Caramoan Islands Jeepney Tour - Tour Philippines [HD]
Caramoan Islands Jeepney Tour - Tour Philippines [HD]
By: MagicJay2000
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Caramoan Islands Jeepney Tour - Tour Philippines [HD] - Video
Caramoan Islands Jeepney Tour - Tour Philippines [HD]
Caramoan Islands Jeepney Tour - Tour Philippines [HD]
By: MagicJay2000
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Caramoan Islands Jeepney Tour - Tour Philippines [HD] - Video
El Hierro Island - Canary Islands - #7 STORIES
I #39;ve been invited along with 6 other filmmakers by the tourism board of the Canary Islands to make a video about the islands. Each of us had one attributed, ...
By: My nice videos
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Kyodo via Reuters, file
The disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China that Japan claimed are an integral part of their territory in new teaching manuals.
By Arata Yamamoto and Henry Austin, NBC News
TOKYO -- Japan risked further irking their close neighbors China and South Korea on Tuesday, when the government announced textbooks were being changed to make it clear that two sets of remote islands at the center of sovereignty disputes are integral parts of their territory.
Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura said the ministry was revising the teaching manuals so junior high and high school students learn "properly" about Japanese history and to make it clear that there is no dispute over the ownership of the rocky Senkaku islands in the South China Sea.
The island chain that China calls the Daioyus, have been a flash point between the two countries since Tokyo nationalized the group of uninhabited archipelagos in 2012.
China claims almost all the South China Sea and in November announced it was expanding its air defense identification zone to include the disputed islands.
A few days after they began to enforce this, American bombers flew over the islands on what was described as a training mission.
South Korea summoned the Japanese ambassador on Tuesday to protest claims to the Takeshima islets, known as Dokdo in South Korea. They are situated most equidistant between the two countries.
"Our government strongly condemns this and asks Japan to immediately withdraw it," Seoul, who haveadministered the islets since the end of World War II, said in a statement.
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Kyodo via Reuters, file
The disputed islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China that Japan claimed are an integral part of their territory in new teaching manuals.
By Arata Yamamoto and Henry Austin, NBC News
TOKYO -- Japan risked further irking their close neighbors China and South Korea on Tuesday, when the government announced textbooks were being changed to make it clear that two sets of remote islands at the center of sovereignty disputes are integral parts of their territory.
Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura said the ministry was revising the teaching manuals so junior high and high school students learn "properly" about Japanese history and to make it clear that there is no dispute over the ownership of the rocky Senkaku islands in the South China Sea.
The island chain that China calls the Daioyus, have been a flash point between the two countries since Tokyo nationalized the group of uninhabited archipelagos in 2012.
China claims almost all the South China Sea and in November announced it was expanding its air defense identification zone to include the disputed islands.
A few days after they began to enforce this, American bombers flew over the islands on what was described as a training mission.
South Korea summoned the Japanese ambassador on Tuesday to protest claims to the Takeshima islets, known as Dokdo in South Korea. They are situated most equidistant between the two countries.
"Our government strongly condemns this and asks Japan to immediately withdraw it," Seoul, who haveadministered the islets since the end of World War II, said in a statement.
Continued here:
Disputed islands are ours, Japan's new teaching manuals claim
Countless biology students have dutifully learned to associate the Galapagos Islands with finches. Here Darwin noticed that birds on different islands had different beak shapes, and ta-da, theory of evolution. Butgalpago is Spanish for tortoise, and young Darwin also learned from watching these huge reptiles lumber across the archipelago. Today, thegalpagos are only a fraction of their former population. And as theyve disappeared, the landscape of the islands has transformedbecause although Darwin didnt know it, the tortoises were driving the evolution of an entire ecosystem.
The story starts before Darwin ever reached the Pacific island chain. So to get details from a time before naturalists were taking notes, Swansea University ecologist Cynthia Froyd and her colleagues searched a different set of records: fossilized tortoise poop.
There used to be 100,000 to 250,000 tortoises living and relieving themselves in the Galapagos. Those numbers dropped after European settlers arrived in the 16th centurythe slow-moving giants were eaten, hunted for oil, and tormented by invasive egg-eating rats. By the 1970s their numbers had dropped to 14,000 or fewer.
