About site: Issues/Science and Technology/Biotechnology/Stem Cell Research - AAAS Policy Brief: Stem Cell Research
Return to Society also Society
  About site: http://www.aaas.org/spp/cstc/briefs/stemcells/index.shtml

Title: Issues/Science and Technology/Biotechnology/Stem Cell Research - AAAS Policy Brief: Stem Cell Research A summary of recent issues and events related to human embryonic stem cell research, and an extensive collection of links.
Kibbee,_Rosnagel,_Slater,_Thompson_and_Allied_Lines Family history including surnames Stadler, Emery, Thompson, Hintz, Wilson, Rakoczy and Masters. Features descendant trees, photographs and associated links.

Polk Family history including the Knox and Walker families of Scotland and Ireland, and the Shelby family of South Wales.

Hillel_and_Jewish_Student_Organizations Links to Hillel Foundations and Jewish student organizations in US college and university campuses.

Frank_and_Mike_-_Tribune Designed to stay in touch with family and friends, presented in e-zine format.

York_Grand_Lodge_of_Mexico Masonic Grand Lodge located in Mexico. In Spanish, English, and German.

Gamma_Sigma_Sigma_La_Salle_University_-_Delta_Omega_Chapter Located in Philadelphia, PA.


  Alexa statistic for http://www.aaas.org/spp/cstc/briefs/stemcells/index.shtml





Get your Google PageRank






Please visit: http://www.aaas.org/spp/cstc/briefs/stemcells/index.shtml


  Related sites for http://www.aaas.org/spp/cstc/briefs/stemcells/index.shtml
    Balsam Ancestors of Bill Balsam and Margaret Moreno. Includes searchable database.
    Knippelberg Family history and message boards. Includes searchable index, photographs, and related links. Also offers information in German.
    Weichinger Family history and genealogy.
    The_Melvin_Little_Socialist_Home_Page Personal website of a supporter of the Socialist Party, USA. Contains biographical sketches of significant socialists, a platform and left links.
    Northeast_District Serves congregations in Maine.
    Crystal_Cloud_Graphics Backgrounds and some .gif files, including animated crosses. Galleries listed by themes and include: world religions, cultural traditions, and esoteric.
    Jody\'s_Homepage Profile, photos and interests; in Columbia, South Carolina.
    Global_Trade_Watch__NAFTA_Coverage Introduction, report cards, job loss database, broken promises of the agreement, and the "The NAFTA Index".
    British_Council_of_Traditional_Witchcraft_Chat Covers pre-Gardnerian Witchcraft.
    Glasgow_City_Mission An inter-denominational Christian agency works alongside churches to provide for the spiritual and material welfare of the poor and disadvantaged in city of Glasgow, Scotland. Includes emergency shel
    The_Structural_Transformation_of_the_Public_Sphere Quotes from Habermas' works, assembled by Laura Mandell.
    Alliance_Francaise_de_Lahore View library, class schedule and services. Lahore, Pakistan.
    Sisters_of_St__Basil_the_Great Official web site of the American Province of this Ukrainian Catholic women's religious order. History, FAQs, mission statement, vocations page. Graphics-dependent.
    The_Faust_Tradition_from_Marlowe_to_Mann Directory of links to source documents pertinent to a scholarly study of Faustian legends.
    Crack_Down_on_Child_Porn The United Nations urges technology firms and ISPs to block access to illegal materials.
    Shimshon_and_Yishmael__Wild_Men_Generations_Apart Jewish essay comparing the characters of Samson and Ishmael.
    Jewish_Encyclopedia__Reuben Overview of the son of Jacob from the traditional Jewish perspective, including apocrypha and Talmudic commentary.
    NTSB__EgyptAir_Flight_990 The August 2000 report on the crash, statements, press releases, and other information on the investigation.
    Platonic_Academy About the academy in Florence. The members included Ficino, Pico and Machiavelli. From the Institute and Museum of the History of Science.
    Grand_Council_of_United_Emerald_Socieities Made up of Irish-American organizations, Emerald Socieities from various agencies and locations across the United States.
This is websites2007.org cache of m/ as retrieved on 2008.08.21 websites2007.org's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web. The page may have changed since that time.
AAAS - Center for Science, Technology and Congress Log In | Join | Search | Site Map | Contact Home About AAAS Programs Membership Publications News Career Support         Advanced search     AAAS Events & Links Events AAAS Board AAAS Council AAAS Elections AAAS Statements AAAS Store Annual Meeting Archives Awards Communicating Science Development Education Employment Experts Governance International Make a Gift Media Relations Membership Organization Press Releases R&D Budget and Policy Science Science Books & Film Science & Policy S&T Policy Fellowships             AAAS Center for Science, Technology and Congress   

