Friday, March 30, 2012

Movie Review: 'Goon' | Movies & TV | Arts & Entertainment | Epoch ...

Hockey film that works both on and off the ice

By Joe Bendel Created: March 29, 2012 Last Updated: March 29, 2012


Seann William Scott (C) in the comedy 'Goon', a film about a bouncer overcoming long odds to lead a team of underperforming misfits to semi-pro hockey glory.(Magnet Releasing)

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Doug ?the Thug? Glatt has a good heart and a complete lack of guile. He sure can fight, though. In fact, he will brawl his way into a minor league hockey contract in Michael Dowse?s crowd-pleasing Goon, which opens this Friday in New York.

Always overshadowed as the underachiever in a family of doctors, the socially awkward Glatt lives the anonymous life of a bar bouncer. At first, hockey would be the province of his loud-mouth buddy Ryan, who produces a hockey webcast. However, when Glatt lays a beat down on a skid row player rushing the stands to get at his obnoxious pal, he catches the eye of Rollie Hortense, the home club manager. Before he knows it, he has a real minor league contract up north, playing for Hortense?s brother Ronnie.

When Glatt starts out, he can barely skate, but that?s okay. He was not recruited to score or even defend, but to enforce. He is to be a cement head in the Dave Semenko tradition, except more so. He is to retaliate for cheap shots, spark his team with a momentum-swinging altercation, and protect Laflamme. A former hockey prodigy, Laflamme flamed out after finding himself on the received end of a brutal hit from legendary enforcer Ross Rhea. As luck would have, Rhea has been busted down to the minors, building fan anticipation for a cement-head showdown.

There will be fists flying, but aside from Ryan?s crude humor, Goon is shockingly endearing. Even though the Halifax Highlanders are a squad of mismatched misfits, Glatt takes pride in being part of the team. Of course, his spirit of camaraderie catches on with most of the grizzled journeymen. He also tries to woo the jaded party girl Eva with refreshing ?Leave It to Beaver? innocence.

Indeed, there is nothing ironic or smirky about Seann William Scott?s work, which is why it is so earnestly engaging. Like every fan favorite, he provides a strong rooting interest?a ?Rudy? level underdog, in love and sport. Who knew Stifler had it in him? (Seann?s smarmy character in the American Pie series.)

Perhaps since they are both Canadian, Kim Coates and Nicholas Campbell (known for his role as Dominic Da Vinci) really look and sound like hockey coaches. Yet, Liev Schreiber (who is American but can easily pass) plays Rhea with appropriate animal intensity, creating one of the best sports movie nemeses since maybe Clubber Lang.

Goon is an unusually sweet sports film. There is something aesthetically appealing about its embrace of the minor league milieu. Ultimately though, Goon works just as well on and off the ice, which is the real test for this genre. Recommended with affection for audiences well beyond the hockey target market, it opens this Friday at the Village East.

Goon

Director: Michael Dowse

Starring: Seann William Scott, Jay Baruchel, Alison Pill, Liev Schreiber, Eugene Levy

Running Time: 92 minutes

Rating: R

Joe Bendel writes about independent film and lives in New York. To read his most recent articles please visit http://jbspins.blogspot.com

Source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/arts-entertainment/movie-review-goon-212501.html

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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

London subway stops named for Owens, Lewis, Phelps

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/london-subway-stops-named-owens-lewis-phelps-193330242--olympics.html

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Rio+20 must radically rethink innovation

Rio+20 must radically rethink innovation [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Julia Day
j.day@ids.ac.uk
44-079-742-09148
Institute of Development Studies

New sustainable development goals must involve grassroots initiatives

A radical new approach to innovation is urgently needed to ensure a fair and green economy and avoid reversing progress made on global poverty reduction, according to leading scientists.

Ahead of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, or Rio+20, the ESRC STEPS Centre calls on negotiators to rethink the way science and innovation can contribute to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that are likely to emerge from Rio.

Rio+20 is a golden opportunity to enhance the role that science, technology and innovation of many kinds can play in building an environmentally sustainable and socially just green economy at a global level.

"The stakes are too high at Rio+20 for a business-as-usual approach," said Professor Melissa Leach, director of the STEPS Centre. "We are pushing up against planetary boundaries that are near, or already past, breaking point. Science, technology and innovation can help avert catastrophic developmental and environmental damage. But only if we move beyond outdated notions of whose innovation counts, to recognise the vital role different forms of innovation can play."

"We would like to see Rio+20 provide a global framework supporting different forms of innovation that address sustainable development challenges at local, national and global levels. Beyond setting targets, this is about enabling the grassroots and enhancing innovation capabilities for the longer-term" added Dr. Adrian Ely, STEPS Centre head of impact and engagement.

The STEPS Centre has drawn up a set of recommendations for ways in which Rio+20 could pay attention not just to the 20-lane innovation 'superhighways' carved out by high-tech and well-financed industries, but to the bush-paths and mountain-trails of grassroots innovation trodden by less high-profile users, workers, consumers, citizens, activists, farmers and small businesses.

Recommendations submitted to the zero draft of the Rio+20 outcome document cover five areas for action: agenda setting; funding; capacity building; organising; and monitoring, evaluation and accountability. Recommendations include:

  • UNEP/ the proposed new specialized agency on environment adopting the assessment, promotion and co-ordination of innovation for sustainable development as part of its mandate
  • Transparent corporate reporting on R&D investments which focuses on poverty alleviation, social justice and environmental sustainability

Our vision is a world where science and technology work more directly for social justice, poverty alleviation and the environment. What this means for particular contexts, places and people will be enormously varied as will be the means to achieve it. Nevertheless, we believe our recommendations can catalyse and provoke specific concrete actions to help achieve this vision.

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Rio+20 must radically rethink innovation [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 27-Mar-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Julia Day
j.day@ids.ac.uk
44-079-742-09148
Institute of Development Studies

New sustainable development goals must involve grassroots initiatives

A radical new approach to innovation is urgently needed to ensure a fair and green economy and avoid reversing progress made on global poverty reduction, according to leading scientists.

Ahead of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, or Rio+20, the ESRC STEPS Centre calls on negotiators to rethink the way science and innovation can contribute to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that are likely to emerge from Rio.

Rio+20 is a golden opportunity to enhance the role that science, technology and innovation of many kinds can play in building an environmentally sustainable and socially just green economy at a global level.

"The stakes are too high at Rio+20 for a business-as-usual approach," said Professor Melissa Leach, director of the STEPS Centre. "We are pushing up against planetary boundaries that are near, or already past, breaking point. Science, technology and innovation can help avert catastrophic developmental and environmental damage. But only if we move beyond outdated notions of whose innovation counts, to recognise the vital role different forms of innovation can play."

"We would like to see Rio+20 provide a global framework supporting different forms of innovation that address sustainable development challenges at local, national and global levels. Beyond setting targets, this is about enabling the grassroots and enhancing innovation capabilities for the longer-term" added Dr. Adrian Ely, STEPS Centre head of impact and engagement.

The STEPS Centre has drawn up a set of recommendations for ways in which Rio+20 could pay attention not just to the 20-lane innovation 'superhighways' carved out by high-tech and well-financed industries, but to the bush-paths and mountain-trails of grassroots innovation trodden by less high-profile users, workers, consumers, citizens, activists, farmers and small businesses.

