2A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 26, 2001 NATION/WORLD Scientists clone human BOSTON (AP) - A research com- patible cells pany reported yesterday it had cloned transplantat the first human embryo, a development Lanza an it said was aimed at producing geneti- tive Micha cally matched replacement cells for interest in patients with a wide range of diseases. embryos in But the news from Advanced Cell birth to a ci Technology of Worcester, Mass., drew it clear thatt swift protests from religious and politi- ble of that. cal leaders who saw it as a step toward But the cloning human beings. National Ri Several states, including California, ed little tir have banned human cloning, and Con- announcem gress is considering such a ban. But ating huma company officials insisted their work is pose of killi the first step in providing hope for peo- cells," saidt ple with spinal injuries, heart disease tor Douglas and other ailments. acts quickly "These are exciting preliminary will be open results," said Dr. Robert P. Lanza, one of And a c the researchers at Advanced Cell Tech- used to sit nology. "This work sets the stage for Advanced human therapeutic cloning as a poten- premature tially limitless source of immune-com- encourage Bln aden si MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan (AP) - Hun- dreds of Osama bin Laden's foreign legion were killed after staging an uprising with smuggled arms in a northern alliance prison yesterday, officials said. U.S. airstrikes helped quash the daylong insurrection A U.S. special forces soldier inside the fortress was taped by,a German television crew saying an Ameri- can may have been killed, but the Pentagon said later that all U.S. forces in Afghanistan had been accounted for and that none had died. The U.S. Central Command, which oversees the war in Afghanistan, declined to say whether U.S. forces were inside the Qalai Janghi fortress when the fighting began. The fighters, about 300 Chechens, Pakistanis and Arabs who surrendered Saturday from the besieged city of Kunduz, had smuggled weapons under their s for tissue engineering and ion medicine." .d the company's top execu- ael West said they had no transplanting such early to a woman's womb to give honed human being, nor was their embryo would be capa- Washington D.C.-based ght to Life Committee wast- me yesterday attacking the ent. "This corporation is cre- n embryos for the sole pur- ng them and harvesting their the group's legislative direc- Johnson. "Unless Congress y, this corporation and others ning human embryo farms." ritic of the company who on ACT's ethics board said Cell's announcement was and would serve only to such harsh reaction" against cloning. Glenn McGee, a University of Penn- sylvania bioethicist who resigned from Advanced Cell Technology's ethics advisory board, called the announce- ment "nothing but hype." He said the company's report lacks any significant details, including what cells company scientists actually grew from the cloned embryo. "They are doing science by press release," he said. A second company quickly claimed yesterday that it had also cloned human embryos, but in unpublished research. The company, Clonaid, said it hopes to eventually create fully-developed human clones. "I'm very pleased that I'm not alone," company Director Brigitte Boisselier said in a phone interview. "We're doing embryos every day." The company keeps its laboratory location secret, citing security concerns. Boisselier said that the embryos wvere embryo created by injecting eggs with a variety of other cells, but she refused to give details. In findings published Sunday by the online journal, e-biomed: The Journal of Regenerative Medicine, and also described online in Scientific American, the ACT scientists said they had grown a six-cell human embryo. They said they created the early embryo by injecting a very small cell with its genetic material into a woman's donated egg. In such cloning, the inject- ed DNA often comes from a skin cell, but the researchers this time used a cumulus cell, which nurtures a develop- ing egg. This technique could produce replacement cells only for a woman of childbearing age, since the injected DNA comes from a woman's reproduc- tive system. However, the scientists have been experimenting with injecting adult skin cells into the eggs as well. NEWS IN BRIEF >z ZURICH, Switzerland Black boxes found in Swissair crash Workers combing through a muddy wood found the flight recorders from a Swiss airliner that crashed near Zurich, killing 24 people, officials said yester- day. Nine people survived, two in critical condition. The four-engine Crossair Jumbolino Avro RJ-100 crashed a few miles short of the runway Saturday night after a flight from Berlin with 28 passengers - most of them foreigners - and five crew aboard. Authorities said the bodies of all 24 victims were recovered by yesterday evening. The survivors included two crew members, but the pilot and co-pilot were among the dead, they said. A Zurich police statement said the passengers and crew included 10 Swiss, 13 Germans - including one who also had U.S. citizenship - three Israelis, two people from the Netherlands and one each from Austria, Canada, Ghana, Spain and Sweden. They did not release the names. Before all 24 deaths were, confirmed, Israeli officials said three promi- nent Israelis were among those missing and feared dead. They were Yaakov Matzner, dean of the Hebrew University school of medicine; another leading doctor, Amiram Eldor, and Avishai Berkman, a Tel Aviv city official. WASHINGTON Leahy letter powerful enough to kill 100,000 Sen. Patrick Leahy says there was enough anthrax in the letter sent to his office to kill more than 100,000 people. The letter to the Vermont Democrat was dis- covered Nov. 16 in a batch of unopened mail sent to Capitol Hill and quarantined since the discovery of an anthrax-contaminated letter to Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D- S. D.) on Oct. 15. "We still haven't got the letter open," Leahy said yesterday on NBC's "Meet the Press." "It is so powerful that they're having difficulty figuring out how best to open it and preserve the evidence." An FBI microbiologist said last week that there were billions of spores inside the letter, which was taped around the edges. "You could feel the powder inside," the microbiologist told reporters. Daschle, speaking a day after a memorial service for a 94-year-old Connecticut woman who died from inhalation anthrax, said Americans should be careful open- ing the mail. "I would be very skeptical about opening envelopes that aren't recognizable, that look suspicious," Daschle said on "Fox News Sunday." 