High housing price impacting Chinese middle-class people’s health

New Delhi, Apr 22 (ANI): China’s high housing price is impacting middle-class fortunes and causing them health problems, according to a survey done by two Chinese universities.

The survey, jointly conducted by the Beijing-based Xiaokang Magazine and Tsinghua University, said Chinese middle-class people are under great pressure and do not feel good about their health: 88.9 percent said they were or will be over fatigued, and 53.3 percent said they were not satisfied with their physical and mental conditions.

Respondents of the survey were civil servants and white-collar workers in the city. They are mainly post 80s, 70s and 60s, with more than 80 percent of them having a monthly income of more than 3,000 yuan (440 dollars), the China Daily reports.

“If the soaring housing price cannot be curbed effectively, China’s middle class may collapse,” said Tang Jun, a sociologist with the China Academy of Social Sciences.

About 80 percent of civil servants and white-collar workers said they were under great pressure, and more than 60 percent said their pressure was mainly about buying a house and paying mortgage loans, the survey said.

More than 60 percent of the respondents said they were sacrificing their health for money, with 16.1 percent saying they can accept this deal and 45.4 percent saying they don’t want to accept this deal but have no choice, according to the survey.(ANI)

CSBC seeks shipbuilding order from Taiwan’s Evergreen

TAIPEI, April 14 (Reuters) – Taiwan’s top shipbuilding firm, CSBC Corp (2208.TW), is seeking an order to build 12 new ships for Evergreen Marine (2603.TW), suggesting that major freighters in Asia are benefiting from a sustained pickup in demand globally.

Industrials

CSBC General Manager Tang Tay-ping told Reuters on Wednesday that his company would offer a price next week on the new ships, which each have a capacity of 8,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs).

The first new ship could be shipped in the second half of 2013, said Tang, who declined to give dollar figures on the tender.

Evergreen Marine, the world’s fourth-largest marine shipping line, said last month it has targeted a profit for 2010 following losses last year, as cargo orders pick up with the global economic recovery. [ID:nTOE62E061]

Taiwan’s industrial hub and major port city Kaohsiung, a barometer for Asian export-reliant economies, has seen mild recovery from a year ago, aiming to add a combined capacity of 6.3 million TEUs to the port, which once handled about 10 million TEUs per year but only saw 8.58 million in 2009. [ID:nLDE63B1CZ]

On Wednesday, CSBC shares closed down 1.38 percent and Evergreen Marine shares fell 0.53 percent, against the main TAIEX’s 0.84 percent rise. (US$1=T$31.5) (Reporting by Lin Miao-jung, Editing by Jonathan Standing)

92yo murder accused ‘loved husband deeply’

A family friend of an elderly woman accused of killing her 98-year-old husband, says she loved him deeply.

Clare Tang has been charged with murder over the death of her husband, C Y Tang, at their unit at Surry Hills in Sydney on Friday night.

Police say he was found with head wounds.

The 92-year-old has been held in custody since then and faces court tomorrow.

George Tsoi says the couple were married for about 70 years.

“You won’t find any other couple better than this couple,” he said.

He says the couple are from Shanghai, and own half-a-dozen restaurants in Singapore.

Mr Tsoi cried as he talked of the accused, saying she has never lived alone and he is worried about her being in custody

Ancient book of Buddhism chantings found in Korean temple

Seoul, September 16 (ANI): Archaeologists have uncovered an ancient Chinese book of Buddhism chantings in a Korean temple.

According to a report in Korea Times, the Hangeul copy of an ancient Chinese book, which contains the notes of the Joseon Kingdom (1392-1910) scholar Kim Si-seup, was discovered at Baekryunam, Haein Temple.

The book was originally written by a Buddhist master from the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and dates back to the 16th century.

“We discovered the ‘shiphyeondam eonhaebon’ while we were examining the library of Ven. Seong Cheol (1912-1993) at Baekryunam, Haein Temple, in April this year,” Ven. Won Taek said at a press conference at the Jogye Order, northern Seoul.

“It’s a rare book ? perhaps even the only copy ? that is not included in the Natural Treasures list nor on the lists of national libraries and university libraries,” he said.

An eonhae copy, or eonhaebon, is a book or writing that contains the literal translation of a sentence in Chinese to Hangeul, or Korean.

It is different from the normal translation books as it features a word-for-word translation, and is far removed from the Hangeul sentences used today.

