'""■‘mlESDAYMARCH 5, 2002 the bath 1 fP THE VOLUME 108 • ISSUE 107 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY .r\8cM domestic pet cloning sparks debate rnnorlAH r ^ By Emily Peters THE BATTALION ist reported jc Mensive begi’ against Talik strongholds • Ighan provncs- \qL\\ researchers have stirred up ghaniSTW whirlwind surrounding their ToraBen st | eat; doning a cat in conjunction ® Gardez^_ h a private company that plans to y—r*—^inircialize pet cloning. ' • '^“Controversy about the effects of T^*/ “nitlv. has been aroused by recent jfslhat fonnerly cloned mice and /Khost e p have developed obesity, and , .lly, the first cloned sheep, has e l||P e d arthritis. Psychologists and the Humane Society denounced the project. Three years ago a private million aire offered $3.7 million to a universi ty that would clone his beloved pet dog. Missy. A&M realized the scien tific breakthroughs the money could produce, bid for the grants and won partly for its prestige as the first uni versity to clone numerous species, including pigs, goats and cattle. A&M researchers created Cc , short for “carbon copy”, as a step in the “Missyplicity” project. People already have paid the private company working with A&M, Genetic Some owners try to get another pet that is as simi lar as possible with the same breed, same color, but that typically doesn’t work — Dr. Sandra Barker professor of psychiatry Savings and Clone, $900 to have their pet’s cells stored until research allows for commercial pet cloning. Gift certifi cates are offered online for cell storage. The company hopes to commercial ly clone a dog in the next few years and offer limited experimental cloning of customers’ cats within the next year. Dr. Sandra Barker, professor of psychiatry at the School of Medicine at Virginia Commonwealth University, said that in her experience counseling people who have lost a pet, the grieving period can be com parable to losing a family member. Replacing a pet is not the answer. “Some owners try to get another pet that is as similar as possible with the same breed, same color, but that typically doesn’t work,” Barker said. “Those are the people trying to avoid the grief process, and they often have had to return the pet.” Barker said pet owners looking to replace their old pet will be disappointed with current cloning technology, where color is unpredictable and personality may not compare to that of the lost pet. Genetic Savings and Clone addresses this issue through a state ment that pets will only have some of See Cloning on page 7 A 9 U.S. soldiers killed in raid Americans lead Operation Anaconda in Afghanistan ■/ headquaitt he Israeli mil ie Jerusalemlni i the suicided and sent flatwif lat cauehlfirr’ RANDAL FORD • fHE BATTALION in many tronioltk 1 Sophomore biomedical science major Heather Macphail words and do tricks. The macaw parrot is found to 1.000 b t ra j ns Oliver, a blue and gold Macaw parrot, to pronounce parts of the tropical regions in of South America. ay evening her entered . _— —————— ighborhood r approached < id detonated! hi !us body ml ice chief' WASHINGTON (AP) — As many as nine American soldiers were killed and 40 more were wounded Monday when two U.S. helicopters took enemy fire during the most deadly allied air and ground offensive of the war in Afghanistan. The U.S. assault, code-named Operation Anaconda, marked a new approach. Instead of relying on Afghan forces to take the fight to the al-Qaida, with U.S. troops in support, the Americans took the lead. Afghan, Canadian, Australian, German, Danish, Norwegian and French forces were supporting. U.S. ground troops and pilots were operating at eleva tions between 8,000 and 11,000 feet, said Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, cold, icy and snowy “like the Rocky Mountains in the mid dle of the winter.” Army officials said Apache attack helicopters had been hit with extraordinary amounts of small arms fire but were able to continue their assaults. Air Force AC-130 gunships, armed with howitzers and 40mm can non, were serving as the ground troops’ airborne artillery. Air Force bombers and Navy and Air Force strike aircraft had dropped more than 350 bombs by Monday. The men killed Monday were not the first U.S. casualties in the new offensive, which appeared far from finished. Army Chief Warrant Officer Stanley Harriman, 34, of Wade, N.C., was killed in a ground attack Saturday shortly after American forces, joined by Afghan and other allied troops, began the offensive against hundreds of fighters of the al-Qaida terror network and the fonner ruling See Soldiers on page 7A ensen criticizes middle class By Jessica Watkins THE BATTALION ie bomber, nr: r lied, includir; ■ Id and sever.. ice said. Americans need to stop the systemized brutality the nothing tod. government inflicts on other countries in its war on ms nothingtc orism, said Dr. Robert Jensen, professor of journal- ration. this hii. at the University of Texas. Jensen spoke to A&M jer ofinnocer dents Monday at a program on “Radical Citizenship >n Dore GolReactionary Times,” hosted by the Campus Greens, defend the pdnladdition to being a professor, Jensen is a free- cer for several progressive journals. He is known for /owed toatti itroversial comments he made after the Sept. 11 ito two Wesitcks, writing that the World Trade Center bombing three