News, 2 November 2000
A study carried out for a British magazine has suggested that one in
three women have been prescribed the [abortifacient] morning-after
pill after having unprotected sex while drunk. The survey of 1,000 18-
to 30-year-olds, which will be published in December's issue of
Company magazine, found that a third of women admitted to having had
unprotected sex when they were drunk and out of control, and that
nearly half blamed alcohol for one-night stands they would never have
countenanced otherwise. [
Metro, 2 November]
Scientists in the US who injected human stem cells into lamb foetuses
have announced that more than 20 sheep have been bred with partly
human body tissue. The stem cells became functional within the heart
muscle, skeletal muscle and bone cartilage of the sheep, yet remained
recognisably human as they developed. The experiments were carried out
at the Children's Institute for Surgical Science in Philadelphia.
[
Metro, 2 November] The source of the human stem cells used in this
experiment is not clear.
An expert in human genetics has told a conference on
in vitro
fertilisation (IVF) in Turin, Italy, that even the technique's "founding
fathers" are now coming round to oppose it. Fr Angelo Serra, one-time
assistant to the Nobel prize winner Renato Dulbecco and
professor-emeritus of human genetics at the Catholic University of
Rome, observed that, even after 20 years of experimentation, IVF still
failed in 87 percent of cases. He drew attention to comments recently
made by Anne McLaren, the English geneticist who established the
concept that a human embryo should not be accorded any recognition as
a person until 14 days after fertilisation. She has written an essay
in which she expressed regret at inventing such a distinction, which
bioethicists have said is arbitrary from both a biological and moral
point of view. [Zenit news agency, 31 October]
Pro-life campaigners in Canada have welcomed the possible
opportunity for anti-abortion legislation offered by a proposed
referendum law. Under the law, proposed by the Alliance party, issues
could be put to a referendum if three percent of registered voters
(about 300,000 people) signed a petition. Jim Hughes, national
president of the Campaign Life Coalition, said that, if the law were
passed, his movement would move "as fast as possible ... to find out
what kind of support we would have for the strongest possible question
and then go for it." If a complete abortion ban failed, more winnable
questions could be put to the people in subsequent referenda, such as
on funding for abortions. [
The Ottawa Citizen, 1 November; from
Pro-Life E-News]
Pro-life campaigners interrupted Hillary Clinton last Sunday as she
made an address from the pulpit of a Roman Catholic church in
Rochester, New York state. Mrs Clinton, who is the Democratic
candidate for New York's US Senate seat in next Tuesday's elections,
is well-known as a pro-abortionist. [Zenit news agency, 1 November]
An American university medical centre which has been criticised for
using brain cells from aborted unborn children in its research
programmes has appointed a 'rapid autopsy manager' in a bid to obtain
tissue from alternative sources. The University of Nebraska Medical
Center hopes to be able to extract tissue from people who have died
[adults] rather than from victims of elective abortions, but the need
for a family to grant consent within two hours of death could prove to
be a problem. [
Omaha World Herald, 1 November]
US Senator Jesse Helms has attacked the administration of President
Bill Clinton for opposing his attempts to ban federal funding for the
distribution of morning-after pills in American schools. The senator's
provision which would have blocked distribution of the pills in
schools was dropped from a federal funding bill by congressional
budget negotiators last weekend. Senator Helms claimed that at least
180 schools are providing morning-after pills to children as young as
12. [
The News and Observer, 1 November]
To subscribe to SPUC's email information services, please visit www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2012