AAAS Policy Brief: Stem Cell Research

Issue Summary | AAAS Resources | LinksContents Scientific Breakthrough Ban on Embryo Research Ethical Dispute NIH Guidelines Anticipation Builds The President's Decision The Controversy over Cell Lines Pressure Builds in Election Year 2006: The First Veto Stem Cells in the States 2007: The Second Veto Future Political Prospects Scientific Breakthrough The issue of stem cell research burst on the scientific scene in November of 1998 when researchers first reported the isolation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). The discovery, made by Dr. James A. Thomson, a biologist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, offered great promise for new ways of treating disease. The cells, which are derived from several-day-old embryos, can theoretically differentiate into virtually any type of human cell, from blood cells to skin cells. Scientists hope to find ways of using them to repair damaged tissue. For a clear and concise description of stem cells and their potential, see the National Institutes of Health (NIH) report Stem Cells: Scientific Progress and Future Research Directions, executive summary. Ban on Embryo Research Dr. Thomson's breakthrough work was not eligible for funding from NIH, the federal government's primary sponsor of biomedical research and the sponsor of some of his other research projects. Instead, he set up a separate lab to work on hESCs supported by private funding from the Geron Corporation of Menlo Park, California and the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF). The work was ineligible for public funding because of a ban placed by Congress on NIH-funded human embryo research. In 1995, Congress attached the ban to the bill appropriating funds for NIH. It has been retained in each successive appropriations bill (appropriations bills are passed annually), and until 2001, no public funding was ever provided for hESC research in the United States. The following is the text of the ban, originally authored in 1995 by then-Rep. Jay Dickey (R-AR), as it appeared in NIH's fiscal year 2006 appropriations bill (H.R. 3010, Sec. 509):     (a) None of the funds made available in this Act may be used for—  (1) the creation of a human embryo or embryos for research purposes; or  (2) research in which a human embryo or embryos are destroyed, discarded, or knowingly subjected to risk of injury or death greater than that allowed for research on fetuses in utero under 45 CFR 46.204(b) and section 498(b) of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 289g(b)).  (b) For purposes of this section, the term 'human embryo or embryos' includes any organism, not protected as a human subject under 45 CFR 46 as of the date of the enactment of this Act, that is derived by fertilization, parthenogenesis, cloning, or any other means from one or more human gametes or human diploid cells.  Because of the great potential promised by Dr. Thomson's discovery, NIH sought legal counsel from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on the application of the ban to hESC research. In January 1999, HHS concluded that scientists could use public funds for research on hESCs as long as derivation of the cells—which results in the destruction of an embryo—was carried out with private funds. NIH thus began drafting guidelines governing funding for hESC studies. Back to Contents Ethical Dispute Opponents of hESC research hold that human life begins as soon as an egg is fertilized, and they consider a human embryo to be a human being. They therefore consider any research that necessitates the destruction of a human embryo to be morally abhorrent. Proponents of hESC research, meanwhile, point out that in the natural reproductive process, human eggs are often fertilized but fail to implant in the uterus. A fertilized egg, they argue, while it may have the potential for human life, cannot be considered equivalent to a human being until it has at least been successfully implanted in a woman's uterus. In vitro fertilization clinics routinely create more human embryos than are needed over the course of a fertility treatment, and are therefore left with excess embryos that are often simply discarded. Proponents of research hold that it is morally permissible to use such embryos for potentially life-saving biomedical research. Opponents object to this argument, however, saying that such research would still condone the destruction of embryos. Some opponents of hESC research also argue that research on stem cells obtained from adults is just as promising and renders hESC research unnecessary. Most scientists, however, dispute this claim, citing great potential in the field of adult stem cells but several drawbacks as compared with hESCs. Proponents of hESC research advocate funding for both fields. Back to ContentsNIH Guidelines In December of 1999, NIH released draft guidelines allowing federally funded research on hESCs derived in the private sector