মঙ্গলবার, ৩০ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Team of rivals: Italy, finally, forms new government (+video)

Center-left leader Enrico Letta will be Italy's new prime minister, after his party formed a coalition government with former Premier Silvio Berlusconi's conservatives.

By Frances D'Emilio,?Associated Press / April 27, 2013

Italian Premier-designate Enrico Letta speaks at the Quirinale Presidential Palace in Rome, Saturday, April 27, 2013. Italy has finally has a new government, a coalition of Berlusconi's forces and center-left rivals who forged an unusual alliance.

(AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis)

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Center-left leader Enrico Letta forged a new Italian government Saturday in a coalition with former Premier Silvio Berlusconi's conservatives, an unusual alliance of bitter rivals that broke a two-month political stalemate from inconclusive elections in the recession-mired country.

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The daunting achievement was pulled off by Letta, who will be sworn in as premier along with the new Cabinet on Sunday at the presidential Quirinal Palace.

Letta, 46, is a moderate with a reputation as a political bridge-builder. He is also the nephew Berlusconi's longtime adviser, Gianni Letta, a relationship seen as smoothing over often nasty interaction between the two main coalition partners.

Serving as deputy premier and interior minister will be Berlusconi's top political aide, Angelino Alfano. He is a former justice minister who was the architect of legislation that critics say was tailor-made to help media mogul Berlusconi in his many judicial woes.

The creation of the coalition capped the latest political comeback for Berlusconi, a former three-time premier who was forced to resign in 2011 as Italy slid deeper in to the eurozone's sovereign debt crisis.

On Monday, Letta is expected to lay out his strategy to Parliament, ahead of required confidence votes from the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.

"We negotiated for the formation of the government without throwing up any stop signs," Berlusconi to told one of his TV networks. "That's how we contributed to forming a government in short time" after Letta was tapped Wednesday.

Berlusconi, a fervent anti-Communist, views Italy's left as a personal nemesis, and Letta's Democratic Party has some of its roots in what was the West's largest Communist Party.

Letta expressed "sober satisfaction over the team we put together and its willingness" to form a coalition.

Only a few weeks earlier, the head of the Democrats, Pier Luigi Bersani, resigned from the party post in humiliation and he refused Berlusconi's offer for a "grand coalition" and futilely tried to form a government without the center-right. Letta was a Bersani loyalist.

Bersani hailed the coalition formula as a "necessary compromise" that gives the country "freshness and solidarity."

The No. 3 bloc in Parliament, the anti-establishment 5 Star Movement, is led by comic Beppe Grillo, who ruled out any alliance with the largely sullied political class that has ruled Italy for decades.

President Giorgio Napolitano, who tasked Letta with creating a government out of bitter rivals, called upon the coalition partners to work "in a spirit of absolute, indispensable cohesion" as they work for sorely needed political and economic reforms.

The 87-year-old head of state sounded almost breathless as he expressed confidence the rivals could work together "without conflict or prejudices to find the right solutions" to the country's pressing economic and political problems.

Napolitano didn't name the challenges, but they include fighting unemployment, especially for young people, and corruption sullying much of the political class.

Napolitano said: "It was and is the only possible government," and one "whose formation couldn't be delayed further, in the interest of our country and of Europe."

He reluctantly agreed to be re-elected by Parliament earlier this month for another seven-year term because of the political instability.

Italy's economy is No. 3 among eurozone members, and financial markets have been anxiously watching to see if an effective government could be formed to carry on with outgoing Premier Mario Monti's efforts to keep the country from sliding into the eurozone's sovereign debt crisis.

Some Italian political observers have predicted such a hybrid government might last only a few months of Parliament's five-year term, before collapsing in squabbling.

But the fear of elections, especially after the lightning-quick rise of comic Grillo's grassroots movement, could prove to be strong glue.

Giovanni Orsina, deputy director of LUISS university's school of government in Rome, ventured that Letta's new coalition could "last more than we expect, 18 to 24 months, more or less."

The history professor cited "lack of alternatives, and because I believe Parliament's members are not particularly eager to get back to the polling booth and face new elections."

Voters, fed up with new and higher taxes, including a despised property tax revived by Monti, rejected his severe austerity policies.

The small centrist party created in time for the election by Monti, an economist and former European Union commissioner, will participate in the coalition, although Monti won't be in the Cabinet, which is heavy on two novelties ? a large presence of female ministers and Italy's first black minister.

A native of Congo, Cecile Kyenge is a doctor who will serve as minister of integration. Proposals to make it easier for Italy' growing immigrant population to become citizens have gone nowhere in Parliament amid fierce opposition from the anti-immigrant Northern League party. The party, a Berlusconi ally, isn't in the new government.

Prominent among the women in the Cabinet is Emma Bonino, a former EU commissioner and Radical Party leader who will serve as foreign minister. Olympic gold medal kayaker Josefa Idem was tapped as minister of equal opportunity and sports.

Letta comes from a moderate wing of the left-rooted Democratic Party that is close to the Vatican. Since Parliament always includes an array of lawmakers enjoying good ties to the politically influential Catholic church in Italy, this was one more qualification on Letta's bridge-building resume.

The father of three sons, he lives in Rome's working-class Testaccio neighborhood. When he was tapped by Napolitano on Wednesday, he drove his own car to the Quirinal Palace, in what was seen as a photo opportunity gesture to Italian taxpayers who widely despise the huge fleet of luxury cars that shuttles around ministers and lawmakers.

In 1998, when he was 32, Letta became the youngest minister in Italy's history when he served as minister for European policy for then-Premier Massimo D'Alema, an ex-Communist leader. Letta seemed a natural for that post. He spent his childhood in Strasbourg, home to the European Parliament, and studied international law before jumping into politics.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/WJ77Gys4ack/Team-of-rivals-Italy-finally-forms-new-government-video

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সোমবার, ২৯ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

These Japanese Wooden Pens Are Perfectly Elegant

You know, there's nothing quite like finding the perfect writing instrument. It's a wordsmith's holy grail of sorts. And we love these elegant new pens from Japanese brand Miidori.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-_CtJYu4qHQ/these-japanese-wooden-pens-are-perfectly-elegant-484695075

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A Chinese Winery That Mimics Everyone's Favorite Five-Armed Glyph

Here's a fun little piece of literalism for a Monday afternoon: Asterisk, a winery designed by the Japanese firm Sako Architects.

