শুক্রবার, ৩ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১২

Palestinians throw shoes, stones at U.N. convoy (Reuters)

GAZA (Reuters) ? Dozens of Palestinians threw shoes, sticks and stones at U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's convoy as it crossed into the Gaza Strip Thursday, protesting against what they saw as a slight against Palestinians jailed in Israel.

No one was injured during the hostile welcome and the vehicles, which crossed into the Hamas-ruled territory from southern Israel, pushed through the crowd and sped away.

Ban is visiting the region to try to restart long-stalled Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

"I thank the people of Gaza for the warm welcome," he told a news conference, provoking laughter among local journalists. "I met many people who were waiting for me at the entrance."

He went to say that he had sympathy for the complaints of people in Gaza: "I fully share their concern and frustration," he said. "This is why I am here for the third time. This is a very dire economic, social, humanitarian problem."

Ban again called on Israel to lift all restrictions on the Gaza Strip and urged Israel and the Palestinians to keep the peace process alive.

"The leaders of the two parties are committed to continue these negotiations. There are still concerns and lack of mutual trust, but I am hopeful that this dialogue will continue in a sustainable way," he said.

Israel should "provide some goodwill gestures as a way of confidence-building measures," Ban said, echoing pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from the United States and European Union.

"I would urge the people from Gaza to stop firing rockets into the Israeli side. Indiscriminate killing of people, civilians, is not acceptable, for whatever reasons. Likewise Israelis should fully guarantee the freedom, human rights and decent life and dignity of the Palestinian people."

The Israeli army said eight rockets were fired into Israeli territory on the eve of Ban's visit.

Many of those who protested as his U.N. convoy passed were family members of Palestinians being held in Israeli prisons. They hit the vehicles with signs bearing slogans accusing Ban of bias toward Israel and of refusing to meet the relatives of Palestinian prisoners.

About 5,000 Palestinians are held in Israeli jails and securing their release is a highly emotive issue in Palestinian society.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi; Writing by Ari Rabinovitch and Douglas Hamilton.; Editing by Alastair Macdonald)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/un/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120202/wl_nm/us_palestinians_israel_un

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১২

Joan Rivers and Betty White?s Reefer Madness!

smoke2.jpg
If you thought Joan Rivers was outrageous before, wait until you see the antics of her royal ?highness? in the new season of her show, Joan & Melissa: Joan Knows Best? ?I smoke pot this season,? the comedian reveals to In Touch. ?It?s fantastic.? Apparently, Joan has smoked the funny stuff before ? with galpal Betty White. ?I mean, I went completely loopy, but it was fun!? says Joan.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/InTouchWeekly/~3/_xfnBok-ZT0/joan_rivers_and_betty_whites_r.php

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Starwood 4Q profit falls, but tops Street's view (AP)

STAMFORD, Conn. ? Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc.'s fourth-quarter profit dropped 51 percent on impairment charges and other items, but its adjusted results beat analysts' expectations.

The lodging company, which operates hotels under the St. Regis, Westin, Sheraton and other brands, said Thursday that its revenue rose 14 percent, also beating Wall Street estimates. Its first-quarter earnings guidance topped analysts' average expectation.

Its outlook for the full year was at the low end of analysts' expectations, however.

Its shares fell $2.40, or 4.4 percent, to $52.65 in morning trading.

The company said that economic conditions in developed markets remain uncertain, but that the lodging supply situation is very favorable.

Many hotels operators have pulled back on new hotel openings in the U.S. since the recession, as people started to travel less frequently or take shorter trips in order to save money.

The picture is brighter in emerging markets, where Starwood says economic growth has been strong, which has led to increased demand for hotels and a need for more supply.

CEO Frits van Paasschen said in a statement that Starwood's growing presence in emerging markets led to nearly 21,000 room openings last year ? the most in the Stamford, Conn., company's history.

Starwood reported net income fell to $167 million, or 85 cents per share, for the period ended Dec. 31. That's down from $339 million, or $1.78 per share, a year ago.

Excluding charges related to an unfavorable legal decision, impairment charges and other items, adjusted earnings from continuing operations was 71 cents per share. The figure included income from the St. Regis Bal Harbour residential project.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet forecast adjusted earnings of 57 cents per share.

Revenue increased to $1.53 billion from $1.34 billion, which beat the $1.42 billion that Wall Street expected.

Management fees, franchise fees and other income climbed 12 percent to $234 million.