Recommendations submitted to the zero draft of the Rio+20 outcome document cover five areas for action: agenda setting; funding; capacity building; organising; and monitoring, evaluation and accountability. Recommendations include:

  • UNEP/ the proposed new specialized agency on environment adopting the assessment, promotion and co-ordination of innovation for sustainable development as part of its mandate
  • Transparent corporate reporting on R&D investments which focuses on poverty alleviation, social justice and environmental sustainability

Our vision is a world where science and technology work more directly for social justice, poverty alleviation and the environment. What this means for particular contexts, places and people will be enormously varied as will be the means to achieve it. Nevertheless, we believe our recommendations can catalyse and provoke specific concrete actions to help achieve this vision.

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-03/iods-rmr032712.php

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Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Extreme Weather All About Global Warming; Why We Love Tear-Jerkers

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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/extreme-weather-global-warming-why-love-tear-jerkers-220406003.html

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Monday, March 26, 2012

High blood sugar lowers chances of surviving a heart attack

ScienceDaily (Mar. 25, 2012) ? Patients with high blood sugar run an increased risk of dying if they have a heart attack, and diabetics are less likely to survive in-hospital cardiac arrest than non-diabetics, reveals research at the Sahlgrenska Academy, at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.

Diabetes is common among patients with coronary artery disease, and this is a potentially lethal combination: a thesis from the University of Gothenburg's Sahlgrenska Academy reveals that diabetes in coronary artery disease patients brings a significantly increased risk of premature death.

Smaller chance of surviving

Doctoral student and researcher Petur Petursson investigated the connection between blood sugar disorders and survival following heart attacks and cardiac arrest. His thesis shows that patients with diabetes have a smaller chance of surviving in-hospital cardiac arrest. Diabetes and pre-diabetes are also associated with a less favourable prognosis following coronary artery surgery.

"Type 2 diabetics with suspected coronary artery disease who are on insulin therapy have lower survival," he explains. "We've not been able to demonstrate the exact cause, but much of it may be because those on insulin therapy have more severe disease."

Need for careful management

Petur Petursson says that the results underline the need for careful management of patients with coronary artery disease and the importance of accurately diagnosing and managing blood sugar disorders.

"Medical personnel can pretty much assume that coronary artery disease patients will have some kind of blood sugar disorder, so there must be established strategies for managing these disorders at every heart clinic in the country."

The thesis Aspects of Abnormal Glucose Regulation in Various Manifestations of Coronary Artery Disease was defended on 23 February.

Further information: http://gupea.ub.gu.se/handle/2077/28511

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Gothenburg, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Christoph Reinhardt, Mattias Bergentall, Thomas U. Greiner, Florence Schaffner, Gunnel ?stergren-Lund?n, Lars C. Petersen, Wolfram Ruf, Fredrik B?ckhed. Tissue factor and PAR1 promote microbiota-induced intestinal vascular remodelling. Nature, 2012; DOI: 10.1038/nature10893

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/03/120325102611.htm

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sssssssssssssssss | ShbabNahda | Health & Fitness Blog

Cupping Therapy for Knee pain

An investigation into the effect of Cupping Therapy as a treatment for Anterior Knee Pain and its potential role in Health Promotion
Posted on March 5, 2011 by admin

Kaleem Ullah MSc Physiotherapy
University of East Anglia Physical Address

Address:
UK

Ahmed Younis
Principal Lecturer
St Georges University of London Physical Address

Address:
UK

Mohamed Wali
St Georges University of London Physical Address

Address:
UK

Citation: K. Ullah, A. Younis & M. Wali : An investigation into the effect of Cupping Therapy as a treatment for Anterior Knee Pain and its potential role in Health Promotion. . The Internet Journal of Alternative Medicine. 2007 Volume 4 Number 1
Table of Contents

* Introduction
* History and origins of Cupping T?
* Current use of Cupping Therapy
* Medical effects of Cupping Thera?
* Anterior Knee Pain and Cupping T?
* Cupping Therapy and the ethnic m?
* Contra-indications and Precautio?
* Aims of the research
* Testable hypothesis
* Methodology and research design
* Population and Sampling
* Inclusion Criteria
* Exclusion Criteria
* Instrumentation
* Ethical consideration of the stu?
* The procedure
* Data Analysis
* Results
* Response Rate
* The difference between Passive a?
* The significance of differences ?
* Discussion
* Effect of Cupping Therapy on Ran?
* The impact of Cupping Therapy We?
* Conclusion
* Appendices

Abstract

Objective : To investigate the effect of Cupping Therapy at a patho-physiological level for anterior knee pain and its impact on Quality of life and well-being.
Method: Experimental survey utilising clinical trial and a questionnaire. A three week follow-up was conducted to determine longer term carry over of treatment effects utilising both objective and subjective assessment. This method enables the researcher to examine how much the independent variable causes participants to change (Dane, 1990).
Results: There was statistically significance difference between the level of pain, well being and Range of Motion for patients with anterior knee pain pre and post Cupping (P Conclusions : The efficacy of the treatment of Cupping Therapy for Anterior Knee Pain, well being and range of motion has been researched and results reveal improvements in participants as a result of Cupping Therapy. It is recommended that further studies are conducted with larger study samples and of longer duration.

Introduction

Cupping is an ancient method of treatment that has been used in the treatment and cure of a broad range of conditions; blood diseases such as haemophilia and hypertension, rheumatic conditions ranging from arthritis, sciatica, back pain, migraine, anxiety and general physical and mental well-being. The aim of Cupping is to extract blood that is believed to be harmful from the body which in turn rids the body of potential harm from symptoms leading to a reduction in well-being.
History and origins of Cupping Therapy

Traditionally, Cupping Therapy has been practiced in most cultures in one form or another. In the UK the practice of Cupping Therapy also dates back a long way with one of the leading medical journals ?The Lancet? being named after this practice. A lancet is a piece of surgical equipment that was traditionally utilised to release excess blood i.e. venesection and to prick boils. The Arabic name for Cupping Therapy is Al-Hejamah which means to reduce in size i.e. to return the body back to its natural state. The practice of Al-Hejamah has been part of Middle-Eastern cultural practice for thousands of years with citations dating back to the time of Hippocrates (400 BC). Of the western world, the first to embrace Cupping Therapy were the ancient Egyptians, and the oldest recorded medical textbook, Ebers Papyrus, written in approximately 1550 BC in Egypt mentions cupping (Curtis, 2005). Cupping Therapy can be divided into two broad categories: Dry Cupping and Wet Cupping. Dry Cupping Therapy tends to be practiced more commonly in the Far-East whereas Wet Cupping is favoured in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. For the purpose of this research Wet Cupping Therapy will be investigated and the referred to as Cupping Therapy.
Current use of Cupping Therapy

Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) is becoming more popular with the public and gaining credibility within biomedical health care (Hill, 2003). Surveys show that approximately one third of the UK?s population (Ernst, 1996) and slightly higher in the USA (Wootton and Sparber, 2001) have used CAM. Additionally, mainstream healthcare, whilst requesting further evidence for CAM, are increasingly interested in some forms of CAM (Hoffman, 2001).
Medical effects of Cupping Therapy

According to Hennawy (2004), Cupping Therapy is indicated for blood disorders, pain relief, inflammatory conditions, mental and physical relaxation, varicose veins and deep tissue massage and quotes up to 50% improvement in fertility levels.