‘Shiphyeondam’ refers to the 10 songs and poems made to praise Buddha’s teachings, written by Tang Dynasty Buddhist master Dongan Sangchal of the Jodong Order of Zen Buddhism, a sect of the religion in China.

The songs are comprised of seven Chinese characters and contain the traditions and the practices of the Jodong Order.

Ven. Won Taek explained that the discovery was meaningful as the book was from the 16th century. Most of the eonhaebons known today are from the 15th century.

“We found many precious ancient books and eonhaebons while examining the library and we will apply these artifacts as Natural Treasures after examining the value of them. We will also make photo prints of the eonhaebons for ancient hangeul and writing experts to use them as research material,” he said. (ANI)

Nicotine plays “tricks” on the brain

Washington, Sept 10 (ANI): Nicotine, the addictive component in cigarettes, “tricks” the brain into creating memory associations between environmental cues and smoking behavior, say researchers at Baylor College of Medicine.

The study has been published in the journal Neuron.

“Our brains normally make these associations between things that support our existence and environmental cues so that we conduct behaviors leading to successful lives. The brain sends a reward signal when we act in a way that contributes to our well being,” said Dr. John A. Dani, professor of neuroscience at BCM and co-author of the study.

“However, nicotine commandeers this subconscious learning process in the brain so we begin to behave as though smoking is a positive action,” the expert added.

Dani said that environmental events linked with smoking can become cues that prompt the smoking urge. Those cues could include alcohol, a meal with friends, or even the drive home from work.

To understand why the associations are so strong, Dani and Dr. Jianrong Tang, instructor of neuroscience at BCM and co-author of the report, decided to record brain activity of mice as they were exposed to nicotine, the addictive component of tobacco.

The mice were allowed to roam through an apparatus with two separate compartments. In one compartment, they received nicotine. In the other, they got a benign saline solution. Later, the researchers recorded how long the mice spent in each compartment. They also recorded brain activity within the hippocampus, an area of the brain that creates new memories.

“The brain activity change was just amazing. Compared to injections of saline, nicotine strengthened neuronal connections – sometimes up to 200 percent. This strengthening of connections underlies new memory formation,” Dani said.

Consequently, mice learned to spent more time in the compartment where the nicotine was administered compared to the one where saline was given to them.

“We found that nicotine could strengthen neuronal synaptic connections only when the so called reward centers sent a dopamine signal. That was a critical process in creating the memory associations even with bad behavior like smoking,” the expert said. (ANI)

Pak Qaeda hand in 2006 trans-Atlantic bomb plot revealed

London, Sep.8 (ANI): New evidence put before a British jury during a retrial of three Brit Muslim convicts suggests that the men used code words to discuss their plans with an al-Qaeda fixer based in Pakistan.

The e-mails and conversations suggest that the plot was in its final stages, possibly days away from execution in 2006.

The seven daily flights highlighted by the three plotters were: 14.15 United Airlines Flight 931 to San Francisco; 15.00 Air Canada Flight 849 to Toronto; 15.15 Air Canada Flight 865 to Montreal; 15.40 United Airlines Flight 959 to Chicago; 16.20 United Airlines Flight 925 to Washington; 16.35 American Airlines Flight 131 to New York; 16.50 American Airlines Flight 91 to Chicago.

According to The Telegraph and the Daily Express, the batteries the gang planned to use as part of their detonators were bought in Pakistan.

An ingredient in the bomb mix was the orange soft drink Tang – sold in Pakistan – which had a high sugar content to aid the explosion.

A British intelligence source said: “The use of drink bottles sold in Pakistan and batteries sold in Pakistan underline the plot’s ties to that country. The foot soldiers were from Britain – but the organisers were in Pakistan.”

A security source said of the conspiracy: “It was very clever and the airport scanners would not have picked up the devices at all.”

Prosecutor Peter Wright told the Woolwich Crown Court in South East London how the would-be bombers were “a cell of home-grown terrorists activated and directed by a designated leader in Pakistan.”

That was confirmed by a government source in Pakistan, who said the plot was believed to have originated “with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.”

Seized e-mails showed the chain of terror stretched from there, across the lawless border to Pakistan, to London and to the woods of High Wycombe where explosives were buried.

The aim was to mirror the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, which killed 259 passengers and 11 in the Scottish town.

Aliases exposed during the trial revealed the terror kingpin in Pakistan was dubbed “Paps” or “Papa”.

