Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_C - Cloning
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 193    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | 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  

         Cloning:     more books (100)
  1. Ethical Issues in Human Cloning: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives
  2. Cloning of the American Mind: Eradicating Morality through Education by B. K. Eakman, Bev Eakman, 1998-08-01
  3. Cloning: For and Against (For and Against, Vol 3)
  4. The Cloning of Joanna May by Fay Weldon, 1991-03-01
  5. Cloning and the Future of Human Embryo Research
  6. Cloning, Gene Expression, and Protein Purification: Experimental Procedures and Process Rationale by Charles Hardin, Jennifer Edwards, et all 2001-03-01
  7. Stem Cell Research and Cloning (Point/Counterpoint) by Alan Marzilli, 2007-01-30
  8. Who's Afraid of Human Cloning? by Gregory E. Pence, 1998-01-25
  9. After Dolly: The Promise and Perils of Cloning by Ian Wilmut, Roger Highfield, 2007-08-20
  10. Stem Cell Research and Cloning: Contemporary Challenges to Our Humanity (Interface: a Forum for Theology in the Word) (Interface: A Forum for Theology ... A Forum for Theology in the World)
  11. Cloning (Contemporary Issues Companion)
  12. Understanding DNA and Gene Cloning: A Guide for the Curious by Karl Drlica, 2003-04-25
  13. Cloning Miranda by Carol Matas, 1999
  14. Crafting a Cloning Policy: From Dolly to Stem Cells by Andrea, L Bonnicksen, 2002-07-15

41. Americans To Ban Cloning
Group of Americans promoting a global, comprehensive ban on human cloning.
http://www.cloninginformation.org/
Audio/Video
Cloning Information
Commentaries
Congressional Testimony
...
Fact of the Day
(Archive)
Founding Statement

Latest News

Press Releases and

Public Statements
...
Email Signup
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. Latest News and Information Catholic, Confucian Groups Speak Out Against Hwang Korea Times U.S. Relatively Hospitable to Stem-Cell Research ( Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Study: Lack of Coherent Cloning Policies Reflects Polarized Debate, Limited Understanding ( Medical News Today Louisiana: House Committee OKs Competing Versions of Anti-Cloning Bills ( AP Scientists Ask Nations to Allow Therapeutic Human Cloning for Stem Cell Work ( AP Recent Commentary and Testimony
A Review of the Novel Cast of Shadows
Christina Bieber Lake - The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity Production of Pluripotent Stem Cells by Oocyte Assisted Reprogramming Joint Statement - The Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity Contrary To Popular Assumption...

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

43. Roslin Institute, Edinburgh
early development, reproduction, animal behaviour and welfare and has pioneeredmethods for the genetic modification and cloning of farm animals.
http://www.roslin.ac.uk/
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 The leading centre for animal biotechnology
Roslin Institute is one of the world's leading centres for research on farm and other animals. It has internationally recognised programmes on molecular and quantitative genetics, genomics, early development, reproduction, animal behaviour and welfare and has pioneered methods for the genetic modification and cloning of farm animals. Our research aims to provide new opportunities for three industry sectors: animal breeding, biotechnology and animal production. This research also informs national and international policy on animal welfare, the environment and genetic diversity. Roslin Institute, Roslin BioCentre, Midlothian EH25 9PS Scotland UK

44. CNN.com - Stem Cell, Cloning Bills Dropped - November 2, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/11/02/senate.stem.cells/index.html
MAIN PAGE
WORLD

U.S.

WEATHER
...
ABOUT US/HELP

CNN TV what's on
show transcripts

CNN Headline News

CNN International
...
askCNN

EDITIONS CNN.com Asia CNN.com Europe CNNenEspanol.com CNNArabic.com ... set your edition Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW InStyle Business 2.0
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.

