Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_B - Back To School Health
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 203    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | 11  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Back To School Health:     more detail
  1. Back-to-School Health News.(Influenza)(Brief Article): An article from: Techniques
  2. CIRCUSWORKS: a special back-to-school web site for primary school teachers and homeschoolers. (Notices).: An article from: Communication Disorders Quarterly
  3. Assisted living and elder care in the Valley: senior care during the back-to-school rush.(An Advertising Supplement): An article from: San Fernando Valley Business Journal
  4. Older nurses face the challenges of tertiary study: a group of RGONs, most in their fifties, went back to school for a year. Here three share their journey ... article from: Kai Tiaki: Nursing New Zealand by Marilynn Bruton, Lynette Harrison, et all 2003-09-01
  5. Circusworks, a special back-to-school gift to primary school teachers and homeschoolers. (Notice).(Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey): An article from: Communication Disorders Quarterly
  6. Tuberculosis: Back to the Future (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Third Annual Public Health Forum) by John D. H. Porter, 1994-07
  7. Looking forward by going back: a school counselor educator's return to school counseling.(PERSPECTIVE FROM THE FIELD): An article from: Professional School Counseling by Tamara E. Davis, 2006-12-01
  8. Merck backs off campaign to make cervical cancer vaccination school entry requirement for preteen girls.(FOR THE RECORD)(Merck & Company)(Report): An article from: Guttmacher Policy Review by Adam Sonfield, 2007-01-01
  9. School backpacks do not appear to be behind new-onset, chronic back pain. (Alternatives Probably Unneeded).(Brief Article): An article from: Pediatric News by Deeanna Franklin, 2002-01-01
  10. Heavy school backpacks may be too much for children to shoulder. (In The News ...).: An article from: Childhood Education
  11. Reducing the co$t of pain: Understanding and using ergonomics to develop, implement, improve and market your cumulative trauma/repetitive motion injury prevention programs : workshop manual by Ronald W Porter, 1996

41. TIME.com: Back To School -- Jan. 19, 2004
G E N E R A T I O N S back to school Campus life. lured to Lasell by the desire torejoin a scholarly community — reasonably priced healthcare insurance
http://www.time.com/time/generations/article/0,9171,1101040119-574877,00.html
Conference
TIME/ABC News Obesity Summit

View the live webcast
Articles Since 1985 Current Issue Past 30 Days -Top Searches- Iraq George W. Bush U.S. Military al-Qaeda Osama bin Laden G E N E R A T I O N S
Back to School
Campus life. Exams. Papers. Test anxiety. Sounds like the perfect retirement
By JEREMY CAPLAN
Monday, Jan. 12, 2004
Now Kaplan, 86, is one of 210 student Just a few hundred yards from the tiny dorm rooms where his younger classmates reside, Kaplan reaches up to a handmade bookshelf and dusts off his 1940 Yale thesis on F.D.R. up until now the retired furniture maker has avoided Lasell writing courses. Kaplan skims his old thesis to remind himself how he used to Polish his prose. Having lived through 11 presidencies and the birth of three grandchildren since he penned that last paper, he reviews his work with a critical eye. Then he sets it aside, closes his laptop and puts pen to page the old-fashioned way. It may be his first paper in 64 years, he says, but that doesn't mean it can't be his best. In 2003 more than 7,000 new apartments and cottages were built in CCRCs across the country. Lasell Village has a waiting list of more than 100 people. And with the senior population expected to double over the next 30 years, experts like Schless project exponential growth in the number of such communities. By 2006 new retirement communities will have sprouted up alongside at least six major colleges and universities, including the University of Texas, UC Davis, Purdue, Stanford, Denison, Penn State and the University of Florida. The Stanford center, called the Classic Residence by Hyatt, in northern California won't open until May 2005, but 305 of the 388 units have already been sold. Starting at $600,000 a unit, prices rise to $3.9 million for a 4,200-sq.-ft. three-bedroom apartment.

