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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">o he focused on were the use of
elephant eggs to grow an embryo -- similar to the process that
led to Dolly -- and the creation of embryonic mammoth stem cells.Stem
cells of this type can also be induced to form gametes. If
the cells were from a female, this might provide an alternative source
of eggs for use in research, and perhaps in breeding, including the
cloning of mammoths, Wilmut wrote.Wilmut, emeritus professor at the MRC
Center for Regenerative Medicine at University of Edinburgh, made headlines
in 1996 when he and his colleagues cloned Dolly the sheep. Their
technique involved injecting DNA into a special egg cell and transferring
the product into a third sheep, which carried the egg to term.
While Dolly lived a brief life, dying in 2003, her very existence
was hailed as a medical marvel.That such a noted scientist could even
discuss the process of bringing back the mammoth stems from an astonishing
find on a remote Russian island in the Arctic Ocean: blood so
well preserved that it flowed freely from a 10,000- to 15,000-year-old creature.PHOTOS:
"Extinct" Monkeys With Sideburns Found in BorneoThe fragments of muscle
tissues, which weve found out of the body, have a natural red
color of fresh meat. The reason for such preservation is that the
lower part of the body was underlying in pure ice, and the
upper part was found in the middle of tundra, said Semyon Grigoriev,
the head of the expedition and chairman of the Mammoth M
uno argues
its time the state get on board with a plan that he
claims can help up to 100 homeless Hawaiians a year.In 2010, Mizuno
along with state Rep. Rida Cabanilla failed to sway lawmakers. But what
they did next shocked many. Both Mizuno and Cabanilla started soliciting
funds to send the homeless away anyway on a case-by-case basis. Mizuno
chipped in $100 of his own money to buy a one-way plane
ticket to send homeless man Gregory Reese back to Seattle, Wash.That didnt
sit well with John Fox, director of the Seattle Displacement Coalition,
who told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, he had never heard of elected officials
using their own money to send a homeless person back to his
or her home state.But Hawaiis relocation plan isnt a new idea. It
is fashioned after a New York City program implemented six years ago.
The Mayor Michael Bloomberg-backed plan bought hundreds of homeless families
bus tickets, train rides and airfare so they could leave the city.According
to the latest figures available, New York City spent at least $500,000
annually on Project Reconnect. From 2007 to 2009, the Bloomberg administration,
which has struggled with homelessness, sent more than 550 families packing.
They argue that sending away families is a lot less expensive than
housing them in shelters which cost the city more than $36,000 a
year per family.In Baton Rouge, La., the citys Metro Council approved a
measure to send its 800 homeless residents out of
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