Sited on an artificial island in a complex outside of Beijing, the building's five prongs each house a different program?one for eating, one for boozing, and so on. The 60,000-square-foot winery is part of a luxury complex called the Park Hotel Group, which operates properties all over Asia.

Wine is increasingly in demand in China, where Western-made symbols of wealth?like Expressionist painting reproductions and Neoclassical architecture?are increasingly popular. And according to World Architects, most of the wineries popping up outside of Beijing are built to replicate French villas or German castles, keeping in line with the popularity of European grapes amongst Chinese drinkers. So Asterisk, then, is a kind of outlier amongst Chinese wineries (and a welcome one, I'm willing to bet).

My tolerance for iconography in architecture is pretty low, but it's hard not to like this little gem. It's like a polite little footnote to the landscape itself. See more on Sako's website. [World Architects]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/a-chinese-winery-that-mimics-everyones-favorite-five-a-484679519

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    Russia caught bomb suspect on wiretap

    WASHINGTON (AP) ? Russian authorities secretly recorded a telephone conversation in 2011 in which one of the Boston bombing suspects vaguely discussed jihad with his mother, officials said Saturday, days after the U.S. government finally received details about the call.

    In another conversation, the mother of now-dead bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev was recorded talking to someone in southern Russia who is under FBI investigation in an unrelated case, officials said.

    The conversations are significant because, had they been revealed earlier, they might have been enough evidence for the FBI to initiate a more thorough investigation of the Tsarnaev family.

    As it was, Russian authorities told the FBI only that they had concerns that Tamerlan and his mother were religious extremists. With no additional information, the FBI conducted a limited inquiry and closed the case in June 2011.

    Two years later, authorities say Tamerlan and his brother, Dzhohkar, detonated two homemade bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon, killing three and injuring more than 260. Tamerlan was killed in a police shootout and Dzhohkar is under arrest.

    In the past week, Russian authorities turned over to the United States information it had on Tamerlan and his mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva. The Tsarnaevs are ethnic Chechens who emigrated from southern Russia to the Boston area over the past 11 years.

    Even had the FBI received the information from the Russian wiretaps earlier, it's not clear that the government could have prevented the attack.

    In early 2011, the Russian FSB internal security service intercepted a conversation between Tamerlan and his mother vaguely discussing jihad, according to U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation with reporters.

    The two discussed the possibility of Tamerlan going to Palestine, but he told his mother he didn't speak the language there, according to the officials, who reviewed the information Russia shared with the U.S.

    In a second call, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva spoke with a man in the Caucasus region of Russia who was under FBI investigation. Jacqueline Maguire, a spokeswoman for the FBI's Washington Field Office, where that investigation was based, declined to comment.

    There was no information in the conversation that suggested a plot inside the United States, officials said.

    It was not immediately clear why Russian authorities didn't share more information at the time. It is not unusual for countries, including the U.S., to be cagey with foreign authorities about what intelligence is being collected.

    Nobody was available to discuss the matter early Sunday at FSB offices in Moscow.

    Jim Treacy, the FBI's legal attache in Moscow between 2007 and 2009, said the Russians long asked for U.S. assistance regarding Chechen activity in the United States that might be related to terrorism.

    "On any given day, you can get some very good cooperation," Treacy said. "The next you might find yourself totally shut out."

    Zubeidat Tsarnaeva has denied that she or her sons were involved in terrorism. She has said she believed her sons have been framed by U.S. authorities.

    But Ruslan Tsarni, an uncle of the Tsarnaev brothers and Zubeidat's former brother-in-law, said Saturday he believes the mother had a "big-time influence" as her older son increasingly embraced his Muslim faith and decided to quit boxing and school.

    After receiving the narrow tip from Russia in March 2011, the FBI opened a preliminary investigation into Tamerlan and his mother. But the scope was extremely limited under the FBI's internal procedures.

    After a few months, they found no evidence Tamerlan or his mother were involved in terrorism.

    The FBI asked Russia for more information. After hearing nothing, it closed the case in June 2011.

    In the fall of 2011, the FSB contacted the CIA with the same information. Again the FBI asked Russia for more details and never heard back.

    At that time, however, the CIA asked that Tamerlan's and his mother's name be entered into a massive U.S. terrorism database.

    The CIA declined to comment Saturday.

    Authorities have said they've seen no connection between the brothers and a foreign terrorist group. Dzhohkar told FBI interrogators that he and his brother were angry over wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the deaths of Muslim civilians there.

    Family members have said Tamerlan was religiously apathetic until 2008 or 2009, when he met a conservative Muslim convert known only to the family as Misha. Misha, they said, steered Tamerlan toward a stricter version of Islam.

    Two U.S. officials say investigators believe they have identified Misha. While it was not clear whether the FBI had spoken to him, the officials said they have not found a connection between Misha and the Boston attack or terrorism in general.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Adam Goldman in Washington and Michael Kunzelman in Boston contributed to this report.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/apnewsbreak-russia-caught-bomb-suspect-wiretap-211814701.html

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    রবিবার, ২৮ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

    Boeing ready to build seven Dreamliners a month by mid-year

    WARSAW, April 25 (Reuters) - Borussia Dortmund striker Robert Lewandowski played down his stunning one-man demolition of Real Madrid, saying he had played better than Wednesday's four-goal masterclass. The Poland international scored all his team's goals in a 4-1 win over the nine-times champions in their Champions League semi-final first leg. "In the second half Real Madrid did not know how they should play, at some moments they were helpless," Lewandowski told the Polish pay-TV platform nc+. "We took the first step (towards the final). "I felt confident, but there were even better matches. ...

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/boeing-ready-build-seven-dreamliners-month-mid-034043974.html

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    Still no comment on DMC approval by House - Postbulletin.com ...

    News release from Rep. Duane Quam's office -- interesting that his comments on the budget bill are secondary to comments on the education bill and include no reference to Destination Medical Center.

    If he or other area Republican House members have put out statements on DMC's passage (as part of budget bill) Wednesday night, I haven't seen them.

