2- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 19, 2000 NATION/WORLD COLLINS Continued from Page 1. He announced that he will begin a series of publications about the Human Genome Project to be released later this year. Collins also emphasized that this pro- Iect is a landmark in scientific history And will change the face of society. "We're going on a great adventure," he said. Collins said he aims to have the Project completed by April 25, 2003 --the 50th anniversary of the discov- ry and publication of DNA's double aelix. In a separate interview with The Michigan Daily, Collins said the next ;tep after the human genome is com- Iletely sequenced is to figure out what he sequence means. "We have a three billion letter text- book which we can't understand, writ- ten in a funny alphabet with only four letters, a lot of which seems to be filler, but we're not quite sure," Collins said. Although he was the final speaker of the morning, Collins was alluded to and referenced in the first presenta- tions at the symposium. The variety of speakers at the symposium emphasized the exten- sive laundry list of concerns about the function of genetics in the future. In addition to examining genetics in the future, the symposium honored University Medical Prof. Hunein Massab, who developed a nasal spray that provides an alternative to the flu shot. As the first speaker, Director of the Office of Genetics and Disease Prevention at the Centers for Dis- ease Control Muin Khoury addressed what is in store for public health in the 21st Century. Khoury said moving from genetic sequencing to applying the knowl- edge in public health will take a lot of work. "There's a lot to be done to achieve the benefits and promise of genetics," Khoury said. "But there's no going back. The future of genet- ics is now." Michelle Lloyd-Palmer from the Health Resources and Service Admin- istration spoke after Khoury and spec- ulated on the public's access of genetic resources in the future. She particularly emphasized equal access and regulation of possible ser- vices such as genetic therapy. "We need to remember to look at the individual, not the disease," Lloyd- Palmer said. Other speakers included Public Health Prof. Patricia Peyser, Univer- sity of Wisconsin at Madison law profs. Pilar Ossorio and Paul Miller, a commissioner from the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commis- sion. Collins' speech followed and then after a lunch break, symposium par- ticipants broke off into smaller focus session on the topics of their choice, such as "Genetics, Race and Ethnicity" and "Genetics and the Media." Yesterday's symposium was a pre- cursor to the third annual National Conference on Genetics and Disease Prevention to be held in Ann Arbor today and tomorrow. AcROSS THE NATION --_ N.H. Senate hears impeachment case CONCORD, NH -The New Hampshire Senate opened the state's first-ever impeachment trial yesterday, sitting as a jury to hear charges against State Supreme Court Chief Justice David Brock. The 22 senators - two others recused themselves for potential conflict of interest - started with a tour of the Supreme Court building, including the con- ference room where a Feb. 4 outburst by then-Justice Stephen Thayer touched off a chain of events that led to Brock's impeachment. After a few questions, the senators returned to the Legislative Office Building to hear motions. Brock got one prosecution witness excluded, on grounds that he lacked first- hand knowledge of the case, but lost a bid for a broader-than-usual ban on hearsay evidence. The trial is expected to last two to five weeks. The House voted in July to impeach the 64-year-old Brock, a high court jus- tice since 1981 and chiefjustice since 1986. The House accused Brock of lying to its investigators, making an improper call to a lower-court judge in 1987, soliciting comments from Thayer about Thayer's own divorce case in February, and routinely allow- ing judges to comment on cases from which they were disqualified for conflicts of interest. Ssnisrsl Your Mom Wants You to Get Your Senior Portrait Taken!, ENSI4N this wesid SepLl-SepL22 niN Monday, Tees, Friday:10am-6m Wednesday, Thursday:10am-O9m Gordon slows to tropical storm status CEDAR KEY, FL - Residents of this rustic fishing town cleaned up bro- ken tree limbs and surveyed roof dam- age yesterday after Gordon plowed ashore with wind just below hurricane strength and quickly weakened. The former hurricane was down- graded to a tropical depression yester- day as it spread locally heavy rain through Georgia and into the Caroli- nas, causing some street flooding. Rain had stopped falling at Cedar Key but the sky was still overcast yesterday. No deaths or injuries had been reported, but several tornadoes caused scattered damage in Florida and there was still a possibility of tornadoes yesterday along the Atlantic Coast from South Carolina into southern North Carolina. Gordon hit Cedar Key and the rest of Florida's upper central Gulf Coast about 8 p.m. Sunday with drenching rain and a 6-foot storm surge topped by waves. Most of Cedar Key's 800 residents ignored suggestions that they volun- tarily evacuate and stayed home to face the storm, which never grew much above minimum hurricane streng~th. "Everything worked out real good on the storm," Mayor Heath Davis said at daybreak. Astronauts prepare for journey home CAPE CANAVERAL, FL -- Space shuttle Atlantis' astronauts tidied up their ship yesterday for the ride home, leaving behind a fully stocked international space station. NASA expects the space station's first permanent cew to move in in six wveeks, after years of uncertainty and delay. "This crew certainly has laid out the red carpet." space station manag- er Robert Cabana said. "They accomplished everything that we asked them to do, everything we wished they could do and, I think, about everything we dreamed that they could do." Sophia B.,Jones Room ist ILMichigan Union) Schedule yours online at www.carlwolfstudia.com (user id : umich, password: 00491 ARouND THE WORLD ' Court sentences 6 to death in Jordan AMMAN, Jordan -- A military court yesterday sentenced six Muslimn militants to death by hanging for plan- ning terror attacks against U.S. and Israeli targets in Jordan. Four of the six remain at large and were tried in absentia. The three-man State Security Court acquitted six other men and handed down prison terms from 7 1/2 years to life on the remaining 16 defendants. The ruling absolved all 28 men, including 12 fugitives tried in absentia, of "affiliation, with an illegal organization" -- al-Qaeda allegedly led by Saudi militant Osama bin Laden. Bin Laden, who has taken refuge in Afghanistan, is wanted by the United States for the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people. The accused, who had pleaded innocent and denied links to bin Laden, claiming their confessions were obtained under duress, often interrupted the verdict with calls of "Allahu Akbar," or God is great. Cohen: Indonesia must disarm militia JAKARTA, Indonesia -- U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen urged Indonesia yesterday to take quick action to disarm and disband militia gangs in West Timor or face isolation by the international community. After meeting with President Abdurrahman Wahid and other top officials, Cohen said Indonesia must prove by its actions that it will combat the ruthless paramilitary gangs respon- sible for killing three U.N. Workers. - Comjniledfiom Daily iiire reports. 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