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         Cloning:     more books (100)
  1. I Am the Other: Literary Negotiations of Human Cloning (Contributions to the Study of Science Fiction and Fantasy) by Maria Aline Salgueiro Seabra Ferreira, 2005-02-28
  2. Clones and Clones: Facts and Fantasies About Human Cloning
  3. Human Cloning and Human Dignity: The Report of the President's Council on Bioethics by Leon R. Kass, 2002-10
  4. Germ Cell Protocols: Volume 2: Molecular Embryo Analysis, Live Imaging, Transgenesis, and Cloning (Methods in Molecular Biology)
  5. Human Cloning: Religious Responses
  6. Genesis of the Grail Kings: The Explosive Story of Genetic Cloning and the Ancient Bloodline of Jesus by Laurence Gardner, 2002-01-01
  7. Yes to Human Cloning: Eternal Life Thanks to Science by Rael, 2001-06
  8. Molecular Cloning and Gene Regulation in Bacilli
  9. Human Cloning: Science, Ethics, and Public Policy
  10. Understanding Cloning by Editors of Scientific American, 2002-08-23
  11. Human cloning: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Science, 3rd ed.</i> by Antonio Farina, 2004
  12. Guide to Molecular Cloning Techniques, Volume 152: Volume 152: Guide to Molecular Cloning Techniques (Methods in Enzymology) by BERGER, 1987-10-28
  13. Scientific and Medical Aspects of Human Reproductive Cloning by National Research Council, 2002-05-17
  14. Cloning Silicon Valley: The Next Generation High-Tech Hotspots by David Rosenberg, 2001-11

81. GSM Cloning
GSM cloning. (Note that some of this information, specifically regarding the possibility of overthe-air cloning, is now outdated.
http://www.isaac.cs.berkeley.edu/isaac/gsm.html
GSM Cloning
History: On April 13, 1998, the Smartcard Developer Association and the ISAAC security research group announced a flaw in the authentication codes found in digital GSM cellphones. This allows an attacker with physical access to a target phone to make an exact duplicate (a ``clone'') and to make fraudulent calls billed to the target user's account. At the time of the announcement, we published an overview of our results , including some detailed technical information. (Note that some of this information, specifically regarding the possibility of over-the-air cloning, is now outdated. See below for more discussion.) Press coverage: The Los Angeles Times local copy The New York Times The Associated Press ... The Daily Californian Readers of the scard mailing list have pointed out that, in Europe, one can anonymously rent GSM cellphones quite cheaply. The prospect of those phones getting cloned is a bit worrisome. Three years later: Indications are that the GSM industry is taking steps to repair the security weaknesses in the GSM cryptographic algorithms. A patched version of COMP128 is now available (called COMP128-2), although it remains unpublished. Most importantly, the GSM industry appears to have at least partially learned the important lesson here: `security through obscurity doesn't work'. The next-generation replacement for GSM, called 3GPP, will use algorithms developed based on principles from the research literature. The 3GPP cryptographic algorithms have been published for scientists to study, which gives the research community a chance to give early warning of any potential weaknesses and also to gain confidence in the 3GPP ciphers. I am strongly supportive of this effort.

82. CNN.com - Health - Online Reaction To Human Cloning Research - March 28, 2001
CNN
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Online reaction to human cloning research
Human cloning is an issue with vital medical, ethical and religious implications, and not surprisingly, it has resulted in passionate debate between proponents, opponents and the undecided. The following quotes are a sampling of opinions posted by members of the CNN Community about research into human cloning. They illustrate arguments from all sides of the issue, but may not be representative of public opinion at large.
From the message boards
To all of you worried about cloning messing with nature: Man has been using cloning (albeit on plants) since the dawn of agriculture. Without cloning and genetic engineering, there is no way that the human race would have been able to grow to its current size there just wouldn't be enough food. D.F.

