Word: scotlanders
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...afraid of cloning? Why did President Clinton, after forming a commission to study the matter, unilaterally ban research funding for human cloning this week? And why are European leaders moving to take similar steps? Surely, we are not afraid of Wilmut, a humble scientist in Scotland who just wants to turn animals into milk and drug factories...
...announcement which has left both the scientific and ethical communities aghast, a researcher working for a private company in Edinburgh, Scotland, has apparently created the first successful clone of an adult mammal--a ewe, genetically identical to a six-year-old adult sheep...
...make another human being? We think it would be ethically unacceptable, and certainly would not want to be involved in the project." Meanwhile, President Clinton provided a typically Beltway response: He asked for a commission to review the implications. Wilmut and his colleagues at the Roslyn Institute in Edinburgh, Scotland, will publish a report on the sheep cloning Thursday in the journal Nature. Previously, scientists had cloned less complex life forms, like tadpoles, but the tadpoles had never developed into frogs. In the sheep experiment, tissue was taken from the ewe's udder and cultivated in a lab, using...
...ceaseless wonder to me, especially after having spent my junior year abroad in Scotland, that a game can power a culture the way soccer--"football" to the rest of the United Nations--can, and does...
...Football Against the Enemy, by Simon Kuper. From Scotland to Soweto, Kuper analyzes the socio-political ramifications of soccer in nations throughout the world. How did Person try to use soccer to his advantage in Argentinian politics? How are Eastern European clubs linked with organized crime? Fascinating questions like these are revealed, and then answered, in very readable style...