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Doctor Removes 130-Pound Tumor From Mississippi Man

Roger Logan holds up a smartphone Thursday that shows a photo of him with a 130-pound tumor before a surgery to remove it at Bakersfield Memorial Hospital in Bakersfield, California. Photo: Henry A. Barrios / The Bakersfield Californian

BAKERSFIELD, California — A California doctor removed a 130-pound tumor from a Mississippi man who had been told by other physicians that he was just fat.

Roger Logan, 57, had the non-cancerous growth removed on Jan. 31 at Bakersfield Memorial Hospital, where he will remain for another week or so before returning to Gulfport, Mississippi.

The tumor probably started as an ingrown hair that became infected, swelled and developed its own blood supply, Logan’s surgeon, Dr. Vipul Dev, told the Bakersfield Californian.

It sprouted from his lower abdomen more than a decade ago.

Doctors told him: “You’re just fat, it’s just fat,” Logan told KERO-TV in Bakersfield.

The tumor grew so massive that it hung to the floor when he sat.

“I used to equate it, you just put a strap around your neck and carry three bags of cement around with you all day long, just swinging,” Logan said.

Virtually unable to move, he spent most of his time in a recliner in one room of his home.

By the time the tumor reached 130 to 140 pounds, doctors told Logan it was too risky for him to have surgery, giving him only a 50 percent chance of surviving it.

But his wife, Kitty, scoured the country for specialists to perform the operation and found Dev, who had performed similar surgeries.

“She just kept pushing,” Logan told the Californian. “She wouldn’t let me quit.”

Logan finally made the 2,000-mile, 40-hour trip to Central California with his chair bolted to the floor of a cargo van, “just like I was in my living room at home,” Logan told the paper.

Logan is now recovering and last Thursday he was able to walk for practically the first time in years.

“My feet are together,” Logan said, wiggling his toes in his hospital bed. “They haven’t been together in years.”

He is looking forward to returning home and resuming his life, out of an armchair.

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Uncanny Valley: Bangkok’s Club Tribes Hit the Road (Photos)

Love it or hate it, Epic Stage is for EDM. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat

Top: Love it or hate it, Epic Stage is for EDM. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat

For those who chase bliss dancing till dawn, Bangkok’s free-wheeling nightlife has been in a state of decline.

With fewer clubland sanctuaries to feel bass aggression, push deep house frontiers, trip through techno or just slam EDM all night without fear of a raid, hundreds of nighthawks headed to the hills this past weekend to the first Mystic Valley Festival.

It was basically a Bangkok club night without the hassles of Bangkok held three hours northeast in a pleasantly scrubby if dusty patch of forest near Khao Yai National Park.

Read: The Lights Fantastic: Bangkok Team Makes Music For Eyes

Given the kingdom’s proliferation of Big Music Fests, it made sense that electronic dance music would get its own, and for its first year, Mystic Valley was relatively well organized.

Sets began and ended mostly on schedule, the eight stages were thoughtfully designed for their target audiences, and things mostly went off as expected. That’s probably to be expected since the organizers were folks from places such as Levels and Live RCA.

If you cannot do with less than Wonderfruit-level production values, then you might not be fully impressed. But fine, you can just go to Wonderfuit in two weeks.

The biggest thing missing was more people. There was space for four times as many people, but enough bodies packed in to make for some energy and people-watching. Crowd definitely more farang than Thai.

Predictably, one-in-two attendees swarmed the EDM arena, while the other tribes channeled out to claim stages from trap to trance. Nearly everyone there induced a state of ecstasy or otherwise, so tribal conflict isn’t a bother.

Organizers deserve credit for knowing their music and drawing on reliable talent both local and imported, putting 80 local DJs into rotation with about 50 international talents all headlined by the likes of Sven Vath, Sander Van Doorn and Fedde Le Grand.

Maybe they’ll do it again. Here are some pics. For more nightlife coverage, read our Notes from the Underground column.