Now Galapagos tortoises are being reintroduced to the islands. But has the ecosystem changed in their absence? Froyd wondered specifically about the islands highest points. These areas are mostly empty of tortoises today, even though the animals are known to travel to higher ground for water during the dry season.
Froyd took sediment samples at lofty bogs on the island of Santa Cruz. (This island is also called Indefatigable, like a tortoise climbing an 800-meter volcano.) These bogs are packed with moss, surrounded by lush vegetation, and frequently covered in a cold, thick mist calledgara.
The researchers scoured the ancient mud samples for fossilized fungus spores, pollen, and plant remains. At all three of their sample sites, they found dung-affiliated fungispecies that grow on the droppings of herbivores. This was a clue that a large plant-eater used to live and poop at those spots. Judging by radiocarbon dating, the animal had lived in the bogs for thousands of years, but disappeared around 500 years ago. Dung-rich areas were also full of plant pollen, as from the gut of a grazer. All signs pointed to the Galapagos tortoise, the only large herbivore around. (Theres also an extinct giant rice rat that could have left enough dung, the authors note, but it wasnt known to hang out in swamps.)
When the researchers collected fresh tortoise dung and examined it in the lab, they saw similar patterns of fungus to those in their ancient samples. The same was true of sediment samples taken from a pond where tortoises still live today.
At the same time the dung fungi disappeared, about 500 years ago, certain plant species disappeared from the dirt samples too. The plants that vanished were those that prefer a muddy, churned-up environmentlike the home tortoises would have provided as they trampled and sloshed through a wetland. Some of these plant species are now rare or extinct in the Galapagos.
All this evidence added up to tell a story: Tortoises used to cover Santa Cruz Island, from the coasts to the highlands. At the top of the island they wallowed in wetlands with open ponds or lakes. Here they drank, grazed on plants, and kept their bodies cool. Then, around the time humans settled on the island, the turtles left the highlands. Its still not clear whytheir reduced numbers from hunting may have meant less competition from other tortoises, and thus less need to travel for water. There might also have been a shift in the islands climate that discouraged tortoises from hiking the volcano.
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We Discovered Too Late That Tortoises Are Expert Landscapers
TOKYO - Japanese education chiefs will instruct schools to teach children that islands at the center of disputes with China and South Korea belong unequivocally to Tokyo, the government said Tuesday.
The move could further inflame already-strained ties in the region, where clashes over differing interpretations of history frequently mar important economic relationships.
Revised teachers' manuals for junior and senior high schools will be issued to education boards across the nation, an education ministry official said.
"From the educational point of view, it is natural for a state to teach its children about integral parts of its own territory," Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura told a news conference.
The move comes as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has stirred controversy with his unabashed nationalism, including with a visit to a war shrine widely viewed by neighbouring countries as a symbol of Tokyo's wartime aggression.
Japan is embroiled in a row with China over the Tokyo-controlled Senkaku islands in the East China Sea, claimed as the Diaoyus by Beijing.
The dispute regularly sees standoffs between paramilitary ships and has also involved military vessels and planes. Some observers say the islands represent a key fault line for the region and could be the spark for an armed conflict.
Tokyo and Seoul, meanwhile, are at odds over the sovereignty of a pair of sparsely-inhabited rocks in waters between them, administered by Seoul as Dokdo, but claimed as Takeshima in Japan.
The new manuals describe both sets of islands as "integral parts of Japanese territory" for the first time, the official said.
The manuals will also note that the Takeshima islands are "illegally" occupied by South Korea, and that Japan does not even recognize the existence of a territorial dispute over the Senkaku islands, the official said.
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AFP January29,2014,12:08amTWN
The announcement immediately prompted anger in Seoul, which called in the Japanese ambassador and warned of reciprocal countermeasures if the changes are not withdrawn immediately.
Revised teachers' manuals for junior and senior high schools will be issued to education boards across the nation, a Japanese education ministry official said.
From the educational point of view, it is natural for a state to teach its children about integral parts of its own territory, Education Minister Hakubun Shimomura told a news conference on Tuesday.
The move comes as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has stirred controversy with his unabashed nationalism, including a visit to a war shrine widely viewed by neighboring countries as a symbol of Tokyo's wartime aggression.