days. 1 ? “no more despicable than the massive acts of ter- gunmen, pollsm — the deliberate killing of civilians for political killed in thf poses — that the U.S. government has committed...” Americans must make the decision to know what days searctj government is doing in other parts of the world, the Balata ((sen said. , in the Wes>‘‘Without empathy, there is not much hope of chang- ybreak Sirf the world,”Jensen said. “We have the choice to )w or not to know. We have the choice to be willful- ,ources sai gnorant. We have the choice to act.” lammed Dar Jensen said survival of the United States is depend- a Martyrs Bl on Americans becoming pain-seeking individuals, e Dheisheh M “If we want to be more than just Americans we should seek pain and reduce pleasure,” he said. Jensen condemned the United States' use of cluster bombs in the Vietnam and Gulf wars. He said 5 to 20 percent of cluster bombs do not detonate and then become land mines. “If we do not act, we are not simply turning our backs on the children who might bend down to pick up a cluster bomb, but we are in fact turning our backs on our humanity,” he said. “Pain is inherently part of the human condition. Cluster bombs are not.” Jensen said Americans need to dismiss their middle- class lifestyles. “People in middle-class America are willing to sup port policies of dominance because they believe their comfort is based on these policies,” Jensen said. “Standard, middle-class lifestyle in the United States is unsustainable in the long term. If this way of living was extended to the whole world, the planet could not sus tain us.” Jensen said U.S. citizens should reevaluate what the war on terrorism is trying to accomplish. “Next time you are told we are fighting for freedom, ask whose freedom we are fighting for,” he said. Travel safety tips for spring break h camp. romptu celO . ” and fW hina updates property laws B By Araceli Garcia THE BATTALION Since joining the World Trade ganization last year, China has de many amendments to its intel- tual property laws to comply with fO’s regulations, said Chinese del- ites. visiting Texas A&M Monday discuss China’s role in the WTO. The quantity of inventions is ;her for foreign inventions than nestic inventions in China. The :rage growth rate of these inven- ns is 14.7 percent. Fifty percent of se inventions come from nonser- e, 10 percent from universities and aird from enterprises,” said Zheng, rofessor from a Chinese university 1 an expert in technology transfer. Currently, China has 1,000 univer sities and 8 million enterprises. Six different methods of technolo gy transfer have been developed for within Chinese universities. Sixty to 70 percent of the research for new inventions in China is funded by the government, and 30 to 40 percent is funded by enterprises. The transfer of technology within universities is about 5 to 10 percent and the transfer out of universities constitutes 90 to 95 percent. Advantages of the transfer of technology include “different disci plines, fresh people, (and) new ideas,” Zheng said. See China on page 2A By Anna Chaloupka THE BATTALION Spring break is less than a week away, and while many students are making plans for the ultimate party experience, the U.S. State Department is warning stu dents about conditions that may affect their safety and welfare during vacation. Each February, the department distrib utes information to more than 1,500 college campuses to alert American students of hazards they may encounter while on spring or summer breaks. Drugs, alcohol and disorderly conduct top the list of what students should avoid for safe travel experi ence, whether in the United States or abroad. More than 1,200 American citizens are arrested abroad each year on charges of possession of an illegal substance. The department said many drugs that are legal in one country may not be legal in another, and students should be aware of the laws, customs and standards of the country they are visiting to avoid confrontation with local authorities. Alcohol is another substance that gets many students in trouble when on vacation. The department said students have the mis conception that local authorities will over- TIPS FOR FOREIGN TRAVEL • Be aware of what medications are legal to carry • Learn the legal drinking age • Avoid advertising you are a foreigner — don’t flash travelers cheques, passports or rental car keys unless necessary Source: US Department of State CHAD MALL AM • THE BATTALION look drunken behavior because they are visitors, but this is not the case. Students should refrain from public intoxication, underage drinking and drunk driving. Dr. Susan Dennis, a Texas A&M pro fessor and faculty coordinator of a Spanish immersion program in Mexico, said alco hol can be the downfall of a student’s semester break. “People just go overboard on spring break,” Dennis said. “When people get drunk, they really put themselves in a posi tion for someone else to do harm to them.” Dennis said if students are going to See Travel on page 7A RANDAL FORD • THE BATTALION Zheng Yongping gives a presenta tion concerning the implications of China joining the WTO. IKStDt Sports Pg. 1B Ags face OSU in tourney Teams to duel for third time AggieLife Pg. 3A High & low Students search for their study niche WEAIHUK HIGH A 650 F A low 25° F WEDNESDAY HIGH 70° F LOW 45° F