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         Cloning:     more books (100)
  1. Whose View of Life?: Embryos, Cloning, and Stem Cells by Jane Maienschein, 2003-12-22
  2. Understanding Cloning (Science Made Accessible) by Scientific American, 2002-03-01
  3. IN HIS IMAGE THE CLONING OF A MAN by David Rorvik, 1978
  4. Gene Cloning: An Introduction by T. A. Brown, 1995-07
  5. Remaking Eden: How Genetic Engineering and Cloning Will Transform the American Family (Ecco) by Lee M. Silver, 2007-08-01
  6. PCR Cloning Protocols (Methods in Molecular Biology) (Methods in Molecular Biology)
  7. The Debate over Human Cloning: A Pro/Con Issue (Hot Pro/Con Issues) by David Goodnough, 2003-01
  8. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Understanding Cloning by Jay D. Gralla, Preston Gralla, 2004-04-06
  9. Gene Cloning and Manipulation by Christopher Howe, 2007-08-06
  10. IN HIS IMAGE The Cloning of a Man by David M. Rorvik, 1978-09-01
  11. Cloning Christ: A Challenge of Science and Faith by Peter Senese, Robert J. Geis, 2003-01
  12. Gene Cloning by Lodge/Lund/Minc, 2006-10-24
  13. Basic Questions on Genetics, Stem Cell Research and Cloning: Are These Technologies Okay to Use? (Biobasics Series) (BioBasics Series) by John Kilner, 2002-12-31
  14. Flesh of My Flesh: The Ethics of Cloning Humans A Reader by Gregory E. Pence, 1998-07-25

21. Howstuffworks "How Human Cloning Will Work"
Scientists in South Korea claim to have created human embryos via cloning. Main Science Life Science How Human cloning Will Work.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/human-cloning.htm
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How Human Cloning Will Work
by Kevin Bonsor Table of Contents Introduction to How Human Cloning Will Work Me, Myself and My Clone Who Will Clone? To Clone or Not to Clone Lots More Information Shop or Compare Prices Nothing really prepared the world for the 1997 announcement that a group of Scottish scientists had created a cloned sheep named Dolly . Many folks believe that within the next decade, we will hear a more shocking announcement of the first cloned human. Thanks to two scientists in South Korea who claim to have created human embryos through cloning, it appears we're getting close. Talking to yourself will take on a whole new meaning when cloning is made possible. Until now, the idea of human cloning has only been possible through movie magic, but the natural progression of science is making human cloning a true possibility. We've cloned sheep, mice and cows, so what's to stop scientists from cloning a human? Some countries have set up laws banning cloning, but it is still legal in many countries. It will cost tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars, but there will always be people willing to spend that type of money to be a part of history.

22. BBC News | SCI/TECH | Human Cloning Plans Under Fire
A prominent Italian cardinal has criticised plans by Italian and US doctors to clone human beings; March, 2001 article from BBC News.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1213000/1213387.stm
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Saturday, 10 March, 2001, 16:30 GMT Human cloning plans under fire
Antinori and Zavos: Aim to go ahead with plans
There is mounting criticism of plans by doctors from Italy and the United States to clone human beings. Among the latest voices to speak out against the proposals is the prominent Italian cardinal Carlo Maria Martini. The Milan archbishop said the cloning team should remember that "the dignity of man is the main thing, and persons cannot be fabricated through technology". He said a human being had an "innate and natural" dignity, which should "not be violated in any way". The cloning team insist their project is intended to help infertile couples and have tried to avoid ethical questions. But this has failed to stop the objections and doubts raised by religious and scientific groups. 'Frankenstein doctors' An Italian politician has been highly critical of the cloning team's research conference in Rome on Friday, which attracted a huge amount of publicity. Giovanni Bianchi, of the Popular Party, which is in the governing coalition, described the team as "Frankenstein" doctors and said the conference was called with "one eye on a scoop and the other, obviously, on business".

