Wednesday, April 30, 2014

China preparing for short, sharp war with Japan

China’s military has been beefing up training as the country continues keeping an unwavering stance on various territory disputes with its neighbors. In particular, according to a U.S. naval officer China has been preparing for possible military action over the ongoing dispute with Japan over a small cluster of islands in the East China Sea, and the more recent air-defense zone dispute.
According to a report by theUnited States Naval Institution, part of China’s Mission Action 2013 exercise, a military drill that includes all branches of the country’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA), included preparation for combat to take over the Senkaku/ Diaoyu Islands, Capt. James Fannell, deputy chief of staff intelligence and information operations for the U.S. Pacific Fleet, said.
“We witnessed the massive amphibious and cross military region enterprise -- Mission Action 2013,” Fannell said during a conference last week in San Diego, Calif. “[We] concluded that the PLA has been given the new task to be able to conduct a short sharp war to destroy Japanese forces in the East China Sea following with what can only be expected a seizure of the Senkakus or even a southern Ryukyu [islands] – as some of their academics say.”

DOJ to investigate Napoles scam at DOTC De Lima says P407M IT deal not on Napoles’ list By Gil C. Cabacungan, Marlon Ramos Philippine Daily Inquirer 2:45 am | Thursday, May 1st, 2014

DOJ to investigate Napoles scam at DOTC

De Lima says P407M IT deal not on Napoles’ list

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The P407-million allegedly phantom computerization project of the Department of Transportation and Communications involving Janet Lim-Napoles (in photo) will be investigated and charges will be brought against everybody involved, according to the Department of Justice. INQUIRER FILE PHOTOS
MANILA, Philippines—Justice Secretary Leila de Lima said Wednesday that she would have the P407-million allegedly phantom computerization project of the Department of Transportation and Communications (DOTC) involving Janet Lim-Napoles investigated and bring charges against everybody involved.
De Lima said Benhur Luy, the principal witness in the P10-billion pork barrel scam allegedly masterminded by Napoles, had spoken to her about the businesswoman’s dealings with the DOTC 10 years ago, but she said it was unclear whether Luy was referring to the bogus computerization program.
She said Napoles did not discuss the computer scam at the DOTC with her during their meeting last week.
“I have no knowledge about the DOTC issue. It was not included on the list [from Napoles], which covered projects funded by PDAF (Priority Development Assistance Fund),” De Lima said.
But the premise or assumption of the (Department of Justice) is that these are PDAF funds unless (Napoles) clarifies that it’s not PDAF,” she said.
She said the DOJ would look into the details of the allegedly irregular DOTC supply contracts and file charges against all those involved.
Napoles’ list
De Lima again declined to disclose the list prepared by Napoles containing the names of lawmakers and other people involved in the pork barrel scam.
“We cannot disclose it, [as] we’re still getting the rest of the statement from Napoles,” De Lima said.
“Nobody was added to the list. Any changes [on the list] will not come from us, but from Napoles herself,” she said.
A number of senators and congressmen have demanded the disclosure of the list, which Napoles gave to De Lima during their meeting in Napoles’ room at Ospital ng Makati where the businesswoman underwent surgery last week.
De Lima said the DOJ was also looking into the possibility of allowing Napoles to submit an affidavit prepared by her own lawyers detailing how the nongovernment organizations (NGOs) that she controlled siphoned off billions of pesos from the PDAF, pork barrel that channels funds to congressional districts.
Quoting Napoles’ doctors, she said the businesswoman had difficulty speaking after undergoing a surgical procedure that removed her uterus and two ovaries.
Fictitious program
“We’re finding ways … to … facilitate the completion of her statement [despite] her physical condition. We … want to finish this as soon as possible,” De Lima said.
In the House of Representatives, lawmakers on Wednesday took the Commission on Audit (COA) to task for sitting on the report about the fictitious computerization program in the DOTC involving Napoles.
“No doubt the COA is at fault for this controversy. It breached its primary mandate to be the financial gatekeeper of the state, flagging fraud where it sees them. More than 10 years had elapsed and the COA has yet to release its report whether or not to allow, disallow, reject in toto or otherwise pass upon the DOTC transaction with Napoles,” Deputy Speaker Giorgidi Aggabao said.
“Upon a sensible view of audit rules, it must be held to include within its fair intent that examination of accounts and the release of the resulting report must be made within a reasonable time. Ten years is unreasonable,” Aggabao, who is Isabela’s representative in the House, said.
Cavite Rep. Elpidio Barzaga said the COA should explain its failure to pursue the fraudulent purchase of the computers.
Rehearsal
“The scam could not have prospered without the assistance of COA auditors. Public funds are all subject to COA audit. Everyone is aware that the COA is the constitutional watchdog regarding the expenditure of public funds. COA Chairperson (Grace Pulido) Tan has been very vocal about the pork barrel scam yet no COA auditor has been mentioned in the pork barrel issue,” Barzaga said.
“If the COA had only acted on Napoles’ scam much earlier with the DOTC computers, there would have been no pork barrel scam,” he added.
The theft of public funds through the phantom computerization project of the DOTC 10 years ago is believed to have been a rehearsal for the staging of the P10-billion pork barrel scam.
The Inquirer obtained documents showing that Napoles’ company Jo Chris Trading cornered the P407-million contract from the DOTC for the distribution of computers and other communication equipment to local governments chosen by politicians between 2002 and 2003.
This contract was awarded to Jo Chris Trading without public bidding and pork scam whistle-blowers, who used to work for Napoles at JLN Corp. and fronted for her in a slew of fake foundations, claimed that the deliveries of computers and other communication equipment were fictitious.
Levito Baligod, a lawyer for the pork scam whistle-blowers, claimed that Napoles bought only a small sample of radio and computers and showed them to the DOTC and the lawmakers as proof of purchase and delivery.
DOTC signatories
Baligod also said that just like in the pork barrel scam, the signatures of the recipients were forged.
The purchase orders for the project was signed by then DOTC assistant secretaries Rene Maglanque (now mayor of Candaba town, Pampanga province) and Domingo A. Reyes Jr., who were identified by the whistle-blowers as  Napoles’ main connections in the agency, then headed by Secretary Leandro Mendoza.
Mendoza died last year.
The lawmakers who endorsed the deployment of the computers were Deputy Speaker Carlos Padilla, who was then House minority leader; Majority Leader Neptali Gonzales II; former Senators Manuel Villar,  Tessie Aquino-Oreta (an aunt of President Aquino), Robert Jaworski and Robert Barbers  (who died in December 2005); former Representatives Zenaida Ducut of Pampanga (now chair of the Energy Regulatory Commission); former Malabon-Navotas Rep. Felipe Sandoval II; and former Pampanga Rep. Juan Miguel “Mikey” Arroyo (who was given the computers during his term as Pampanga vice governor).
Padilla and Sen. Cynthia Villar have tossed the blame at the DOTC, which they say had the responsibility of ensuring that the computers were bought and delivered.
Padilla said he would support moves for an investigation into the DOTC computerization program.
“I think Napoles would not have been able to perpetrate such a thing, mastermind or not, without the connivance of government bureaucrats including those in the COA,” Padilla said.
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Good news for Mankind - Golez. Patients regrow muscles with pig bladder tissue