and providing for stringent oversight of such research. The guidelines allowed research on cells derived only from embryos leftover from fertility treatments and donated with the consent of the progenitors. In addition, if a fertility clinic were to profit from the sale of embryos used for stem cell derivation, research on those cells would not be allowed. After reviewing a flood of comments, NIH released final guidelines on August 25, 2000, and with the backing of President Clinton, solicited applications for its first hESC research grants. The guidelines were greeted with mixed reviews: praise from many supporters of hESC research and criticism from opponents. NIH received several grant applications for work on hESCs under the new guidelines, and it established a committee to review the proposals. However, a statement by soon-to-be President Bush during his 2000 campaign indicated his opposition to hESC research and discouraged many scientists from submitting proposals. Bush said, "I oppose federal funding for stem cell research that involves destroying living human embryos." Because of this statement, some speculated that he would overturn the NIH guidelines as one of his first acts as president. The president stood by his statement, but he resisted calls to overturn the guidelines outright and instead ordered a review by Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson. In April, NIH canceled the first scheduled meeting of its committee set up to review grant applications for stem cell research. In a letter to the Culture of Life Foundation dated May 18, 2001, President Bush reiterated his campaign statement. Back to Contents Anticipation Builds During the president's first few months in office, he delayed his decision on the guidelines and repeatedly rebuffed attempts by reporters to get him to talk about the issue. Meanwhile, media attention on stem cell research built gradually until the topic reached the front pages in early summer of 2001. On July 9, stem cells graced the cover of Newsweek magazine. Reports surfaced of a divided White House as President Bush sought a compromise. Interest groups on each side of the issue waged intense lobbying campaigns. Patient groups, scientific organizations, and the biotechnology industry lobbied President Bush to go forward with federal funding for hESC research, while conservative anti-abortion groups and the Catholic Church urged him not to do so. In Congress, most Democrats and moderate Republicans argued for hESC research, while most conservatives oppose it. However, there were and continue to be a few staunch conservatives who support stem cell research, such as the late Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-SC) and former Sen. Connie Mack (R-FL). On June 13, 2001, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT), who led the fight in the early 1990s against fetal tissue research, came out strongly in favor of stem cell research. He set out his views in a 10-page letter to Secretary Thompson. At a hearing the following month, Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN), a surgeon who has often advised President Bush on health-related issues, announced his support for hESC research that is confined to "a limited number of cell lines." Back to Contents The President's Decision President Bush announced his decision in a primetime address to the nation on August 9, 2001. He decided to allow federal funding of hESC research to go forward, but only on cells already in existence. After researchers isolate stem cells from a human embryo, the cells often replicate indefinitely, creating a "cell line." The president decided that for a cell line already in existence, research would be permissible because destruction of an embryo had already taken place, but he refused to allow publicly funded research on any cell line created in the future so as to prevent the federal government from acting in a way that would encourage the destruction of human embryos. This decision drew mixed reactions from groups on each side of the issue. Some opponents of hESC research praised the decision for limiting research to existing cell lines, while others said that no research should be permitted under any circumstances. Proponents of hESC research, meanwhile, generally praised the president for allowing some research to go forward, but criticized the restriction to existing cell lines as too strict, questioning whether enough research would be allowed. Key to President Bush's decision was a determination by NIH that there were 64 cell lines in existence worldwide as of August 9. Previously, most scientists had thought the number to be much lower, and some expressed doubts about how many of the 64 cell lines would be truly useful to researchers and meet the stringent ethical requirements set out in the NIH guidelines and imposed by many universities. On August 27, NIH released a statement listing the ten entities that had created the cell lines and