The principles of Acupuncture and Acupressure are very similar to that of Wet Cupping Therapy, except for the fact that Wet Cupping involves the letting of blood whereas Acupuncture and Acupressure utilise suction and stimulation of points to attain the desired results. Letting out blood is in fact among the oldest of acupuncture techniques (Dharmananda, 2004). It is speculated that acupuncture started as a method of pricking boils of the skin, then expanded to letting out ?bad blood? that was generated by injuries or fevers and finally allowing invisible evil spirits and perverse atmospheric qi (most notably ?wind?) escape from the body (Unschuld, 1985).

Focussing attention back to the research into Chinese healing traditions, the discovery of Acupressure and Acupuncture analgesia has proved that they can elicit the release of morphine like substances (Endorphins), Serotonin or Cortisol which can ultimately lead to pain relief and alter the physiological status of the individual (Schulte, 1996). Acupressure and Acupuncture in fact are being utilised and proven useful in pain and addictive management (Schulte, 1996; Hinze, 1988; Cadwell, 1998). At a biological level; Acupressure and Acupuncture work by stimulating or activating (1) the immune system; (2) Enkephalin secretion; (3) neurotransmitter release (4) vasoconstriction and dilatation and (5) the gates for pain in the CNS which interpret pain sensation (NIH Consensus Development Panel, 1998; Schulte, 1996). Finally, it is believed that stimulation of Acupoints can lead to the pain gates to be overwhelmed by increasing frequency of impulses, therefore ultimately leading to closure of the gates and hence pain reduction (Oumeish, 1998; Cadwell, 1998).

According to the National Institute of Health (NIH) Consensus Development Panel (1997), acupuncture is also effective against chemotherapy nausea and vomiting, nausea in pregnancy, dental pain, adjunct therapy, addiction, stroke rehabilitation, headache, menstrual cramps, tennis elbow, fibromyalgia, low back pain, carpal tunnel syndrome, asthma and so forth (Lee, 2001). Given the relative low cost of CAM in general, integration of therapies into mainstream healthcare delivery will no doubt lighten the financial and time burden on our healthcare system.

As Cupping Therapy has been proposed as an effective treatment for pain and given the similarities with Acupuncture and Acupressure theory, it is possible to therefore accept the above mechanism of biological action for Cupping Therapy for pain reduction as well.
Anterior Knee Pain and Cupping Therapy

It is well established that knee injuries are the most common serious injury during sporting activities (Johnson, 2005). The potential for Cupping Therapy to treat anterior knee pain and its associated morbidity should be researched as mentioned earlier as the health and cost implications are indeed promising. It is proposed that Cupping Therapy alongside sound medical and physiotherapy advice for conditions such as Anterior Knee Pain will work well as research has shown that conventional treatment of Anterior Knee Pain (AKP) with sound physiotherapy advice are effective tools in reducing levels of AKP as well as having benefits on individual well-being (Clark et al., 2000).
Cupping Therapy and the ethnic minority population

Britain?s population is very diverse; the number of people classed as ethnic minorities is on the increase, (Commission for Racial Equality 1999). It is well established that the use of health care services by ethnic populations is disproportionate to that of the Caucasian population in the UK (Crespo et al., 2000) and also that physical inactivity is more prevalent among ethnic minorities than among Caucasians, (King et al 2000). Therefore an intervention such as Cupping Therapy may help to bridge the gap as did Acupuncture with Far-Eastern communities.
Contra-indications and Precautions to treatment

Cupping Therapy has no major side effects aside from minimal discomfort due to the method of application of skin cuts to the patient. In cases where the patient?s pain threshold is low, a local anaesthetic can be administered. Also other possible minor side effects that may occur is the feeling of slight light headedness post Cupping Therapy, this again is similar to the sensation one feels after having had blood taken from the doctor, as Cupping Therapy encourages blood flow to the cupped region (hyperaemia), one may therefore feel warmer and hotter as a result of vasodilation taking place and slight sweating may occur. Again this can be attributed to sound scientific rationale and there is no cause for concern.

Pregnant women or menstruating women, cancer (metastatic) patients and patients with bone fractures or muscle spasms are also believed to be contra-indicated. Also, Cupping Therapy cannot be applied to a site of DVT, where there are ulcers, arteries or places where a pulse can be felt (Chirali, 1999,).
Aims of the research

The aim of the research:

* Evaluate the effect of Cupping Therapy on Anterior Knee Pain (AKP), Range of movement and its impact on quality of life and well-being.

Testable hypothesis

* Cupping Therapy has no effect on the perception of knee pain, Range of movement and well being

Methodology and research design

The method of this study was an experimental survey utilising clinical trial and a questionnaire methodology. A three week follow-up was conducted to determine longer term carry over of treatment effects utilising both objective and subjective assessment. Measurements of subjects were taken pre- and post-test.

The research was designed after extensive literature review, discussion with cupping practitioners, observation of the application techniques, and discussion and communication with practitioners and centres involved in performing cupping (mainly in the Middle East). After that, the procedure for the application of cupping for this research was established(see cupping application procedure).

An assessment sheet (see appendix 1) was designed to include patient information, past and present medical history, vital signs measurements (pulse rate, blood pressure and O 2 saturation rate for monitoring purposes only). All measurements and questions were performed by the same researcher before and after cupping to enhance validity and reliability.

Outcome measures that were used were the Pain Visual Analogue Scale (Pain VAS), Well Being Visual Analogue Scale (Well Being VAS) and joint range of motion, both Active Range of Motion (AROM) and Passive Range of Motion (PROM). The independent variable in this study was the treatment of Cupping Therapy, which all participants received. The independent variables measured were Pain and Well-being VAS scales and Active and Passive Knee Ranges of Movement. The participants were also asked about their perception of cupping and general health and quality of life through a questionnaire. The questionnaire was designed carefully through integrating an array of generic qualitative approaches such as the World Health Organisation Quality of Life questionnaire (WHOQOL-100), EuroQol-5D (EQ-5D) and the 15D Health Related Quality of Life (15D); with the aim to develop a questionnaire specific to Cupping Therapy. Prior to the main study, the questionnaire was tested successfully in two pilot studies.
Population and Sampling

The target population for this investigation was the general public predominantly in the Greater London region and currently unaffiliated with any health trust using convenience sampling technique. Subjects were recruited utilising a range of advertising techniques including advertising on; a national radio station (Spectrum Radio 558 AM), university email system, a medical documentary TV show on ANN satellite channel (Arab News Network).
Inclusion Criteria

* Subjects with knee problems age between 20-80 years old.
* Subjects who did not receive cupping to the knee region before or to any other region of the body six months prior to the study.

Exclusion Criteria

* Infants
* Subjects suffering from serious heart troubles or diseases that render the individual prone to bleeding.
* Pregnant women
* Cancer patients
* Subjects with bone fractures or muscle spasms at the knee region.