DJ Delorean at the Phatfunk Stage. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
DJ Delorean at the Phatfunk Stage. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Sven Vath at the Sunn Stage. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Sven Vath at the Sunn Stage. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Bear Trap around Sunn stage.
The ‘Bear Trap’ around Sunn stage.

smoking

Dark White Stage. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Dark White Stage. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
TLT Stage for those in need of a full trance solution.
TLT Stage for those in need of a full trance solution.
Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Phatfunk Folks, from left, MC Sinnamon, DJs Delorean, Azek, Dragon. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat
Phatfunk Folks, from left, MC Sinnamon, DJs Delorean, Azek, Dragon. Photo: Thapphawut Parinyapariwat

 

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Cambodia Accuses Japanese Expat of Luring Women Into Flesh Trade

Cambodian fishermen take their motorized boats for fishing during fish harvesting season in the middle of Mekong river on Monday near Phnom Penh. Photo: Heng Sinith / Associated Press

PHNOM PENH — Cambodian police have arrested a Japanese man and two Cambodians suspected of tricking Cambodian women into working in the sex trade in Japan.

A statement posted Monday on the Cambodian National Police website said Susumu Fukui, the 52-year-old owner of a Japanese restaurant in Phnom Penh, was arrested last week on suspicion of luring at least 10 women from provincial areas to work in Japan, ostensibly as well-paid waitresses, but then forcing them into the sex trade. Also arrested were his 28-year-old Cambodian wife and a 34-year-old male employee of the restaurant.

The website said the arrests followed the rescue of seven of the women by Japanese police after they secretly contacted the Cambodian Embassy in Tokyo. The women returned to Cambodia late last month.

Police said the Japanese man and his wife told the women they recruited that they would earn USD$3,000-5,000 (105,000 baht to 175,000 baht) a month in Japan. On arrival, however, they were sent to Gunma prefecture, northwest of Tokyo, where they were forced to work in the sex trade. Japanese newspapers reported that after the women were freed, the authorities there made three arrests, of two Japanese men and a Thai woman, for forcing them into prostitution.

Ly Sophana, a spokesman for the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, said the three suspects in Phnom Penh were expected to be formally charged by prosecutors on Tuesday when the authorities have finished questioning them.

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Thai Treasury Reserves Down 85% Since Coup

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha promotes the junta-backed Prompt Pay system on Aug. 9 at Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — The Finance Minister insisted Monday the military government is not running out of money despite having burned through most of the reserves in place when it seized power.

Finance Minister Apisak Tantivorawong admitted the treasury balance was now under a sixth of what it was when the military came to power in 2014, from 495 billion to 75 billion baht. But, he said, that depletion of 420 billion baht from the coffers was a healthy adjustment and meant the government was relying less on loans.

“Having a high treasury balance is a burden on the government,” Apisak said Monday.

Apisak said higher cash reserves meant the government had to pay more interest on its debt obligations.

Apisak’s explanation that the government intentionally reduced the treasury balance from nearly 500 billion baht to between 50 billion baht and 100 billion baht did not quiet skeptics who cast doubt on the regime’s financial health as it recently moved to shore up revenue by raising jet fuel taxes by 1,900 percent and pushing a tax on sugary drinks.

On Saturday, government spokesman Sansern Keawkamnerd dismissed suggestions the government was going bankrupt. To illustrate the nation’s financial strength, he announced that the government had 74.9 billion baht on hand as of the end of 2016.

That number piqued the curiosity of an economics lecturer at Kasetsart University, Decharut Sukkumnoed, who pointed out that Sansern’s figure was 420 billion baht less than there was when the military seized power, according to the government’s Fiscal Policy Office.

“This does not include the fact the military government took a [744.2 billion] baht loan to compensate for deficits from September 2015 to December 2016,” Decharut wrote online Sunday.

The current treasure level of 74.9 billion is the lowest ever in 10 years of records from the Fiscal Policy Office. The next lowest was 2007, when there was 142.7 billion on hand. The most was in 2013, when there was 605.1 billion in government coffers.

Decharut’s analysis prompted Monday’s news conference by the finance minister and a furious response from Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha.

