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         Cloning:     more books (100)
  1. Human Cloning (Biomedical Ethics Reviews)
  2. Human Cloning: Playing God or Scientific Progress? by Lane P. Lester, James C. Hefley, 1998-07
  3. Rapture: A Raucous Tour Of Cloning, Transhumanism, And And The New Era Of Immortality by Brian Alexander, 2004-10-06
  4. Cloning: For and Against
  5. Animal Cloning: The Science of Nuclear Transfer (New Biology) by Joseph, Ph.D. Panno, 2004-10
  6. Human Dignity And Human Cloning
  7. Cloning The Messenger by Billie Borchardt, 2000-10-12
  8. The ABCs of Gene Cloning by Dominic Wong, 2005-12-09
  9. Cloning (Genetics: the Science of Life) by Susan Schafer, 2009-03
  10. Body Doubles: Cloning Plants and Animals (Science at the Edge) by Sally Morgan, 2003-04
  11. Cloning and Genetic Engineering (Life in the Future) by Holly Cefrey, 2002-09
  12. Clone Medusa by R. C. Lulay, 2007-08-22
  13. Gone: A Sci Fi about cloning by Virginia Salazar, 2003-02-28
  14. Cloning Tomato Plants for Fun and Massive Profits

61. Human Cloning - Supermodels Could One Day Have A Whole New Human Cloning Career,
Commentary by Dr. Patrick Dixon, Director of Global Change Ltd. and author of the Genetic Revolution.Category Society Philosophy Applied Bioethics cloning Human......Human cloning, cloning ethics clones - cloning - cloning animals - human cloninginformation - dolly - human cloning news - research on human cloning - human
http://www.globalchange.com/clonech.htm
Search our 18,500 pages for human cloning
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Cloning Video
Cloning Mailing List
Human Cloning
...
Trends Analysis
by Dr Patrick Dixon Futurist Recent Human Cloning Video / Articles by Dr Patrick Dixon - 3 million visitors - many on cloning Supermodels could one day have a whole new human cloning career Demand for human cloning - claims by Clonaid of world's first cloned baby "Eve" - 26/12/02 Dolly the clone is dead - did cloning cause illness?
Supermodels
could one day have a whole new human cloning career, selling cells from their bodies to make hundreds of "perfect" human clones for tomorrow's parents. Indeed we could soon clone a supermodel without her knowledge or consent - from a drop of saliva or blood... Indeed a former Playboy model wrote to me on this website the other day offering to sell her own DNA - maybe someone will clone her one day. I hope not. Over 3 million visitors to these regularly updated pages - created by Dr Patrick Dixon , physician, futurist and a leading authority on the ethics of human cloning - life after the cloning of Dolly the Sheep.

62. Cloning And Stem Cells
Articles on stem cells, germ line genetic engineering, tissue regeneration, transgenics, nuclear transfer. Published quarterly.
http://www.liebertpub.com/clo
Over 20 Years as the Leading Publishers in the Field of Biotechnology Editorial Board Manuscript Submissions Tables of Contents Full-Text Search ... Advertising Info
ISSN: 1536-2302
Published Quarterly
Cloning and Stem Cells
You may subscribe below:
Select Subscription Rate: -Personal Rates- 2003 Online Only Personal $229.00 2003 Outside USA Print Personal $299.00 2003 USA Print Personal $249.00 -Institutional Rates- 2003 Online Only Institutional $395.00 2003 Outside USA Print Institutional $489.00 2003 USA Print and Online Institutional $499.00 2003 USA Print Institutional $419.00 Please note subscription orders are entered for the complete volume year. For example, if you are ordering the 2003 volume, you will receive any and all issues published to date for that volume. Click here to read two papers on a simpler method of animal cloning using nuclear transfer
The Journal publishes peer-reviewed research papers on the remarkable new opportunities in medicine, biology, and agriculture that arise from the demonstration of far greater than expected developmental plasticity in mammalian cells. Papers cover all aspects of cloning along with the culture and differentiation of stem cells from all stages of development from embryo to adult.
Indexed in MEDLINE/Index Medicus and EMBASE.