    For those of you keeping score at home, DFLers Kim Norton and Tina Liebling did put out statements.


    House Moves Ahead with Damaging Changes to Education and Taxes

    Rep. Duane Quam, Byron

    On Tuesday, the Minnesota House debated and passed the Omnibus K-12 Education Finance bill, the largest single expenditure of our state?s budget. In our current budget, passed in 2011, we provided a 33 % increase and spent $15.5 billion. This budget also helped spur over $300 million in surplus that will be used to pay back the school shift. With $15.7 billion in funding for our public schools, the bill also creates millions in new bureaucratic mandates that funnel money outside of the classroom. Line items like new ?regional centers of excellence? aren?t necessary to improve the classroom experience for our kids.

    Even more concerning, however, is the elimination of graduation standards that got slipped into the bill. Currently, Minnesota High Schoolers take several assessments in order to qualify for a high school diploma. Two of these GRAD (Graduation Required Assessment for Diploma) tests include the GRAD Writing Test given at grade nine and the Grade 10 Reading MCA. These tests are now on the chopping block.

    Why would we remove statewide comprehensive standards for our students? Embarrassed by poor results in their metro school districts, some powerful education groups have applied great pressure on Governor Dayton and my Democrat colleagues in the legislature to do-away with these measurements. Unfortunately for our students, the pressure worked.

    With great concern for our local schools and student readiness for post-graduation, I spoke with several teachers in our district and offered an amendment to the K-12 bill which would have kept a grad standard in place. Through an accumulation of scores across subject areas, my amendment would have allowed an overall positive score for students and teacher candidates to outweigh a potentially lower score in one subject area. It would have kept a state standard for our graduates and our new teachers in place.

    My amendment was rejected by House Democrats and the elimination of crucial learning measurement benchmarks will march on.

    On Wednesday night, the House also passed the largest tax increase in three decades. Paid for with new higher income taxes and a shift in lower and middle income brackets, the bill also brings about higher sales taxes on alcohol products and tobacco. One lesser known item in HF677 (Omnibus Tax Bill) is the elimination of the state?s charitable giving tax credit for those that itemize deductions, as well as the elimination of a tax credit for purchasing long-term care insurance.

    With new taxes and fees totaling $3 billion over the next two years, people from our area across income levels will feel the bite of this stone-cold job killer. Businesses will have less to hire and grow jobs, and may raise prices or close down. Farmers will not see the property tax relief they deserve, because the bill is focused on metro-area interests. In all, the new taxes amount to over $500 for every man, woman and child in Minnesota, or $2000 for a family of four.

    Both bills will now merge with Senate versions and return to the House before they are given final passage and sent to Governor Dayton.

    Thank you for your input during these long weeks of session, I appreciate hearing from you.

    ?

    Source: http://postbulletin.typepad.com/honk/2013/04/still-no-comment-on-dmc-approval-by-house.html

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    Russia Detains 140 Suspected Islamic Extremists (Voice Of America)

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

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/302008813?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    শনিবার, ২৭ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

    Duncan leads Spurs' rout, pushing Lakers to brink

    San Antonio Spurs guard Cory Joseph, right, blocks a shot by Los Angeles Lakers guard Andrew Goudelock during the second half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

    San Antonio Spurs guard Cory Joseph, right, blocks a shot by Los Angeles Lakers guard Andrew Goudelock during the second half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

    Los Angeles Lakers forward Pau Gasol, of Spain,, right, blocks a pass by San Antonio Spurs center DeJuan Blair during the first half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

    San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan, left, dunks over Los Angeles Lakers forward Pau Gasol (16), of Spain, during the first half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series on Friday, April 26, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

    Los Angeles Lakers forward Metta World Peace, right, shoots over San Antonio Spurs forward Kawhi Leonard during the first half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series, Friday, April 26, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

    San Antonio Spurs forward Tim Duncan, left, shoots over Los Angeles Lakers forward Pau Gasol, of Spain, during the first half in Game 3 of a first-round NBA basketball playoff series on Friday, April 26, 2013, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

    (AP) ? After 16 seasons, Tim Duncan knows the NBA postseason is no time for mercy. Particularly when an opponent is down and seemingly ready to go out.

    In the opening minutes of Game 3, Duncan made three consecutive baskets and blocked Dwight Howard's shot, dominating with his usual ruthless grace.

    He put the San Antonio Spurs ahead to stay, and they ended up handing the short-handed Los Angeles Lakers their biggest home playoff loss in franchise history.

    After a 120-89 victory Friday night, all that's left is the finish ? something Duncan and the Spurs also know how to do pretty well.

    Duncan had 26 points and nine rebounds, and Tony Parker had 20 points and seven assists in a largely silent Staples Center as San Antonio pushed the Lakers to the brink of first-round playoff elimination for the first time since 2007.

    "We respect these guys, and we're not trying to give them any momentum whatsoever," Duncan said.

    The short-handed Lakers played without their top four guards due to injury, and the Spurs posted their biggest win of a series thoroughly controlled by coach Gregg Popovich's playoff-tested club.

    San Antonio led throughout the final 44 minutes, going up by 18 in the first half and 25 early in the fourth quarter with its smooth, flexible offense.

    "I think we're playing fairly well," Popovich said. "Whether the team you're playing is whole, or banged up like the Lakers are ... we have to bring the energy and the professionalism to play."

    They've had little trouble doing it so far, and the Spurs can close it out in Game 4 on Sunday night.

    Tiago Splitter limped to the Spurs' locker room late in the third quarter with a sprained left ankle, but not much else went poorly for San Antonio while silencing the Lakers' enthusiastic crowd.

    Howard had 25 points and 11 rebounds, and Pau Gasol added his first career playoff triple-double with 11 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists, but the Spurs were far too much for a team without Kobe Bryant and Steve Nash.

    Andrew Goudelock scored a career-high 20 points in his first playoff start, and fellow starter Darius Morris scored 12 of his 24 points in the blowout fourth quarter.

    With Bryant and Nash joined by Jodie Meeks and Steve Blake on the injured list, the Lakers started Goudelock and Morris, using a starting five that had never started together for the second time in three games. The young guards didn't play poorly, but they weren't enough to overcome Duncan's dominance and Parker's continued move back to top form.

