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Science News January 13, 2007 Christen Brownlee |
Cloned Meat and Milk Are Safe, But They Won't Hit Stores Soon A Food and Drug Administration analysis concludes that food from cloned animals is safe, but the effort and expense involved in creating these animals means that products from them won't be in markets anytime soon. |
Food Engineering February 1, 2007 |
Regulatory Watch FDA finds meat and milk from animal clones is as safe to eat as from conventionally bred animals. |
Scientific American March 2007 |
The Beef with Cloned Meat For Americans, the idea of cloned meat elicits distaste even in many confirmed carnivores. Is that gut reaction justified? From a food-safety standpoint, probably not. |
The Motley Fool January 4, 2005 Charly Travers |
Cloning Fluffy Pet cloners like Genetic Savings & Clone (GSC) are clearly part of a new market on the verge of breaking open, and the opportunity for the first movers in this field is quite large. While private now, biotech investors need to keep watch. |
Wired October 16, 2007 Ben Paynter |
Cloned Beef (and Pork and Milk): It's What's for Dinner With cloned meat already at market, can -- and should -- the FDA keep farmers from using cloning technology in the dairy, beef, and pork industries? |
BusinessWeek March 26, 2007 Pallavi Gogoi |
Little Dogies, Big Controversy Beef from Scott Simplot's cloned cattle could soon be on the menu if the FDA say O.K. |
Salon.com January 9, 2003 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Fun with pig clones Every porker is different, even if it shares the same genes with a litter of siblings. So forget about ordering a copy of your favorite faithful companion. |
Wired October 2009 Gregg Easterbrook |
Gregg Easterbrook: Embrace Human Cloning Human clones, it is widely assumed, would be monstrous perversions of nature. Yet chances are, you already know one. They walk among us in the form of identical twins. |
Wired January 2001 Brian Alexander |
(You)2 Human cloning has always been frightening, seductive - and completely out of reach. Not anymore... |
Salon.com January 3, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
A mammoth undertaking Can genetic science bring extinct species back to life? And if it can, should we let it? |
Food Processing February 2008 David Feder |
Send in the Clones The FDA approves cloned food for human consumption. What kind of Frankenfood do we have in our future? |
Bio-IT World June 2005 Johan Bostrom |
Give a Dog a Clone The lack of products on the market is a common complaint about pioneering biotech companies, but Genetic Savings & Clone has sold five carbon-based products that purr when you stroke them. And the next offering will bark. |
Salon.com January 31, 2001 Theresa Pinto Sherer |
Can two men make a baby? Researchers say it's possible, but lawmakers must pave the way... |
Wired January 2004 Wendy Goldman Rohm |
Seven Days of Creation The inside story of a human cloning experiment |
Food Processing February 2008 |
Just Say No to Clones Should the food industry should fund a forum to assess the advisability of clones in the food supply? The evidence presented here says "yes." |
Salon.com May 3, 1999 Dawn MacKeen |
The Clone Age Adventures in the new world of reproductive technology... |
Popular Mechanics April 15, 2009 Erin McCarthy |
Is Fringe's Genetic Monster Possible? Unlike the monster on Fringe, altered animals typically have only a single gene difference from non-altered animals -- but they can look different. |
Salon.com June 18, 2002 Scott Anderson |
Playing God Bush's bioethics czar Leon Kass wants to criminalize lifesaving medical research as violating the natural order of things. Would he have opposed wiping out smallpox? |
Salon.com August 8, 2001 |
To clone or not to clone? As two scientists threaten to begin human cloning "within weeks," scientists and ethicists say the two are acting irresponsibly... |
Salon.com May 21, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Clone free Francis Fukuyama warns that the combination of runaway biotechnology and individual freedom could lead to a social nightmare... |
Reason April 2001 Cathy Young |
Monkeying Around with the Self Why support for biotech shouldn't foreclose the debate over its moral issues... |
Wired March 2000 Charles Graeber |
How Much Is That Doggy In The Vitro? Move over, Dolly. Here comes Fido forever - dog cloning, and the business potential due to pet owners outliving their pets. |
Science News August 14, 2004 Janet Raloff |
What's the Beef? A study finds that at least half of the genetic inheritance of many of the animals identified at the slaughterhouse as Angus actually traces to some other breed. A new test will reveal what share of an animal's DNA traces to a particular breed. |
Food Engineering September 29, 2008 |
Tech Flash Vol. 4 No. 13 Tyson Foods enters Brazilian poultry industry... DuPont opens India corn research center... E. coli flashes a red light... Firewalls and plant floor security... etc. |
Salon.com January 4, 2001 Michael Scott Moore |
"Cloning: Responsible Science or Technomadness?" A new book shows that ethical questions about replicating humans are less consequential than the procedure's threat to our biological diversity... |
Food Engineering January 6, 2008 |