Ali called himself Imran and Chacha and also set up email accounts in the bogus names Tippu Khan and Jameel Masood.

His co-conspirators used aliases such as Fatty, Arro and Nigga.

Hydrogen peroxide was known as “aftershave”, police surveillance as “skin problems” and martyrdom videos were referred to as “wedding tapes”.

It is also thought that the bomb makers received training at an al-Qaeda camp in Pakistan.

A mystery Pakistani, thought to be a top al-Qaeda envoy, made contact with the three would-be suicide bombers during a flying visit to Britain in June 2006.

Experts who tested the explosive mix on the aircraft were horrified.

A witness said: “It was absolutely devastating.” (ANI)

80yr-old Chinese man’s dream to spread English language

New Delhi, Sep 2 (ANI): An 80-year-old Chinese man, who wants to spread the English language, has authored and published three booklets in the past four years to help people learn it.

Tang Zaixing, from Nanhai district of Foshan, Guangdong province, moved to Foshan from Hong Kong when new China was founded in 1949, and his dream of learning English faded away, reports the China Daily.

But he started to regain interest in it after he retired from service in 1991, and began learning the language again, printing his first oral English booklet while he was hospitalised four years ago.

Tang, whose library consists of a huge collection of English books, distributed copies of the booklet to doctors and nurses at the hospital.

But his passion for the language does not end there, as he even has the walls of his house covered with English words. (ANI)

Buddhist Mount Wutai in China listed as World Heritage site

New Delhi, June 27 (ANI): Buddhist Mount Wutai in China has become the country’s 38th site to join UNESCO’s World Heritage List as a cultural landscape.

“We’ve been through a rough path, full of suspense,” said Tong Mingkang, deputy chief of China’s State Administration of Cultural Heritage, after the announcement.

Mount Wutai, literally the five-terrace mountain, is a sacred Buddhist mountain with five flat peaks.

The cultural landscape features 53 monasteries and includes the East Main Hall of Foguang Temple, a structure that was built in 857 during the Tang Dynasty (618-917) and is one of the oldest wooden buildings in China

It also features the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Shuxiang Temple with a huge complex of 500 statues representing Buddhist stories woven into three dimensional pictures of mountains and water.

The structures on the site represent a catalogue of the way Buddhist architecture developed and influenced palace building in China for more than one millennium.

Mount Wutai, located in Shanxi Province, is the highest mountain in northern China and is remarkable for its morphology characterized by precipitous sides with five open treeless peaks.

Temples were built on the site from the first century AD to the early 20th century. (ANI)

Chinese mind-body training technique improves attention, reduces stress

Washington, May 20 (ANI): Just five days of practicing a newly emerging mind-body technique may produce effective changes in attention and stress reduction, say Chinese researchers.

Now undergraduates at the University of Oregon are being taught the practice-called integrative body-mind training (IBMT)-which was adapted from traditional Chinese medicine in the 1990s in China, where it is practiced by thousands of people.

In a 2007 study, the researchers had reported that doing IBMT prior to a mental math test led to low levels of the stress hormone cortisol among Chinese students, along with lower levels of anxiety, depression, anger and fatigue than students in a relaxation control group.

“The previous paper indicated that IBMT subjects showed a reduced response to stressWhy after five days did it work so fast?” said UO professor Yi-Yuan Tang.

He says that the new findings point to how IBMT alters blood flow and electrical activity in the brain, breathing quality and even skin conductance, allowing for “a state of ah, much like in the morning opening your eyes, looking outside the grass and sunshine, you feel relaxed, calm and refresh without any stress, this is the meditation state.”

Using several technologies, the researchers conducted two experiments involving 86 undergraduate students at Dalian University of Technology and analyzed the data collected.

“We were able to show that the training improved the connection between a central nervous system structure, the anterior cingulate, and the parasympathetic part of the autonomic nervous system to help put a person into a more bodily state. The results seem to show integration-a connectivity of brain and body,” said UO psychologist Michael Posner.

In each experiment, participants who had not previously practiced relaxation or meditation received either IBMT or general relaxation instruction for 20 minutes a day for five days.

After conducting single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), the researchers found that both groups experienced some benefit from the training-those in IBMT showed dramatic differences based on brain-imaging and physiological testing.

Physiological tests also revealed that IBMT subjects had lower heart rates and skin conductance responses, increased belly breathing amplitude, and decreased chest respiration rates as compared with the relaxation group.