Patients regrow muscles with pig bladder tissue

For the first time ever, scientists have been able to successfully regenerate damaged leg muscles through a new stem cell technique that uses material from pig bladder tissue. Researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and the McGowan Institute for Regenerative Health tested out the procedure on five men.
Results from the small, preliminary trial -- and prior animal studies -- were published today in Science Translational Medicine. The research was sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense.
The procedure involves surgically implanting a "quilt" of sheets of the cells from connective tissue of a pig's bladder. The process causes the body to regenerate stem cells at the injury site, which repairs scar tissue and helps the person to regain muscle strength and movement.
"We can take the type of injury that normally would form nothing other than scar tissue and form a brand new skeletal muscle that's functional, that contracts," Dr. Steve Badylak at the University of Pittsburgh's department of surgery, told CBS News' Ko Im.
Over time the transplanted tissue melds with the patient's real muscle tissue, explained Badylak. "They get these signals," he said. "They say, okay, I get it, I'm supposed to line up like this, and they recruit their own new blood supply, their own new nerves and they basically start forming new tissue this way."
Pig bladder cells have been used for years to repair damaged and missing tissue of patients. In the past, doctors have employed the technique to fix hernias and treat skin ulcers. Last year, a surgeon in Delray Beach, Fla., grew a man's missing fingerusing the material. And some researchers are in the early stages of harvesting the tissue to grow vital organs for transplant.
The researchers of this trial report the procedure was highly effective on three of the five men, all of whom sustained injuries six months prior and had lost 25 percent of leg muscle volume. The five men underwent regular physical therapy for 12 to 26 weeks prior to the surgery, and resumed regular sessions 48 hours after the procedure for an additional 26 week
Six months later the surgically treated leg muscles were at least 20 percent stronger in three of the men. One man with an injured thigh muscle showed a 1,820 percent improvement on the "hop test." Another man demonstrated a 352 percent improvement on the chair lift and a 417 percent improvement for a single leg squat. Biopsies and scans of the injured tendons showed muscle regrowth had occurred in all five men.
Nick Clark, one patient enrolled in the study, injured his calf in a skiing accident almost 10 years ago. "Because of complications of that severe break there was a lot of internal bleeding inside these muscle compartments and that caused swelling," Clark told CBS News.
After his initial recovery, Clark found the muscle didn't work the same way. "I couldn't push off my left foot at all. I had no balance," he explained. Since undergoing the procedure, Clark says his balance has improved. He can also put weight on his leg, jump and he no longer needs to wear an orthotic. "I wanted to try it, I wanted to see if it works for me and I'm happy that it has," he said.