Asked about the issue Monday, Prayuth threw back questions and blamed political side-taking for interpreting the government as becoming penniless.

“Look at what people are asking for … to help the floods, help farmers, help every day!” he said. “What do you want me to do?”

Finance Minister Apisak said Monday the government still has liquidity and the credit necessary to secure financing if needed.

A shortfall of 390 billion baht is expected for 2017, according to the budget approved in May.

Decharut said he would evaluate and respond to Apisak’s statement Monday night.

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AIS to Stream HBO and Sell Google Chromecast

BANGKOK — A month after the realm lost access to HBO, the No. 2 mobile operator announced Monday it will soon stream all the Thrones and Veep and Silicon Valley to people again.

Advanced Info Service, or AIS, announced that it will add the HBO channels abruptly dropped by cable provider TrueVisions recently to its streaming AIS Play service along with a number of other channels.

Over a dozen channels will be added including HBO HD, HBO Signature, HBO Family, HBO Hits, and Cinemax, Fox Movie, FX, Star World, National Geographic, Nat Geo Wild, Nat Geo People and more.

At the beginning of the year, TrueVisions stopped providing six HBO channels and last week announced it would further cut its offerings.

AIS said it would announce pricing for the pay channels before they go live between April and June.

AIS Play is available via an iOS or Android app or the AIS Playbox, which comes with its high-speed internet packages.

The company also said it would be the first authorized Google Chromecast distributor for people to stream the content from their mobile devices to their computers or televisions.

The Chromecast Gen 2 is available for about 1,500 baht. Other models such as Chromecast Audio and Chromecast Ultra are not yet available.

A screenshot from AIS website on Monday
A screenshot from AIS website on Monday

Related stories:

NoGeo: TrueVisions to Drop 11 More Channels: NBTC

TrueVisions Will Stop Showing HBO, Cinemax Channels in 6 Days

Bangkok Bank Strikes Back at Fox Networks Over 2.5B Baht Suit

 

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Banksy Stars Among 8 Films at Bangkok Design Fest

BANGKOK — Gain insight into an infamous art-vandal’s stay in New York, the last painter of film posters in Mumbai and the family behind a famous jewelry empire.

Street art, jewelry design, food design, technology and fashion come together at A Design Film Festival to celebrate design industry trends and subcultures with eight documentary films showing in Bangkok for four days later this month.

Indulge your obsessions for street art, jewelry design, technology and more with “Banksy Does New York,” which chronicles the 31 days the famed graffiti master spent in the Big Apple and “Crazy about Tiffany’s,” which looks at the iconic 180-year-old American jewelry brand. See Mumbai, India, in the story of the last man to hand paint movie posters in Bollywood hit “Original Copy.”

More highlights include “Noma: My Perfect Storm” about a gastronomically pioneering Danish chef whose restaurant ranks as one of the best in the world and “The Human Face of Big Data,” which illustrates the promises and perils of the mind-boggling amount of data the world has accumulated.

The schedule and tickets are available online. Tickets are 150 baht (130 baht for Thailand Creative and Design Center members). All films will be screened with Thai subtitles.

The festival runs Feb. 25 and 26, March 4 and 5 at Scala Theatre in Soi Siam Square 1.

The Design Film Festival was founded by design studio Anonymous in 2010 in Singapore. The festival has traveled to more than 10 cities including Berlin, New York, Portland, Seoul, Taipei and Bangkok.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wL26aFx31Ww

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Prayuth Trash-Talks Reporters For Asking About Toxic Landfill

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha speaks Monday at the Government House in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha opened fire on reporters Monday at Government House over their questions about a potentially toxic landfill in the Thai south that local officials say has been poisoning livestock and water supplies.

The junta leader said civil servants were at work “solving the problem” of the landfill located in Nakhon Si Thammarat, after residents filed a complaint Thursday with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment that it was sickening people and animals.