Instrumentation

Basic Cupping therapy equipment was utilised including a hand suction pump, plastic cups of the same size and anti-septic tools.
Ethical consideration of the study

Patients were provided information sheets detailing the research procedure, subject understanding of the research was considered and a consent form was provided prior to commencing the study. Subjects wishing at anytime to withdraw from the study, or withhold any information were allowed to do so. Ethical approval was sought from Kings College Research Committee.
The procedure

The following procedure as used:

Prior to commencing application of treatment, we ensured that:

* The subjects had complied with the pre-cupping requirements (inclusion criteria).
* Contra-indications were eliminated
* Equipment was sterilised
* Subjects were reassure/reminded of minor side effects
* Subjects? blood pressure, pulse rate and O 2 saturation rate were measured in a sitting position, and then subjects were asked to identify the level of their pain using visual analogue scale in English (and also an Arabic translation was available, see appendix 1). Vital signs were taken only to monitor subject general condition.
* Knee observations were conducted for any abnormalities and then the knee range of motion was measured from a supine lying position by the same researcher.
* Subjects were interviewed by the same researcher.
* The cupping application was performed at the knee (lateral to the quadriceps tendon) utilising a razor for sterility purposes and control of depth and breadth of cuts. Cups were applied to the treatment region and the blood was carefully drained three times. The cupped region was managed as according to basic wound management procedures (i.e. antiseptics and gauze application)
* All measurements (blood pressure, pulse rate and O 2 saturation rate, knee range of motion as well as the pain and well being scales) were repeated by the same researcher immediately after cupping and then one, two and three weeks after cupping.

Data Analysis

The data was analysed using descriptive analysis in the form of minimum, maximum, mean, and Standard Deviation (SD). The paired sample t-test was employed to determine the difference between subjects before and after cupping.

The level of significance of this study was set at 5%. All data analysis was performed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) v.12 for Windows.
Results
Response Rate

A total of 26 volunteers consented to partake in the study. Four volunteers dropped out prior to the study commencing. Twenty two volunteers began the study; five volunteers did not attend any follow-up appointments therefore they were excluded from the study and two volunteers were unable to attend the final two appointments and the remaining 15volunteers completed the study giving a participation rate of 57.69% (n=15). The constitution of the twenty two volunteers that began the study was as follows: male (n=20, 90.90%), female (n=2, 9.10%). All volunteers were above 18 years of age.
The difference between Passive and Active Ranges of Movement, Pain and Well Being scores before and after Cupping Therapy

The table below illustrates there was an increase in the mean both Active and Passive ranges of movement, as a reduction in pain scores and an increase in well-being. The Std. Deviation pre-Cupping for PROM was (M?SD) (142.64 ? 11.168), and three weeks post-cupping the Std. Deviation was (151.67 ? 5.96). Likewise for AROM the Std. Deviation pre-Cupping for AROM was (134.14 ? 16.53) and three weeks post-cupping the Std. Deviation was (147.24 ? 7.04). A similar trend can be seen for the pain and well being scores. The Std. Deviation pre-Cupping for Pain was (5.38 ? 2.8), and three weeks post-cupping the Std. Deviation was (1.29 ? 2.02). The Std. Deviation pre-Cupping for well-being was (7.21 ? 1.65), and three weeks post-cupping the Std. Deviation was (8.29 ? 1.20).

Thumbnail: Table 1: Showing the difference between Passive and Active Ranges of Movement, Pain and Well Being scores before and?
Table 1: Showing the difference between Passive and Active Ranges of Movement, Pain and Well Being scores before and after Cupping Therapy
The significance of differences in subject scores before and after cupping

As we have seen from the above table there are noticeable differences in each outcome measure scores pre-Cupping and the follow-up sessions. The paired sample t-test was performed to ascertain the statistical significance difference between the pain scores, range of motion and well being: immediately after Cupping, 1 week after Cupping, 2 weeks after cupping and 3 weeks after Cupping.

Thumbnail: Table 2: showing the significance of differences in subject scores before and after cupping
Table 2: showing the significance of differences in subject scores before and after cupping

The table above shows that there is a statistically significance difference in Passive Ranger of Motion, Active Ranger of Motion, Pain Visual Analogue Scale and Well Being Visual Analogue Scale before and after Cupping Therapy; p ? 0.05 in all outcome measures.
Discussion
Effect of Cupping Therapy on Ranges of Motion and Pain level reduction (Tables 1 and 2)

The level of pain perceived by the subjects post intervention was significantly lower than compared to pre-intervention. This can be viewed from table1 which shows difference between Passive and Active Ranges of Movement (ROM), Pain and Well Being scores before and after Cupping Therapy.

Looking at the pain scores similar changes can be seen as with the Ranges of Motion scores. The mean pain score had dropped from 5.14 to 1.26 after the third week. There was a considerable reduction in the levels of pain perceived and upon applying a paired sample t-test it was found that the difference in scores was statistically significant immediately after cupping, 1,2 and 3weeks post cupping also (p

It can be seen that both active and passive ranges improved considerably post cupping. The mean AROM pre cupping was 134.14degrees with the minimum ROM being 95degress. The mean scores had increased to 143degrees 1week post cupping and the minimum score had increased to 124degrees. By the third week, the mean score had increased to 147.24degrees and the minimum score had increased 128degress. Upon applying a paired sample t-test it was found that the difference in scores was statistically significant immediately after cupping, 1,2 and 3weeks post cupping also (p

The reductions in pain scores can be attributed to sound rationale as cupping therapy can elicit the release of morphine like substances (Endorphins), Serotonin or Cortisol which can ultimately lead to pain relief and alter the physiological status of the individual (Schulte, 1996). Acupressure and Acupuncture in fact are being utilised and proven useful in pain and addictive management (Schulte, 1996; Hinze, 1988; Cadwell, 1998). At a biological level like Acupressure and Acupuncture, Cupping Therapy works by stimulating or activating (1) the immune system; (2) Enkephalin secretion; (3) neurotransmitter release (4) vasoconstriction and dilatation and (5) the gates for pain in the CNS which interpret pain sensation (NIH Consensus Development Panel, 1998; Schulte, 1996). Finally, it is believed that stimulation of Cupping points can lead to the pain gates to be overwhelmed by increasing frequency of impulses, therefore ultimately leading to closure of the gates and hence pain reduction (Oumeish, 1998; Cadwell, 1998).
The impact of Cupping Therapy Well-Being (Tables 1 and 2)

It is not possible to truly quantify the true impact an intervention like Cupping Therapy has on the life of an individual. A qualitative approach towards understanding the impact from a patient?s perspective is perhaps a more accurate interpretation with respect to the general impact. However, an analogue scale similar to the Pain VAS was used to quantify the perceived impact of cupping therapy on subject well being. The mean well-being VAS scores had increased from 7.21 to 8.23; an overall increase of more than 1. The increase in well-being scores was maintained throughout the study therefore reflecting the idea that Cupping Therapy has a positive impact on well-being. This finding is supported by the paired sample t-test (p= ? 0.05). Hennawy (2004) supports this finding also.

It is therefore reasonable to stipulate that the biological benefits of cupping therapy in conjunction with the psychological uses of cupping collectively induce a feeling of physical and psychological well being.
Conclusion

It is not for the purpose of an exploratory piece of work like this to implement changes in healthcare practice. Rather the aim being to investigate and raise awareness of a procedure and to address issues of importance associated with it. The efficacy of the treatment of Cupping for Anterior Knee Pain, Range of Movement and well being has been researched and results reveal statistically significant differences in support of Cupping Therapy. It is also suggested that as an intervention, Cupping Therapy needs to be regulated and a register of practitioners developed. Longer term studies related to the effects of Cupping Therapy need to be conducted for other musculo-skeletal conditions.
Appendices

Thumbnail: Appendix 1
Appendix 1

Thumbnail: Appendix 2: Assessment pack
Appendix 2: Assessment pack
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Article Source ? http://www.britishcuppingsociety.org/http:/www.britishcuppingsociety.org/hello-world

Source: http://www.shbabnahda.com/fit/?p=2054

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Food And Drink ? GUEST REVIEW In Coral Gables Community ...