63. Human Cloning
human cloning how to do human cloning - human cloning videos - argumentsfor and against cloning. Making clones and cloning animals.
http://www.globalchange.com/clonlink.htm
Search our 18,500 pages for human cloning
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Cloning Video
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Human Cloning
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Trends Analysis
by Dr Patrick Dixon Futurist Recent Human Cloning Video / Articles by Dr Patrick Dixon - 3 million visitors - many on cloning
Human Cloning - Latest Human Cloning News Many useful cloning links / pictures/ videos
Dolly the clone sheep is dead - did cloning cause her illness?
CLONAID "world's first cloning of babies - Eve" - Fact or Fraud?
Dolly the sheep dies - did animal cloning technology make her sick?
Human Cloning News - Clonaid claims cloning of Eve Search site for human cloning What is Clonaid and are they really able to do human cloning? ... human cloning - animals Dolly sheep clones - cow clones - cloning techniques scientist cloning himself using cows egg human cloning using pig eggs How to clone - transgenic human cloning technology - nuclear transfer methods - stem cells and therapeutic cloning - human cloning laws - new human cloning legislation - human cloning research human cloning problems dangers and risks - human cloning progress - children from clones - headless clones - human cloning for spare part organs reproductive cloning - the future of cloning.

64. CNN - Clinton Stresses Urgent Need For Human-cloning Ban - January 10, 1998
CNN.com
http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/9801/10/clinton.cloning/
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Clinton stresses urgent need for human-cloning ban
January 10, 1998 Web posted at: 12:10 p.m. EST (1710 GMT) WASHINGTON (CNN) Spurred by a Chicago scientist's desire to establish a human-cloning clinic, President Clinton on Saturday urged Congress to quickly pass legislation banning human cloning for at least five years. "It's good to remember that scientific advancement does not occur in a moral vacuum," Clinton said in his weekly radio address. "We must move with caution, care and deep concern about the impact of our actions." The president has not proposed restricting the cloning of molecules, DNA, cells, tissues or animals. The possibility of cloning humans moved a step closer to reality early in 1997, when Scottish scientists debuted the world's first cloned animal: a sheep named Dolly. Dolly Within weeks, scientists in Oregon introduced to the world a pair of cloned Rhesus monkeys. Last June, Clinton sent Congress proposed legislation banning the cloning of humans for at least five years, giving the National Bioethics Advisory Commission time to assess the risks, and the ethical and social impact of cloning humans.

65. Genetic Encores: The Ethics Of Human Cloning
Genetic Encores The Ethics of Human cloning. Some opponents of cloning believethat such individuals would be wronged in morally significant ways.
http://www.puaf.umd.edu/IPPP/Fall97Report/cloning.htm
home feedback e-mail search ... order Genetic Encores:
The Ethics of Human Cloning The successful cloning of an adult sheep, announced in Scotland this past February, is one of the most dramatic recent examples of a scientific discovery becoming a public issue. During the last few months, various commentators scientists and theologians, physicians and legal experts, talk-radio hosts and editorial writers have been busily responding to the news, some calming fears, other raising alarms about the prospect of cloning a human being. At the request of the President, the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) held hearings and prepared a report on the religious, ethical, and legal issues surrounding human cloning. While declining to call for a permanent ban on the practice, the Commission recommended a moratorium on efforts to clone human beings, and emphasized the importance of further public deliberation on the subject. An interesting tension is at work in the NBAC report. Commission members were well aware of "the widespread public discomfort, even revulsion, about cloning human beings." Perhaps recalling the images of Dolly the ewe that were featured on the covers of national news magazines, they noted that "the impact of these most recent developments on our national psyche has been quite remarkable." Accordingly, they felt that one of their tasks was to articulate, as fully and sympathetically as possible, the range of concerns that the prospect of human cloning had elicited.

