Page • Friday, October 22, 1999 World Team unravels genetic coil : Batta John D. Huntley Class of '79 31 3B South College Ave., College Station, TX 77840 (409) 846-8916 An authorized TAG Heuer dealer. LONDON (AP) — An international team of researchers said it is on the verge of unraveling for the first time the genetic pattern of a human chromosome — a milestone toward what ex perts call one of the most important scientific accomplishments ever. The team, involving British, U.S. and Japan ese scientists, is part of a worldwide collaboration known as the Human Genome Project, which aims to reveal the structure of the estimated 100,000 genes in human DNA. That will help scientists better understand what can go wrong in the body and how to fix it. The group investigating chromosome 22 — the second smallest of the 24 kinds of chromosomes that carry human DNA — is putting the finishing touches on its work and plans to submit it for pub lication in the journal Nature later this year, team leader Ian Dunham said yesterday. “We have it completed now to the point where there isn’t anything else we can do. We are now working on the analysis,” Dunham, senior re search fellow of the Sanger Center in Cambridge, England, which is handling about a third of the entire genome project, said. Genes are arranged in tightly coiled threads of DNA organized into pairs of chromosomes in every cell of the body. Genes can promote or cause disease when they do not work properly. Some of the illnesses linked to genes gone bad in clude cancer, arthritis, diabetes, high blood pressure, Alzheimer’s and multiple sclerosis. Chromosome 22 contains genes in volved in the immune response, schizo phrenia, heart defects, mental retardation, leukemia and several other cancers, Bruce Roe of the University of Oklahoma, part of the team examining it, said. The team, which also involves Keio University in Japan, Washington Univer sity in St. Louis and scores of labs across the world, is revealing the sequence of the building blocks of DNA along the length of the chromosome. ) Decoding a human chromoso^ lo< Researchers are poised to decipher the geneticpa'in first human chromosome Here is a look at sontea that map to regions on chromosome 22 GENE IN THE REGION WHICH IS LINKED TO Cat-Eye ayndrome DiGeorgo syndrome Mental retardation Heart delects and merUT Immunoglobulin light chain Breakpoint cluster Immune responsesysir. Leukemia S nngioma deletion Ewing't Mentng Bone cancer Brain tumors Neu rofibroblastoma Cancer ot the nerves ima deletion Source UmversAy ot Oklahoma Concert: October 23rd 8:00 pm at the Rudder Auditorium •.iL y : « •• will Hastings will be offering a free Essential Energy 6 Song CD Sampler with the purrhase of either of these titles. mmi ' I ill All the releases are available at Hastings in College Station: 2004 Texas Ave. S. Rockets hammei maternity hospit ljunic Bay at 1 Russian airstrike or artillery shelling mm+ Movement of Russian forces Population center ® RUSSIA Approximate front line Terek River Russian-occupied Chechnya INGUSHETIA GEORGIA 'belt a nev \m t ;ies ap aes ea DAGESII |jf they ■“It ha; j|ow if I net hi i Ines," ptictice caise if; if< 70 [i 15 mites The / sot” Sat versity o la., tf teUn brask |d host e tear AP/wm.j.( GROZNY, Russia (AP) — Salvos of rockets slammed into a crowded open air market and other parts of Grozny, including a maternity hos pital, yesterday, killing at least 118 people and injuring up to 400, a Chechen official said. Chechen officials said the rock ets were fired by Russian forces moving in on the capital. The Russ ian Defense Ministry in Moscow denied responsibility. Bodies, severed body parts and pools of blood were scattered throughout the market after six rock ets exploded in the stalls, which were crowded with shoppers during the early evening attack. At least four other rockets slammed into other parts of the city, including one that hit a maternity hospital, Magomed Magomadov, a senior government official, said. He said 118 people were killed and between 300 people and 400 people were injured. Many of the injured were in critical condition, he said. Russian forces moved in to Chechnya in late September to im pose a security zone around the breakaway republic and to wipe out Islamic militazits. Russian forces were devastated by street fighting Slocu ms li [ding i mati iem ei id. 7 nvinc “But d we ming dma thf with guerrillas in the capitaldmlmes ii the 1994-96 war, which left Ci* to be nya with de facto independenel is difl At the market yesterday, -lese g, dreds of terrified people, mi “The screaming and crying, ranforct as the rockets exploded. Surroi ing streets were jammed pie trying to escape. Someonlool tried to help the wounded. “It was dark and then allofas den, the place was illuminated something was sparkling in the Then we heard the explosion] Umar Madayev said. Grozny’s already overcroKfirougl and poorly equipped hospitalsffilecoa packed with the injured. A fewdKhts tors, working with almost no inf ange ications, operated on someofi wounded under the glare kerosene lamps because the el tricity was out. Badly wounded people lay pools of blood in the dirty, darkci ridors of the central hospital, will there were no beds for them. [ Russian troops, meanwhile, dos in on the Chechen capital, withal vance tanks and armored pets® carriers reportedly less than ei| miles outside Grozny. Chechen ei pool. Ifth 16 cials said some Russian soldiers la- 0t lP es been spotted even closer. VICTOR’S Quality Mens & Ladies Boot & Shoe Repair Custom Hand Made Aggie Senior Boots /Vo Waiting List Necessary - Order at your convenience Class of 2001 is not too late to order now! 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