I had never heard about Crave and much less that it had opened in Coral Gables two weeks ago. Fortunately for me, my boyfriend had discussed it when I was trying to think of places to go to dinner with my friends. After some research into the menu I realized this was a little state chain with a diversified menu similar to Cheesecake Factory (minus the cheesecake). The menu offers a lot of continental/new American dishes as well as a decked out sushi bar and wine list. One of my friends had visited one of their Minnesota locations and raved about it, so we made a decision to give it a shot. Once at the cafe you notice how massive it is. The outside dining area is larger than most locally run bistros, venture inside and you are slapped in the face with a gigantic space that screams, ?Viva las Vegas! ? The d?cor reminded me a lot of the Bellagio, with Chihuly-esque glass structures hanging from the ceilings and walls.

While we waited for my chums, we tried two appetisers and drinks. I kept it easy and ordered their edamame. The edamame is tossed in a sriracha soy glaze that gives it a nice kick and when I was finished, my lips were burning and tingling. The edamame was superbly cooked and very well seasoned; fortunately for me, my date was too occupied with his food so I did not have to share.

My date had 2 appetisers; he started off with their Sunomono Salad (a posh way of pronouncing cucumber salad). The salad is truly light and refreshing with cucumbers, daikon and carrots tossed in sweet rice vinegar. The display was also simple and colorful with the bright greens, orange and yellow colours popping against the contrast of the white dish. The rice vinegar tasted great and was a good compliment to the thinly shredded daikon and cucumber.

Up next, my date had their Griddled Ceviche. I know what you are thinking, ?Grilled Ceviche, isn?t that a total oxymoron?? And you are totally correct. That's really what charmed us about the dish. The menu has a straightforward description for this dish that states, Shrimp, scallop, kimchee, mango and cilantro. What we got was a bowl filled with shrimp, scallops, chopped mango and minced cilantro with 3 orange segments and 3 slices of avocado. As you may be able to see in the photo, the avocado had some slight brown spots, but nothing that was too unbearable. As some of you may know by this time, I am allergic to shrimp, so I could not try this dish and have to rely solely on what my date?s thoughts on the dish were for this post. He revealed the freshness of the ingredients was not top notch, but none the less it is a good dish with a great fusion of fruits and savory tastes. Whether the name GRILLED Ceviche is 100% befitting is still to be determined, though it was a tasty dish none the less. I will be able to comment, I've realized that my date?s intake of shrimp has skyrocketed exponentially since it?s become clear that I am allergic, coincidence? I think not.

When my buddies joined us, we dove directly into our starters and everybody ordered completely different sorts of cuisines. The menu is all over the place, like Britney Spears when she hasn?t had her daily Lithium dose. My friend Manny went with their sushi, his wife and my date both had pasta and I had a pizza. I?ll begin my talking about my friend?s sushi. He got 2 different rolls, their Sumo Roll and Crunchy Spicy Tuna Roll. The sumo roll is a tempura roll with a combination of spicy salmon, mango, cilantro and asparagus with a drip of sweet eel sauce over the top. The Crunchy Spicy Tuna roll comes with Spicy tuna, shrimp tempura, cream cheese, avocado, cucumber, seaweed salad, crunchy flakes, and sweet sauce. My pal was a concentrated sushi eating machine. He probably did at 1 time mention that the sushi did taste nice and the fish was fresh. The indisputable fact that he inhaled his food and failed to look up much during dinner was a positive signal.

My date had their Shrimp and Andouille sausage pasta (another shrimp dish, I smell a conspiracy). The dish includes linguini, saut?ed shrimp, andouille sausage, spinach, broccolini, tomato and fresh parmesan all tossed in a marginally spicy vodka cream. I was unable to taste this dish, but the veggies were all brightly colored and my date did mention the dish had a pleasant kick to it that went well with the sausage and shrimp.

My mate Jen is simply one of the pickiest eaters in The USA. I know as she reads this she's likely announcing aloud, I AM NOT! I continue to love you Jen, but you are fussy do not be irritated by me! Although she was debating over 2 different dishes, at the last minute she. Made a decision to have their Roast Chicken and Penne pasta. The pasta comes with roasted red peppers, kalamata olives, goat cheese, pine nuts, minced basil tossed in a romesco sauce. She enjoyed the red peppers and the undeniable fact that they were still al dente and firm. The Chicken tasted fresh and the pasta was also cooked al dente. The romesco sauce gave it all a great, a touch spicy flavor that tied together all the ingredients nicely. You can imagine our awe when she left all but 5 pieces of pasta behind. If the fussy eater of the bunch ate her entire plate, you know it can't be bad.

I ended up having their Grape and Apple flatbread pizza. I was in a vegetable eater friendly mood that night and this dish appeared reasonably healthy. I really enjoyed this dish, the crust was truly thin, and almost cracker like around the edges (I realize a few of the people do not like this kind of crust, but given the toppings it was a success for me). The pizza came topped with a large amount of blue cheese crumbles, thinly julienned red apples, halved seedless purple grapes and dripped with honey and minced parsley. The menu discussed that the pizza comes with rosemary, but my pizza had no rosemary in it whatsoever. None the less, this giant flatbread was actually mouth-watering and the red apples and grapes went well with the blue cheese. And do not let this dish fool you, it is really awfully filling yet it does not leave you asking the waiter for a wheelbarrow and stretchy pants.

My friends made a decision to try 2 their ?Crave Miniatures ? also known as pudding shots. My buddies went with their Tiramisu and Salted Caramel Mousse shots. The Tiramisu was delicately layered similar to a small trifle and topped with a generous dusting of cocoa and a chocolate decoration to give it some additional pizzazz. My friend Jen breathed her shot and was sufficiently nice to grace her hubby with one small spoon before devouring it. Her husband ate the bulk of the Salty Caramel mousse shot that looked ethereal and light as a mousse should. The display of this shot was less decadent and fancy it looked succulent. I was too stuffed to try either one of the desserts, but both of my friends warranted me they were superb.

Actually , our meal and experience was a favorable one. Our waitress was jovial, helpful and keen to aid us with ideas. The food was good and the diner was surely busy for a Thursday night. If you're searching for a huge place to host a celebration or a trattoria that's a nick above the Cheesecake factory, then give this place a try. The menu does spread itself rather thin with so many various options and cuisines. As with several chain restaurants that have so many options, it doesn't particularly excel or wow, but they execute their dishes well in an above average manner. This is their 2nd outpost in Florida, with their first located in Orlando, and I expect more locations to pop up in South Florida.

- (Guest Blogger at WANT).

T.J. McLeod is a gourmet who love Crave Restaurant and enjoys seeing them expand in Coral Gables and surrounding communities.

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Sunday, March 25, 2012

The most common brain tumor can arise from neural stem cells ...

The link between neural stem cells and this aggressive type of cancer is a warning for the scientists to proceed with caution, with new treatments for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer?s disease, where the hope is to use neural stem cells help the loss of function of nerve regeneration, said Zhu.Over the past six years, some studies have shown that stem cells are the cells involved in a range of cancers, including glioblastoma. But the new study reveals in particular that the GBM begins in neural stem cells, which have a mutation in the p53 gene. These cells then give rise to mutants, rapid multiplication of cells of the cellular differentiation of a class called transit-amplifying progenitor cells.