66. CDROM Replication, CDR Replication, CD Duplication, CD Replication, Duplication
Suppliers of CDROM, CD-R and diskette replication services.
http://www.goldenrom.com/
Friday, April 04, 2003
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67. Scientific American: Cloning Noah's Ark
FEATURE ARTICLE. November 2000 issue cloning Noah's Ark ByRobert P. Lanza, Betsy L. Dresser and Philip Damiani.
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=0002AB9E-F4AA-1C72-9B81809EC588EF21

68. Times Online
Great medical benefits are at risk, warns Robert Winston, believing people have confused the issue. The Times
http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/tim/99/07/14/timopnope01002.html?199676

69. Scientific American: Cloning Hits The Big Time
EXPLORE. September 02, 1997 cloning Hits the Big Time Genetic copyingof animals is attracting commercial interest By Tim Beardsley.
http://www.sciam.com/explorations/090297clone/beardsley.html
April 4, 2003 go Advanced Search TODAY'S NEWS EXPLORE ... PAST ISSUES EXPLORE September 02, 1997 Cloning Hits the Big Time Genetic copying of animals is attracting commercial interest By Tim Beardsley
HARBINGER. Last February, the Roslin Institute's lamb, named Dolly, became the first animal clone to capture public attention. When scientists at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh reported last February that they had cloned an adult sheep, their work immediately captivated the public. But some cautious researchers wondered whether the success might not be a flash in the pan. After all, the Scottish workers had to try 277 times before they succeeded in producing the clone, named Dolly. Unless the efficiency of the cloning process could be greatly improved, it seemed unlikely to become a common technique for producing improved strains of livestock. Moreover, Dolly's birth did not prove that cloning could be used to create animals from cells that had been genetically manipulated. Unless cloning could be combined with sophisticated genetic manipulation, the technique seemed unlikely to realize its full potential. Just six months later, it seems clear that doubts are unfounded. While the debate focused on Dolly, a number of other corporate and academic laboratories were quietly pushing ahead with similar projects. At least two U.S. companiesABS Global of De Forest, Wisc., and Advanced Cell Technology of Worcester, Mass.have successfully impregnated cows and pigs using cloned cells. In addition, the work over the past six months has demonstrated that cloning works perfectly well on cells that have been genetically altered.

70. Cloning Report
Coverage by the Washington Post.
http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/nation/specials/science/cloning/index.html
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71. ONPRC
Report from the Oregon Primal Research Center (OPRC) announcing the technology for creating genetically indistinguishable monkeys.
http://www.ohsu.edu/orprc/current/neti.htm

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72. Ingenta Select
cloning. cloning is published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. and is available onlinevia Ingenta Select. This journal is now published as cloning Stem Cells.
http://www.catchword.com/titles/15204553.htm
Cloning Cloning is published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. and is available online via Ingenta Select. This journal is now published as There are currently 10 issues available for viewing.
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73. BBC News | SCI/TECH | Doctors Defiant On Cloning
Italian and US doctors say they intend to push ahead with plans to clone human beings despite widespread condemnation; BBC article from March, 2001.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1209000/1209716.stm
low graphics version feedback help You are in: Sci/Tech Front Page World UK ... AudioVideo
The BBC's science correspondent Fergus Walsh in Rome
"The champions of cloning came to Rome to argue their case"
real
The BBC's Pallab Ghosh
"In principle, it's straightforward"
real
Dr Harry Griffin, Roslin Institute
"It is not inevitable that it can be done"
real
Debating the issues Embryologist Dr Sammy Lee and Ruth Deech, head of the UK human fertilisation authority real Friday, 9 March, 2001, 12:43 GMT Doctors defiant on cloning Antinori and Zavos want an open debate on human cloning Doctors from Italy and the United States said on Friday they intended to push ahead with their plans to clone human beings, despite the objections and doubts raised by religious and scientific groups. Cloning may be considered as the last frontier to overcome male sterility Severino Antinori Italian Severino Antinori and American Panayiotis Zavos told a symposium in Rome that they were motivated solely by the desire to help infertile couples have children. "Cloning may be considered as the last frontier to overcome male sterility and give the possibility to infertile males to pass on their genetic pattern," Antinori told scientists and journalists at the city's Umberto I Polyclinic.

