Need to boost earnings

Barbados and other countries heavily dependent on tourism for their livelihoods need to do more to increase earnings and jobs from the sector.

That advice has come from the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC), which pointed out that travel and tourisms contribution to the world economy has grown for the fourth consecutive year and is expected to show even stronger growth in 2014.

The WTTC, which said the information was contained in its 2014 annual economic data report, added that policies need to be implemented to increase tourism receipts and jobs.

David Scowsill, who is president and chief executive officer of the organisation, which called itself the global authority on the social and economic impact of travel and tourism said it has been another really good year for the sector but many governments lack of openness is restraining their countrys travel and tourism potential.

The data underlines travel and tourisms undeniable status as a driver of growth. Some countries have taken huge positive strides with visa facilitation over the past few years. But many countries economic contribution from travel and tourism is still being held back, particularly due to restrictive visa policies, he said.

He pointed to 2012 research from WTTC and the United Nations World Tourism Organisation (UNWTO) that demonstrates that improving visa processes could generate an additional US$206 billion in tourism receipts and create as many as 5.1 million jobs by 2015 in the G20 economies.

Scowsill said there was real momentum in some countries with visa facilitation but there is still a lot to do.

To capitalise on, rather than thwart, travel and tourisms potential to boost visitors, spend and jobs, we would encourage countries to implement progressive approaches to visas, which make it easier for people to travel.

Governments also need to ensure that they have intelligent rather than punitive taxation measures in place. Last but not least, it is also essential that the public and private sectors facilitate growth in a responsible and sustainable way, with people and the planet at the forefront of policies, he noted.

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Need to boost earnings

Luxury Travel Advisors ULTRA Summit 2014 Yields Insights into Affluent Travel

NEW YORK -- Luxury Travel Advisor's ULTRA Summit 2014, which concluded last week at the Park Hyatt Chicago, brought together the world's most elite travel advisors and suppliers for an exclusive discussion about the latest research and trends in ultra-luxury or "affluent travel."

A hand-selected group of ultra-luxury advisors and suppliers, invited for their expertise as the world's top purveyors of affluent travel, participated in the invitation-only, three-day program, which featured intimate, prescheduled appointments, strategic networking functions and expert presentations about high-net-worth travelers, trends and business opportunities.

Ruthanne Terrero, Questex Hospitality + Travel vice president of content and editorial director, presented the results of an exclusive survey of ultra-travel advisors. A key finding was the fact that personal contact still matters in sales, as evidenced by more than a third of respondents who said they conduct 75 percent of their business by phone and in person.

Clayton Reid, president & chief executive officer of MMGY Global, told the group that traveler intent, a measure of consumer inclination to travel, is "picking up very dramatically," to its highest point since 2004. "Eight in 10 U.S. travelers are suggesting they will take an international trip in the next two years," he said. "That is double what it was 12 years ago."

Kate Lorenz, content strategy director for Leo Burnett Group in Chicago, provided a primer for marketing through social media. Her advice included devoting a half hour to social media in the morning and again at the end of the day. Also, she urged advisors to focus on one or two key channels, notably Facebook and Instagram, before expanding to other channels.

John Wallis, chief marketing officer for Hyatt Hotels Corp., joined Anthony Ingham, vice president of North American brand management for St. Regis Hotels & Resorts, The Luxury Collection, W Hotels Worldwide and Le Meredien, to discuss how their respective companies are redefining the luxury experience.

"Transparency is the new green," Wallis said. "We will spend less money on advertising and more on delivering the experience." By the same token, he predicted hotels will change their traditional hierarchical organization scheme to become less process-oriented and more focused on customer experience.

Ingham said his company's luxury hotels are being redesigned to meet the expectations of a new generation of affluent travelers who prefer a more personal, less formal experience. That effort involves retaining the historical significance of older hotels while adding modern touches including technology, but keeping it hidden so as not to detract from the hotel's authenticity.

Kristian Anderson, senior vice president of sales and general manager, North America, for Silversea Cruises observed that the ultra-affluent "are not easily impressed" and urged suppliers to focus on "small details that are repeated time and time again." Meeting the needs of individual travelers is more important that providing "iPad portals in every room," he said.

Peter Yesawich, vice chairman of MMGY Global, provided assurance to advisors in the audience that affluent travelers value time over money and that, accordingly, 29 percent plan to use advisors to plan their next trips. Their attitude is, "If I'm going to travel, it had better be good," he said.

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Luxury Travel Advisors ULTRA Summit 2014 Yields Insights into Affluent Travel

Tomorrows Super-Soldiers Will Wear Night Vision Contact Lenses

The ideal crystalline structure of graphene is a hexagonal grid. Image: Wikimedia Commons

As the Pentagon continues to build a lighter, faster and stronger soldier of the future, new technology that could provide night vision without bulky goggles has caught the Armys eye.

