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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper discussing the history of cloning and the untimely death of Millie, the first cow to be cloned in the US. Cloning has reached the point at which protocol is set and there is no anticipated reason that researchers could not produce a human clone. We have reached the brink of ethics, however, and it is yet unclear whether science should proceed. This debate forms the core of discussion surrounding cloning today. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KScloning.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
of all her associates. She ate with them and slept with them, and the group spent all their days together. The biggest difference from Millies point of view
was that there was always somebody sticking her with a needle or poking around for fecal samples causing her to fantasize about planting a hoof square in the face of
the one doing the poking. Millie lived on the farm of the University of Tennessee veterinary school in the foothills of the Smokies.
Sadly, she was found dead in the pasture one morning, leading the bovine caretaker to conclude, "Musta been hit by lightnin." The story circulated through the local news
for several days before the vet school announced that no, Millie the cloned cow of the University of Tennessee - and the first in the nation - had not been
struck by lightning on that day during which none had occurred. Rather, she had died suddenly from a bacterial infection no one at the vet school even knew that
she had. Whats in a Name "Millie" was a nickname for Millies full name, Millennium.
Scientists cloned another Jersey calf using the same "standard cell-culturing techniques as compared to the method most commonly used in cloning research and which was made famous by the
sheep clone Dolly" (UT Produces Another Jersey Clone, 2001). Millies successors name is an acronym for "experimental manipulation for mastitis abatement," or Emma
(UT Produces Another Jersey Clone, 2001). Emmas purpose in life is to assist researchers in discovering the basis for genetic resistance to mastitis, a common disease among dairy cattle.
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