23. Prometheus Bound: Cloning Bears Identical Reactions
Fred L. Smith's commentary on the public's reaction to the announcement of Dolly and GM foods.
http://www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/reg20n2j.html
Prometheus Bound
Cloning Bears Identical Reactions
by Fred L. Smith Jr. Fred L. Smith Jr. ispresident of the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C. T he ink had barely dried on the clever headline on the Scottish sheep cloning story, "Hello Hello, Dolly, Dolly!" before politicians were calling for bans. President Clinton was first to express "serious concern." Repre-sentative Vernon Ehlers (R-Mich.), a physicist by training, echoed his sentiments. He reasoned that to prevent horrible regulation, we should impose bad regulation. The response to cloning was predictable and indicative of the troubled political history of biotechnology. The discovery of the double helix structure of DNA and later, the ability to recombine DNA, made many uneasy. Technophobe Jeremy Rifkin described biotechnology as "a form of annihilation every bit as deadly as nuclear holocaust, and even more profound." Repetition of the "mistake" of unleashing nuclear power had to be avoided. Scientists could no longer allow others to decide how to use new and potentially destructive discoveries. They assumed the role Olympians, deciding whether the technology would be released or suppressed. Thus in the early 1970s, James Watson, co-discoverer of the DNA double helix, and several microbiologists urged a moratorium on further research until the dangers of gene-splicing could be assessed. At a meeting in Pacific Grove, California in 1975, scientists urged the National Institutes of Health to impose guidelines governing DNA experiments.

24. TIME Newsfile: Cloning
JOHN CHADWICK/AP, For decades, the cloning of adults — animals or humans — has been largely the stuff of science fiction. Since
http://www.time.com/time/newsfiles/cloning/
JOHN CHADWICK/AP
A host of pricing plans are available to suit your research needs.
The Age of Cloning
A line has been crossed, and reproductive biology will never be the same for people or for sheep
1700 words
March 10, 1997
Read Cover Story

Table of Contents

Wanting A Clone
What kind of social revolution will human cloning start?
5742 words Feb. 19, 2001 Read Cover Story Table of Contents New Scientist: Cloning A collection of articles and essays related to cloning Roslin Institute Online The Edinburgh lab that made Dolly How Human Cloning Will Work From the popular site How Stuff Works, an explainer on how things could work Washington Post: Cloning Report A collection of related articles from the newspaper Sports Ramifications of Cloning ESPN.com Page 2 cartoonist Kurt Snibbe explores the endless possibilities Indicates a premium article from the TIME Archive . You may purchase access to individual articles, or to access multiple articles, purchase a TIME Archive pass or subscription Cloning: Where Do We Draw the Line? Researchers duplicate a human embryo, provoking cries that technology has gone too far TIME, Nov. 8, 1993, 3449 words

25. The Center For The Study Of Technology And Society - Biotechnology
A field that brings together agriculture, genetics, cloning, health, medicine and reproductive technology. The Center is a nonprofit research and educational group based in Washington, D.C.
http://www.tecsoc.org/biotech/biotech.htm
Special Focus Pages:
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Top News DEBATE:
Our Biotech Future (National Review, issue dated 5 Mar 01) OPINION: Eugenics Coming Soon to a Country Near You (National Review, 27 Feb 01) Gene Therapy Prevents Cancer in Mice (BBC, 26 Feb 01) Adopting Frozen Embryos (NY Times, 25 Feb 01 - free registration required) Goats Engineered to Produce Spider Silk in Their Milk (Forbes, issue dated 19 Feb 01) Online Rush to Buy Human Eggs (BBC, 16 Feb 01) Doctors Believe "Brain Pacemakers" Can Treat Wide Range of Illnesses (Wall St. Journal, 16 Feb 01 - free subscription required) The Human Body is Not "Built to Last" (Science Daily, 13 Feb 01) Consumers Want Engineered Food Labeled (Washington Post, 13 Feb 01) A New Genetic Window on Curing Diseases (Washington Post, 11 Feb 01) ESSAY: Implications of the Human Genome Project for Medical Science (Journal of the American Medical Association, 7 Feb 01)

26. ThinkQuest : Library : Views On Cloning And Genetic Engineering: Improving On Na
Improving nature or uncorking the genie? Information and debate positions, both for and against.
http://library.thinkquest.org/19697/
Index Life Science Genetics
Views on Cloning and Genetic Engineering: Improving on Nature or Popping the Genies Cork?
This web site provides information on the controversial issue of genetic cloning. The site explains what cloning is by focusing on the birth of Dolly, the lamb that was cloned by Scottish scientists in 1997. The site explains the cell and what scientists must do to clone it. Explore reactions to cloning from politicians, lawmakers, and scientists. What do you think? Visit Site 1998 ThinkQuest Internet Challenge Awards Fourth Place Languages English Students Dave Yale Secondary School, Abbotsford, Canada Richard Rift Valley Academy, Kijabe, Kenya Katie Langley Secondary School, Langley, Canada Coaches John Willoughby Elementary, Langley, Canada David Mugumu High School, Kijabe, Kenya Want to build a ThinkQuest site? The ThinkQuest site above is one of thousands of educational web sites built by students from around the world. Click here to learn how you can build a ThinkQuest site.