74. Genetic Engineering: Defining Our Children's Traits
Considerations and arguments on several scientific procedures that could improve human life.
http://www.jpreason.com/science/gene.htm
Genetic Engineering
The Uncover of the Pyramid
Since Mendel's experiences and the discovery of the DNA as the genetic material, we started to know how and why we are like we are we; started to understand more about how our bodies work. Our genes are like the computer program running in us; we are what our genes code us to be. The first big success for genetic engineer (GE) was the production of insulin by genetically modified bacteria. It showed the medical, economical, and industrial possibilities of this technology. Like a pyramid buried in the sands of the desert, the possibilities and uses of GE were being uncovered. Thanks to refined techniques in molecular genetics and recombinant DNA techniques, its uses soon started to be employed in a vast array of areas:
  • Medicine: in the diagnostic of diseases, understanding how diseases occur, and discovering how to fight them;
  • Pharmaceuticals: producing monoclonal antibodies, antibiotics, vaccines, interferon, and many other proteins with pharmaceutical value;
  • Environmental applications: bioremediation by creating and optimizing bacteria capable of degrading xenobiotics;

75. TMP 352 - Human Cloning
Human cloning Scientists at the Roslin Institute in Scotland shocked the worldlast February when they announced that they had cloned the first mammal a
http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~jones/tmp352/projects98/group1/home.html
Human Cloning Scientists at the Roslin Institute in Scotland shocked the world last February when they announced that they had cloned the first mammal - a sheep named "Dolly". "Dolly" was cloned using a method called somatic cell nuclear transfer. Great controversy arose when it was suggested that this method could also be used to clone humans beings. The word "cloning" is used to define replication of cells, tissues, embryos, and genes. It is important to note that the greatest controversy arises from somatic cell nuclear transfer - the process that could potentially be used to clone humans.
The Cloning Process

History of Cloning
Timeline
of events since "Dolly's" birth
How do you clone? - the basics
Religious/Ethical Perspectives

Assessing the many sides of the debate
Government Involvement

US Government - possible regulations and policies
Other Nations
Practical Uses for Human Cloning
How could cloning realistically change the future of medicine? Commercial Potential To learn more about the information presented here, please visit our

76. Basic Principles Of Gene Cloning, Sequencing, Analysis
of methods behind gene cloning, genetic engineering, DNA recombination and isolation, including discussion of restriction enzymes and ligase.......
http://www.geocities.com:80/SiliconValley/5504/biochem.html
There are many steps in the process of genetic manipulation of DNA from cutting it to amplifying the recombinant molecule which has been produced.
In order to isolate biochemically useful DNA the sequence should be as long as possible. The DNA must first be obtained from the required cells. If eukaryotic cells are being used this is a relatively simple process as they cells are surrounded by only a lipid membrane. Lipid is soluble in detergent and so adding detergent to eukaryotic cells will lyse them. A commonly used detergent is called sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS). Enzymes such as nucleases, which lead to the degradation of genetic material also first, have to be inactivated and SDS does this too.
The DNA obtained can be processed in slightly varying ways. If a high molecular weight is not required then adding a large concentration of ethanol, which is then centrifuged to form a pellet, can precipitate the DNA. The remaining ethanol is then removed by drying and the remaining pellet is re-dissolved in the required buffer. For situations where large DNA fragments are required, the DNA is not precipitated using alcohol, as the high pressures imparted by the centrifugation can lead to the molecules being sheared.
'Restriction endonucleases' or 'Restriction enzymes' are the backbone behind recombinant DNA technology. The power of these enzymes lies in their ability to cut DNA in to defined fragments at specific sequences of the genetic coding. Restriction enzymes originate from many different forms of bacteria. It had been noted that some forms of bacteriophage grew in forms of