Neanderthals Just As Smart as Modern Humans

Neanderthals Just As Smart as Modern Humans

Apr 30, 2014 04:57 PM EDT
Neanderthals
Despite common belief, Neanderthals were just as intelligent as today's modern humans. (Photo : procy_ab / Fotolia)
Despite common belief, Neanderthals were just as intelligent as today's modern humans. Scientific evidence does not support the widely held belief that our "simple" biped relatives were driven to extinction by our highly intelligent ancestors, according to a new study from the University of Colorado Boulder.
Neanderthals thrived between about 350,000 and 40,000 years ago in parts of Europe and Asia. Our ancestors, referred to as "anatomically modern humans," drove them out, but not because of their dimwittedness or primitive ways.
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But after an extensive review of Neanderthal research scientists confirmed that we are not superior to our hairy close relatives.
"The evidence for cognitive inferiority is simply not there," CU-Boulder researcher Paola Villa, a curator at the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, said in a statement. "What we are saying is that the conventional view of Neanderthals is not true."
The study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, refutes prior hypotheses explaining why Neanderthals no longer roam the Earth. In the past, some researchers have tried to explain the demise of the Neanderthals by suggesting that the newcomers were superior to Neanderthals in key ways, including their ability to hunt, communicate, innovate and adapt to different environments.
Villa and co-author Wil Roebroeks suppose that past misrepresentation may be linked to the tendency of researchers to compare Neanderthals, who lived in the Middle Paleolithic, to modern humans living during the more recent Upper Paleolithic period. This, it turns out, is the equivalent of comparing apples to oranges.
"Researchers were comparing Neanderthals not to their contemporaries on other continents but to their successors," Villa explained. "It would be like comparing the performance of Model T Fords, widely used in America and Europe in the early part of the last century, to the performance of a modern-day Ferrari and conclude that Henry Ford was cognitively inferior to Enzo Ferrari."
Many people are tempted to pinpoint cognitive inferiority for Neanderthals' demise, but archaeologists assert that there is no evidence to support this popular opinion.

The 3-D revolution will blow you away By Sally Kohn, CNN Political Commentator April 30, 2014