Finally, the researchers noted that IBMT subjects had more high-frequency heart-rate variability than their relaxation counterparts, indicating “successful inhibition of sympathetic tone and activation of parasympathetic tone (in the autonomic nervous system).”

IBMT avoids struggles to control thought, and instead relies on a state of restful alertness, allowing for a high degree of body-mind awareness while receiving instructions from a coach.

The study has been published online ahead of regular publication in PNAS. (ANI)

Even in sandals Elle Macpherson makes fashion statement

London, Apr 30 (ANI): Aussie model Elle Macpherson has showed that she can still look glam at 45 in a mini dress and sandals.

Macpherson, who is a six-footer, dressed down in a teeny white dress and gold flats at a dinner for American fashion designer Michael Kors at China Tang in the Dorchester hotel.

“Not many 45-year-olds can get away with a mini dress and bare legs but Elle can still carry it off,” the Daily Express quoted one admiring guest as saying.

“Even in her sandals she towered over half of the men in the room including Michael Kors – so it was probably a good idea to leave the heels at home!” the guest added. (ANI)

Hong Kong Jockey Club plans longer season to compete with Macau

Hong Kong – The Hong Kong Jockey Club is planning to extend the race season by five extra races in a bid to compete with neighbouring Macau and illegal bookmakers, the club confirmed Thursday.

The club has submitted a proposal to the government outlining the arguments in support of a longer season that would see the extra races taking place in July.

The current 78-meeting season ends at the beginning of July.

In a briefing held Wednesday, Hong Kong Jockey Club chief Winifried Engelbrecht-Bresges said a longer season would create more than 4,000 jobs in Hong Kong and help the club maintain the donation of 1 billion Hong Kong dollars (129 million US dollars) it gives to charity every year.

He also said it would prevent potential revenue from leaking out of the former British colony and into the coffers of illegal bookmakers, offshore casinos and the casinos of neighbouring Macau, the so-called Vegas of the East.

According to an independent survey conducted for the Jockey Club, Hong Kong punters lost around 20 billion Hong Kong dollars (2.57 billion US dollars) at Macau’s casinos last year, double the amount of 2005.

Of this, 3.3 billion Hong Kong dollars in bets were lost in the summer months of July and August when the racing season in Hong Kong is closed.

The club’s plan also proposes introducing 20 more simulcasts of overseas race meetings, which are expected to produce 36 million Hong Kong dollar in tax revenue for the government.

The proposal has been submitted to the government and will now be considered by the Lotteries and Gambling Commission.

But it has already angered Christian and anti-gambling organizations who says it will push gamblers into a dead-end.

Joe Tang, a supervisor with the Caritas Addicted Gamblers Counselling Centre, said a longer season would leave gamblers no time to reflect on their behaviour.

He said the club had treated 1,500 pathological gamblers since it opened in 2003 and receives at least 550 calls for help every month.

However, the Jockey Club argued the extra meeting was only a minor increase in the season that would not increase the number of gamblers or create any social issues.

Betting on horse racing and soccer matches through the Hong Kong Jockey Club and a weekly government-run lottery are the only legal forms of gambling in Hong Kong.

However, the city of 6.9 million has a huge black market of underground bookmakers and syndicates, while thousands of Hong Kong gamblers take the one-hour ferry journey to Macau every week to gamble in casinos.

Gambling is still the most lucrative source of tax for the Hong Kong government with the Jockey Club paying around 13 billion Hong Kong dollars (1.67 billion US dollars) in tax and betting duty. (dpa)

Kate Moss gets bleary-eyed yet again after party

London, Mar 27 (ANI): Supermodel Kate Moss has yet again displayed her bleary-eyed look after a party.

Moss, 35, who leaves home looking very fresh, looks worse for wear after every party, and none more so, when she recently hailed a ride home at 1.15am, after partying with Sir Phililip Green and his daughter Chloe, reports the Sun.

The three had begun their night out with a civilised meal at swanky China Tang restaurant before hitting the Groucho Club.

Moss was seen to be in good spirits, and was joined by Girls Aloud singer, Sarah Harding, at the club before she left. (ANI)

US, Russia satellite collision not to delay Chinese space programme

New Delhi, Feb 13 (ANI): The wreckage of US and Russian satellites that collided over Siberia poses a threat to Chinese satellites in orbit, but the latter’s space plan will proceed as scheduled.