“Landfills are a problem everywhere, and in response you just protest about it. The easiest solution is to write a law so the government owns all the landfills. Local government is at work on it, why don’t you ask them?” Prayuth said. “You ask me to fix everything. The next time your toilet clogs, will you ask me to fix it too?”

Local officials blame poor development planning for the landfill contaminating water supplies. More than 150 households in Na Sai subdistrict have reportedly been polluted by the landfill, causing many people to break out in sores and blisters, while animals have been infected with parasites, subdistrict chief Wachara Chupathum said Thursday.

As of Monday, Na Sai subdistrict mayor Sukcharoen Soodsomboon complained that no steps had been taken or help received to solve the problem.

“There haven’t been any substantial moves from the municipal government in solving the problem at the root yet. They did send some mobile clinics to check up on people, but the problem of wastewater still remains,” Sukcharoen said. “People are getting red itchy rashes all over their bodies.”

“I just submitted a complaint to the 4th Regional Army about this. This landfill is the fourth biggest one in Thailand, 1.3 million tons big,” Sukcharoen said.

In response to a follow-up question on whether the regional army base would be affected, Prayuth said only reporters who sorted their trash and recyclables were qualified to prod him on the issue.

“Let’s do it this way. Give me a list of reporters who sort trash at their households. Come on, raise your hands. Do I have to issue an order so that only reporters who sort their trash can enter Government House?” Prayuth said.

Just let some issues go after he’s given an answer, the retired general suggested.

“Everything I do, I do under fear of the law, even though I don’t have to be so afraid of it,” Prayuth said.

Mayor Sukcharoen said the water contamination was caused by local government building reservoirs which don’t properly handle wastewater, which becomes contaminated and then flows into local khlongs. He said it’s mostly fishermen in the community who are affected.

Locals should bring their animals for a checkup with the Livestock Development Department free of charge, Nakhon Si Thammarat deputy mayor Sawai Kiewjun said.

“If the municipality really comes and checks up on us, that would be good for the well-being of the animals which have been affected by the landfill for so long,” subdistrict chief Wachara said Thursday.

Asked to describe the landfill, Sukcharoen was terse yet unsparing:

“The stench is ridiculous.”

The Nakhon Si Thammarat Landfill in Nakhon Si Thammarat’s Na Sai subdistrict. Photo: Matichon
The Nakhon Si Thammarat Landfill in Nakhon Si Thammarat’s Na Sai subdistrict. Photo: Matichon
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Australian Woman Dies in Jet Ski Crash Near Phuket

A file photo of a jet ski involved in an unrelated collision last April.

BANGKOK  An Australian woman died when the jet ski she was operating collided with one operated by her companion off Phuket, officials said Monday.

Emily Jayne Collie, 20, was not breathing when rescuers brought her to shore after the crash Sunday, said Rungsak Ouarun, the head lifeguard on Phuket’s Kata beach.

“We tried to perform CPR but she was not responsive,” he said.

Collie’s companion, Thomas Keating, was not injured, said Police Maj. Patiwat Yodkwan, the investigator in charge of the case.

Jet skis are popular on the beaches of tourist destinations like Phuket. Patiwat said the operators who rented the watercraft in Sunday’s crash had the necessary license and insurance documents.

Story: Kaweewit Kaewjinda

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‘Millionaire Pretty’ Who Hit 8 Cars Cleared for New License

Kritrada ‘Zomy’ Tabtimphol in a photo posted to her Facebook on May 28, 2015.

BANGKOK — Police said Monday they’re not sure why an internet celeb accused of crashing into eight cars while under influence of meth two months ago was allowed to take a test to regain her license to drive.

Despite facing a criminal trial for DUI stemming from the November incident, Kritrada “Zomy” Tabtimphol posted a photo of herself sitting for a written driving test on Saturday, which the officers in charge of her case said they were at a loss to explain.

“I didn’t think she could do that,” Col. Arkom Chantanalat, chief of Huai Khwang police, said by telephone. “Maybe the Land Transport Department is unaware of information about her case?”

Read: ‘Millionaire Pretty’ Who Hit 8 Cars High On Meth: Police

Arkom later said he was informed by the department that barring a conviction or special court order, Kritrada was entitled to get a new license.