42. Your Child Back To School Issues
back to school for kids with special needs—find out shy, high energy, anxious, ata new school, have special developmental or mental health needs, or
http://www.med.umich.edu/1libr/yourchild/bts.htm

YOUR CHILD HOME

Your Child Topics
UMHS HOME
Back to School Issues
Back to school for kids with special needs
—find out how to understand and help your child adjust to school, if they are shy, high energy, anxious, at a new school, have special developmental or mental health needs, or under some kind of family stress. Back to school safety tips: Back to school nutrition tips: Tips to help young children adjust when it's time to go back to school. Lots more back-to-school links from Kidshealth.org for parents, kids and teens. Includes information on homework, extracurricular activities, bullying, stress, and getting along with teachers. Written and compiled by Kyla Boyse, R.N. Reviewed by Richard Solomon, M.D.

43. Back To School Irish Health Focus Vhi
For school lunch ideas contact your local health board to Last updated Friday, 24August 2001 Search vhi.ie for more information on back to top of page.
http://www.vhi.ie/hfiles/hf-011.jsp

44. ADA.org: Video News Releases
Baby Boomers; backto-school Checkups; Breakthrough Dental Research;Cigars; Dental Anxiety; Senior Oral health; Whiter Teeth. Baby Boomers.
http://www.ada.org/public/media/videos/vnr/index.asp
Find a Dentist Seal Program Contact Us MEDIA VIDEOS ... PRESS KITS
Video news releases Choose full-motion video presentations from several topics on oral health care. Baby Boomers Broadband/4.8MB
Dial up/642k
Return to Top Back-to-School Checkups Broadband/1.5MB
Dial up/132k
Return to Top Breakthrough Dental Research Broadband/4.9MB
Dial up/657k
Return to Top Cigars Broadband/1.0MB
Dial up/212k
Return to Top Dental Anxiety Broadband/753k
Dial up/157k
Return to Top Dentist Use New Technology to Identify Missing Persons Broadband/4.7MB
Dial up/627k
Return to Top Future of Oral Care Broadband/4.1MB
Dial up/558k
Return to Top Gum Disease Broadband/4.1MB
Dial up/555k
Return to Top Healthy Smiles Broadband/2.0MB
Dial up/415k
Return to Top Learn the Real Story About Mercury in Dental Fillings Broadband/1.5MB Dial up/495k Return to Top New Technologies Broadband/3.3MB Dial up/441k Return to Top Oral Cancer Broadband/3.5MB Dial up/538k Return to Top Oral Cancer Screening Broadband/1.3MB

45. School Health Profiler - Spring 2004 Issue
Tips about Bullying, Washing your Hands, Parenting, Healthy Eating, Sex workshops,funding for class and schoolwide projects. . Go back to the top of this page.
http://www.region.peel.on.ca/health/shp/2004/
Ambulance Archives Art Gallery By-laws Child Care Corporate Services Council Emergency Services Environment Employment / Jobs Executive Office Finance Health Heritage Housing Human Resources Land Division Long-Term Care Museum News Archives Ontario Works Planning Police Public Works Purchasing Regional Official Plan Roads Social Services Transhelp Waste Management Issue #6 - Spring 2004 Now Available
Previous Issues: Feature Articles in this Issue: Our Health and the Environment
- Water - Air - Climate change
- Reduce, reuse, recycle

46. Mayor's Office Of Health Insurance Access
The backto-school 2003 Campaign is a public health insurance outreach and enrollmentinitiative designed to provide eligible yet uninsured children and
http://www.nyc.gov/html/hia/html/b2sflyer.html
Home News HealthStat Health Insurance ...
For Small Businesses

Proprietors
HEALTHSTAT

Activities

Prescreening Tool

Ad Campaign
...
HealthStat Facts

PUBLIC BENEFITS
Earned Income Tax Credit

HOME
WHAT'S NEW E-mail the Director Back-to-School 2003 Campaign The Back-to-School 2003 Campaign is a public health insurance outreach and enrollment initiative designed to provide eligible yet uninsured children and families with opportunities to learn about and enroll in public health insurance programs. The initiative will occur in New York City public schools during the over the counter registration period, August 25th through September 5th , and on the first two days of the new school year, September 8th and 9th. Now principals and other key school personnel can download Back-to-School outreach flyers to heighten awareness of these public health insurance programs at their schools. Please download both English and Spanish flyers by clicking each of the below:

47. CHILDREN S HEALTH INSURANCE PROGRAM NATIONAL BACK-TO-SCHOOL KICK
CHILDREN S health INSURANCE PROGRAM NATIONAL backTO-school KICK OFF.HHS Secretary Donna E. Shalala, along with Attorney General
http://www.cms.hhs.gov/schip/whitehouse/990922wh.asp

48. Back To School 2001: Bad Teeth Epidemic Among Poor Children
back to school 2001 Bad teeth epidemic among poor she s going to have problems inschool if they packer in Erie, asked a migrant health services coordinator
http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/20010826teethschoolonereg3p3.asp
Back to School 2001: Bad teeth epidemic among poor children Sunday, August 26, 2001 By Rachel Smolkin, Post-Gazette National Bureau Six-year-old Edith Becerra has a toothache, but her mother can't find a dentist to treat her. Edith's tooth began hurting when a filling fell out. Now, she's having trouble eating, and her mother worries that the pain will worsen, making it difficult for her to do her schoolwork as she begins first grade tomorrow. "I know what a toothache is, and I know she's going to have problems in school if they don't attend to it now," said Evelia Becerra, who speaks only Spanish. First in a series 5 Pitt dental students learn of the need first-hand
Becerra, an apple-packer in Erie, asked a migrant health services coordinator to help her find a dentist quickly. But only two dental clinics in the Erie area take patients on Medicaid, the government program for low-income families. Becerra was told that the earliest possible appointment for Edith was Dec. 28 four painful months away. Tooth decay, a common chronic childhood condition, is easily treated in most young children. But many low-income children in America do not have such care, either because they have no dental insurance or because their parents cannot find a dentist who will treat them.

49. CNN.com - Health - Health Advocates Back Coke’s New School Policy - March 15, 2
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/diet.fitness/03/15/coke.schools.reax/index.html
MAIN PAGE
WORLD

U.S.

WEATHER
...
ABOUT US

CNN TV what's on
show transcripts

CNN Headline News

CNN International
...
askCNN

EDITIONS CNN.com Asia CNN.com Europe set your edition Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Danish Japanese Korean Arabic Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW
Health advocates back Coke’s new school policy
In this story: Links to obesity, osteoporosis ’Positive move’ Nutritious options RELATED STORIES, SITES By Thurston Hatcher CNN.com Writer ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) Public health advocates welcomed Coca-Cola’s plans to provide a healthier array of drinks at vending machines on school campuses. Coca-Cola announced Wednesday it will make a wide variety of beverages available to schools, including juices, water, sugar- and caffeine-free drinks, and products rich in vitamins and calcium. ALSO Coke alters school plans RESOURCES Get more information on healthy eating from the USDA's nutrition Web site, Nutrition.gov “I think it’s definitely a movement in the right direction as far as pediatric nutrition is concerned and as far as getting kids on a healthier track,” said Jo Ann Hattner, a pediatric nutritionist in Palo Alto, California, who is a spokeswoman for the American Dietetic Association. Coke also said it would work with schools wanting to limit sales of beverages at certain times and locations on campus, and would support nonexclusive deals between schools and local bottlers.