77. Guardian Unlimited | Special Reports | Cloning Interactive Guide
Go to Guardian Unlimited home.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/flash/0,5860,534450,00.html
Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs Life MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Online Politics Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Travel Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The weblog The informer The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Information Newsroom Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Guardian Weekly Money Observer

78. Rael
Article by Susan J. Palmer, a religion teacher who is writing a book about the Rael cult, discusses the movement's history and its involvement in human cloning.
http://www.trincoll.edu/depts/csrpl/RINVol4No2/Rael.htm
The Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life
Trinity College, Hartford CT
Center Home Archive Books Events ...
l RELIGION IN THE NEWS
Summer 2001, Vol. 4, No. 2 Contents,
Summer 2001

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in this issue From the Editor: The Minister, the Rabbi, and the Baccalaureate Idol Threats Purging Ourselves of Timothy McVeigh The Pope Among the Orthodox ... Correspondence: Palestinians and Israelis The Rael Deal by Susan J. Palmer March 28 was a day of triumph for Rael, the 54-year-old Canadian founder of the largest UFO-based religion in the world. In a widely reported House subcommittee hearing on human cloning, he testified that his CLONAID company was planning to clone a deceased baby in the near future. Amid the warnings of sober-suited scientists and bioethicists, Rael lent a sci-fri

79. Medical Ethics In Islam الأخلاقي
Islamic views on many medical ethics issues including organ donation, cloning, euthanasia, abortion , fertility, sex change operations.
http://www.islamicmedicine.org/ethics.htm
Site Contents Introduction Amazing Quran Islam Views on Medical Issues Medicine of the Prophet Views of Non-Muslim Scientists Islamic Medical Associations Home
Introduction
Preface Hakim Mohammad Said The Oath of a Muslim Physician Character of the Physician The Role of a Muslim Doctor - Mahmoud Abu-Saud Adab-Al-Tabib - B.A.Zikria Islamic Code of Medical Professional Ethics Abdul Rahim, C.Amine, Ahmed Elkadi Islamic Perspective in Medical Ethics Shahid Athar Medical Ethics - An Islamic Perspective Contemporary Issues in the Practice of Islamic Medicine Information for Health Care Providers when dealing with a Muslim Patient Medical Ethics Questions - ISNA Conv '97 ... Islamic Philosophy and Medical Ethics (By: Dr.A.Khan MD PhD). Medical Ethics in Islam Articles on Islamic Ethics. Male Doctors - Female Patients , is it Haram? THE MALE GYNAECOLOGIST, MEDICAL EXAMINATION OF THE OTHER SEX.
By Prof. Hassan Hathout ON MEDICAL EXAMINATION OF THE OTHER SEX T he Spirit of the Red Cross in the Teachings of Islam: ON WAR AND WARRING AN IDEOLOGY FOR THE WORLD HISTORICAL GLIMPSE WHAT IS ISLAMIC MEDICINE ?

80. Cloning Ethics: Informing Others, Before We Go To Far In Cloning Or Banning It
cloning Ethics is a quality project done by a Senior in a high school. awarded 3/26/98.You can Download this entire website by downloading cloning.zip (313Kb).
http://www.vuhs.org/apbio/clone/
  • What does cloning technology have to offer
  • How could cloning increase the quality of society, family and life?
  • How could it not?
  • What problems could cloning cause? BEST
    of POD
    awarded 3/26/98
    You can Download this entire website by downloading cloning.zip
    Since Monday, March 9, 1998 The following site is a project by a Senior in High School for his Advanced Placement Biology Class return to Science and Technology or Students or Vergennes Union High School Main Page This page was last updated on Monday, May 11d, 1998
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