In mice, neural stem cells that normally live in this segment give rise to more specialized nerve cells that migrate from the niche. The cancer can start with a single genetic mutation in the p53 gene, which makes the stem cells migrate out of the specialized niche as their offspring.

Appear June 2 in Cancer Cell, the team?s results in mice exposed to the UM for the first time: glioblastoma, the type of cancer that affects U. S. Senator Edward Kennedy is diagnosed in about 10,000 Americans each year may originate from neural stem cells located in a brain region known as the subventricular zone or SVZ.

The results found in mice add new knowledge to a sequence of images of how genes go awry to cause brain cancer. Scientists have recently discovered that some genes and cell lines of action are altered in glioblastoma. But so far scientists do not know what type of cell the cancer started, or more precisely as a lack of p53-mediated pathways is working with other mutations to transform cells in brain cancer.

The results in mice can also lead to time for an effective test for early diagnosis for glioblastoma. MU scientists show that the expression of mutated p53 protein is a marker of glioma cells at all stages of the disease.

Many cancer research has focused on the p53 gene, known as the ?guardian of the genome? because it started a wave of another gene that normally fight cancer.

First of all treatments based on these findings may benefit people, scientists will need more studies on animals to verify the results of animals in human studies.

Zhu and his project team to continue the experiments on mice to see if the function of p53 can be restored in tumor cells. They also check whether the inhibition of neural stem cells in the SVZ promise as a potential treatment. Given the plasticity of these tumor cells started, targeting a single path may not be sufficient, said Zhu.

?We found that cells with p53 mutations are very plastic. If treatment blocks a path of action, they can learn other ways to grow,? said Zhu. This explains why the yield of a glioblastoma multiforme in drug-resistant forms.

Sickle cell anemia is characterized by episodic periods of severe pain, resulting in high resource utilization in health care. Although previous studies have described the scope of this use of health services, have generally been limited to select populations of patients with sickle cell disease and therefore limited the generalization and the inability to supply estimates based on population, the authors write.

?Then we asked, mutant p53 has no role in initiation and progression of cancer, if so, we can use as a marker of brain tumor cells in the brain,? said Wang Yuan, the first author of the study and a UM graduate student in Cell and Developmental Biology. The team found that mutant p53 was detected in a minority of highly proliferative neural stem cells from p53-deficient mice two months after the birth and expansion of the mutant p53 expressing cell characteristics people behind transit-amplifying cells initiation of cancer. The evidence supports the idea that mutant p53 may be a useful marker to track glioma cells in all phases.

The finding of a specific area of ??origin could lead to treatments that can improve the median survival rate of 12 disastrous months for this type of brain cancer, said Zhu Yuan, Ph.D., lead author of the study and assistant professor in the Departments of Internal Medicine and Cell and Developmental Biology at the UM Medical School.

University of Michigan, scientists have discovered that a lack of key tumor suppressor gene in the brain leads to the most common form of adult brain cancer. The study, conducted on mice that mimic human cancer, paving the way for more effective treatments and the future of how to diagnose the disease early.

In addition, Wang and Zhu, other authors are Jiong Yang, Zheng Huarui, Gerald J. Tomasek, Zhang Peng, Department of Internal Medicine, UM, Division of Molecular Medicine and Genetics and Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, Paul E. McKeever, Department of Pathology and UM Eva YH. P.

Lee, University of California, Irvine

Source: http://www.windsorbancorp.com/?p=223

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Building a Valuable Email List to Help Your Business Grow

If you create a targeted email list, you can make it big. Every web marketer can see the worth of putting together an email list, as this is a method for tapping into the countless possibilities of the Internet. In order to make the most out of your email marketing, you should know exactly how to go about with your list building. Keep in mind that since your list can?t be built overnight, you need to be patient in your approach. Nevertheless, the question that happens here is what does it truly take in order to form a list? What should you bear in mind in order to do it lucratively? The article below reviews three simple to use suggestions that you can put to use immediately for developing a list with meaning.

People subscribing to your list are searching for a certain type of content, and it?s up to you to give it to them. Your subscribers have many lists to choose from, and they?ll only stay with yours if they find it worthwhile. Another thing to remember is that the better your content is, the more likely it is that your subscribers will pass it on to their friends. You have to pay a lot of attention to the content you provide, no matter what the topic is. Your goal should be to make it memorable so people want to share it. If you want to get the most out of your list, this is something you should pay attention to.

A really trendy service today is Facebook; the social media site has nearly grown out of control in popularity, all around the world.These same tools are used by people in MLM Marketing

When you?re giving away something in exchange of their email address, see to it that you?re giving away something of real value. You cannot assume that people will hand over their email if it?s useless. Make it an occurrence that is so worthwhile, your prospects don?t need to look elsewhere. Outdo your competition and give value that is way too tempting. Though you might be offering them something as easy as a report, it is imperative that you deliver something that has a ton of value in it. Try to over-deliver as much as you can, so that you get the most out of your list.

It?s not always the case that the largest lists are the most profitable ones. And a small list doesn?t mean you can?t make good money off it. The key to a profitable list is treating your subscribers the right way. You won?t get much out of your list if you mistreat your subscribers. You want a targeted list that becomes more valuable month after month. That?s why you have to make sure you use reliable list building techniques such as the ones we?ve shared.

Dawn Masterall is a well-known author, He used to write the articles and blogs on different topics like marketing, online business, home business, network marketing etc .Checkout his article on WorldVentures leads and empower network leads

Source: http://www.thirdagemedia.com/building-a-valuable-email-list-to-help-your-business-grow-2/

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Altnewsforum: Outrage, protests grow over shooting of unarmed Florida teen http://t.co/UZhzC25l #cnn #news

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Record-breaking laser pulse paves way for fusion

Jeff Hecht, contributor

2.nifpencil.jpg

By the end of this year, the National Ignition Facility will try to focus nearly 2 million joules of ultraviolet laser energy at a tiny target at the tip of this "pencil" (Image: Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC/Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory/Department of Energy)

In terms of laser energy, it was the biggest bang yet. On 15 March, the National Ignition Facility at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California fired a single laser pulse containing 1.875 million joules of energy, exceeding its design energy of 1.8 megajoules for the first time. "This is very exciting, like breaking the sound barrier," says NIF director Edward Moses. Next on the agenda for the building-sized laser is firing a pulse that energetic at a target, thereby igniting nuclear fusion.

See a gallery of how the National Ignition Facility works.

The milestone comes $4 billion and 15 years after construction began on the massive laser, which started operating in 2009. Since then Moses has gradually been turning up the power, so the new record is only a small step above NIF's previous record of 1.6 MJ. Still, no other laser in the world comes close to such energies ? the 192-beam NIF delivers dozens of times more energy than the 30-kilojoule pulses from the world's next-largest operating laser, the 60-beam Omega laser at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics in Rochester, New York.

NIF's ultimate goal is to reach fusion's "ignition threshold", where fusion reactions generate more energy than the laser pulse contains. This will require delivering lots of energy in a very short time to heat and squeeze a tiny hydrogen target into such a hot, dense mass that the nuclei fuse, releasing energy.