6 apporerskiled in prson tunics into the fortress and tried to fight their way out, identified himself only as David, can be heard saying Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Dan Stoneking said. The on Germany's ARD television network. alliance said most of the prisoners were killed. "I don't know how many Americans there were. I The uprising began about 11 a.m., witnesses said. think one was killed, but I'm not sure," the U.S. soldier Alliance spokesman Zaher Wahadat said the prisoners said in the footage. "There were two of us at least, me seized other weapons from their guards and captured and some other guy." an ammunition depot, using its contents to fight the The soldiers appeared to have planned the battle, troops sent in to put down the revolt. Central Command spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Dave Culler Yahsaw, a spokesman for northern alliance com- said, describing it as an apparent "suicide mission." mander Mohammed Mohaqik, said the prisoners broke For-several hours the firefight continued between the down the doors and tried to escape. hundreds of prisoners and what ARD said were only As outnumbered guards perched on the compound's 100 guards. walls fired wildly down at the prisoners, a U.S. special "There was general pandemonium," said Simon forces soldier could be seen in footage by a Germany Brooks, head of Red Cross operations for northern television crew using a telephone to call in airstrikes Afghanistan, who was at the prison to check on the and reinforcements. detainees' condition and escaped by climbing onto the "There's hundreds dead here at least," the man, who roof with northern alliance commanders. -a- ~ Ir mew trmmilor I ak 4S C $ s *r 'opict an Speakers Monday, November 26, 12-3:15 pm U-M School of Public Health If Auditorium, 1420 Washington Hts., Ann Arbor Information: 734.764.8093 introductory Remarks Noreen M. Clark, Dean, School of Public Health Sioben Harlow, Associate Director, International Institute Richard Lem pert, Director, Life Sciences, Values and Society Program The Threats. Suzanne White, Medical Director, Children's Hospital of Michigan Regional Poison Control Center The Public Health Toolbox Matthew Boulton, State Epidemiologist, Michigan Department of Community Health The Response Hank Baier, Associate Vice President, Facilities and Operations The Future Gilbert S. Omenn, Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs JERUSALEM Militant's death increases Violence A spike in Mideast violence yester- day dampened prospects for a new U.S. mediation effort, as a Palestinian teen- ager died in a clash with Israeli soldiers and Israeli helicopters blasted buildings in Gaza after a mortar shell killed an Israeli soldier. The violence came a day before Assistant Secretary of State William Burns and new envoy Anthony Zinni, a retired Marine Corps general, were to begin their peace mission here. The Americans hope to quash Israeli-Pales- tinian fighting before it undermines the U.S.-led coalition against international terrorism. The mediators arriving tomorrow were to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Foreign Minister Shi- mon Peres. Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat was on a trip to Arab countries and was-not, expected back until: Wednesday. NEW YORK Holida shop ping down fom last year Lured by big discounts and fears that must-have holiday items will be in short supply, consumers crowded malls and shopping centers over the Thanksgiving weekend, snapping up video games, DVDs and anything to do with Harry Potter. But the weekend's receipts won't be the bonanza some merchants hoped for. Early-bird specials and other bargains from big chains like Wal-Mart Stores Inc. attracted consumers who were already frugal before the Sept. 11 terror- ist attacks prompted them to further cur-. tail their spending. The come-ons worked, giving the value-priced retailers satisfactory sales. But other merchants, particularly department stores and specialty stores that have been languishing for months, barely met their modest expectations for the weekend, the start of the holiday buying rush. 0 WASHINGTON U.S to form anti-drug policy in Afghanistan 0 Lfori plniG ad " a n o ja n - g , aiim {x 4 Sassoiatd S0'f agspg i A U.S. officials are exploring ways to prevent a surge in opium cultivation in Afghanistan, once the world's leading producer, now that the Taliban's control is crumbling. The challenge is persuad- ing the factions likely to govern to fight opium production and trafficking, when these groups in the past.have shown lit- tle inclination to do that. U.S. counternarcotics officials want to make drug-fighting a condition for receiving international humanitarian aid. They expect some of the assistance will include programs to encourage Afghan farmers to give up opium, the raw material for heroin, in favor of wheat and other legal crops. Representatives of U.S. anti-drug agencies have met to begin developing a counterdrug plan. With efforts under way to form a new multiethnic govern- ment in Afghanistan, the opium issue is attracting the attention of leading Bush administration officials. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. Sponsored by the University of Michigan. School of Public Health; Life Sciences, Values and Society Program; and the International Institute. Univrsiy of Mihr International Institute UnweSiyb(Michigan School of Public Health University of Michigan Life Sciences, Values and Society Program presenti by S 9 9 . mmmmmmmmmmlw H _g I The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $105. Winter term (January through April) is $110, yearlong (September through April) is $190. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscrip- tions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and The Associated Colle- giate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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