45. 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
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
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

46. MedlinePlus: Cloning
From the National Institutes of Health; cloning/Embryonic Stem Cells (NationalHuman Genome Select services and providers for cloning in your area.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/cloning.html
@import url(http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/images/advanced.css); Skip navigation
Other health topics: A B C D ... List of All Topics
Cloning
Contents of this page:
From the NIH

Dictionaries/Glossaries

Organizations

Search MEDLINE/PubMed for recent research articles on
Cloning
You may also be interested in these MedlinePlus related pages:
Genes and Gene Therapy

Genetics/Birth Defects


Select services and providers for Cloning in your area.

47. CNN.com - Jim Bittermann: The Possibility Of Cloning A Human - March 9, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/WORLD/europe/03/09/bitterman.debrief/index.html
MAIN PAGE WORLD U.S.
WEATHER
...
ABOUT US

CNN TV what's on
show transcripts

CNN Headline News

CNN International

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
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?

48. CNN.com - Critics Warn Of Cloning Risks - August 6, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/WORLD/europe/08/06/clone.critics/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 Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW
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."

49. The Cloning Process
The following presents th e of cloning, the process of how Dolly was cloned, Lee notes that at this time, no ethical doctor would do human cloning
http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~jones/tmp352/projects98/group1/how.html
Human Cloning
t h e p r o c e s s Government Involvement
Practical Uses

Back to Main Page

Introduction
The following presents th e of cloning, the process of how "Dolly" was cloned, and the procedure of how to clone a human. Also presented is a brief outline of the arguments for and against human cloning.
History of Cloning
Cloning is not new. Experiments with frogs and toads date back to the 1970s . And experiments involving plants and animal embryos have been performed for years. But experiments involving human beings have never been tried or thought possible, until "Dolly." Her birth shocked the scientific community and has spurred discussion about the possibility of human clones. Dr. Lee Silver, a molecular biologist at Princeton University, is optimistic that "human cloning will occur," and that "it might take five years, ten years at the outermost." Lee notes that at this time, "no ethical doctor would do human cloning" ( Clones 2 ). Although this view is predominant among many scientists, some argue that a safe technology could be developed in the future. This has led to discussion about whether human cloning should even be legally possible.
Numerous events have occurred since the birth of "Dolly" that have only complicated this controversial issue over human cloning. Click here to view a

50. Cloning And Stem Cells
Articles on stem cells, germ line genetic engineering, tissue regeneration, transgenics, nuclear transfer. Published quarterly.
http://www.liebertpub.com/clo
The Leading Publisher in Biotechnology
view cart
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., The Leading Publisher in Biotechnology
Cloning and Stem Cells
ISSN 1536-2302 - Published Quarterly
*** Ian Wilmut, Editor-in-Chief, is moving to The University of Edinburgh in mid-July 2005. Please visit this website again for his new contact information. ***
Editor-in-Chief Ian Wilmut
has won the Ehrlich and Darmstaedter Prize,
Germany’s most prestigious medical award Long-Term Bovine Hematopoietic Engraftment with Clone-Derived Stem Cells
Challenges of Primate Embryonic Stem Cell Research
Cutting-Edge Paper on the Successful Generation of Retinal Pigment Epithelium Cells to Treat Blindness View a special symposium issue on "The Assessment of Food Quality from Cloned Animals"
About the Journal
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, Science Citation Index-Expanded

51. TMP 352 - Human Cloning
The word cloning is used to define replication of cells, tissues, embryos, andgenes. It is important to note that the greatest controversy arises from
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

52. CNN.com - U.S. Lawmakers Debate Limits On Human Cloning - June 21, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/06/20/cloning.hearing/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 Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW
U.S. lawmakers debate limits on human cloning
By Thurston Hatcher CNN WASHINGTON (CNN) The White House believes all forms of human cloning should be banned, whether it's for reproduction or for medical research, an administration official told legislators Wednesday. President Bush and Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson "make very clear they oppose any and all attempts to clone a human being," said Claude Allen, deputy secretary for the Department of Health and Human Services. Allen addressed members of a House subcommittee considering two bills that would restrict cloning. One would ban all forms of human cloning, while another would restrict cloning intended to create a pregnancy but allowing some research. Without endorsing the more restrictive bill, Allen said embryos cloned for research could be used too easily for reproductive purposes. "The administration believes it's in the best interest at this time to ban both research as well as reproductive cloning because the easy step that moves us across that line we all agree is reprehensible," Allen said.