27. Human Cloning - Supermodels Could One Day Have A Whole New Human Cloning Career,
Human cloning, cloning ethics clones - cloning - cloning animals - human cloning information - dolly - human cloning news - research on human cloning - human
http://www.globalchange.com/clonech.htm
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by Dr Patrick Dixon Futurist Recent Human Cloning Video / Articles by Dr Patrick Dixon - 4 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 4 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.

28. Register At NYTimes.com
New York Times article recounts the history of the Raelians and compares the movement to some historical antecedents, including the Oneida Community. Requires free registration.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/29/weekinreview/29KEVL.html
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29. Americans To Ban Cloning
The Americans to Ban cloning (ABC) coalition is a group of concerned Americans and US based organizations that promote a global, comprehensive ban on human
http://www.cloninginformation.org/
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The Americans to Ban Cloning (ABC) coalition
is a group of concerned Americans and U.S. based organizations that promote a global, comprehensive ban on human cloning. ABC is now working to pass S. 245 , the Human Cloning Prohibition Act of 2003. This bill is a comprehensive cloning ban closely matching the one passed on February 27, 2003 by the U.S. House of Representatives (H.R. 534). The bill would outlaw both research and reproductive human cloning. To participate in the effort to pass S. 245, click here Latest News and Information Louisiana House and Senate Ban Human Cloning ( AP South Korean Professor: Human Reproductive Cloning Scientifically Impossible ( Chosun Louisiana: Economics Enters Debate on Cloning
Times-Picayune
Recent Commentary and Testimony Face the Fetus
William Saletan

30. Untitled Document
Links to a variety of papers, events, case studies, and Internet resources.
http://ethics.acusd.edu/applied/bioethics/
This page will automaticaly forward you to the new bioethics page of Ethics Updates. If it does not do so within 5 seconds, click here

31. Cloning
News release that was reported in the journal nature concerning the first reproducible cloning of mammals from adult cells.
http://www.hawaii.edu/ur/News_Releases/NR_July98/cloning.html
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For Immediate Release: July 22, 1998 Contact: Noonan/Russo Communications, 212 696-4455, Ernie.knewitz@noonanrusso.com University of Hawaii, Cheryl Ernst Downloadable graphics accessible, www.noonanrusso.com News release and related materials, www.eurekalert.com or www.noonanrusso.com Video B-Roll available First Reproducible Cloning of Mammals from Adult Cells Reported in July 23 Issue of the journal Nature The first reproducible cloning of a mammal from adult cells, which has successfully yielded three generations and more than 50 identical cloned mice, is reported in the July 23 issue of the international science journal Nature by an international team of scientists, lead by Ryuzo Yanagimachi, of the University of Hawaii. The distinctive cloning technology, described as the Honolulu technique, could be more viable for the production of drugs using transgenic animals than earlier techniques because of its efficiency of reproducibility and, when used in genetic and embryonic development studies, will shed new light on the cellular and molecular activities involved in aging and diseases such as cancer, AIDS, diabetes and multiple sclerosis. The technology has been licensed to the Hawaii-based biotechnology company ProBio America, Inc., for commercialization and to test it for expanded uses. The investigators anticipate that due to similarities between development in mammals the technique will be applicable to larger animals. For example, efficient and accurate cloning can improve the reliability and safety of reproducing transgenic mammals, such as cattle, pigs and sheep, that can be used in the economical production of lower cost protein-based pharmaceuticals. The technique may also be useful for cloning wild or endangered species in a controlled environment.

32. Washingtonpost.com: Cloning Yields Human-Rabbit Hybrid Embryo
washingtonpost.com cloning Yields HumanRabbit Hybrid Embryo. By Rick Weiss Washington Post Staff Writer Thursday, August 14, 2003; Page A04.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A55911-2003Aug13?language=printer

33. Chemist Promises Major Announcement On Cloning Effort
CNN
http://cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/12/26/human.cloning.ap/index.html

34. CNN.com - Stem Cell, Cloning Bills Dropped - November 2, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/11/02/senate.stem.cells/index.html
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Stem cell, cloning bills dropped
By Dana Bash CNN WASHINGTON (CNN) Senators dropped controversial measures on stem cell research and cloning Thursday because they were threatening to further delay work on key must-pass spending bills Congress is hurrying to approve. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pennsylvania, had added language to the Labor, Health and Human Services spending bill that would have allowed couples to donate for research embryos that otherwise would have been discarded, going beyond President Bush's position on stem cells. But in a sign of the changed times, Specter and other supporters of broader federal funding for stem cell research than the administration backs agreed to defer their fight until next year. EXTRA INFORMATION In Depth: The stem cell debate "There is no stomach for it right now," said one supporter, referring to the different atmosphere in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