The 3-D revolution will blow you away

By Sally Kohn, CNN Political Commentator
April 30, 2014 -- Updated 1457 GMT (2257 HKT)
Scientists are 3-D printing body parts ranging from plastic skulls to artificial eyes. Fripp Design and Research and Manchester Metropolitan University say they are able to 3-D print up to 150 prosthetic eyes an hour.Scientists are 3-D printing body parts ranging from plastic skulls to artificial eyes. Fripp Design and Research and Manchester Metropolitan University say they are able to 3-D print up to 150 prosthetic eyes an hour.
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STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • A company in China reportedly used 3-D printers to make 10 houses in a day
  • Sally Kohn: 3-D printers have potential to address problems like hunger, pollution
  • She says scientists are even experimenting with printing human tissues, organs
  • Kohn: Millions worldwide can benefit from 3-D printed houses or foods
Editor's note: Sally Kohn is a CNN political commentator, progressive activist and columnist. Follow her on Twitter @sallykohn. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.
(CNN) -- A company in China reportedly used giant 3-D printers to make 10 houses in one day. This leads to two obvious questions.
First, how big were those printers? The answer is: 10 meters wide by 6.6 meters high. A mixture of cement and construction waste weresprayed to build the walls layer by layer.
And second, if 3-D printers could be used to create a neighborhood of full-sized, detached single family homes in less time and money than it would conventionally take, could 3-D printers help end homelessness?
Sally Kohn
Sally Kohn
I'm not Pollyanna-ish when it comes to ending poverty. Many of the world's problems stem from decades of government policies that fostered inequality and neglect, dynamics that cannot be easily fixed by one solution.
At the same time, I'm completely obsessed with 3-D printers, probably because I don't fully understand them, so they seem like magic sent to us from the future by Captain Picard. If these printers can make even a dent in some of the world's most pressing challenges, they would be even cooler in my book.
So, what major social and economic problems might we potentially print our way out of? Here are some possibilities.
Dutch architects to build \'world\'s first\' 3D printed houseDutch architects to build 'world's first' 3D printed house
How a 3-D printed arm gave hope to boy maimed in bomb blastHow a 3-D printed arm gave hope to boy maimed in bomb blast
Tomorrow\'s world: designs that will define our futureTomorrow's world: designs that will define our future
Hunger
At South by Southwest this year, I got to eat candy that came out of a printer, courtesy of the folks at Deloitte. Last fall, writer A.J. Jacobs documented in The New York Times an entire meal he and his wife ate that was produced by 3-D printers, including pizza, pasta and dessert. While Jacobs needed the help of several companies and their Ph.D. staff to produce his meal, on Kickstarter, one startup tried to get funding for the "Foodini:" a 3-D food printer for home chefs.
For now, the technology is too expensive, and like many trends the exploration is happening more in high-end settings (3-D printed caviar, anyone?). But as the costs come down and the technology improves, could there be a 3-D printer making nutritious food in every village around the globe? Perhaps.
Homelessness
It's quite a feat for the Chinese company to build 10 homes in one day, but they're not the only innovators.
Earlier this year, Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis at the University of Southern California built a giant 3-D printer that can produce a basic house in one day. And in Amsterdam, construction has begun on what appears to be the first multistory -- and aesthetically pleasing -- 3-D printed house. Of course, homelessness is far more complex than simply a lack of housing. But the ability to create "affordable housing" even more affordably would not only help homeless people but also low-income individuals.
Disease
I understand stem cells even less than I understand 3-D printing, so I'm not going to say much here except to note that scientists are experimenting with what seems to be impossible but apparently isn't: printing human organs.
CNN.com reported on how bioprinters use an "ink" of stem cells to print 3-D shapes that can be placed into the human body, where hopefully the cells will be accepted by the existing tissues. Bioprintinghas a lot of potential. In 2013, a little girl born without a windpipe got one thanks to a 3-D printer that rendered one out of the girl's own stem cells.
A foundation has created a $1 million prize to be awarded to whomever comes up with the first 3-D printed functioning liver, which would be a big deal to the 17,000 Americans waiting for liver transplants — and a huge sign of hope to millions of people worldwide with all kinds of organ needs because of diseases and conditions.
Pollution
There are many causes of climate change, one of which is pollution from industrial production. 3-D printing offers many promising alternatives to more traditionally wasteful and dirty manufacturing methods.
Rather than having to throw out entire products when one piece needs replacing ("planned obsolescence"), 3-D printing will make it easier to replace parts. Even complex products can be produced and assembled locally rather than shipped from across the continent, which would reduce the carbon footprint. (The raw materials will need to be shipped, but they take up less room.)
Money
Printing money is as illegal in three dimensions as it is in two. And while 3-D printing may never eliminate the need for money, it may change the demand for it.
Think about how the Internet reduced the cost of information or how Spotify has reduced the cost of music. Or how cell phones are prevalent all over the world. Imagine years into the future when 3-D printers are just as affordable and available as cell phones. Communities could meet their basic needs -- not just for food but everyday items -- with far less money.
Imagine a 3-D printer making plates and cups and toothbrushes and hammers and nails and much more for entire communities, to be shared or bartered for rather than purchased with cash. And for goods that are bought and sold, 3-D printing could maybe reduce costs without affecting production wages (I'm looking at you, Wal-Mart).
The possibilities are so exciting that the World Bank has consideredthe implications of 3-D printing for reducing poverty and sharing prosperity.
Let's hope 3-D printing will truly be as revolutionary as we hope.