    "It's been a very tough year, but we're not going to make any excuses, and we're not going to quit," Howard said.

    The Lakers exceeded their 29-point home loss to Portland on May 22, 2000, the previous worst home defeat for the 16-time NBA champion franchise. Staples Center's lower bowl was half empty in the final minutes, an unfamiliar sight in an arena used to celebrating championships.

    "The first half, we gave everything we had, and it obviously wasn't enough," Los Angeles coach Mike D'Antoni said. "I thought our guys played as hard as they can play."

    After finishing the regular season with a loss at Staples Center among their seven defeats in their final 10 games, the Spurs took control of the series with two methodical wins in San Antonio.

    Nash was largely ineffective after missing the final eight regular-season games, and the Spurs' veteran chemistry was more than enough to finish off the Lakers.

    The first half of Game 3 had the same theme. San Antonio jumped to an 18-point lead late in the second quarter with steady offense from 10 scorers, while the Lakers had an understandable lack of chemistry.

    The Lakers' tumultuous season appears to be drawing to a merciful end, since they're nearly out of healthy players after beginning the season with a star-studded roster and championship aspirations.

    Nine of the Lakers' 15 players were on their injury report for Game 3, and Metta World Peace played despite getting fluid drained from a cyst behind his surgically repaired left knee. After the game, World Peace said he'll probably sit out Game 4.

    Bryant attended the game, hobbling through the Lakers' locker room before the game with crutches and a large walking boot on his immobilized ankle, but didn't join Nash, Blake and Meeks watching in suits at courtside.

    The Lakers were forced to rely on Goudelock, their second-round draft pick from two years ago who spent this season in the D-League until Los Angeles signed him 12 days ago, and Morris, another second-year pro who barely left the Lakers' bench for long stretches this season.

    Goudelock, the MVP of the NBA's D-League this season, put up plenty of points with ample opportunity to shoot, but Parker largely matched him while Duncan thoroughly outplayed Howard and Gasol down low with his timeless game as the Spurs pulled away.

    Goudelock started slowly, but scored 10 points in a 2:25 burst late in the second quarter to trim San Antonio's halftime lead to 55-44.

    NOTES: Gasol is the seventh player to post a playoff triple-double in Lakers history. ... F Boris Diaw, the Spurs' only player with a significant injury, is running on a treadmill and shooting in his comeback from the removal of a cyst from his spine. He's likely to play 2-on-2 with contact next week. ... World Peace ran with obvious discomfort in his knee. Before the game, he considered sitting out, but didn't feel he could miss a game with the Lakers' injury woes. ... Ashton Kutcher, David Arquette, Jon Heder and "Mad Men" creator Matthew Weiner watched from courtside.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-27-BKN-Spurs-Lakers/id-69b5d96cc8b14bbc94336e4b674a40bc

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    শুক্রবার, ২৬ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

    LivingSocial cyber attack affects millions of customers

    By Alistair Barr

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - LivingSocial, the second-largest daily deal company behind Groupon Inc, said on Friday it was hit by a cyber attack that may have affected more than 50 million customers.

    The company said the attack on its computer systems resulted in unauthorized access to customer data, including names, email addresses, date of birth for some users and "encrypted" passwords.

    LivingSocial stressed customer credit card and merchants' financial and banking information were not affected or accessed. It also does not store passwords in plain text.

    "We are actively working with law enforcement to investigate this issue," the company, part-owned by Amazon.com Inc, wrote in an email to employees.

    LivingSocial does not disclose how many customers it has. However, spokesman Andrew Weinstein said "a substantial portion" of the company's customer base was affected. LivingSocial is also contacting customers who closed accounts, because it still has their information stored in databases, he added.

    The attack hit customers in the United States, Canada, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Southern Europe and Latin America. Customers in South Korea, Indonesia, Philippines and Thailand were not affected, Weinstein said.

    "In light of recent successful widespread attacks against major social networking sites, it's obvious that these providers are simply not doing enough to protect their customers' information," said George Tubin, senior security strategist at Trusteer, a computer security company.

    The attack comes as LivingSocial struggles to handle a decline in consumer and merchant demand for daily deals. The company raised $110 million from investors, including Amazon earlier this year, but was forced to make large concessions to get the new money.

    Amazon invested $56 million in LivingSocial in the first quarter, according to a regulatory filing on Friday, which also revealed the company had a first-quarter operating loss of $44 million on revenue of $135 million.

    LivingSocial said on Friday it was beginning to contact more than 50 million customers whose data may have been affected by the cyber attack.

    LivingSocial told customers in an email that they should log on to LivingSocial.com to create a new password for their accounts.

    "We also encourage you, for your own personal data security, to consider changing password(s) on any other sites on which you use the same or similar password(s)," LivingSocial Chief Executive Tim O'Shaughnessy wrote in the email.

    "We are sorry this incident occurred."

    All Things D reported the cyber attack earlier on Friday.

    (Reporting by Alistair Barr; Editing by Tim Dobbyn, Bernard Orr and Andre Grenon)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/livingsocial-says-cyber-attack-affects-millions-customers-205938910.html

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    Nearly half of young Christians support legalizing pot, survey says

    Young people are more likely to support pot legalization, even in the Christian community (AP)A recent poll showing that a slim majority of Americans now support the legalization of marijuana made national headlines. And now, the pro-pot movement appears to have taken another step forward, with a survey showing that nearly half of all young Christians in the U.S. also favor legalizing cannabis.

    In the poll, 45 percent of self-identified Christian youths ages 18-29 favor legalizing marijuana. Forty-nine percent of those surveyed say they oppose legalization. Only 22 percent of Christian seniors who took part in the survey said they favor legalization.

    ?While most religious Americans overall continue to oppose the legalization of marijuana, the generational sea change on this issue is also shifting the ground inside churches,? said Robert P. Jones, CEO of Public Religion Research Institute (PPRI), the group that conducted the survey. ?Christian young adults are twice as likely as Christian senior adults to say both that marijuana should be legal and that using marijuana is morally acceptable.?

    Interestingly, a greater percentage young Christians say they find smoking pot to be morally acceptable compared with the general population. Fifty-two percent said they are OK with pot smoking, compared with 49 percent of all Americans.