50. Welcome - Voices And Choices - PPHB - Health Canada
a school health Profile by which students’ responses to the questionnaireare reported back to the school community. Voices and
http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/pphb-dgspsp/vc-ss/welcome_e.html

Welcome
Tips to Get Started Background Introductory ...
Adolescence

Welcome What's new: June 13, 2003 - The Voices and Choices resources and database are now available to secondary schools in Canada from grade 9 (Secondary 3 in Quebec) to graduation (CEGEP 2 in Quebec). Please note that all of the documents have recently been revised. We appreciate your interest in the Voices and Choices initiative and wish you well with your school health planning. Welcome to the Voices and Choices web site, a dynamic new site that can help members of your school community work together to improve student and school health and enhance learning. Voices and Choices: Planning for School Health is a practical, do-it-yourself, on-line, strategic planning tool for school communities in Canada. It engages young people in identifying their health- and school-related needs and in developing and implementing strategies to address these needs. It includes:
  • a Guide to Implementation outlining a seven-stage planning process;

51. 10 Tips To Help Your Child Go Back To School
9. If your child is worried about school, they may turn to food for comfort. as aspecial treat for the end of the first week back. ABC of health ABC of health.
http://www.bupa.co.uk/health_information/asp/healthy_living/children/school/
You need to have javascript enabled for scripts to allow image rollovers and automatic dates to work. search home
services
health
information
... health tests 7 June 2004 health information health living children's health From summertime to ... sums Many children find going back to school stressful. They have lots of fraught questions, such as who will my form teacher be? Will I be able to sit with my friends? Worrying about who they will have lunch with and 'fitting in' can make children (teenagers especially), extremely anxious. Some need a great deal of support to help them cope with new term pressures. Where possible involve your children in purchasing school clothes. Ensure that their clothes and shoes are comfortable and that their school bag remains light - if your child is comfortable, he or she will feel better during the school day. Get your child into a normal routine a few nights before school starts. Don't let your child stay up late as a special 'last night of freedom' treat, watch TV or do anything that will make it hard for them to settle down - it might be good to read them an extra story or just chat while they are in bed. A late night will only make them harder to wake in the morning, and they may cope less well with the stresses of the day. From your perspective, it will also make the morning routine much more rushed - and you more stressed and short-tempered. Reassure your child that their friends will still be there, or, if it's a move to a new school, try to encourage him or her into thinking that all the new children are feeling the same way and that meeting new friends is good.

52. Back To School Bonanza - Suite101.com
Let’s make 20002001 the best school year of our lives! Welcome to theback to school edition of Mental health for Teens @ Suite101.com.
http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/mental_health_teens/44646
Topics
Articles
Links
Courses

DIRECTORY
COMMUNITIES BOOK CIRCLE SUITE U ... MY SUITE
Search Suite101.com
Within:
Mental Health for Teens
Youth Corner
Search The Web Member Central Join Our Community! Login What's New Become a SuiteU Affiliate ... MemberUpdate Suite University About Suite University Suite University News Visit the University Course Listing ... FREE Demo Course New Topics SpiritWell Travel Book Reviews Agora News Foraging Wild Foods ... More... Suite Events Teacher Appreciation Event 2004 Family Focus 2004 In Tune With Johann Sebastian Bach More about Suite101 About Suite101.com Advertise With Suite For more information - Select a related topic - All Reptiles - Great and Anorexia Babysitting Bookwyrm for Hire: Young Christian Teens/Preteen b Dance/Drill Team Mental Health for Teens Stargazing for Beginners Teen Reflections Teen Writers Teenage Living Teenage Mothers Teens Woman's High School Baske Young at Art Young Writers
Visit Youth Corner
Detailed Topic List Home Computers, information, general reference ... Youth Corner - Girls Mental Health for Teens By elizdrucker Topic Page Articles Links ... Community Bookstore Subscribe Related Subject(s): Teenagers Mental health Teenagers Health and hygiene Genealogy: Researching Immigrant Ancestors Using naturalization records to help trace your roots Project Management 101 The nuts and bolts - manage to achieve your goals Learn Basic HTML Step by step - learn to make web pages do what you want.

