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Washington Post Column Examines Issues Surrounding Supreme Court Confirmation Hearings
"When a Supreme Court nominee such as Judge Sonia Sotomayor comes before the Senate for confirmation, she is promised a full, fair hearing," yet "every nominee"s path is booby-trapped by the history of previous confirmation battles," Washington Post columnist David Broder writes. Broder examines prior confirmation hearings, noting that the "[o]ne thing that may make it harder to forget the partisan and ideological battles of the past is that President Obama found reasons to oppose" Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito while he was in the Senate.During Roberts" confirmation hearing, Obama said that although he was "sorely tempted to vote for Judge Roberts," he had issues with Roberts in cases where "precedent and rules of construction" are insufficient and where justice "can only be determined on the basis of one"s deepest values." Obama added that the rights of women and minorities are dependent on cases in which "the critical ingredient is supplied by what is in the judge"s heart." Obama said Roberts" record on women"s rights and other issues was not strong enough to quell doubts about Roberts" "deepest values."Broder continues, "Based on the Obama precedent, the White House can hardly complain if Republicans push beyond the question of Sotomayor"s qualifications and examine her values -- and her biases." He concludes, "Someday, the Senate may again be satisfied to examine only professional credentials, recognizing the uncertain dynamics of a nine-person bench," but while past precedents survive, "that is not likely" (Broder, Washington Post, 6/4).
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A Tiny Frozen Microbe May Hold Clues To Extraterrestrial Life
A novel bacterium that has been trapped more than three kilometres under glacial ice in Greenland for over 120 000 years, may hold clues as to what life forms might exist on other planets.
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Students Win Challenge To Bring Clean Water To Slums Of Mumbai, India
A team of University of Minnesota-Twin Cities students from a civil engineering class will head to India later this month to share their ideas and plans for helping bring clean water to thousands of residents living in the slums of Mumbai - the same impoverished area that provided the backdrop for the 2009 Oscar Award-winning movie, "Slumdog Millionaire."
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University Of Queensland Researcher Trials New Treatments For Whiplash

For physiotherapist Associate Professor Michele Sterling, treating whiplash is all about thinking outside of the box. The NHMRC-funded researcher, from UQ"s Centre for National Research on Disability and Rehabilitation Medicine, is currently trialling a combination of dry needling and exercise for chronic whiplash sufferers. Whiplash is a common term for sudden acceleration-deceleration forces on the neck as a result of rear-end or side impact motor vehicle collisions and driving accidents. The condition is considered chronic when patients are still experiencing pain three months after the injury. "There are not a lot of treatment options out there," Dr Sterling said. "We"ve shown in the past that a standard physio approach is not effective for a sub-group of people with chronic whiplash. "The impact of their accident has wound up the way their central nervous system processes pain, making them hypersensitive to any kind of stimuli." Dr Sterling said using dry needles was an attempt to "settle down" the nervous system, allowing patients to participate in exercises typically recommended for whiplash. Dry needling involves the insertion of fine acupuncture needles into muscle trigger points in an attempt to deactivate them. The trial only started last month and currently has five participants but will expand to include 120 over the next year. Some participants receive dry needling, while others receive a "sham" injection - a blunt needle which is not inserted into the muscle. Dr Sterling said the trial was an example of mixing orthodox with non-orthodox techniques, an approach she has fine-tuned in her research projects. Along with her colleagues at the Centre for National Research on Disability and Rehabilitation Medicine, Dr Sterling has attempted to find out why some people are more likely to respond to treatment than others. "I"m a physiotherapist by discipline but I was always interested in the more difficult cases and working out why some people didn"t recover well," she said. "Our research has found that indicators of poor recovery include an altered central nervous system processing of pain, post traumatic stress disorder and stress. "There is no one-size-fits-all approach for treating whiplash. "You need to look at the underlying pain processes and develop a tailored treatment plan, which might involve combining physio with psychology." Dr Sterling said the overall goal was for whiplash to be effectively treated in primary care and not to develop into a chronic illness. Future projects will include further investigation of processes underlying persistent whiplash pain including the measurement of inflammatory biomarkers, MRI measures of neck muscles and functional MRI investigation of brain processes in those with chronic whiplash pain. University of Queensland


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