    Fifty-two percent of Christians belonging to an ethnic minority said they have smoked pot, compared with 44 percent of white Protestants and 40 percent of evangelical Protestants. Those numbers are in line with, or even greater than the average for all Americans, 42 percent of whom say they?ve tried marijuana.

    Those who have smoked pot appear to have enjoyed the experience, with 65 percent of them favoring legalization. By the same token, 65 percent those who have never tried marijuana oppose decriminalizing it.

    However, even among those who are opposed to marijuana legalization, more than 60 percent favor allowing it to be used for medical purposes when prescribed by a doctor.

    ?Marijuana, like the issue of same-sex marriage, appears headed for broader cultural acceptance,? said Daniel Cox, PRRI research director. ?Six in 10 Americans do not believe that new laws legalizing the use of marijuana signal widespread moral decline in the country.?

    Support for pot legalization is growing with young Christians (Public Religion Research Institute)

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/nearly-half-young-christians-support-legalizing-pot-survey-215650889.html

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    Taste Makers | BU Today | Boston University

    At Harpoon and Brooklyn Breweries, BU alums are crafting the next generation of beer

    A smooth, full-flavored beverage with dark fruit and licorice notes in the aroma. Pairs well with beef and earthy cheeses.

    The description above is not some sommelier?s assessment of a $42 pinot noir; it comes straight from Harpoon Brewery, and it describes Leviathan Baltic Porter, one of more than 60 beers that have been made by the eighth-largest craft brewer in America.

    Al Marzi, Harpoon?s chief brewing officer, says the flavors and aromas that his recipes produce result in a beverage imbued with character, not vanity. ?Craft beer is sociable,? says Marzi (COM?90), who started at Harpoon as a truck driver 21 years ago. ?It?s not snobby. It?s accessible to everyone. That?s what we want people to take away.?

    Beer has changed. The thin, tasteless stuff has been replaced by a multitude of brews that for 25 years have been challenging and rewarding us with a whole new idea of what beer should taste like. President Barack Obama, for example, thinks it should taste like the White House Honey Ale that is home-brewed at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

    Garrett Oliver, Brooklyn Brewery, craft beer brewer

    ?Americans were kind of a laughingstock 20 years ago when it came to beer,? says Garrett Oliver (CGS?81, COM?83), brewmaster of Brooklyn Brewery. Today, he says, "America is where the excitement is coming from.? Photo by Joshua Paul

    ?Americans were kind of a laughingstock 20 years ago when it came to beer,? says Garrett Oliver (CGS?81, COM?83), a leading beer expert and brewmaster of Brooklyn Brewery, in Brooklyn, N.Y., one of the 2,075 craft breweries in the United States. ?But today, the American craft beer scene is representative of beer in the world. Now, America is where the excitement is coming from.?

    None of those breweries, whose leaders include Harpoon, Brooklyn Brewery, Sierra Nevada, New Belgium Brewing Company, and Boston Beer Company (maker of Sam Adams), make more than six million barrels a year. And while six million may sound like a lot of barrels, it?s all relative. Anheuser-Busch InBev, maker of Budweiser and Corona, sold 106 million barrels in 2010?10 times as much as the entire craft industry.

    The Brewers Association, a national trade group for independent brewers, reports that craft beer sales represent 9.1 percent of the $95.5 billion U.S. beer market. The industry saw a 15 percent jump in sales in 2011, a year when beer sales dipped 1.3 percent as a whole. This after a 12 percent increase in 2010 and a 10.3 percent jump in 2009. And craft beer experts predict that the 2,075 craft breweries?more than have existed since 1890?will increase by 900 in 2013.

    Beer has been a staple in this country ever since the lack of it compelled the Pilgrims to stop in Plymouth, Mass., when the Mayflower ran dry (beer was safer to drink than water). In the 19th century, immigrants from Germany and other beer-drinking countries arrived with few belongings, but many recipes for beer and ale. By the 1890s, there were roughly 2,000 breweries in the United States, and every one of them was officially closed in January 1919 with the ratification of Prohibition. When Prohibition was repealed 14 years later, America?s history of flavorful beer was stunted by the Depression, as brewers resorted to less expensive grains like rice and corn.

    It wasn?t until the last decades of the 20th century that American brewers got their groove back, thanks in large part to home brewers with entrepreneurial aspirations. When Harpoon was founded in 1986, the company was granted Massachusetts Brewing Permit 001. It was the state?s first brewery start-up in 25 years. Harpoon produced 500 barrels of beer that year; by 2012, it was up to 200,000 barrels.

    Al Marzi, Harpoon Brewery, craft beer brewer

    Al Marzi (COM'90), chief brewing officer at Harpoon Brewery, started at the company as a truck driver 21 years ago. He describes craft beer as sociable. "It's not snobby," he says. "It's accessible to everyone." Photo by Kalman Zabarsky

    After graduating from the College of Communication, Marzi looked for a job in advertising. When a friend introduced him to Harpoon cofounder Rich Doyle, Marzi proposed that he handle the young company?s advertising. Doyle said he had an opening for a truck driver. ?I drove the truck for 10 months and learned a lot about the industry just from being inside the bars and restaurants. I became head brewer and went to the Siebel Institute of Technology in Chicago. When I got into the industry, you could do that kind of thing?start in the mail room and work your way up.?

    Oliver lived in London for a year after leaving COM; he found himself in a pub the first night he arrived. The barkeep handed him a pint of room-temperature ale in a ?dimpled fishbowl? and a whole new world of beer was unveiled. When Oliver returned to New York, he started brewing at home, and in 1987 he cofounded the New York City Homebrewers Guild. Two years later, he became an apprentice at the now-defunct Manhattan Brewing Company. He joined Brooklyn Brewery in 1994.

    ?There?s nobody who goes into beer brewing as a business,? he says. ?It all comes from passion. You fell in love with it first, you found it fun, and then you did it professionally. That?s what makes American craft brewing powerful.?

    Oliver, now the editor of the Oxford Companion to Beer, believes that the interest in craft beers is part of a wider enthusiasm for artisanal foods. Today, he says, there is a beer to be paired with just about any dish, from Mexican to Japanese, barbecue to Michelin-starred. A stout can be matched with a dessert to pull out the chocolate and chestnut flavors, or a light, citrusy Belgian witbier will balance a delicate fish.