53. Cloning - Cloning, Cloning, Cloning
Gene shows you what short sheep have to do with modern science.
http://www.eurekascience.com/ICanDoThat/cloning.htm
Home I Can Do That! DNA
Introduction

Structure

Genes

Replication
...
Detail
CELLS
Bacteria

Plants

Animals
SYNTHESIS
RNA

Protein
Detail METHODS Cloning Genetic Engineering MORE Links Send us mail Proud to be a National Science Teacher's Association recommended site Seth Wright was the first to breed animals for favorable traits. In 1791, the Massachusetts farmer found a short legged sheep in his flock. He bred a line of sheep with short legs, because they couldn't jump over his fences and escape! Cloning "Hi! Gene back to tell you all about cloning. It's all over the news with identical sheep (as if they don't look enough alike already) and tomatoes that stay fresh on the shelves for a longer time. The words 'cloning' and 'genetic engineering' are often used by people as though they mean the same thing. Well, they have an overlapping meaning that becomes clear when we look through history. "Genetic engineering, in its broadest definition, means to manipulate a species so that a particular trait is increased in the population. A trait is how an organism looks or acts or what it does. Brown eyes is a trait. Flying in circles is a trait. Climbing trees is a trait. "The earliest forms of genetic engineering occurred on farms, where most people on earth lived at the time. They managed to do this by selecting seeds from plants that maybe had more fruit production or tastier leaves than other plants of its type.

54. CNN.com - Human Embryo Created Through Cloning - November 26, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/TECH/science/11/25/human.embryo.clone/index.html
MAIN PAGE
WORLD

U.S.

WEATHER
...
ABOUT US/HELP

CNN TV what's on
show transcripts

CNN Headline News

CNN International
...
askCNN

EDITIONS CNN.com Asia CNN.com Europe CNNenEspanol.com CNNArabic.com ... set your edition Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW InStyle Business 2.0
Human embryo created through cloning
WASHINGTON (CNN) Scientists at a technology company said Sunday they have created human embryos through cloning, drawing criticism from President Bush and lawmakers and raising new ethical questions. Advanced Cell Technology Inc. of Worcester, Massachusetts, said the experiment was aimed not at creating a human being but at mining the embryo for stem cells used to treat disease. Stem cells are a kind of master cell that can grow into any kind of cell in the body. The company's study was also published in an online scientific journal. "I'm just trying to help people who are sick, and really that's our focus," said Dr. Michael West, the company's president and CEO. He called the development "the first, halting steps" toward a new area of medicine. Speaking on CNN's "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer," West disputed the suggestion the work amounted to the creation of a human being.

55. Wired News: Cloning The Best In Show
However, she said the AKC has yet to address how cloning will affect But theHumane Society of the United States says dog cloning poses an animal
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,68423,00.html?tw=rss.TOP

56. CNN.com - Research Progress: Pig Cloning For Organs - January 3, 2002
CNN
http://cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/01/03/pig.cloning/index.html
MAIN PAGE
WORLD

U.S.

