Marriott Hotels Ban Smoking In Rooms

Marriott Hotels Ban Smoking In Rooms
Two decades ago, about half the company’s rooms were set aside for smokers, but demand has steadily dropped, with only 5 percent of customers now requesting smoking rooms. At the same time, complaints about cigarette odor have increased, and company officials have struggled to address the issue.

Marriott, which will enforce its ban by charging violators $200 to $300, follows that of the Westin Hotels & Resorts chain, which late last year announced it was making all 77 of its properties smoke-free

Find your bosses’ home value with Zillow and Yahoo!

Find your bosses’ home value with Zillow and Yahoo! – Lifehacker
Yahoo! Real Estate has integrated the previously-mentioned Zillow home valuation service into Yahoo! Maps.

That means you can look up the home values of your house, your friends’ and enemies’ houses on Yahoo! all mapped out with nearby homes for comparison.

Moms Prefer Smell of Their Own Baby’s Poop

LiveScience.com – Moms Prefer Smell of Their Own Baby’s Poop
n a new study, 13 mothers were asked to sniff soiled diapers belonging to both their own child and others from an unrelated baby. The women consistently ranked the smell of their own child’s feces as less revolting than that of other babies.

This effect persisted even when the diapers were purposely mislabeled.

What Shamu Taught Me About a Happy Marriage

What Shamu Taught Me About a Happy Marriage – New York Times
I listened, rapt, as professional trainers explained how they taught dolphins to flip and elephants to paint. Eventually it hit me that the same techniques might work on that stubborn but lovable species, the American husband.

The central lesson I learned from exotic animal trainers is that I should reward behavior I like and ignore behavior I don’t. After all, you don’t get a sea lion to balance a ball on the end of its nose by nagging. The same goes for the American husband.

The runaway interest of this article is covered in this “Shamu-mania” Salon article.

Living the American dream

MiamiHerald.com | 06/18/2006 | Living the American dream
BOYE, Mexico – Clementina Arellano grew up with her six brothers in a shack in this dusty Mexican hamlet. Now 42, she’s raising her sons in a spacious, 10-room mansion with Roman-style pillars at the doorway and a garden full of flowers and singing birds.

How did she transform her fortunes so dramatically? By waiting tables and sweating in a furniture factory for 10 years in Hickory, N.C., sending home up to $500 a month

Last year, Mexican migrants sent home a record $20 billion, making them Mexico’s biggest foreign earner after oil. In the first four months of this year, the amount was $7 billion, a 25 percent increase over the same period last year. Continue reading “Living the American dream”

Thinking Global Demographics

WSJ.com – Thinking Global
The deepest demographic hole is in Russia. President Vladimir Putin trumpets his country’s new status as an energy superpower, but a decline in male life expectancy to pre-1959 levels has combined with declining birthrates to more than offset that advantage. “The real wealth of the modern world is human resources, and not what you have in the ground,” says Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute, Washington’s leading expert on global demographic trends. He fears a new security challenge: a declining state with nuclear weapons that is relying on nonhuman resources for its power.

On a brighter note, Mr. Eberstadt has spotted a surprising and potentially positive trend toward lower population growth in developing countries, where concerns have focused for years on overpopulation and its relation to cyclical poverty. More than half the world is now living at subreplacement levels, including nearly every country of East Asia, many parts of the Mideast, Turkey and Brazil. The cause appears to be modern thinking seeping through to more cultures than previously thought, propagating the notion that a large number of children is more of an economic burden than benefit.

Yet geopoliticians are focusing most on China and the U.S. — the world’s fastest-rising power and its incumbent. China is following an aging course similar to that of Japan, but its trends hold more dangers as it begins from a lower income base with less-developed pension and health systems.

Mr. Bennett talks about a 1-2-4 equation, where one Chinese child supports two parents who support four grandparents, but in reality, many parents have no child to support them. “There’s this slow-motion humanitarian tragedy coming down the track for China,” Mr. Eberstadt says.

He says the U.S. trend is more a story of its “exceptionalism” among industrialized countries, with higher birthrates that grow out of significantly different attitudes. U.S. birthrates are 30% higher per family than those of Europe or Canada.

“This is the expression of millions of unorganized, spontaneous couples,” says Mr. Eberstadt, who adds that the U.S. will be the only industrialized country to hold on to its share of global population in the next half century. That also will give it more of a risk-taking nature than allies on matters ranging from fighting terrorism to technological innovation.

“The U.S. will have less and less affinity with other developed countries,” he says. “It will be harder and not easier to find common ground with allies.”

Useless Facts > Human Body

Useless Facts > Human Body

Thanks to Caroline Collier

The average human brain has about 100 billion nerve cells.>> There are 45 miles (72 km) of nerves in the skin of a human being.

The average human heart will beat 3,000 million times in its lifetime and pump 48 million gallons of blood.

Each square inch (2.5 cm) of human skin consists of 20 feet (6 m) of blood vessels.

During a 24-hour period, the average human will breathe 23,040 times.

Human blood travels 60,000 miles (96,540 km) per day on its journey through the body. Continue reading “Useless Facts > Human Body”