    These days, the New York Times and Washington Post regularly write about new beers as if they were movie releases, the interest in home brewing has soared, and specialty beer stores all over the country carry hundreds of different types of craft beer from around the world.

    Meanwhile, all-women groups like the Pink Boots Society, a professional organization of women in the brewing industry, and Ladies of Craft Beer encourage women to home-brew and become craft brewers. Smaller microbreweries, like Peak Organic in Maine and Eel River Brewing in California, make beer with organic ingredients, and others use bourbon barrels to age their beer. And in November 2012, Anheuser-Busch InBev, which sells the craft-like beers Goose Island and Shock Top, formed its own Craft Advisory Board.

    With the 900 new breweries expected to open this year, and planned expansions at larger craft brewers like Harpoon and Brooklyn Breweries, some in the industry worry that the craft beer movement might become too big for its market.

    But Marzi doesn?t buy it. He can?t imagine that beer drinkers who appreciate the newer brews will ever go back. ?It simply becomes a part of what you do,? he says. ?It even changes your taste in food. You don?t go backward.?

    The Couple Behind Brooklyn Brew Shop

    Erica Shea (CGS?04, COM?06) and Stephen Valand (CAS?07, COM?07), founders of Brooklyn Brew Shop, want to demystify brewing. Video by Alan Wong View closed captions on YouTube

    At the height of the recent recession, in 2009, Erica Shea (CGS?04, COM?06) and Stephen Valand (CAS?07, COM?07) quit their jobs to invest in beer. The former film majors realized that most home-brew kits made five gallons of beer at a time, far too much for a typical New York City apartment. They also saw that the instructions on existing kits were hardly user-friendly, with words like ?acidulation? and ?fluctuation.?

    ?We wanted to demystify brewing by taking it back to the kitchen,? says Shea. They also wanted to sell home-brew kits and ingredient mixes for small-scale brewing in tiny city apartments. They named their venture Brooklyn Brew Shop.

    Stephen Valand and Erica Shea, founders owners, Brooklyn Brew Shop, craft beer brewers, beer brewing kits, how to brew beer

    Valand and Shea sell their kits in Whole Foods and Williams-Sonoma stores across the country, in Europe, and in South Africa. Photo by Joshua Paul

    The entrepreneurs started sawing and rejiggering plastic tubes and clamps to make a better, simpler kit, one that included most ingredients a home brewer would need (grain, hops, and yeast), as well as clearly written, foolproof instructions.

    Luck was with them. The couple?s first sales outlet was a booth at the Brooklyn Flea Market. The flea market happened to be right across the street from a Whole Foods store, whose proprietors took an interest in the home-brew kits. Whole Foods put 30 kits on its shelves. Less than three hours later, they were all sold. The next day, it happened again.

    Now Brooklyn Brew Shop kits are sold in Whole Foods and Williams-Sonoma stores across the country, in Europe, and in South Africa. The product has been featured in the New York Times, on NBC, and in Food & Wine magazine. Shea and Valand use their film skills to produce simple, step-by-step home-brewing tutorials. They have teamed with Brooklyn Brewery to sell that company?s ingredient mixes, and they hope to cut similar deals with other breweries. Their first beer cookbook, 2011?s Brooklyn Brew Shop?s Beer Making Book, explains how to make beers as varied as a lobster saison and a bourbon dubbel.

    ?Beer that you make on your stove is yours entirely,? Valand says. ?No beer in the world tastes exactly like it.?

    ?And,? says Shea, ?it gains you a lot of friends.?

    The Up-and-Coming Brewer

    Helder Pimentel, Backlash Beer Company, beer brewer, craft beer breweries

    Helder Pimentel (CGS'04, SMG'06) launched Backlash Beer Company in his garage. "I think the market is primed for local anything," he says, "and beer fits into that." Photo by Kalman Zabarsky

    Like the legendary masters of Silicon Valley, Helder Pimentel started his business in his garage, tweaking craft beer techniques and recipes for seven years. In 2011, after years of listening to his friends tell him that his beer was good enough to sell, Pimentel (CGS?04, SMG?06) left a lucrative banking job and launched Backlash Beer Company with partner Maggie Foley.

    Pimentel says Backlash, based in Holyoke, Mass., targets a younger demographic than other craft brewers. Its labels sport a set of brass knuckles and names like Groundswell (a Belgian Blonde) and Declaration (an IPA). The company hand labels, wax dips, and stamps all of its beer. But what really sets Backlash apart, says Pimentel, is taste. ?My strategy with what we brew is to make beers that would be easily respected by someone who is just exploring the craft brew space,? he says. ?My mission is to bring over the fringe drinkers who don?t know where to begin.?

    Backlash is one of many start-up craft brewers that rents space and equipment from a bigger brewery, which allows it to focus on brewing and marketing, rather than building infrastructure. Pimentel spends a few days a week visiting bars and restaurants in the New England area, asking if they would like to try his beer. More than 50 restaurants and bars serve Backlash.

    ?I made a business plan when we started, and we?ve blown everything out of the water,? Pimentel says. ?I think the market is primed for local anything, and local beer fits into that.?

    Beer Goes Back to the Future

    George Schwartz, historian, history of beer, beer history

    Historian George Schwartz (GRS'14) has a keen interest in the new movement to brew old beers. Photo by Kalman Zabarsky

    George Schwartz is a historian who loves beer. A doctoral student in the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences American & New England Studies Program and a former assistant curator for exhibitions and research at the Peabody Essex Museum, his lectures often focus on what people want to hear: beer.

    ?There is such a range of types and styles of beer you can make that aren?t possible with wine and Scotch,? says Schwartz (GRS?14).

    Unsurprisingly, Schwartz has a keen interest in the new movement to brew old beers. He notes that craft brewer Dogfish Head has used ingredients found in a 2,700-year-old drinking vessel from the tomb of King Midas. Its Midas Touch, which the brewer describes as a cross between wine and mead, has received more medals than any other Dogfish creation.

    Another small company, Shmaltz Brewing, attempted to make a batch of an English-style porter made by George Washington, using a recipe found in the New York Public Library. The first attempt produced beer that was overwhelmingly syrupy and bitter. When the company dialed back on the molasses, the brew was perfectly drinkable.