83. GSM Cloning
GSM cloning. Here is some information on our GSM cloning results, starting at a very high level, and moving on eventually to detailed
http://www.isaac.cs.berkeley.edu/isaac/gsm-faq.html
GSM Cloning
Here is some information on our GSM cloning results, starting at a very high level, and moving on eventually to detailed technical information, with data for the cryptographers and mathematicians at the end. Please feel free to contact us gsm@isaac.cs.berkeley.edu with any questions. This is joint work with Ian Goldberg (also of the ISAAC research group) and Marc Briceno (Director of the Smartcard Developers Association Important note added after publication: This article was released on April 13, 1998. This is the original version of that article (with no changes made other than this note), and is provided primarily for historical reasons. Please beware that some of our understanding about some details of the attack especially the possibility of over-the-air cloning has changed since when we wrote this note. We now feel that we understated the risk of over-the-air attacks in our initial announcement; based on new information, we have come to the conclusion that over-the-air cloning must be considered a very real threat which should not be ignored. Please see

84. CloneCD Forums :: Index
Discussions about cloning cds including playstation games and how to make working copies of any CD, whether or not it is copyprotected with a cd key or serial.
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85. Cloning
students! cloning. “Clone” derives from the Greek word for “twig” — Scientific American , May 1997. 2004. See also. cloning searches
http://www.geocities.com/skews_me/cloning.html
Welcome Dutch University of Nijmegen students
BI 101
students!
Cloning
“Clone” derives from the Greek word for “twig”
Scientific American
, May 1997.
cloning i cloning and stem-cell research ii ... pics Advocates for patients, as well as the biotechnology industry, are strongly in support of therapeutic cloning [The history of cloning dates back more than a century to 1891 Naples when Hans Driesch (see also Adolph Eduard Driesch ), in a controversial experiment, separated the blastomeres of a cleaving sea urchin egg.] He picked [sea urchins] because they have large embryo cells, and grow independently of their mothers. Dreich took a 2 celled embryo of a sea urchin and shook it in a beaker full of sea water until the two cells separated. Each grew independently, and formed a separate, whole sea urchin. In 1902, another scientist, embryologist Hans Spemman [or Spemann pic ), used a hair from his infant son as a knife to separate a 2-celled embryo of a salamander, which also grow externally. He later separated a single cell from a 16-celled embryo. In these experiments, both the large and the small embryos developed into identical adult salamanders. If the constriction is not complete and produces only a dumbbell, one may obtain an embryo with a single tail and two complete heads.

86. CNN.com - Q&A: Human Cloning - August 7, 2001
CNN
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LONDON, England (CNN) A group of European and U.S. researchers have said they will begin attempts to clone a human being in November. Italian obstetrician Severino Antinori and U.S. researcher Panos Zavos say 200 couples have volunteered to take part in the cloning procedure. CNN reporter Chris Burns in Italy assesses the situation. Q: Is human cloning really feasible? A: Italian professor Severino Antinori contends that it is, following successful tests with various species of animals. Q: How will the cloning process be conducted? VIDEO CNN's Elizabeth Cohen interviews Dr. Panos Zavos on his plans to clone humans (August 6) Play video (QuickTime, Real or Windows Media) CNN's Kyra Phillips talks to CNN Legal Analyst Roger Cossack about U.S. cloning laws (August 7) Play video (QuickTime, Real or Windows Media) A: Dr. Antinori plans to choose from hundreds of candidates he says have applied to be involved with cloning. The candidates are couples unable to have children because the male is sterile. If the process goes ahead, the nucleus from a cell in the male will replace the nucleus of his partner's embryo, then the embryo is implanted in the woman's uterus. Antinori plans to begin human cloning in November.

87. Human Cloning, The How To Page
I have other pages for humor, but this page is only for serious cloning info. This procedure is based upon the Sheep cloning procedure.
http://www.biofact.com/cloning/human.html
How to Clone a Human (Version 1.1)
This is not a joke procedure, it's the real thing. I have other pages for humor, but this page is only for serious cloning info. This page was updated on 2/27/98 (to version 1.1) with new information from Dr. Lee Silver of Princeton University, a noted expert on cloning. This procedure is based upon the Sheep cloning procedure. The mouse cloning procedure seems to have worked better, so I'll be changing this page to Version 1.2 when I get all that information together. The two procedures are similar, but not identical. This page provided courtesy of:
The BioFact Report
Materials
  • Human Tissue : Pure human cells of one tissue type, from the individual who will be cloned.
  • Human Tissue Culture Media: Media in which these human cells will grow and divide.
  • Minimal Human Tissue Culture Media: Media in which cells will stop dividing, and enter a state of "quiescence" without dying.
  • Laboratory supplies: Incubator, Sterile Hood, petri dishes, microscopes, and tools capable of removing and implanting cellular organelles, such as the nucleus, from one cell to another.
  • Unfertilized human egg cells.