announcing plans to create the Human Embryonic Stem Cell Registry, which would contain more detailed information about the hESC lines eligible for federally funded research. The agency also encouraged researchers to submit grant applications for hESC research and requests to use existing funds for such research. The president also announced during his speech the formation of a President's Council on Bioethics, chaired by Dr. Leon Kass, a bioethicist at the University of Chicago. In addition to studying a range of ethical issues raised in the biomedical and behavioral sciences, the council oversees all federally funded hESC research. Back to Contents The Controversy over Cell LinesAccording to the August 27, 2001, NIH statement, there were 64 cell lines in existence as of August 9 at the following ten laboratories: Name Number of cell lines BresaGen, Inc., Athens, Georgia 4 CyThera, Inc., San Diego, California 9 Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden 5 Monash University, Melbourne, Australia 6 National Center for Biological Sciences, Bangalore, India 3 Reliance Life Sciences, Mumbai, India 7 Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel 4 University of California, San Francisco, California 2 Göteborg University, Göteborg, Sweden 19 Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, Madison, Wisconsin 5 Scientists raised concerns about these cells centering on five questions: whether the cell lines were indeed robust stem cell colonies; whether the procedures used to create the cells were consistent with high ethical standards; whether the different cell lines had sufficient genetic diversity; whether cells produced from the cell lines would be safe for implantation in humans; and whether the owners of the cell lines would make them available to researchers in a timely fashion and at a reasonable cost. NIH claimed that 19 stem cell lines existed at Göteborg University in Sweden . However, The New York Times reported that of these 19 lines, 12 were "still in early stages," four were "being studied and described," and just three were "established." Referring to the cells in early stages, Professor Lars Hamberger, a scientist at the Göteborg lab, told the Times that "[t]hose 12 perhaps ought to be called potential cell lines. If we get three good lines out of them we’ll be satisfied." In an appearance before the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee on September 5, 2001, Secretary Thompson acknowledged that just 24-25 of the cell lines were in fact established embryonic stem cell lines. He emphasized, however, that there were 64 "derivations" and that while some were in early stages of development, all were derived before August 9 from surplus embryos created by fertility clinics, making them eligible for use by federally funded researchers. Regarding ethical requirements, the NIH statement said that all of the 64 cell lines "meet the President’s criteria." In other words, they "must have been derived from an embryo that was created for reproductive purposes and was no longer needed," and "informed consent must have been obtained for the donation of the embryo and that donation must not have involved financial inducements." The statement did not indicate, however, whether the cells would be likely to meet the strict ethical standards enforced by many universities. Also in doubt was the genetic diversity of the cells. In order to account for genetic differences in studying stem cells, researchers need to carry out experiments on cells derived from a group of embryos that is genetically variable. While NIH revealed the locations of the existing cell lines, their origins remained uncertain. The safety of the existing cell lines for implantation also emerged as a major concern. Most of the cells grew in culture with the help of mouse stem cells, which could potentially introduce animal viruses dangerous to humans. Under Food and Drug Administration rules, such transplants with existing cells would be classified as "xenotransplants," or transplants of animal tissue, and would be subject to strict requirements on both researchers and patients. In order to address concerns about the access researchers would have to existing cell lines, Secretary Thompson announced at the HELP Committee hearing that NIH had signed a memorandum of understanding with WiCell Research Institute, which is affiliated with WARF. The agreement provided NIH scientists with access to WiCell's stem cell lines for their research and allowed them to freely publish their results. On November 7, 2001, NIH launched the Human Embryonic Stem Cell Registry. The registry listed all the cell lines eligible for federally funded research, along with contact information for researchers wishing to utilize them. For some of the cell lines, additional characterization information was also posted. Along with the creation of the registry, NIH issued notices formally inviting grant applications for research on the approved cell