Researchers at the University of Michigan, Ted Norris and Zhaohui Zhong, have createda super-thin infrared light sensor using graphene an atom-thin material related to graphite that could be layered onto contact lenses. Grapheneabsorbs infrared rays and translates them into an electrical signal, in a similar fashion to how silicon chips work with visible light in a digital camera.

The team of engineers and computer scientists placed an insulating layer between two graphene layers and then added electric current. When infrared light hits the layered product, its electrical reaction is amplified strongly enough to be converted into a visible image.

If we integrate it with a contact lens or other wearable electronics, it expands your vision, said Zhong. It provides you another way of interacting with your environment.

Night vision contacts are still years away the research needs to produce greater light sensitivity, as well as the ability to work in a broader range of temperatures.

To move the project forward, Norris and Zhong say they need commercial or governmental partners beyond the initial support that came from the National Science Foundation. They say that the technology could have widespread application, including smartphone cameras for photos in the dark and car windshields to enhance nighttime driving.

In 2011, some speculated that cat vision contact lenses were used by the Navy Seals in the Osama bin Laden raid.

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Tomorrows Super-Soldiers Will Wear Night Vision Contact Lenses

That computes: $10 million in state budget for super CSI computer center

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. - State lawmakers secured $10 million for a major computer project for the College of Staten Island (CSI) in this year's $138 billion state budget.

Also included is the promised $14 million for Verrazano-Narrows Bridge toll relief for Island motorists, among other allocations.

State Sen. Andrew Lanza (R-Staten Island) and Assemblyman Michael Cusick (D-Mid-Island) announced that the $10 million would go toward CSI's Interdisciplinary High Performance Computer Center, a state-of-the-art research and learning facility to be built on the Willowbrook campus, which is already home to the college's super computer.

"This will make CSI an even bigger attraction," said Lanza.

Said Cusick, "This shows that CSI is the jewel we've always known it to be."

CSI President Dr. William Fritz said that the $10 million should bring the facility through the design phase and to the beginning of the bidding process.

"This will transform our campus," said Fritz, who added that the center will also include lecture halls, classrooms and offices and research space for faculty.

It is the first new academic space to be built at the campus since CSI moved to Willowbrook in 1994.

"That is significant," said Fritz.

Lawmakers said that the total pricetag for the facility would be around $50 million.

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That computes: $10 million in state budget for super CSI computer center

Revolutionary stem cell op to treat heart failure

Graham Parker, 41, from County Durham is one of first to benefit from trial Some participants were given stem cells and the rest placebo Stem cells were taken from bone marrow in his hip and injected into heart Years later Graham feels better - but still classed as having heart failure

By Carol Davis

PUBLISHED: 18:04 EST, 31 March 2014 | UPDATED: 18:25 EST, 31 March 2014

Graham Parker took part in a trial using stem cells to repair heart damage

A major new trial is using patients' own stem cells to treat heart failure. One of the first to benefit is Graham Parker, 41, an archaeology student from Stanley, County Durham. He tells CAROL DAVIS his story.

Working as a supply teacher a few years ago, I started feeling exhausted. I couldn't walk more than 50 metres without pausing, was constantly breathless and would wake at night coughing.

At first I thought it was a cold or flu, or the stress of a house move. But my mum, a retired nurse, pointed out I'd been ill for two months, and sent me to the doctor.

The GP suspected asthma, and gave me an inhaler. But within a week it was worse and I couldn't walk more than a few yards without retching.

So I saw a second GP. She didn't say what she thought it was - she called an ambulance instead. I was admitted to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Gateshead, then transferred to the Freeman Hospital in Newcastle while they ran several tests, including an ECG (electrocardiogram) and MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) scan.

Doctors explained I had heart failure: part of my heart muscle was damaged and the lower pumping chamber had become flabby so couldn't pump blood round my body properly. This was why I was so exhausted.

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Revolutionary stem cell op to treat heart failure

Stem cell treatment improves heart muscle function

Home > News > health-news

Washington, April 1 : In a heartening news for patients with severe ischemic heart disease and heart failure, a new human trial shows that stem cells, when injected directly into the heart muscle, are effective for failing hearts.

"Our results show that this stem cell treatment is safe and it improves heart function when compared to placebo," said Anders Bruun Mathiasen, a research fellow in the cardiac catherisation lab at Rigshospitalet University Hospital Copenhagen, Denmark.

This has the potential to benefit many people who suffer from this common and deadly disease, he added.

Ischemic heart disease, also known as coronary artery disease, results from a gradual buildup of plaque in the heart's coronary arteries and can lead to chest pain, heart attack and heart failure.