88. CNN.com - Team To Attempt Human Cloning - March 9, 2001
CNN
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Team to attempt human cloning
ROME, Italy (CNN) An international group of fertility experts has announced details of their plans to be the first scientists to clone a human being. The group, meeting in Rome, discussed their strategy for human and so-called therapeutic cloning to help tackle a range of degenerative diseases. The plan has come under heavy fire from scientific and religious camps and has been attacked as "grotesque" by the Vatican. AUDIO Arthur Caplan, Univ. of Pennsylvania: It's clearly amoral 852K/79 sec. AIFF or WAV sound MESSAGE BOARD Human cloning QUICK VOTE Do you support scientists' plans to clone a human being? Yes No View Results IN-DEPTH CNN explores the blueprint of the body: Overview Genome guide Glossary Genetics FAQ ALSO

89. Plasmid Insertion
cloning into a Plasmid. Legend Process by which a plasmid is used to import recombinant DNA into a host cell for cloning. Many diseases
http://www.accessexcellence.org/AB/GG/plasmid.html

Cloning into a Plasmid
Legend:
Process by which a plasmid is used to import recombinant DNA into a host cell for cloning. Many diseases are caused by gene alterations. Our understanding of genetic diseases was greatly increased by information gained from DNA cloning. In DNA cloning, a DNA fragment that contains a gene of interest is inserted into a cloning vector or plasmid The plasmid carrying genes for antibiotic resistance, and a DNA strand, which contains the gene of interest, are both cut with the same restriction endonuclease . The plasmid is opened up and the gene is freed from its parent DNA strand. They have complementary "sticky ends." The opened plasmid and the freed gene are mixed with DNA ligase, which reforms the two pieces as recombinant DNA. Plasmids + copies of the DNA fragment produce quantities of recombinant DNA. This recombinant DNA stew is allowed to transform a bacterial culture, which is then exposed to antibiotics. All the cells except those which have been encoded by the plasmid DNA recombinant are killed, leaving a cell culture containing the desired recombinant DNA. DNA cloning allows a copy of any specific part of a DNA (or RNA) sequence to be selected among many others and produced in an unlimited amount. This technique is the first stage of most of the genetic engineering experiments: production of DNA libraries, PCR, DNA sequencing, et al.

90. THE E-JOURNAL OF HUMANCLONING
Electronic journal, with original articles and reviews on stem cell research and ethics.
http://www.humancloning.150m.com/home.html
Free Web Site Hosting Web Hosting
THE e-JOURNAL OF
HUMAN CLONING Welcome to the e-Journal of Human Cloning Visit the HUMANCLONING interactive - the new interactive forum of the e-Journal of Human Cloning. You could post your articles in the contributions section of HUMANCLONING interactive Chat with people at the HUMANCLONING interactive home editorials latest articles ... us
SEARCH THIS WEBSITE LINK EXCHANGE PROGRAM SPONSORS news Swiss to Act to Keep Out 'Suicide Tourists'
Telegraph http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/
UK: Cloning/Stem Cell Business Closes Down
BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/2260841.stm
(Web photo: BBC)
Higher Drug Doses Seen as OK for Dying Patients
Reuters http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/4080696.htm
New Genetic Screening Detects More Abnormalities in Embryos Reuters http://www.4woman.org/nwhic/News/2002/02sep17-2.htm Hopes Raised of Using Adult Stem Cells to Treat Muscular Dystrophy BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2262217.stm

91. The President's Council On Bioethics: Human Cloning And Human Dignity: An Ethica
printerfriendly version. Human cloning and Human Dignity An Ethical Inquiry. The President s Council on Bioethics Washington, DC, July 2002.
http://www.bioethics.gov/reports/cloningreport/
Human Cloning and Human Dignity:
An Ethical Inquiry The President's Council on Bioethics
Washington, D.C., July 2002 If you are interested in ordering a report, please send requests with the name of the report and your full mailing address to info@bioethics.gov. Please allow 6 to 8 weeks for delivery.
Table of Contents:

92. CNN.com - British Panel Recommends Human Cloning For Cell Research - August 16,
CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/08/16/embryo.cloning.ap/index.html
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British panel recommends human cloning for cell research
LONDON (AP) A panel of experts urged the government to allow human cloning for scientific study of transplants, a recommendation that, if approved, would make Britain the first country in the world to authorize human cloning for any purpose. In calling for Britain to amend its ban on human cloning, the government-commissioned panel said scientists should be allowed to create cloned embryos to study the manufacture of cells and tissues for transplant.