Worldwide systemwide revenue per available room for hotels open at least a year rose 5.8 percent on a constant dollar basis. In North America, the metric increased 7.6 percent, while overseas it rose 3.5 percent.

Worldwide revenue per available room for Starwood branded hotels open at least a year climbed 5.7 percent.

Revenue per available room, or revpar, is a key gauge of a hotel operator's performance.

Residential revenue surged to $127 million from $1 million a year earlier, with $121 million coming from the sale of residential units at Bal Harbour. The property includes both a hotel and private residences. Starwood said that Bal Harbour received certificate of occupancy during the quarter and closed on the sale of 36 units.

For the full year, Starwood reported net income of $489 million, or $2.51 per share, compared with earnings of $477 million, or $2.51 per share, in the prior year.

Annual revenue increased 11 percent to $5.62 billion from $5.07 billion.

The hotel operator anticipates first-quarter earnings of about 49 cents to 53 cents per share and full-year earnings of approximately $2.22 to $2.33, including the Bal Harbour project.

Analysts predict first-quarter earnings of 36 cents per share and full-year earnings of $2.24 per share.

Carlo Santarelli of Deutsche Bank said in a client note that investors may think Starwood played it safe with its outlook.

"While fourth-quarter results were solid, we anticipate what we see as conservative 2012 guidance will likely resonate with investors, especially considering the strength in shares. That said, we would use pullbacks as a buying opportunity," he wrote.

Starwood has 1,090 properties in nearly 100 countries and 154,000 workers at its owned and managed properties.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120202/ap_on_bi_ge/us_earns_starwood

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বুধবার, ১ ফেব্রুয়ারী, ২০১২

Perfect nanotubes shine brightest: Researchers show how length, imperfections affect carbon nanotube fluorescence

ScienceDaily (Jan. 31, 2012) ? A painstaking study by Rice University has brought a wealth of new information about single-walled carbon nanotubes through analysis of their fluorescence.

The current issue of the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano features an article about work by the Rice lab of chemist Bruce Weisman to understand how the lengths and imperfections of individual nanotubes affect their fluorescence -- in this case, the light they emit at near-infrared wavelengths.

The researchers found that the brightest nanotubes of the same length show consistent fluorescence intensity, and the longer the tube, the brighter. "There's a rather well-defined limit to how bright they appear," Weisman said. "And that maximum brightness is proportional to length, which suggests those tubes are not affected by imperfections."

But they found that brightness among nanotubes of the same length varied widely, likely due to damaged or defective structures or chemical reactions that allowed atoms to latch onto the surface.

The study first reported late last year by Weisman, lead author/former graduate student Tonya Leeuw Cherukuri and postdoctoral fellow Dmitri Tsyboulski detailed the method by which Cherukuri analyzed the characteristics of 400 individual nanotubes of a specific physical structure known as (10,2).

"It's a tribute to Tonya's dedication and talent that she was able to make this large number of accurate measurements," Weisman said of his former student.

The researchers applied spectral filtering to selectively view the specific type of nanotube. "We used spectroscopy to take this very polydisperse sample containing many different structures and study just one of them, the (10,2) nanotubes," Weisman said. "But even within that one type, there's a wide range of lengths."

Weisman said the study involved singling out one or two isolated nanotubes at a time in a dilute sample and finding their lengths by analyzing videos of the moving tubes captured with a special fluorescence microscope. The movies also allowed Cherukuri to catalog their maximum brightness.

"I think of these tubes as fluorescence underachievers," he said. "There are a few bright ones that fluoresce to their full potential, but most of them are just slackers, and they're half as bright, or 20 percent as bright, as they should be.

"What we want to do is change that distribution and leave no tube behind, try to get them all to the top. We want to know how their fluorescence is affected by growth methods and processing, to see if we're inflicting damage that's causing the dimming.

"These are insights you really can't get from measurements on bulk samples," he said.

Graduate student Jason Streit is extending Cherukuri's research. "He's worked up a way to automate the experiments so we can image and analyze dozens of nanotubes at once, rather than one or two. That will let us do in a couple of weeks what had taken months with the original method," Weisman said.

The research was supported by the Welch Foundation, the National Science Foundation and Applied NanoFluorescence.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Rice University.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Tonya K. Cherukuri, Dmitri A. Tsyboulski, R. Bruce Weisman. Length- and Defect-Dependent Fluorescence Efficiencies of Individual Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes. ACS Nano, 2012; 6 (1): 843 DOI: 10.1021/nn2043516

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120131122456.htm

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Isolated Peru tribe makes uncomfortable contact

Peruvian authorities say they are struggling to keep outsiders away from a clan of previously isolated Amazon Indians who began appearing on the banks of a jungle river popular with environmental tourists last year.