Arkom said his force revoked Kritrada’s driving license after she crashed her BMW into eight cars on Nov. 1 and caused traffic mayhem on Ratchadapisek Road with her erratic behavior. Three people were injured.

But Kritrada, who came to fame as a commercial model, or Pretty, posted a photo of her written exam for a new driving license on Saturday. While many comments were posted in support of Kritrada, others chastised her for taking the test while her criminal case is ongoing.

Kritrada appeared to have either deleted the photo or made it private by Monday afternoon. She did not respond to a reporter’s messages requesting comment.

Arkom, the police station chief, said police and the department don’t share a database of offenders barred from driving due to traffic-related criminal cases.

“This is an issue about systems that need improving and linking with each other, and areit’s not updated,” Arkom said.

The Nov. 1 crash caught widespread attention particularly because of the bizarre behavior Kritrada exhibited after exiting her vehicle. Not only did she shout there was a bomb in her car, she also prayed and danced when policemen tried to question her. She later fainted at the police station and was taken to a hospital by her family.

Lab results sent to police later revealed she was under influence of methamphetamines at the time of the incident, police said. Kritrada was subsequently charged with DUI and other related offenses. She was freed on bail.

Related stories:

‘Millionaire Pretty’ Who Hit 8 Cars High On Meth: Police

Hospital, Police Trade Blame as ‘Millionaire Pretty’ Treated For Stress

Cops Waived Sobriety Test for Net Idol ‘Millionaire Pretty’

Cops Have Yet to Charge ‘Beauty Idol’ Who Crashed Into 8 Cars

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Tech and Agriculture Combine at ‘Rubber Day’ in Bueng Kan

In a technology-meets-agriculture event, Thailand’s leading producer of rubber in the northeast will host its fifth Rubber Day later this month.

Various innovations ranging from automatic rubber-slitting machines, rubber pillow technologies, compressed rubber technologies to online rubber merchandising platforms will be featured at the Bueng Kan Red Cross and Rubber Day 2017.

Bueng Kan

“The fair will be attended by delegates from China, the world’s leading rubber consumer and some delegates from India,” said former Deputy Prime Minister Pinit Jarusombat – who first initiated the fair five years ago – at a press conference Thursday.

Deputy Prime Minister Pinit Jarusombat
Deputy Prime Minister Pinit Jarusombat

Pinit said the fair will provide an opportunity for rubber farmers to exchange knowledge and learn about new technologies. The event will be in line with the government’s “Thailand 4.0” campaign to promote technology integration in all industries.

Bueng Kan Gov. Pisut Bussayapanpong said the fair will help to add value to the local rubber market. He aimed to make Bueng Kan a world-class rubber cultivation center in the future.

Bueng Kan Governor Pisut Bussayapanpong
Bueng Kan Gov. Pisut Bussayapanpong

In remembrance of the Late King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the fair will also feature an exhibition about his applied sustainable philosophy toward agriculture.

As the northeastern province with the biggest rubber plantation, the developments would benefit farmers if they have an opportunity to sell their product directly without a middleman, said Niphon Khonkayan, Chief Executive of the Bueng Kan Provincial Administrative Organization.

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Niphon said Bueng Kan rubber farmers had already formed a cooperative to achieve their goal of self-reliance, adding that they plan to produce rubber pillows and mattresses.

A representative of Rubber Valley company from China, Chen Husheng said they will feature an online market platform in the fair. The system through which farmers can connect directly with buyers will help all parties maximize profits.

Chen Husheng
Chen Husheng

Panbua Boonpan, Deputy Managing Director of Matichon Group, who will co-host the event, said the mobile rubber museum run by the edutainment park “Rubberland” in Pattaya would be another highlight of the fair.

Panbua said there would also be forums covering various topics, from demonstrations of local expertise to lessons on how to blend technology for usage in the rubber industry.

The fair will be held Feb. 16 through Feb. 22 in front of the Bueng Kan City Hall.

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