93. Ad Hoc Committee On An International Convention Against The Reproductive Cloning
the International Atomic Energy Agency, for the purpose of considering the elaboration of an international convention against the reproductive cloning of human
http://www.un.org/law/cloning/
Other UN legal web sites International Law web site Office of Legal Affairs Codification of International Law Treaty Collection Sixth Committee International Law Commission International Trade Law Law of the Sea International Criminal Court United Nations Homepage Terrorism Committee Juris. Imm. Committee UN Safety Committee Charter Committee Repertory of Practice Other UN legal web sites last update: 15 December 2003 The General Assembly, at its 72nd plenary meeting held on 9 December 2003, decided, without a vote, to include the item in the provisional agenda of its fifty-ninth session in 2004. No meeting of the Ad Hoc Committee or the Working Group of the Sixth Committee is scheduled for 2004 (i.e. the item will only next be discussed in the Sixth Committee in late 2004) Introduction The General Assembly, in resolution 56/93 of 12 December 2001, decided to establish an Ad Hoc Committee, open to all States Members of the United Nations or members of specialized agencies or of the International Atomic Energy Agency, for the purpose of considering the elaboration of an international convention against the reproductive cloning of human beings.

94. CNN.com - Bush Prods Senate To Adopt Ban On All Cloning - April 11, 2002
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Bush prods Senate to adopt ban on all cloning
Bush: "Life is a creation, not a commodity." From Major Garrett CNN White House Correspondent WASHINGTON (CNN) President Bush on Wednesday pressed the Senate to forbid the cloning of human embryos either for research or reproductive purposes, saying any reason for human cloning would be unethical. "Anything other than a total ban on human cloning would be unethical," he said in a speech at the White House. "Research cloning would contradict the most fundamental principle of medical ethics that no human life should be exploited or extinguished for the benefit of another." Bush issued a call last year against cloning human embryos, and Wednesday he built on that call, arguing that other forms of biomedical research offer greater promise without the moral objections raised by cloning. EXTRA INFORMATION Flash Animation: The cloning process Flash Animation: Cloning for treatments Timeline: A chronology of cloning Bush endorsed legislation sponsored by Sens. Sam Brownback, R-Kansas, and Mary Landrieu, D-Louisiana, that would make it a federal crime to create a cloned human embryo. The bill has 29 Senate co-sponsors but Landrieu, running for re-election this year, is the only Democrat to sign onto the measure.

95. Welcome To Cloning Around! Cloning Around (c) 1987-2002 David Scott MacLachlan -
cloning Around © 1987Present. Cartoons about clones, creatures, monsters and mutations who List of all cloning Around © Cartoons.
http://www.cloningaround.com/
Cartoons about clones, creatures, monsters and mutations who have escaped from a genetic engineering research laboratory and the Slightly Miffed Scientists who created them. Cloning Around " started life in the late 1980's as your typical "Genetic mutations escape from a college biochemistry laboratory" campus newspaper cartoon strip. It originally followed the standard three or four panel format, but over the years it has since mutated into a single panel cartoon for the most part. Every now and then it regresses to a multiple panel version. The characters aren't based on any particular person, they're just products of an especially fevered imagination. What would start out as random doodles would eventually take on a life of their own, becoming Clyde, Prof. Arnbuckle, The Sock Monster, et al. As you will notice, bad puns run rampant throughout the strip. Guilty as charged - but, I remain unre pun tant ;) If you find that there's a particular cartoon that you truly like, and want a hardcopy version of it for framing, or for using as the centerpiece for a dartboard, please contact me and we can discuss prices. The original versions that I create are done in a higher resolution than the ones that I post on the web, and are much more suitable for printing.

