 50% of the required withdrawal amount.1  
                                      
                                 
                                     
                                
                                TAKING THAT TRIP OF A LIFETIME, MORE
                                AFFORDABLY  
                                Maybe you’ve always wanted
                                   to go to China, or India, or France... but the practical question becomes “Can I
                                   afford it?” A 12-day trip to China or an 8-day cruise down the Rhine, for
                                   example, can easily cost several thousand dollars. 
                                     
                                     
                                There are ways to knock
                                   down the cost of that dream trip. One, schedule it for the “shoulder seasons” or
                                   even the off-season. Just that little move alone could save you hundreds or
                                   thousands of dollars. (Off-season cruises in particular can amount to great
                                   values.) Two, look at going all-inclusive or taking a group tour; any loss of
                                   flexibility might be a minor tradeoff for major savings. Knowing how much money
                                   you are going to spend up front allows you to travel with less uncertainty.
                                   Lastly, if you are single, see if you can avoid going alone. Solo travel often
                                   ends up costing much more per-person than group travel or even just vacationing
                                   as a couple.2   
                                      
                                      
                                ON THE BRIGHT SIDE 
                                Earlier this year, Consumer Reports
                                      surveyed more than 24,000 of its subscribers aged 55-75. It
                                      found that 74% of the respondents who had already retired had expenses equal
                                      to or less than what they had expected when they left
                                      work.3  
                                    
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