The energy required is relatively modest ? 1.8 megajoules is about the energy released by a half kilogram of high explosive. But NIF delivered that energy in only 23 billionths of a second, so that its power during that period reached 411 trillion watts, 1000 times more power than the US electric grid generates on average.

It has been a long, hard slog to achieve this goal. Livermore took its first shots at fusion targets in the 1960s with much smaller lasers, and NIF itself had a troubled birth in the 1990s. Though it has taken more time than expected to reach the energy required for igniting fusion, Livermore hopes to reach ignition by year's end.

Meanwhile, the lab is already planning an even bigger laser called LIFE (Laser Inertial Fusion Energy).

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Forum Jump

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Archaeologists Revisit Iraq

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

IRA FLATOW, HOST:

This is SCIENCE FRIDAY. I'm Ira Flatow. One of the first teams of American archaeologists to visit Iraq is nearly two - in nearly two decades has just returned from a dig in the southern part of the country. Archaeologist Elizabeth Stone and her team were excavating a site about four miles from Ur. That's the home of the biblical figure Abraham, and it's a region that hasn't been explored very much. Here to talk more about what it's like to travel and to work in Iraq and a tool that - toll that looting has taken on the county's archeological legacy is Elizabeth Stone. She is an archaeologist and professor of anthropology at Stony Brook University. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.

DR. ELIZABETH STONE: Hi. How are you?

FLATOW: Two Stony Brooks in one hour.

STONE: I know.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Tell us what it was like there. Set the scene for us. Where did you go? What did you do?

STONE: Well, I think one of the really cool things was when we arrived, and this was pure happenstance, as we drove from Basra to Nasiriyah, we passed the last American convoy going out.

FLATOW: Wow.

STONE: So last military leave, and the first scientists go in, which was...

FLATOW: Was that scary?

STONE: No, it was great. I think it was great. I mean, you know, we had Iraqi security, and, you know, Iraqi security is actually much more low-key than American security. I actually like it better. I mean, this - none of this would have happened if I didn't have an Iraqi graduate student who comes from that area. And, you know, he convinced us that the area was safe and we could - we went and checked it out the season - last summer.

FLATOW: Right.

STONE: And we had nothing, but everybody was just wonderful. Everybody fell over backwards to be helpful, friendly. We've had absolutely no negative...

FLATOW: Yeah. Did you have a certain destination and a place you wanted to explore?

STONE: Yeah. I mean, we were working in a site called Tell Sakhariya, which is not sexy. But before, one was never able to get a permit to dig a small site. You had to dig one of the really big cities. And I was kind of - I'd been working with satellite imagery, which suggested that small sites weren't as simple as one might think. And I was especially interested in looking at one that was close to a major city because then you can make the connections between what's happening in the small satellite site and the central one.

And then the site also was in a military area, so it was secure. And I have to say, we didn't entirely find what we expected. We visited the site last summer, and we had found a historical inscription that would date to the early second millennium B.C. and then surface ceramics that date to the later part of the second millennium B.C. And everything we knew said that the entire south had been abandoned for the period in between. So, that all looked fairly promising. When we got there, we found a lot more historical inscriptions, and it's clear that this was a very important place in the late third and early second millennium B.C. And we found a big platform.

But, you know, when you dig down and hit a platform, it's not actually very edifying. And we have to get - we have to come in again with remote sensing to really figure out how big and how broad that platform is. It was probably holding up a temple. And there is a place called Gayesh(sp) where kings from Ur would go and have a big party once a year. So I think that probably is where it was.

FLATOW: So you have a lot more work to do.

STONE: Yeah. But I think the thing that was really interesting about it was, on top of that, we found evidence of a temporary settlement, probably a summer settlement for the ancient Marsh Arabs, which dates to exactly that period when we've no evidence of anybody living in the south before. And I think, you know, we've known that there were people in Mesopotamia who were living in the marshes from art and bits and pieces of written records, but nobody has ever dug one up before.

And so, they, you know, they're eating very different animals. They're not living in houses. And one of the things we had is we had about nine very distinguished professional Iraqi archaeologists working with us because they've been cut off from knowing much of anything, you know, from any kind of the advances in archaeology for at least - probably more like 30 years because Saddam wasn't very big on that either.

FLATOW: Yeah.

STONE: And, I mean, they were just stunned by this site. They said they never worked on a site that you don't - in Iraq that you don't dig for 10 minutes and hit architecture. And we didn't.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

FLATOW: Wow.

STONE: Which kind of disconcerted us, too. So, as I say, it's not sexy, but it's a really very, very different collection of animal bones, for example, which we began to analyze. And a different collection of plot remains, we expect.

FLATOW: Is there a bureaucracy now set up to host, you know, archeologists and take care of them and...

STONE: Yeah. There always has been. I mean, there's always been the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage. So it's, you know - and when Iraq reverted back and got independence after the occupation formally ended, it just kind of went back to all of Saddam's old rules, which is slightly disconcerting. So yeah, it's now a country where you still have to get exit visas whereas most ex-Soviet satellites have moved on but Iraq hasn't because it had this great hole in its life for all these years.

So there's a certain amount of bureaucracy you have to do from there, but the Department of Antiquities has been great. I mean, they gave us a permit. The head of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage drove all the way from Baghdad for a day to visit us and then drove back again. We had two government representatives, which is typical, but one of them was the director of excavations, so the second most important person on the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage. We were just, you know, we were treated really, really well.

FLATOW: You know, we heard so much about the looting of antiquities right after the war started. Did you see evidence of that and has the stuff come back? And where did that stand now?

STONE: Well, you know, I think - I had done a study using satellite imagery where I kind of documented what was going on with looting. And it was really the worst kind of after the war until the end of 2003. And it has settled down to a certain extent since then. We did visit the site of Omar, which is one of the ones that was worst hit, both last summer and this winter. And in both cases, there were holes that had been dug that day. Yeah, you can see them because the dirt is still damp. And that's very discouraging. I mean, it's a situation where there are guards, but the guards are still part of the local community, and they've been looting the site now for, you know, nearly a decade, and they're not really going to stop. And it's a long way away from anywhere. It's a long way to get there.

So it is better, but the Iraqis at one point had an antiquities police that had vehicles and then they couldn't get fuel for the vehicles, and now a lot of them have been kind of redirected to guard, I think, more touristic sites and monuments and things. So there's a lot of kind of back and forth. The department of - the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage is not a very powerful one. And it gets kind of - it's a bit of a political football.

FLATOW: 1-800-989-8255 is our number. Talking with Elizabeth Stone, who is an archaeologist digging in Iraq for antiquities. Let's see if we have - oh, yes, we do have lots of folks. Carl(ph) in Columbus, Ohio. Hi, Carl.

CARL: Hi, Ira.

FLATOW: Hi, there. Go ahead.

CARL: Before I ask about the Baghdad Battery, I'd like to point out that it's nice to have a real scientist as opposed to a lightweight promulgator of fluff making up...

FLATOW: You have - do you have a question for this person here?

CARL: I do. Alan Alda was something of an offense to science. But my question in this context to a real scientist is the Baghdad Battery, apparently, a couple of - maybe one to 2,000 B.C., the Iraqis had electricity in the form of a wine, vinegar, iron, perhaps, copper solution. It was a primitive battery that might be use to electroplate. Was that found? Was that - is that in the possession of the authorities these days and when was it?