Japan is embroiled in a row with China over the Tokyo-controlled Senkaku islands in the East China Sea, claimed as the Diaoyus by Beijing.
The dispute regularly sees standoffs between paramilitary ships and has also involved military vessels and planes. Some observers say the islands represent a key fault line for the region and could be the spark for an armed conflict.
Beijing's reaction was muted, with foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying saying the Chinese government was severely concerned and had launched solemn representations.
We want to stress that the Diaoyu islands and their affiliated islands have been China's inherent territory since ancient times, she said.
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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
27-Jan-2014
Contact: Jennifer Burke burkej@kennedykrieger.org 443-923-7329 Kennedy Krieger Institute
Baltimore, Md. (January 27, 2014) Researchers at the Kennedy Krieger Institute recently announced study findings showing the successful development of a humanized preclinical model for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD), providing scientists with a much needed tool to accelerate novel therapeutic research and development.
Published in Human Molecular Genetics, the study outlines the validity of a unique model that, for the first time, mirrors the gene expression and biomarker profile of human FSHD tissue. Previously, there has been no accepted preclinical model for FSHD, a complex and rare neuromuscular disorder that affects approximately 4-7 per 100,000 individuals. As a result, therapeutic development for the disorder has been stymied.
"The inability to mimic the FSHD's genetic mechanism in preclinical models has been an ongoing challenge for the research community. Without an accurate model, making the leap to clinical research commonly fails," said Kathryn Wagner MD, PhD, director of the Center for Genetic Muscle Disorders at the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore, MD. "We believe this unique model will open the door to studying muscle regeneration over time and help better predict clinical response to therapeutic drugs."
Inspired by cancer preclinical models developed with human tumor tissue, Dr. Wagner and her research team leveraged both basic science and clinical research resources available at Kennedy Krieger to successfully regenerate grafted muscle within the models. Human bicep muscle biopsies transplanted into models survived for over 41 weeks and retained features of normal and diseased tissue.
"This model is not only applicable to genetic muscle diseases for which we lack appropriate research models, but for other acquired muscle conditions," said Wagner. "Now there will be more research possibilities related to the overall impact of age and disease on the regenerative and growth capacity of human skeletal muscle."
###
The study was conducted by researchers at multiple institutions, including Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine; University of Massachusetts Medical School; Harvard Medical School; University of Maryland School of Nursing; University of Maryland School of Medicine; and Children's National Medical Center, Washington, D.C.
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Cosmic Connections: Mars Meditation for Inner Guidance
Please Subscribe for the Only Binaural Channel exclusively featuring FULL LENGTH VIDEOS Mars symbolizes focused energy, passion, endurance and competitivenes...
By: Full Length Binaural Beats, Isochronic Tones, Chakras, Relaxation Meditation
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Cosmic Connections: Mars Meditation for Inner Guidance - Video
The health care system in Tuscany
The health care system in Tuscany: how it is organized and works.
By: Agenzia Regionale Sanit Toscana
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Anti-Addiction with Good Vibes binaural beats music
Please Subscribe for the Only Binaural Channel exclusively featuring FULL LENGTH VIDEOS Curing self from any type of addiction will only happen when you want...
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Volunteer Abroad Guatemala Xela Kathryn Kerr Health Care Program http://www.abroaderview.org
https://www.abroaderview.org Volunteer Abroad Guatemala Xela Kathryn Kerr Health Care Program In Guatemala there are networks of public health centers offeri...
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Volunteer Abroad Guatemala Xela Kathryn Kerr Health Care Program http://www.abroaderview.org - Video
Blurred Lines of Health Care
Michael Riordan, CEO of Greenville Health System, explains how the economic alignment of health insurers and providers will change the way in which care is d...
By: CBRArchives
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Free Market Health Care: Keith Smith, MD, Surgery Center of Oklahoma
Prices drop and quality increases when government and insurance bureaucrats are not allowed in the exam room, explains Keith Smith, MD of the Surgery Center ...
By: Association of American Physicians and Surgeons
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Free Market Health Care: Keith Smith, MD, Surgery Center of Oklahoma - Video
The Fight to Stop Single Payer Health Care
Thom Hartmann talks with Wendell Potter, Former health insurance exec (Cigna) turned whistleblower / Author, "Deadly Spin" and the new e-book "Obamacare: Wha...