53. School Psychologists Action Network - Newsletter
The backto-school Opportunity Knocks Improving healthcare for Children.by Peter Whelley, NCSP, Coordinator, NASP health Care Initiative.
http://www.nasponline.org/advocacy/SPAN/span_sep03_hcinews.html
Message from the Chair
Mark Your Calendar: PPI 2004

Building Upon Legislative Successes and Opportunities

The School Psychologist Shortage: Evidence for Effective Advocacy
...
Access the NASP Advocacy Action Center
The Back-to-School Opportunity Knocks: Improving Healthcare for Children
by Peter Whelley, NCSP, Coordinator, NASP Health Care Initiative
Summer is waning and the school year is quickly approaching. As the first day nears, kids and their families will be getting ready. Anxious anticipation together with enthusiasm and optimism is what we would hope accompanies each child as they approach the schoolhouse door. Schools and school personnel, such as yourself, can inform parents and help them enroll their children. For some, the beginning of a new school year means shopping for new clothes, getting needed immunizations, sports physicals, etc.  Unfortunately, more than 8.5 million children will be starting the school year without health insurance. That means that they not only will not be getting routine checkups and preventative care, but they are likely to go untreated when ill and have more chronic illness than those who are insured. The implications for their educational experience are obvious.  The saddest part is that it doesn’t have to be this way. 

54. News > Press Archive > Kids Are Back In School, Tobacco Smoke Is Out; - American
Kids Are back in school, Tobacco Smoke is Out. Through the Efforts of the AmericanLung Association of Virginia and Other health Groups, the General Assembly of
http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=dvLUK9O0E&b=41837

55. Back-to-School: A Perfect Time For Families To Catch Up On Vaccinations
NFID) and the National Coalition for Adult Immunization (NCAI) want parents tomake the back to school period a time for a family preventive health check.
http://www.nfid.org/factsheets/btsrelease.html
Back-to-School: A Perfect Time For Families To Catch Up On Vaccinations
National Immunization Awareness Month Spotlights Family Protection Throughout August Contacts:
Ulysee Huling
Jennifer Passantino
August 20, 2002 (Bethesda, MD) Millions of parents are busy getting their kids ready for a brand new school year buying new clothes, books and supplies, and making doctor appointments for annual physicals. But this year the doctor's visit is more important than ever for parents to make sure their children and the whole family get caught up on important immunizations. Shortages of a number of vaccines from the last year are now over or ending, and the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases (NFID) and the National Coalition for Adult Immunization (NCAI) want parents to make the back to school period a time for a family preventive health check. "Back-to-School season often means vaccinations for children but we also want parents to take this opportunity to assess their own preventive health status," said Susan Rehm, MD, president, National Foundation for Infectious Diseases. "Adults often ignore needed immunizations, and this fall is the perfect time for the entire family to catch-up on vaccinations." Due to supply issues, many routine vaccines were deferred causing children and adults to fall behind on their vaccination schedules. While the temporary shortages did not pose a critical health risk, the NFID and NCAI want to make sure that children and adults don't let their immunizations lapse as supplies are restored to normal.

56. WebMD Health
Topic Couples Coping Support Group Discussion going back to school by otherdave. Regoing back to school by oimone, on 5/14/2004 113621 AM. Dave.
http://boards.webmd.com/message.asp?message_id=6785330

57. NIDA - Newsroom - NIDA Goes BACK To School
Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), National Institutesof health, discussed the Institute s new back to school initiative, which
http://www.drugabuse.gov/Newsroom/03/NR10-22.html
Common Drugs of Abuse Acid/LSD Alcohol Cocaine Club Drugs Drug Testing Heroin Inhalants Marijuana MDMA/Ecstasy Methamphetamine Nicotine PCP (Phencyclidine) Prescription Medications Prevention Research Steroids Treatment Research Trends and Statistics
NIDA Home
Newsroom
NIDA Goes BACK to School
For Release October 22, 2003
At a press briefing held today in Washington, D.C., Dr. Nora D. Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), National Institutes of Health, discussed the Institute's new Back to School initiative, which provides students and teachers with informative, accurate information about addiction and drug abuse. "We are excited about expanding the resources available to students and teachers on the science behind drug abuse and addiction," Dr. Volkow said. "Beyond their educational value, our materials hold the promise of sparking students' general interest in the biological sciences as a possible career choice, while meeting teachers' needs for engaging curricula that also fulfill national science education objectives." One exciting component of the NIDA Goes Back to School initiative is " NIDA for Teens: The Science Behind Drug Abuse ," an interactive Web site officially launched at today's event. Available at