STONE: I'm trying to remember the Baghdad Battery. My recollection of it is that most people don't think it was a battery. I think it was found and it resembles other clay vessels that are probably used for rituals in terms of having kind of multiple mouths to it. And I'm truly trying to remember.

FLATOW: What would they have done with the battery like that?

STONE: I think it's not a battery. I mean, I don't think anybody who's, I mean, I think the people who argue it's a battery are not, you know, are not scientists basically. That it - there is some metal that is attached to it, but that happens when metal corrodes and is in contact with ceramics under those circumstances. So I don't know anybody who thinks it's a real battery in the field.

FLATOW: So it was just a piece of fluff comment there about it being a battery. OK. 1-800-989-8255 is our number. So what is - potentially, what would be the big find if you go back? What would you be looking for?

STONE: Well, we're in this actually - we're in this kind of nebulous position because the Iraqis actually were sorry for us, I think, because we weren't finding any architecture.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

STONE: So they encouraged us to apply for a permit to dig at Ur again, which hasn't been dug since Woolley in the 1930s. And that permit has been granted by the minister of culture. There are some other kind of institutional hoops to jump over that might be more complicated and we, of course, have to get funds. So our inclination is to work at Ur for a longer season than the four weeks we had right now for the next few years. And - but also go back and do more things, especially get some remote sensing so we understand what's going on beneath the ground at (unintelligible) and try to go a little deeper so we understand the connection between this kind of marsh settlement and then what must have been an important earlier settlement, but it's deeper down than we were able to get in the time we had.

FLATOW: Yeah. Let's go to Mark(ph) in Oaksville(ph), Idaho. Hi, Mark.

MARK: Hello. How are you doing today?

FLATOW: Hey. How are you?

MARK: Better than I deserve, so doing good.

FLATOW: I wish I could say the same thing.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

MARK: Hey, I got a quick question. I have recently been doing a lot of research and study on the - on spiritual religious concepts of that area, southern Iraq and that, particularly the pre-Christian timeframe. And I was just wondering if the archaeology over there had uncovered any new information, or with Iraq opening up archaeologist, can we look forward to some more information coming out from that area?

STONE: Well, yeah, sure. I mean, you know, if we can really figure out, for example, what this platform is - I mean, it probably was supporting a temple - and if we can get some more written information, we're going to get a better understanding of what is happening not just in the city. So the cities have these big major temples and then they have little temples and then they have shrines. And we have a pretty good understanding of how that worked and how people accessed them. But, again, one of the things I've been seeing on satellite imagery, which will record whether weather conditions are correct, architectural patterns beneath the ground, is a lot of the small fights and not scruffy little villages that you might expect. But they actually are kind of - just places that have temples, for example, or just places that have public buildings.

And so I think that there is a kind of a new direction of research where we really need to think about what's happening in the countryside as well as what's happening in the cities as well, which we already understand pretty well.

IRA FLATOW, HOST: Mm-hmm. Let's go to Nick(ph) to Ann Arbor. Hi, Nick.

NICK: Hey, how are you?

HOST: I'm good.

NICK: Yeah, I just got a quick question about how easy it is to bring artifacts back from the site there. I know there are a lot of countries that are very protective of their cultural heritage, and I'm wondering what our relationship with Iraq is and if the occupation has changed that relationship in any way.

STONE: Iraq has had - actually, since the 1930s, which is why Woolley stopped digging at Ur, Iraq generally has had a, you know, no export of artifacts. And, you know, we had no expectation of that. So we draw them. We record them. We photograph them. We get all of the information from them when we turn them over to the Iraqis. What we can bring back are samples. So, for example, we were able, even in a short season, to get permission to bring back all of the animal bones that we found. So the materials that really need more technical analysis, we can take back.

And if we wanted to do, which we didn't, more technical analysis, say, on ceramics or other kind of materials, you could take samples. And so we were able to bring back the plant remains and the animal remains, and those are being analyzed here. And that's really pretty standard and doesn't bother me at all because I don't know what I would with the objects anyway. I mean, once you've recorded them, you've recorded them.

HOST: Talking with Elizabeth Stone, archeologist and professor of anthropology at Stony Brook University on SCIENCE FRIDAY from NPR. But you don't know what you would do with them if you brought them back, is that what you said?

STONE: Well, I mean, I think, you know, museums might want them. Most of the things we found this season, I don't think they would want.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

STONE: There are a couple of things they might like, but most...

HOST: Well, they're just old hat to you. You're...

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

STONE: Well...

HOST: A bone here or this there, but other people, hey, you know, look, that came from Iraq. Let's go to the museum and see that.

STONE: Well, sure. But, I mean, there are - I mean, there's lots of stuff in lots of museums. You can go to the Metropolitan, the (unintelligible) Institute in Chicago. I mean, some of the best stuff is the University of Pennsylvania Museum. There are lots places in the United States where you can see it. You don't have to take it out of the country.

HOST: Right. And they want - a lot countries want this stuff back, don't they?

STONE: Well, that's more controversial. I mean, you know, I mean, I do believe in the statute of limitations. If you don't do that, you have real problems. So, for example, the Code of Hammurabi, which is in the Louvre, and every so often, Iraq kind of makes rumblings saying that they would like that back. That was stolen by the Elamites. It was found in Iran. I mean, it was stolen thousands of years ago from Iraq. So, you do have to have a statute of limitations. I mean, it was stolen long before there was an Iraq.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

STONE: So I think, you know, there is the - UNESCO had a conference and - in 1970, and that's generally the date that people try to say you really can't take things out without permission.

HOST: Right. Let me get a couple of more calls in here because a lot of interesting questions. Let's go to Rebecca(ph) in Berkley. Hi, Rebecca.

REBECCA: Hi. I was wondering if we were going to have the chance to see any reports of these excavations in print any time in the near future.

STONE: I hope so.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

STONE: I mean, we need to get the analysis - for what we found, the analysis of the plants and the animals are really important. The plants are now in Britain, and I think people are working on those, but I haven't had a report back. And the animal bones are being analyzed here and are - I'm not sure how far along we are, maybe a third of the way along through that. Once I've completed that, we'll put together an article and probably submit it to the Journal Iraq.

HOST: Let me go to Richard in Bayside, Queens, in New York. Hi. Richard, go ahead.

RICHARD: Hi there. Hi there. I wanted to know if your guest can distinguish between Sumerian and Akkadian and other Semitic languages. And...

HOST: OK. We got to go - get that question in quickly.

STONE: Sure. Yes. I mean, if you can - there are some situations where stuff that was written in Akkadian was written in Sumerian, but you can tell Sumerian from Akkadian pretty well. I'm not great at that. I can do a little bit, but the specialists can do it at a drop of a hat.

HOST: Well, you can. That's why you sit there and I sit here.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

HOST: Thank you, Elizabeth Stone, for taking time to be with us today and good luck. You don't know when you're going back to (unintelligible)?

STONE: Well, we hope to be going back next February.

HOST: Next February. All right. We'll wait for another report.

STONE: OK. Thanks so much.

HOST: You're welcome. Elizabeth Stone is an archeologist and professor of anthropology at Stony Brook University.

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. All rights reserved. No quotes from the materials contained herein may be used in any media without attribution to National Public Radio. This transcript is provided for personal, noncommercial use only, pursuant to our Terms of Use. Any other use requires NPR's prior permission. Visit our permissions page for further information.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/03/23/149231682/-archaeologists-revisit-iraq?ft=1&f=1007

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