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   KEYWORDS : HUMAN CLONING
News Resources Bibliography
There's No Monkeying Around With Cloning -- Malcolm Ritter  -- Los Angeles Times  -- December 07, 2003

Almost seven years after the birth of Dolly the sheep shocked scientists and the public, cloning has shown mixed progress. Scientists have achieved it in more than a dozen mammal species but an efficient cloning process still eludes them. Clones are more prone to physical defects than regular animals are. And researchers haven't been able to duplicate monkeys from adult or fetal tissue, a goal that could help medical research.

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The Cloning Clash -- Gregory M. Lamb  -- Christian Science Monitor  -- November 06, 2003

Does the world need therapeutic cloning research? UN members are preparing to vote on a resolution to ban human cloning.

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DNA re-write could allay cloning fears -- Helen Pearson  -- Nature Science Update  -- April 29, 2003

Researchers have unveiled a new technique that could transform reproductive cloning into a safe, standardized technique for assisted reproduction. They discussed an extra step that could eliminate many objections to the controversial technique.

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Paper casts doubt on human cloning -- Raja Mishra  -- Boston Globe  -- April 11, 2003

Human cloning is nearly impossible using current techniques, according to new research that casts further doubt on rogue human cloning efforts.

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Human reproductive cloning 'currently impossible' -- Philip Cohen  -- New Scientist  -- April 10, 2003

A newly discovered quirk of primate cell biology suggests that monkeys - and humans - are impossible to clone from adult cells using current techniques.

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Molecular Block to Viable Clones -- Staff  -- Wired News  -- April 10, 2003

Cloning humans, or any other primates, may be impossible with today's techniques because of a fundamental molecular obstacle, say scientists trying to understand why attempts to clone monkeys have failed.

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I, Clone -- Michael Shermer  -- Scientific American  -- April 01, 2003

Michael Shermer proposes using a variant of Asimov's famous Three Laws of Robotics to resolve the current debate over human cloning.

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Cloning advances faster than regulation -- Peter N. Spotts  -- Christian Science Monitor  -- February 13, 2003

A smoldering global debate over human cloning is likely to flare following a report this week that researchers in South Korea have for the first time cloned human embryos and used them to produce a type of cell widely regraded as a potential key to treating a range of diseases.

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The Promise of Therapeutic Cloning -- Gina Kolata  -- New York Times  -- January 05, 2003

Theraputic cloning, the use of cloning technology for curing disease, is often raised in cloning debates as a positive benefit of human cloning. However, scientists admit the technology is "literally in an embryonic stage."

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Human Cloning is the Least Interesting Application of Cloning Technology -- Ray Kurzweil  -- KurzweilAI.net  -- January 04, 2003

Kurzweil argues that of all the applications of theraputic cloning, human cloning is the least interesting and least worrisome.

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