35. Cloning And Stem Cells
ISSN 15362302 Published Quarterly. cloning and Stem Cells. You may subscribe below Select Subscription Rate
http://www.liebertpub.com/CLO/default.asp
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Cloning and Stem Cells
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Select Subscription Rate: -Personal Rates- 2004 Online Only Personal $256.00 2004 Outside USA Print Personal $350.00 2004 USA Print Personal $286.00 -Institutional Rates- 2004 Online Only Institutional $439.00 2004 Outside USA Print Institutional $572.00 2004 USA Print and Online Institutional $574.00 2004 USA Print Institutional $482.00 Please note subscription orders are entered for the complete volume year. For example, if you are ordering the 2004 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, EMBASE/Excerpta Medica, ISI Alerting Services, Science Citation Index-Expanded and Biotechnology Citation Index.

36. CNN.com - Health - Cloning Experts To Tell House Committee Pros, Cons - March 27
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/03/27/cloning.reality/index.html
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Cloning experts to tell House committee pros, cons
The cloned mouse on the right became obese as an adult for no apparent reason. Experts say cloned animals often develop abnormalities In this story: The mechanics of cloning Extraterrestrials RELATED STORIES, SITES By Miriam Falco CNN Medical WASHINGTON (CNN) In 1997, when the world first heard about Dolly the sheep, the first mammal to be cloned from an adult, the possibility of cloning a human moved from science fiction into the realm of reality. Now Congress is taking up the question of whether human cloning should be allowed. In a hearing Wednesday, proponents and opponents of human cloning will tell the House Energy and Commerce Committee what they see as the likely consequences of cloning a human being. FROM TIME.COM

37. Roslin Institute, Edinburgh
public interest. Summary of all published reports on mammalian cloning Somatic cell nuclear transfer (cloning) efficiency ( - as published). cloning.
http://www.roslin.ac.uk/public/cloning.html
take me to... people history associations genomics and bioinformatics transgenics and biotechnology animal breeding and welfare opportunities collaborations spin-outs news archive press releases cloning animal welfare animal breeding genomics education vacancies directions cloning animal welfare animal breeding genetic modification ... education public interest
Summary of all published reports on mammalian cloning - Somatic cell nuclear transfer (cloning) efficiency - as published) Cloning Which type? Much confusion happens when people see the word "clone" used. Depending on the age of the dictionary, the definition of biological cloning can be:
  • A group of genetically identical individuals descended from the same parent by asexual reproduction. Many plants show this by producing suckers, tubers or bulbs to colonise the area around the parent.

38. Drive Image Pro
Provides IT professionals with powerful cloning tools. With TaskBuilder's user friendly interface it's easy to create scripts for use within any framework. Supports CDR and CD-R/W. Supports Windows 95/98/2000/NT 4.0 Workstation, or DOS.
http://www.powerquest.com/driveimagepro/index.html

39. CNN.com - Critics Warn Of Cloning Risks - August 6, 2001
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http://cnn.com/2001/WORLD/europe/08/06/clone.critics/index.html
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Critics warn of cloning risks
The team that cloned Dolly does not support human tests ROME, Italy (CNN) Controversial plans by an Italian doctor to try to create the world's first cloned human baby have been fiercely criticised by politicians, ethical groups and scientists alike. Professor Severino Antinori, who will unveil his plans before the National Association of Sciences in Washington D.C. on Tuesday, hopes to begin a human cloning programme in November using 200 infertile couples. But critics say that the process used to create Dolly the sheep in 1997 - carries a very high risk of miscarriage and deformity. Even Dr. Ian Wilmut, who led the team that created Dolly, said it took 277 tries to get it right in a sheep and does not support human cloning. Ethical and religious groups argue Antinori's team and other cloning researchers are trying to "play God." Biochemist Art Caplan, of the University of Pennsylvania, told CNN: "This procedure is just not safe."

40. CNN.com - Jim Bittermann: The Possibility Of Cloning A Human - March 9, 2001
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Jim Bittermann: The possibility of cloning a human
Jim Bittermannn is CNN's senior European correspondent. Q: How do doctors propose to do this cloning procedure, and what is its intended purpose? Bittermann: Basically what the doctors here say is that they want to help couples who would like to have children to have children. That is one of the reasons why they have received so many hundreds of volunteers from all over the world who'd like to take part in these experiments. What they are not saying is that in fact cloning is an extremely complicated affair, and in the case of the animals that have been cloned like the sheep for instance, there have been hundreds of miscues of mistakes where a fully formed being is not created at the end of the process. MESSAGE BOARD Human cloning QUICK VOTE Do you support scientists' plans to clone a human being?

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