The behavior of the small group of Mashco-Piro Indians has puzzled scientists, who say the encounters may be related to the encroachment of loggers and by low-flying aircraft from nearby natural gas and oil exploration in the southeastern region of the country.

Clan members have been blamed for two bow-and-arrow attacks on people near the riverbank in Madre de Dios state, where officials say the Indians were first seen last May.

One badly wounded a forest ranger in October. The following month, another fatally pierced the heart of a local Matsiguenka Indian, Nicolas "Shaco" Flores, who had long maintained a relationship with the Mashco-Piro.

The advocacy group Survival International released photos Tuesday showing clan members on the riverbank, describing the pictures as the "most detailed sightings of uncontacted Indians ever recorded on camera."

The British-based group provided the photos exactly a year after releasing aerial photos from Brazil of another tribe classified as uncontacted, one of about 100 such groups it says exist around the world.

Pictures from birdwatcher and archaeologist
One of the Mashco-Piro photos was taken by a birdwatcher in August, Survival International said. The other two were shot by Spanish archaeologist Diego Cortijo on Nov. 16, six days before Flores was killed.

Cortijo, a member of the Spanish Geographical Society, was visiting Flores while on an expedition in search of petroglyphs and said clan members appeared across the river from Flores' house, calling for him by name.

Flores could communicate with the Mashco-Piro because he spoke two related dialects, said Cortijo, who added that Flores had previously provided clan members with machetes and cooking pots.

The Mashco-Piro tribe is believed to number in the hundreds and lives in the Manu National Park that borders Diamante, a community of more than 200 people where Flores lived.

Less isolated habitat
Although it's not known what provoked the Mashco-Piro clan to leave the relative safety of their tribe's jungle home, Beatriz Huerta, an anthropologist who works with Peru's agency for indigenous affairs, speculated their habitat is becoming increasingly less isolated.

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The upper Madre de Dios region where the tribe lives has been affected by logging, she said. "They are removing wood very close."

Meanwhile, Huerta said, naturalists in the area and Manu National Park officials told her during a recent visit that a rise in air traffic related to natural gas and oil exploration in the region is adversely affecting native hunting grounds, forcing increasing migration by nomadic tribes.

The clan that showed up at the river is believed to number about 60, including some 25 adults, said Carlos Soria, a professor at Lima's Catholic University who ran Peru's park protection agency last year.

"It seemed like they wanted to draw a bit of attention, which is a bit strange because I know that on other occasions they had attacked people," Cortijo said by phone from Spain. "It seemed they didn't want us to go near them, but I also know that the only thing that they wanted was machetes and cooking pots."

Cortijo said the group lingered by the river a few minutes, apparently to see if a boat would pass by so they could ask for some tools, something authorities say they had done in the past.

"The place where they are seen is one of heavy transit" of river cargo and tourist passage, and so the potential for more violent encounters remains high, Soria said.

Culture clash
The situation is compounded by culture clash. The Mashco-Piro live by their own social code, which Soria said includes the practice of kidnapping other tribes' women and children.

He said the Mashco-Piro are one of about 15 "uncontacted" tribes in Peru that together are estimated to number between 12,000 and 15,000 people living in jungles east of the Andes.

"The situation is incredibly delicate," said Huerta, the government anthropologist.

"It's very clear that they don't want people there," she said of the area where the clan has been loitering, noting that it had ransacked a jungle ranger's post that authorities later removed.

One of the clan's likely fears is being decimated by disease borne by outsiders, as has occurred with other uncontacted peoples, Huerta said.

But it's also a mystery why they have appeared in an area so heavily trafficked, she added.

After the first sightings, and after tourists left clothing for the Mashco-Piro, state authorities issued a directive in August barring all boats from going ashore in the area. But enforcing it has been difficult as there are few trained and willing local officials.

Authorities say they aren't sure why Flores was killed. It could be that the Mashco-Piro were angry because he hadn't provided them with more machetes and cooking pots. Or perhaps it was because they considered the farming plot where he was killed too close to what they considered their territory.

Cortijo, the Spanish archaeologist, said the loss of Flores makes reaching any understanding with the Mashco-Piro very complicated.

"The problem is that 'Shaco' was the only person who could talk to them," he said. "Now that he's dead it's impossible to make contact."

More about 'uncontacted' tribes:

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/46202743/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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