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Obamacare Health Care On Life Support Business Of Birth The Independents
Obamacare Health Care On Life Support Business Of Birth The Independents Defenders Of The Constitution !!! Please: Like, Share and Subscribe ...Thanks!!! Cre...
By: Disillusioned
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Obamacare Health Care On Life Support Business Of Birth The Independents - Video
Hackathon aims to improve SA #39;s health care system
A combination of doctors, health care workers and patients have gathered at Groote Schuur Hospital in Cape Town for the country #39;s first ever "health hackatho...
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Operation: OPEN HOPE. PH Brings First Health Care to Rural Kenyan Community.
In March, 2014, a PH volunteer medical team will be on-the-ground on Rusinga Island in rural Western Kenya. In collaboration and partnership with the Ministr...
By: projecthumanityvideo
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Operation: OPEN HOPE. PH Brings First Health Care to Rural Kenyan Community. - Video
Health-care professionals have been pouring into business schools for the better part of two decades, hoping to parlay a business education into a career opportunity in a fast-growing and maddeningly complex field.
The University of Georgia is the latest school to respond to the demand for a health-care MBA. Beginning in the fall, the university will offer a dual-degree program from its College of Public Health and the Terry College of Business. The program is designed for business school students who want an expertise in health care, or public-health students interested in business, according to a press release. The University of California at Berkeleys Haas School of Business and Yale School of Management also offer joint MBA-MPH degrees.
The rise of the health-care MBA is usually traced to the late 1990s, when the University of California at Irvine and other medical schools began offering joint MD-MBA programs. About 50 percent of medical schools offer the joint degree, according to the Boston Globe. Last year the University of Indianas Kelley School of Business announced a program tailored specifically for midcareer doctors seeking to climb the management ladder.
Health-care specializations have also gained popularity at more traditional business school programs. Duke Universitys Fuqua School of Business has seen fivefold growth in its health sector management certificate program since 2001, as well as a spike in applications from doctors in recent years. Health care accounts for one in five EMBA candidates at MITs Sloan School of Management.
Students in the University of Georgias new program will study health-care policy and economics at the College of Public Health and management at Terry during the three-year program. That will put graduates back in the job market in 2017. With the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicting health care will add 5 million jobs in the decade ending in 2022, theyll likely have better prospects than some of their business school peers.
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Three Senate Republicans on Monday proposed repealing the nation's controversial health care law in favor of a replacement that eliminates most of the government coverage mandates it imposed and offers tax breaks to help the lower-income obtain coverage.
The supporters of the proposal, Sens. Orrin Hatch of Utah, Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and Richard Burr of North Carolina, said in a written statement that their goal was to "reduce health care costs and increase access to affordable, high quality care."
The plan is a rarity among congressional Republicans, who vowed more than three years to "repeal and replace" President Barack Obama's health care law, also known as 'Obamacare,' but since then have focused almost exclusively on trying to repeal it without advancing a comprehensive alternative.
As described by aides, the size of the tax credits envisioned in the alternative would be determined by age and income, and be available to the unemployed as well as those seeking individual coverage or working for smaller companies. Those with incomes up to three times the federal poverty level generally $70,650 for a family of four would be eligible.
The proposal repeals all of the tax increases that have taken effect with the new health care law, including one on medical devices and another on high-cost insurance plans. Yet it would impose a new one by limiting the tax exemption that individuals are allowed to take for the cost of their health insurance premiums.
Under current law, 100 percent of premiums are exempt from federal income tax, and the proposal would reduce that to 65 percent.
In addition to raising money to help finance the tax breaks for those with lower incomes, the change would help control the cost of coverage, aides said.
Under the proposal, employers that provide health care would be permitted to deduct their full cost, as is now the case.
In another major change, the proposal would roll back the expansion of Medicaid that is a central part of the new health care law. In its place, Republicans proposed giving individual states a fixed amount to pay for care of their poor residents, based on the number of individuals who live at or below the poverty level.
Republicans said they did not have overall cost estimates for the legislation, or of the impact it would have on the uninsured population. In a written statement, they said that generally speaking, it would neither raise nor lower deficits over a decade, yet achieve "significant savings for consumers and taxpayers."
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