    Other attempts to relive brewing history have lifted live bacteria from a beer bottle found in a 19th-century Baltic shipwreck, re-created a Central American fermented chocolate drink from 1200 BC, and used ingredients recorded in a 4,000-year-old hymn to Ninkasi, the Sumerian beer goddess.

    A version of this article was published in the winter-spring 2013 issue of Bostonia.

    Source: http://www.bu.edu/today/2013/taste-makers/

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    Google Currents (for iPad)


    Flipboard?and a handful of other iPad newsreading apps have changed the way that we consume media, by allowing news junkies to read content in a tablet-friendly, magazine-like format.?Google entered the space in 2011 with Currents, its own take on the mobile newsreader. This free iPad?app (also available on Android) lets users read online publications in a slick, easy to navigate layout. Featuring partnerships with the likes of The Atlantic, The Huffington Post, Slate, and many other publications, Google Currents has no shortage of interesting content. The biggest obstacles the app faces is overcoming some stability issues and getting users to use it instead of the entrenched champion, Flipboard.

    The Reading Fundamentals
    Getting started is as simple as logging into Google Currents with your Google account credentials. If you don?t have an account, you can create one from within the app. After logging in with my Gmail username and password, I watched a brief navigation and usage tutorial which gave me a quick rundown of the app's various features.

    I then arrived at the Google Currents new streamlined home screen which let me add subscriptions (now known as "Editions") from the Editions Sidebar (which replaces the "Library" and "Trending Stories" sections that drove the first Google Currents iteration). The new design puts Currents in visual alignment with other Google properties such as YouTube and Google Plus, and makes navigating the app simpler.

    Diving Into Content
    Bring a finger to an Editions category (like Science & Tech, for example) and the apps reveals thematically related publications. There are several publications included by default, but you can easily remove unwanted ones by tapping the Edit icon. Tapping "Add Subscriptions" opens a section containing publications grouped by category. If, for example, you decide to add Space.com to your reading lists?a site listed within the Science & Tech cluster?it will automatically be added to the similarly named group in the Editions Sidebar.

    Each Editions Sidebar grouping has an associated "Breaking News" subhead that lets you check out the hottest stories of the moment?through some may not be of great importance. On the day that I tested Google Currents, the Entertainment section's Breaking News was fronted by a story that detailed why Gwyneth Paltrow is the Worlds' Most Beautiful Woman.

    Navigation operates in a similar fashion as other iPad newsreading apps by letting you swipe from page to page, through the animation can be a bit slow at times (as well as adding or deleting subscriptions). You can also share articles via email, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Pinboard, Instapaper, and Google+. Unlike Flipboard, Google Currents doesn't display updates from social networks such as Facebook or Twitter, but you can view the Google+ updates from Google Currents curators such as Tom Anderson (best known as the face of MySpace). You can also star stories to save them for future reference, and read caches stories offline.

    Best of all, Google Currents syncs across all devices on which you have it installed, so you can move from phone to tablet and back again without missing a beat. That said, Google Currents doesn't sync with the soon-to-be-extinct Google Reader, so those who use both won't find articles read/unread across both services.

    Like Flipboard, Google Currents gives user the opportunity to create their own digital magazines by adding a RSS feed, Flickr images, a logo, and more.

    Google Currents has a major gripe that keeps me from abandoning Flipboard: It doesn't always display a feed's latest stories in chronological order. A site's most recent article may be place behind a story that published a few days before.

    Should You Download Google Currents?
    Google Currents is a strong entry in the iPad newsreading space thanks to a slick redesign, native offline reading, and cross-device syncing. Flipboard gets the nod thanks to its simple design, deep social networking ties, and overall swiftness. Still, Google Currents is an app worth a try if Flipboard and the handful of other newsreading apps aren't to your fancy.

    Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/-syuraAZXq8/0,2817,2397454,00.asp

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    A Great Gift For Mother's Day ~ Shari's Berries Review - A Mom's ...

    **The product for this review was provided by Shari's Berries. However, all opinions are my own and were not influenced in any way.

    Whether I'm shopping for mother's day, or a birthday gift...I want to find things that are unique and personal. As a mom of three little ones, the easiest way to shop for gifts like this is online. Thankfully, Shari's Berries offers a great selection of gift ideas for any occasion and makes it easy every time!

    With gift ideas for all occasions, Shari's Berries is known for their large selection of delicious and unforgettable gifts, always arranged and presented carefully and lovingly. Whether you're shopping for birthday gifts, baby shower gifts, or maybe a "just because gift"... Shari's Berries has you covered and even ships nationwide!

    I have browsed and shopped Shari's Berries in the past, and have always been impressed with the large selection of products offered. With everything from Mother's Day gift baskets to dipped berries...there's truly something for everyone.


    When asked if I'd like to review something from Shari's Berries, I was thrilled and the timing couldn't have been more perfect! The following week we had plans to go to a birthday get together for my brother and I knew Shari's Berries would have the perfect gift! I was right.

    Browsing through the birthday gifts, I found many that I knew he would be thrilled with. However, the one that stuck out to me most was the 7-piece Happy Birthday Surprise Cookie Bouquet!


    I ordered it, and even did the option to get one of the cookies personalized with his name on it. I love personalizing things, as it's an extra special tough that makes it even more special for the recipient. I know my brother really thought it was neat. The site was very easy to navigate, and placing the order couldn't have been easier. Thanks to the great coupon codes, I was able to get a great deal too!

    I was also pleased with how quickly the item shipped. I was able to choose which day I wanted it to arrive, and it came right on time. YAY!


    When the cookie bouquet arrived, I will admit I was a little nervous that the cookies might be broken. Afterall, cookies aren't the easiest thing to mail. As I opened the box, any anxieties I had were put to rest. The cookie bouquet was wrapped wonderfully, and all of the cookies looked fantastic!! Not only were they wrapped very well so as not to get broken, but also so that they would stay fresh too.