A privately owned US communications spacecraft collided with a defunct Russian military satellite about 800 km above northern Siberia at 4:55 pm GMT on Tuesday, the China Daily reported.

The 560-kg US satellite, of Iridium Holdings LLC, was launched in 1997 and the Russian Cosmos-2251, weighing almost a ton, was sent in space in 1993.

Chinese scientists are monitoring the debris to gauge the potential threat to the country’s satellites, said Tang Bochang, co-designer of China’s first spaceship Shenzhou I.

He added that China’s space exploration program, including sending a “space laboratory module” next year would not be delayed.

About 4,000 satellites and used rocket parts, apart from about 6,000 pieces of debris that can be seen, are traveling in space around 20,000 km an hour, according to NASA.

The two satellites’ wreckage poses little threat to the International Space Station, about 1,200 km above the Earth’s surface, NASA and the Russian Federal Space Agency both said yesterday. (ANI)

Kate Moss gets Lionel Richie to serenade her during birthday party

London, January 17 (ANI): Fashion world’s wild woman Kate Moss had a superb birthday bash on Thursday, when Lionel Richie accepted the model’s request to sing his party anthem ‘All Night Long’ for her.

The supermodel, who turned 35 on Friday, kicked off her festivities early with a bash at London’s Dorchester on Thursday.

After enjoying a meal in the hotel’s China Tang restaurant, she found Lionel at the main bar, and requested him to sing his famous tune for her.

Lionel did agree to perform, and Moss’ Kills rocker pal Jamie Hince provided drums by bashing the top of a table.

“It was brilliant, a total surprise, and really made the night. Lionel was at the main bar while Kate partied in a private area when she spotted him,” the Sun quoted a pal as saying.

“She went over and asked him to sing All Night Long for her and her guests and he did it. Everyone was dancing on the tables and Jamie was on percussion. It was so much fun,” the pal added. (ANI)

Bacteria can directly cause blood clotting

Bacteria can directly cause blood clottingLondon, November 3: An international research team has found that bacteria can directly cause human blood and plasma to clot, something that has long been thought to have been lost during the course of vertebrate evolution.

The researchers believe that their new findings may help advance scientists’ understanding of coagulation during bacterial infections, which in turn may pave the way for new clinical methods for treating serious medical conditions like sepsis and anthrax.

Blood often coagulates during sepsis or bacterial infections, but this has generally been regarded as a host”s immune and inflammatory response.

Though scientists have known for long that bacteria can activate factors that precede coagulation, they previously did not think that bacteria could pass the coagulation threshold and cause blood clots to form.

The clots, once formed, can grow and propagate.

While the clotting may prevent the dissemination of the bacteria through the host, it often causes serious vascular damage due to blocked and injured blood vessels.

The researcher say that the location of the bacteria is crucial to clot formation, instead of the total number of bacteria or their level of concentration.

According to them, for those bacteria that can activate coagulation factors, coagulation occurs only when a cluster of bacteria forms.

“Our research demonstrates that coagulation can be controlled by changing the spatial distribution, or clustering, of bacteria,” Nature Chemical Biology quoted study co-author Christian Kastrup, Post-Doctoral Assistant at the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as saying.

“Therefore, considering the location of bacterial cells, instead of just their presence or absence and their total numbers, could significantly change our understanding of coagulation,” Kastrup added.

The team point out that coagulation can occur if enough proteases, which activate coagulation, accumulate near the bacteria rather than diffuse away.

The researchers focused their study on Bacillus anthracis, the anthrax-causing pathogen. They used a safe strain that could not infect humans.

The researchers observed that coagulation, in the case of human blood, required the secretion of zinc metalloprotease InhA1, which activated prothrombin and factor X directly—not via factor XII or tissue-factor pathways.

“We refer to this mechanism as ”quorum acting” to distinguish it from quorum sensing, in which bacteria coordinate certain actions based, in part, on their density,” said Wei-Jen Tang, Professor at the Ben-May Department for Cancer Research.

He further said that the observations made during the study opened up a new field of study.

“We will now explore the commonality of quorum acting, and how quorum acting can affect evolutionary dynamics,” he added.

Ismagilov said that new findings had significant implications.

“The work emphasizes the importance of bacteria”s spatial distribution, rather than just its average concentration in the functioning of nonlinear biochemical networks,” he said. (ANI)