96. CNN.com - Cloning Pigs For Parts - January 7, 2002
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Cloning pigs for parts
by Jeffrey P. Kahn, Ph.D., M.P.H. Director, Center for Bioethics University of Minnesota The same biotechnology company that brought us Dolly the sheep, along with one of its competitors, announced it has now successfully cloned genetically modified pigs. What’s special about these pigs is that they have certain of their genes shut off or “knocked out,” which the companies hope could eventually lead to growing animals whose organs can be transplanted into humans. This could be a major medical advance that would change the way we think about organ transplantation. We might move from the current situation of severe shortage and patients dying long before organs become available, to a time when organ transplant could be treated like other surgeries. But transplanting animal organs into humans – known as xenotransplantation raises its own issues. How safe will organs from animals be for humans? Is it acceptable to engineer and grow animals so that their organs can be used for human transplants? And if everyone who needed a transplant was to receive one, what impact would that have on our health care systems?

97. 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
  • 98. CNN.com - Elizabeth Cohen: Congressional Hearings On Human Cloning - June 20, 20
    CNN
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    Elizabeth Cohen: Congressional hearings on human cloning
    Elizabeth Cohen is a medical correspondent for CNN's Health and Medical Unit. Q: Why hasn't Congress taken up the issue of banning human cloning earlier? Cohen: They have taken up the issue before. There have been calls for banning of human cloning ever since Dolly the sheep was cloned in 1997. It hasn't gone anywhere in the last four years, however, but now there are two groups that say they are ready to start cloning in fact, one group may have already started the Congress is feeling more pressure to actually come up with a ban. ALSO U.S. lawmakers debate limits on human cloning Q: How close are these groups to succeeding? Cohen: One of the groups, they call themselves the Raelians, told Congress in March that they were ready to start a human pregnancy that would lead to a human clone in April, two months ago. So it is possible there is a surrogate mother walking around, two months pregnant with the world's first human clone, but it's impossible to know if this group is serious. They won't tell us if they have a pregnancy, and said they were not going to tell the media anything until they have a healthy human baby clone. Some people think that the science of this group, the Raelians, isn't really serious. This group thinks that human beings were really created by alien scientists. Other people say that the science behind cloning isn't really all that complicated, it's pretty much the same as you would have done for Dolly, cows or mice, and if you could do it in animals you could do it in humans.

    99. Cloning-Key Text
    Key text The mammal copiers – advances in cloning. Published by In nature, cloning is common among plants and is used extensively in plant propagation.
    http://www.science.org.au/nova/043/043key.htm
    Key text
    Published by
    Australian Academy
    of Science Sponsored by The cloning of Dolly the sheep has stimulated discussion on the benefits and risks of the development of cloning techniques. You will get more from this topic if you have mastered the basics of DNA and genes Printer-friendly version of complete topic In nature, cloning is common among plants and is used extensively in plant propagation. The offspring produced by cloning (and other methods of asexual reproduction ) simply develop from cells produced by the parent. Because the offspring have genetic information identical to the parent, they develop very similar characteristics to their parent (and to one another) as they mature. This means that an agriculturalist who grows new plants from pieces of an older plant ensures that the new crop will be a fairly uniform one ( Box 1 ). In contrast, an individual formed by sexual reproduction develops from a cell produced by the union of two cells, usually from different parents. Offspring produced in this way are not genetically identical to each other or to their parents, unlike offspring formed by asexual methods of reproduction. The only clones produced naturally in vertebrate animals are identical twins. These are formed when cells produced by the early divisions of the fertilised egg separate and independently develop into new individuals. They are therefore genetically identical to each other but not identical to their parents.

    100. CNN.com - U.S. Cloning Advance Shocks World - November 27, 2001
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    U.S. cloning advance shocks world
    LONDON, England Political and religious leaders around the world have condemned the latest breakthrough in cloning research in which a U.S. company said it had cloned a human embryo for the first time. The private U.S. research company Advanced Cell Technology (ACT), based in Worcester, Massachusetts said on Sunday it had cloned embryos by removing the DNA from human egg cells. The DNA from an adult human body cell was then implanted into the egg cell, which was then stimulated to grow into a six-cell embryo. VIDEO President George W. Bush speaks out against cloning of human beings. CNN's Kelly Wallace reports (November 26) Play video (QuickTime, Real or Windows Media) MORE STORIES The company behind the clones: Advanced Cell Technology CNN Access: "I'm just trying to help people who are sick"

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