In the study, researchers injected a type of bone marrow stem cell known as mesenchymal stromal cells directly into the heart muscle of a group of patients with chronic ischemic heart failure.

Six months after treatment, patients who received stem cell injections had improved heart pump function compared to patients receiving a placebo.

"The procedure to inject stem cells into the heart requires only local anesthesia so it appears to be a promising treatment for patients who have no other options," Mathiasen mentioned.

Although there are other therapies available for patients with ischemic heart disease, these therapies do not help all patients and many patients continue to face fatigue, shortness of breath and accumulation of fluid in the lungs and legs.

Previous studies have shown mesenchymal stromal cells can stimulate repair and regeneration in a variety of tissues, including heart muscle.

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Stem cell treatment improves heart muscle function

Spirituality, from the Sidelines to the Boardroom

Los Angeles (PRWEB) April 01, 2014

David Meltzer was at the top of his game in the business world. As CEO to sports super agent Leigh Steinberg, he worked alongside Hall of Fame quarterback Warren Moon and lectured about sports and business around the world.

Despite his success, Meltzer was unfulfilled and caught in a rapid downward spiral. Bankrupt and at rock bottom, he realized that reviving his personal and professional lives required blending spirituality with business.

In his memoir Connected To Goodness: Manfiest Everything You Desire in Business and Life, Meltzer reveals seven proven principles for success that helped him incorporate peace and balance into every area of his life. The principles help readers embrace the restorative power of energy in common tasks such as negotiation, sales, client relations and business development.

With each principle, Meltzer provides key elements that help readers adopt the values and habits necessary for complete life change. He hopes to help readers recognize that life without spirituality leaves much to be desired.

At the time in my life when I looked to have it all, I was actually lost and quickly heading in the wrong direction, Meltzer said. My downward spiral turned out to be a necessary journey. Along the way, I found the recipe for success that allowed me to reinvent myself, find true peace and happiness, and inspire others.

My mission is to save readers the time, money and happiness I spent and lost and make their journeys easier.

For more information, visit http://www.connectedtogoodness.com/.

Connected to Goodness: Manifest Everything You Desire in Business and Life By David Meltzer with Harrison Lebowitz Foreword by Warren Moon ISBN: 978-1-45259-122-3

Available in softcover, hardcover, e-book formats.

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Spirituality, from the Sidelines to the Boardroom

Kim Kardashian shines on temple visit in bridal-inspired gown

31 MARCH 2014 Kim Kardashian has got in touch with her spiritual side and felt compelled to share her experience with her fans.

The queen of reality TV is currently in Thailand, enjoying the Kardashian-Jenner annual family holiday, and took to Instagram to post photos of her trip.

In a series of snapshots, Kim is pictured visiting a beautiful temple. The small-screen star, who is engaged to rapper fianc Kanye West, looked ready to walk up the aisle as she donned a stunning white gown for her photos.

Before entering the temple, Kim, 33, showed her respect by taking off her gold sandals. The Los Angeles resident sat on the marble steps, with her dark brunette waves carefully parted to the side. "#etiquette," she wrote alongside the photo.

In another image, Kim soaked in the serene atmosphere as she stood in front of a giant Buddha. Her white dress shone through against the backdrop of brightly coloured murals and heavy gold decor.

Kim looked graceful and completely at peace, which showed as she captioned the picture "#blessed."

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Kim Kardashian shines on temple visit in bridal-inspired gown

Space Station Live: Protein Crystal Growth for Treatment of Immunological Disorders – Video


Space Station Live: Protein Crystal Growth for Treatment of Immunological Disorders
NASA Public Affairs Officer Brandi Dean talks with Paul Reichert of Merck Research Laboratories in N.J. about the Merck PCG study, which looks at the crystal...

By: Waspie_Dwarf

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Space Station Live: Protein Crystal Growth for Treatment of Immunological Disorders - Video

Space travel impacts heart

The hearts of astronauts who spend a lot of time in space become more spherical, raising concern about the potential for cardiac problems during prolonged space travel, according to a new study.

Researchers analyzed heart data collected from 12 astonauts before, during and after stints on the International Space Station. The results show the heart in the weightlessness of space becomes more spherical by a factor of 9.4 percent.

"The heart doesn't work as hard in space, which can cause a loss of muscle mass," James Thomas, the studys lead author and lead scientist for ultrasound at NASA, said in a statement. "That can have serious consequences after the return to Earth, so we're looking into whether there are measures that can be taken to prevent or counteract that loss."

Astronaut Mike Hopkins participates in a spacewalk on Dec. 24.

The long-term health impacts of the shape change are not known. The good news is that the transformation appears to be temporary, with the heart returning to its normal elongated self shortly after the return to Earth.