Regulatory Watch Push for larger FDA food safety budget... Study urged on food from cloned animal... |
Reason October 2008 Greg Beato |
Man's Best Friend Forever Cloning dogs for love and profit |
Scientific American July 2008 Sally Lehrman |
Dolly's Creator Moves Away from Cloning and Embryonic Stem Cells Like many stem cell pioneers, Ian Wilmut, the creator of Dolly the sheep, has jumped to an alternative approach. Is this the beginning of the end for embryonic cloning? |
Wired May 2001 |
Rants & Raves The ethical and commercial issues in human cloning depend in part on resolving its biggest biological problem - namely, safety... America's ideologically driven fear of "state interference" has allowed its corporations to be far more intrusive and abusive than any European government... |
Science News September 18, 2004 |
Click and Clone The Genetic Science Learning Center at the University of Utah has an interactive Web site for middle or high school students that teaches the basics of somatic cell cloning, the type of cloning used to create Dolly the sheep. |
Chemistry World April 2010 |
Column: The crucible We are getting better at manipulating cells to grow into the tissues we need. Chemical factors are key, says Philip Ball |
Reason February 2005 Ronald Bailey |
The U.N. vs. Cloning In September 2004 President Bush strongly endorsed a United Nations resolution, proposed by Costa Rica, for a global treaty that would completely ban both reproductive cloning (that is, cloning to produce a baby) and therapeutic cloning. |
IndustryWeek May 1, 2002 Doug Bartholomew |
Man In The Mirror Cloning could tell us something about ourselves, our business ethics... |
Smithsonian June 2006 Amy Crawford |
Interview: Christiane Nusslein-Volhard A Nobel laureate holds forth on flies, genes and women in science. Her first book, Coming to Life, explains the genetic and cellular basis of animal development and explores the ethical implications of recent progress in genomics and biotechnology. |
Food Engineering September 16, 2008 |
Tech Flash Vol. 4 No. 12 Canada plagued by foodborne illness outbreaks... Cloning still banned in US, and now EU... Tyson expands operations in China... Does Stevia need more research?... US Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency steps up worksite enforcement... etc. |
Chemistry World July 30, 2013 |
Animal pharm Making drugs to treat animals is a potentially lucrative market -- but the path to success is a difficult one, as Clare Sansom discovers |
Salon.com May 25, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Our shiny happy clone future Procreation without sex, smarter babies and the right to choose the sexual orientation of your kids -- it's all good, says scientist Gregory Stock... |
Prepared Foods October 2007 Mark Hostetler |
Article: Regulations: Scientific Health Claims Review FDA's draft guidance on evidence-based health claims is aimed to help producers evaluate and understand the strength of evidence in supporting health claims. |
Salon.com March 12, 2001 Peter Brandt |
Dr. Neal Barnard His ideas on diet and ethical medicine could prolong Dick Cheney's life (and yours), stop animal torture and improve Ted Nugent's attitude. Why isn't this man surgeon general? |
Salon.com March 3, 2001 Dawn MacKeen |
Europe's livestock plague As the British meat market faces yet another crisis, experts at home assess the risk of foot-and-mouth disease in the U.S.... |
Food Engineering April 30, 2009 |
FDA strengthens safeguards against "mad cow disease" FDA issues final ruling barring specific cattle materials from all animal and pet feed |
Chemistry World July 24, 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
A Viable Alternative Tests on mice, rats, rabbits and guinea pigs to stop harmful chemicals reaching humans were once a necessary evil. But such checks now seem embarrassingly old-fashioned, according to a report on toxicity testing. |
Salon.com December 19, 2000 Carolyn McConnell |
"The Century of the Gene" by Evelyn Fox Keller A new book argues that there may be no such thing as a gene. At least, it has proved very difficult to isolate a discrete physical item that can do the work our notion of the gene does... |
CIO March 1, 2004 Stacy Cowley |
Tracking Mad Cows with IT The mad cow incident has made developing the underlying technology for the US Animal Identification Plan (USAIP)--in development since October 2002--an urgent priority for the USDA. |
Science News August 6, 2005 |
What's the Buzz? An interesting website that will let you compare how people in different countries imitate animal and vehicle sounds. |
Food Engineering June 4, 2007 |
Regulatory Watch Milk from cloned cows... What's up with biofuels?... |
Salon.com September 3, 2002 Kurt Kleiner |
"Drawing the Line" by Steven M. Wise A Harvard professor says science itself proves that such animals as parrots, apes and elephants should be considered persons with legal rights. |
Pharmaceutical Executive December 1, 2008 Sarah Houlton |
Animal Humanity The new EU directive looks to reduce, refine, and eventually replace animal testing. |
Reason October 2000 Frederick K. Goodwin & Adrian R. Morrison |
Science and Self-Doubt Why animal researchers must remember that human beings are special... |
Wired January 2003 Charles C. Mann |
The First Cloning Superpower Inside China's race to become the clone capital of the world. |