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    I was so excited to take the Happy Birthday Cookie Bouquet to my brother's birthday party. He was very surprised and loved the personalized gift idea. ?Best of all, the cookies were large and very yummy. There were enough for him to share with the rest of us which was a lot of fun! The kids especially liked them. :)
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    Overall we were really happy with the Happy Birthday Surprise Cookie Bouquet from Shari's Berries. What a great way to send a birthday wish. Each cookie was well packaged, not to mentioned beautifully and colorfully frosted. We will definitely be turning to Shari's Berries again in the future!

    Buy It: You can purchase the Happy Birthday Surprise Cookie Bouquet for $39 at Shari's Berries.

    Coupons: There are also a number of Shari's Berries Coupons you can use too!

    Source: http://www.momsbalancingact.com/2013/04/a-great-gift-for-mothers-day-sharis.html

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    Long-term care in aging US: Not for me, poll says

    Graphic shows AP-NORC poll opinions on living assistance

    Graphic shows AP-NORC poll opinions on living assistance

    (AP) ? We're in denial: Americans underestimate their chances of needing long-term care as they get older ? and are taking few steps to get ready.

    A new poll examined how people 40 and over are preparing for this difficult and often pricey reality of aging and found two-thirds say they've done little to no planning.

    In fact, 3 in 10 would rather not think about getting older at all. Only a quarter predict it's very likely that they'll personally need help getting around or caring for themselves during their senior years, according to the poll by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

    That's a surprise considering the poll found more than half of the 40-plus crowd already have been caregivers for an impaired relative or friend ? seeing from the other side the kind of assistance they, too, are likely to need later on.

    "I didn't think I was old. I still don't think I'm old," explained retired schoolteacher Malinda Bowman, 60, of Laura, Ohio.

    Bowman has been a caregiver twice, first for her grandmother. Then after her father died in 2006, Bowman moved in with her mother, caring for her until her death in January. Yet Bowman has made few plans for herself.

    "I guess I was focused on caring for my grandmother and mom and dad, so I didn't really think about myself," she said. "Everything we had was devoted to taking care of them."

    The poll found most people expect family to step up if they need long-term care ? even though 6 in 10 haven't talked with loved ones about the possibility and how they'd like it to work.

    Bowman said she's healthy now but expects to need help someday from her two grown sons. Last month, prompted by a brother's fall and blood clot, she began the conversation by telling her youngest son about her living will and life insurance policy.

    "I need to plan eventually," she acknowledged.

    Those family conversations are crucial: Even if they want to help, do your relatives have the time, money and knowhow? What starts as driving Dad to the doctor or picking up his groceries gradually can turn into feeding and bathing him, maybe even doing tasks once left to nurses such as giving injections or cleaning open wounds. If loved ones can't do all that, can they afford to hire help? What if you no longer can live alone?

    "The expectation that your family is going to be there when you need them often doesn't mean they understand the full extent of what the job of caregiving will be," Susan Reinhard, a nurse who directs AARP's Public Policy Institute, said. "Your survey is pointing out a problem for not just people approaching the need for long-term care, but for family members who will be expected to take on the huge responsibility of providing care."

    Most people who have been caregivers called the work both worthwhile and stressful. And on the other end, those who have received care are less apt to say they can rely on their families in times of need, the poll found.

    With a rapidly aging population, more families will be facing those responsibilities. Government figures show nearly 7 in 10 Americans will need long-term care at some point after they reach age 65, whether it's from a relative, a home health aide, assisted living or a nursing home. On average, they'll need that care for three years.

    Despite the "it won't happen to me" reaction, the AP-NORC Center poll found half of those surveyed think just about everyone will need some assistance at some point. There are widespread misperceptions about how much care costs and who will pay for it. Nearly 60 percent of those surveyed underestimated the cost of a nursing home, which averages more than $6,700 a month.

    Medicare doesn't pay for the most common types of long-term care. Yet 37 percent of those surveyed mistakenly think it will pay for a nursing home and even more expect it to cover a home health aide when that's only approved under certain conditions.

    The harsh reality: Medicaid, the federal-state program for the poor, is the main payer of long-term care in the U.S., and to qualify seniors must have spent most of their savings and assets. But fewer than half of those polled think they'll ever need Medicaid ? even though only a third are setting aside money for later care, and just 27 percent are confident they'll have the financial resources they'll need.

    In Cottage Grove, Ore., Police Chief Mike Grover, 64, says his retirement plan means he could afford a nursing home. And like 47 percent of those polled, he's created an advance directive, a legal document outlining what medical care he'd want if he couldn't communicate.

    Otherwise, Grover said he hasn't thought much about his future care needs. He knows caregiving is difficult, as he and his brother are caring for their 85-year-old mother.

    Still, "until I cross that bridge, I don't know what I would do. I hope that my kids and wife will pick the right thing," he said. "It depends on my physical condition, because I do not want to be a burden to my children."

    The AP-NORC Center poll found widespread support for tax breaks to encourage saving for long-term care, and about half favor the government establishing a voluntary long-term care insurance program. An Obama administration attempt to create such a program ended in 2011 because it was too costly.

    The older they get, the more preparations people take. Just 8 percent of 40- to 54-year-olds have done much planning for long-term care, compared with 30 percent of those 65 or older, the poll found.

    Mary Pastrano, 74, of Port Orchard, Wash., has planned extensively for her future health care. She has lupus, heart problems and other conditions, and now uses a wheelchair. She also remembers her family's financial struggles after her own father died when she was a child.

    "I don't want people to stand around and wring their hands and wonder, 'What would Mom think was the best?'" said Pastrano, who has discussed her insurance policies, living will and care preferences with her husband and children.

    Still, Pastrano wishes she and her husband had started saving earlier, during their working years.

    "You never know how soon you're going to be down," she said. "That's what older people have a problem understanding: You can be in your 60s and then next flat on your back. You think you're invincible, until you can't walk."

    The AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey was conducted Feb. 21 through March 27, with funding from the SCAN Foundation. The SCAN Foundation is an independent, nonprofit organization that supports research and other initiatives on aging and health care. The nationally representative poll involved landline and cellphone interviews with 1,019 Americans age 40 or older. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Stacy A. Anderson and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.

    ___

    Online:

    Government long-term care primer: http://longtermcare.gov

    AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research: http://www.apnorc.org

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-04-24-US-Aging-America-Long-Term-Care/id-76e515c632214a4b90d4c3233a3734a9

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