WEATHER
...
ABOUT US/HELP

CNN TV what's on
show transcripts

CNN Headline News

CNN International
...
askCNN

EDITIONS CNN.com Asia CNN.com Europe CNNenEspanol.com CNNArabic.com ... set your edition Languages Spanish Portuguese German Italian Korean Arabic Japanese Time, Inc. Time.com People Fortune EW InStyle Business 2.0
Research progress: Pig cloning for organs
Target is gene that leads to organ rejection
COLUMBIA, Missouri (CNN) Researchers say they've taken a major step toward cloning pigs whose hearts, lungs and kidneys could be safely transplanted into humans. Such organs would save the lives of thousands of critically ill people who cannot get transplants because of the shortage of human organs. Using the same cloning technique that created the sheep Dolly, scientists say they produced four piglets without one of two genes that lead to the massive rejections that have plagued efforts at xenotransplantation the process of replacing human organs with animal organs. "We've knocked out one copy of the gene known to cause this immune response," said Randall Prather at the University of Missouri-Columbia, who performed the nuclear transfer that produced the piglets. "Now we have to do other studies to make the double knockout." QUICKVOTE Do you see an ethical dilemma in the development of pig organs for safe transplantation into humans?

57. Cloning Report
Collection of articles about cloning from 1999 and 2000 from the Washington PostOnline.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/science/cloning/cloning.htm

Home
Register Web Search:
News Home Page
Photo Galleries Politics Nation ... News Index
Poll
Should the U.S. ban human cloning? Yes No View results
Web Resources
National Bioethics Advisory Commission

How to Clone a Sheep

Roslin Institute Online

Cloning Report Overview

In 1997, researchers at Scotland's Roslin Institute sparked international debate when they announced the cloning of a sheep named Dolly. The event brought humankind to another crossroads of scientific research and ethical concerns. This special report uses background stories and opinion pieces to review the latest developments in cloning research and to present the breadth of legal and ethical arguments. Scottish Scientists Clone Adult Sheep (The Washington Post, 02/24/97) In The News 1 Embryo, 4 Clones? : Feat Involving Monkey Could Aid Disease Research, Scientists Say (The Washington Post, Jan. 14, 2000) Cloning With Not-So-Fresh Cells (The Washington Post, Jan. 10, 2000)

58. Wired 11.01: The First Cloning Superpower
In any case, Tong performed his experiments not to study cloning per se but Attitudes toward cloning changed in November 1998, when James Thomson of the
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.01/cloning.html
Search:
Wired News Animation Wired Magazine HotBot (the Web)
Pg 1 of 7
Print
email , or fax
this article for free.
The First Cloning Superpower
Inside China's race to become the clone capital of the world.
By Charles C. Mann I am peering into a laboratory microscope at what is sort of a cloned human being. Sort of a cloned human being because it's only a blastocyst, a very early stage embryo that's floating under the microscope like a tiny bit of soap foam. And also sort of because this blastocyst was created by inserting all the DNA from a human being into the egg of a rabbit.
Sacha Waldman This little swimming experiment in interspecies biology is taking place not in some high tech office park or Ivy League research lab, but on the top floor of an emergency ward at a shabby hospital complex in mainland China. Downstairs, the reception area is lined with battered folding chairs occupied by patients with makeshift bandages or open wounds. Splashed across the linoleum is what looks like dried blood. But here on the top floor, the elevator opens to a world of $100,000 microscopes, sperm-washing machines, and egg-denucleating micropipettes. Major scientific journals won't publish research that has been described in the popular media, so I have promised not to divulge identifying details about the experiment or the scientist performing it, whom I'll call Dr. X. But I can say that Dr. X's laboratory is one of three I visited in China where researchers are investigating interspecies clones. And I can also say that this experiment would be illicit if not completely illegal in the United States and most of the developed world. But in China it's all legal, every bit of it, which is a big reason why Dr. X moved here after spending a decade at a public institution in the US.

59. Cloning Pregnancy Fact Or Fiction?
CNN
http://cnn.com/2002/HEALTH/04/09/cloning.pregnancy.reut/index.html

60. Cloning And Stem Cells
Publishes peerreviewed research papers on opportunities for mammalian cells inmedicine and agriculture, along with the culture and differentiation from
http://www.liebertpub.com/publication.aspx?pub_id=9

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 193    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

free hit counter