NASA wants to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s, so researchers are keen on trying to understand how a spaceflight of 18 months or more could affect astronauts' heart health. As part of that research, NASA and its Russian partners are planning to keep two spacefliers on the station for an entire year, starting in 2015.

In addition to the insights for long-term spaceflight, such studies could lead to a better understanding of common heart problems in people on Earth.

The new study, "Affect of Microgravity on Cardiac Shape: Comparison of Pre- and In-flight Data to Mathematical Modeling," was presented over the weekend at the annual scientific sessions of the American College of Cardiology in Washington.

First published March 31 2014, 4:58 PM

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Space travel impacts heart

Space History Photo: STS-86 Launch

In this historical photo from the U.S. space agency, the Space Shuttle Atlantis blazes through the night sky to begin the STS-86 mission, slated to be the seventh of nine planned dockings of the Space Shuttle with the Russian Space Station Mir. Liftoff on September 25 from Launch Pad 39A was at 10:34 p.m. EDT, within seconds of the preferred time, during a six minute, 45 second launch window.

The 10 day flight will include the transfer of the sixth U.S. astronaut to live and work aboard the Mir. After the docking, STS-86 Mission Specialist David A. Wolf will become a member of the Mir 24 crew, replacing astronaut C. Michael Foale, who will return to Earth aboard Atlantis with the remainder of the STS-86 crew. Foale has been on the Russian Space Station since mid May. Wolf is scheduled to remain there about four months.

Besides Wolf (embarking to Mir) and Foale (returning), the STS-86 crew includes Commander James D. Wetherbee, Pilot Michael J. Bloomfield, and Mission Specialists Wendy B. Lawrence, Scott E. Parazynski, Vladimir Georgievich Titov of the Russian Space Agency, and Jean-Loup J.M. Chretien of the French Space Agency, CNES. Other primary objectives of the mission are a spacewalk by Parazynski and Titov, and the exchange of about 3.5 tons of science/logistical equipment and supplies between Atlantis and the Mir.

Each weekday, SPACE.com looks back at the history of spaceflight through photos (archive).

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Space History Photo: STS-86 Launch

Watch Midnight Red Play The Hell Yeah! Game And Admit Theyd Go Naked

While Red Heads await the big launch of Midnight Reds new video for Hell Yeah, we thought wed get the guys shouting hell yeah a little early when they stopped by Entertainment Magazine. Were they up for the challenge?

In the Hell Yeah! game, the rules are simple. We ask the fivesome a question, and they answer hell yeah! or hellllll no! Would they run around New York City naked? Would they have run for president? Well, their answers might surprise you.

When it came to fessing up about whether theyd twerk with Miley Cyrus, four out of the five guys were quick to say hell yeah, but Colton Rudloff was a little more reserved.

Coltons just saying no because hes just being modest cause hes the best twerker, Eric Secharia said.

He doesnt want to out-twerk Miley, Anthony Ladao claimed.

However, attempts to get Colton to twerk during the interview failed. We tried.

Watch the video to see how Selena Gomez got Erics phone and why the band wouldnt be able to eat pizza every day for the rest of their lives.

The band will begin touring with the Wanted on their Word of Mouth tour next Monday.

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Watch Midnight Red Play The Hell Yeah! Game And Admit Theyd Go Naked

NWA Red Cross Worker Heads To Washington After Deadly Mudslide

Posted on: 9:41 pm, March 31, 2014, by Katelynn Zoellner, updated on: 10:15pm, March 31, 2014

A second American Red Cross worker from Arkansas was deployed Monday to Washington state to help victims of the deadly mudslide that has so far killed 24 people.

Workers at a rescue operation is Oso, Wash., are trying to find any signs of life more than a week after the deadly mudslide.

So far, officials said more than 600 people have been involved in the relief effort of the mudslide. That now includes Linda Morgan of the Red Cross Northwest Arkansas Chapter.

Linda has an extensive experience in shelters and managing shelters, said Rick Harvey, Red Cross communications specialist. They notified that they needed her help, and as usual, she has dropped what shes doing and immediately arranged her life to where she could go.

Morgan will be getting to Washington on Tuesday to run the relief shelters for the victims of the mudslide.

I will be managing the people that manage the shelters, Morgan said. I will be in the headquarters doing paper work and making sure there is staff to run the shelters.

In the last week, the shelters have housed more than 120 people.

We provide the shelters for temporary lodging until these families can find other arrangements, Harvey said. We also are there for those people to provide support until they can get back on their feet.

The Red Cross also has served more than 10,000 meals and snacks to first responders and the affected community.

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NWA Red Cross Worker Heads To Washington After Deadly Mudslide