58. NIDA - Newsroom - NIDA Goes BACK To School
teachers across the country, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), a componentof the National Institutes of health, is going back to school in September
http://www.drugabuse.gov/Newsroom/03/NR9-12.html
Common Drugs of Abuse Acid/LSD Alcohol Cocaine Club Drugs Drug Testing Heroin Inhalants Marijuana MDMA/Ecstasy Methamphetamine Nicotine PCP (Phencyclidine) Prescription Medications Prevention Research Steroids Treatment Research Trends and Statistics
NIDA Home
Newsroom
NIDA Goes BACK to School
For Release September 12, 2003
Like millions of students and teachers across the country, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), a component of the National Institutes of Health, is going back to school in September. In addition to sending teachers across the country information about the science-based education material available free from the Institute, NIDA is launching a virtual back to school program with a Web site designed especially for teens. "We are excited about the NIDA resources available to students, parents, and teachers about the science behind drug abuse and addiction," says NIDA Director Dr. Nora D. Volkow. "Our materials are designed to inform students at a variety of grade levels about how research can help us discover the causes and possible cures for drug addiction. At the same time, they meet teachers' needs for engaging curricula that also fulfill national science education objectives." The new Web site

59. Requirements For Back-to-School Immunizations
Requirements for backto-school Immunizations. Public health departments provide vaccinationsfree of charge. In addition, some school-based clinics may provide
http://healthlink.mcw.edu/article/934555000.html
Search Articles:
search tips
Please Take the HealthLink Survey
Email this article

Print this article

Find related articles: By topic:
Children's Health

Vaccines/Immunizations
By keywords:
children

vaccination

immunizations

shots
Receive Health Link via email! Subscribe now >>
Requirements for Back-to-School Immunizations
Parents and children are looking forward to the beginning of the school year. Part of this annual fall ritual is to be sure children are up-to-date on their vaccinations. Most immunizations are administered before a child is two years old; however, between ages four and six, prior to entering kindergarten, children are due for two or three booster shots. Children between 12 and 15 years of age may be due for booster shots, too. While no one looks forward to vaccine injections, the benefits of preventing serious vaccine-preventable diseases far outweigh the mild discomfort of the shot (or shots) and low risk of side effects. Not only do vaccines keep our children healthy, the State of Wisconsin requires children to be fully vaccinated (or in the process of being fully vaccinated) prior to entering school. Parents or guardians may receive a waiver to not vaccinate their children for medical, religious or personal conviction reasons. The Wisconsin Immunization Law is intended to protect all of our children from vaccine-preventable diseases. The state law requires children in licensed day care centers and students in kindergarten through grade 12 to be immunized according to their age/grade level by the beginning of the school year. Immunizations are required against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR), diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis/whooping cough (DTP), polio and Hepatitis B. The same vaccines plus Haemophilus influenza b (Hib) are required for day care children.

60. No More Back-to-School Blues: Nine Tips For A Smooth Transition - Massachusetts
Make sure you schedule your child’s backto-school health checkup (if necessary),get the required immunizations and fill out the necessary health forms
http://www.greatschools.net/cgi-bin/showarticle/ma/242/parent
Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington Washington, D.C. West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
Sign up for our free newsletter to help your child succeed in school.
Sign Up

Edit Subscription

Complete List of Articles

Search Articles:
or Browse Our Glossary

and/or AL AK AZ AR CA CO CT DC DE FL GA HI ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA WV WI WY Search by:
County
or Address School or District Name City State
No More Back-to-School Blues: Nine Tips for a Smooth Transition With a little planning, you can make going back to school as easy as A, B, C. Read on to find helpful information to prepare for the first day of school.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 3     41-60 of 203    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | 11  | Next 20

free hit counter