lines, withdrawing the Clinton Administration guidelines and explicitly delineating President Bush's criteria for embryonic stem cell research. The following year, the National Academy of Sciences released a report on stem cells that concluded that public funding should be made available for research on both embryonic and adult cells, and that in the long run, it would be necessary to derive new embryonic stem cell lines. As of August 14, 2002, a year after President Bush announced his stem cell policy, the NIH stem cell registry listed 78 eligible cell lines that met the president's criteria for publicly funded research. NIH reached agreements with four organizations to allow its researchers to use those organizations' cell lines. The agency also awarded several infrastructure awards to facilitate the distribution of the cells. However, many of the questions raised by scientists about the stem cell policy remained unanswered. News reports indicated that only about 16 of the 78 eligible cell lines were available for distribution, and only a handful had made it into the hands of researchers. Some scientists expressed concern that the slow pace of research in the United States would allow other countries to assume a leadership role in the field. Back to Contents Pressure Builds in Election Year The stem cell debate reappeared in full force in 2004. By that point, it was widely reported that the original number of embryonic stem cell lines deemed available for federal research in August 2001 had been overestimated and many of those cell lines were perhaps unsuitable for research. Many prominent scientists and varying health organizations spoke out in favor of reforming the President’s policy. In particular, the public pleas for increased support of embryonic stem cell research by the family of former President Reagan helped push stem cells into the daily headlines. In April, a bipartisan collection of 206 Representatives sent a letter to President Bush requesting a loosening of the limits on federal embryonic stem cell research. The President received a similar letter in early June from 58 Senators, including Orrin Hatch (R-UT) and Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX). Reps. Mike Castle (R-DE) and Diana DeGette (D-CO) sponsored, along with the support of 189 bipartisan House members, H.R. 4682, the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2004. While not specifying funding, this legislation called for increasing federal support of embryonic stem cell research. It would have allowed the use of stem cells derived from embryos that had been donated from in vitro fertilization clinics and that would have otherwise been discarded. The bill came to rest in the Subcommittee on Health of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. During the 2004 election, embryonic stem cell research became a defining issue between the two major presidential candidates. Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), the Democratic nominee, firmly called for increased federal funding of stem cell research and a repeal of the restrictions set in the August 2001 policy. Stem cell research even received prime-time billing in the Democratic National Convention with a speech by Ron Reagan Jr. The Bush Administration stood firmly by its policy and even First Lady Laura Bush, not known for her involvement in policy issues, came out in defense of the research limitations in a campaign rally. In mid July 2004, NIH announced plans to develop a National Stem Cell Bank that would consolidate some of the available embryonic cell lines into one location. Many opponents of the present restrictions saw the Cell Bank as a superficial arrangement to stifle the growing public dissonance and mask the serious problems with the existing embryonic cell lines. HHS issued a press release that same month highlighting President Bush's position on embryonic stem cells. It reiterated the Administration's stance that taxpayer dollars should not fund the destruction of human embryos, regardless of the source. Back to Contents 2006: The First Veto In February 2005, Castle and DeGette again introduced the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act, H.R. 810. This time the bill gained enough steam to pass the House three months later with a bipartisan vote of 238-194. In the Senate, hESC research proponents such as Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), head of the Appropriations panel responsible for NIH funding, called for consideration of the bill. Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) gave scientists hope when he announced in July 2005 that he had decided that the President’s policy was too restrictive and that he would support H.R. 810. After a yearlong delay in which the Senate leadership grappled with how best to bring the issue to the floor, Frist announced a plan in June 2006: The Senate would consider three bills, with no amendments, that would each require 60 votes to pass. One of them was H.R. 810. Supporters of H.R. 810 were pleased with the agreement; some had feared that, were the Senate given opportunity to amend H.R. 810, the bill would be slowed or killed as it was forced to go through the conference committee process. The other two bills up for consideration were S. 2754, a bill to encourage research into methods of obtaining cells similar to hESCs that would not destroy human embryos, and S. 3504, a bill that would prohibit the establishment of “fetal farms,” in which embryos would be harvested solely for research purposes. Specter teamed with his conservative counterpart in Pennsylvania, Republican Rick Santorum, to sponsor S. 2754. Santorum also sponsored S. 3504 along with fellow hESC research opponent Sam Brownback (R-KS). On July 18, the Senate passed all three bills. H.R. 810 passed with a vote of 63-37; the other two received unanimous votes of acceptance. To be veto-proof, the bill would have had to pass with 67 votes. But some surprises were in store in the House, where the two Senate bills were placed on the suspension calendar—a speedy vote process that eliminates floor amendments and enables bills to pass quickly with a supermajority, two-thirds of the vote. Pundits expected both bills to pass easily. Instead, only S. 3504 survived. Some Democrats indicated that S. 2754 would provide a form of political cover to the President to reject H.R. 810, and so the bill lost. The Republican leadership could have then attempted to bring up the bill again under normal procedures. Though S. 2754 had the votes to pass with a simple majority, a floor debate would have given Democrats a chance to steal the media spotlight from the President. So two bills went to the President for his signature, and as expected, the President made S. 3504 law and vetoed H.R. 810. It was the first veto of his five-plus-year presidency. Bush justified the veto by saying the bill “crosses a moral boundary that our decent society needs to respect.” The House failed to muster up the necessary votes to override the veto; thus, the stem cell landscape for now remains at status quo. Back to Contents Stem Cells in the States As hESC scientists had reason to fret over the lack of available funds, some states took steps to help fill in some of the gaps. In 2004, New Jersey became the first state to appropriate funding for hESC research. Later that year, California voters approved Proposition 71, which allocated $3 billion over 10 years to stem cell research. Connecticut, Illinois, and Maryland followed with funding initiatives of their own. Back to Contents 2007: The Second Veto In January 2007, after a crop of freshman lawmakers took office, the House again passed the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act (H.R. 3) with a vote of 253-174. The Senate followed suit in April (S. 5) with a vote of 63-34, which indicated that the Senate was likely one vote shy of a veto override. (Three Democratic senators who favored the bill in the past did not vote; their votes would bring the tally to 66 supporters.) Unlike H.R. 3, S. 5 contains additional provisions encouraging research into alternative methods of deriving stem cells. This is largely symbolic, as these alternative methods are already eligible for NIH funding. The Senate passed another bill, S. 30 , which calls solely for the funding of alternative methods; the vote was 70-28. S. 5 made it through the House on June 7 with a vote of 247-176. (The alteration from the previous vote on H.R. 3 had to do with a change in the makeup of nonvoting members.) On June 20 the President vetoed S. 5 and issued an executive order similar to the stalled S. 30-it encourages research into alternative methods of deriving stem cells. Back to Contents Future Political Prospects Though the composition of the Senate and the House has changed after the November 2006 election, it is unlikely that hESC research proponents will be able to drum up the 2/3-majority votes in both houses required to override a presidential veto. Therefore hESC researchers and their supporters will be looking to the 2008 race, where stem cells are likely to become an issue, although perhaps not a defining one, just as in the presidential race in 2004. Many observers seem to feel that it is not a matter of “if” but “when” hESC research outside of the approved cell lines becomes legally eligible for federal funding. Back to Contents Updated December 14, 2007 Copyright © 2007. American Association for the Advancement of Science. All rights reserved. Read our privacy policy. Contact info. Mission | History | Organization | Fellows | Annual Meeting | Affiliates | Awards | Giving Education | Science & Policy | International Office | Centers Join | Renew | Benefits | Member Sections | Membership Categories | Log in Science Online | Books & Reports | Newsletters | SB&F | Annual Report | Store Press Room | Events | Media Contacts | News Archives Science Careers | Fellowships | Internships | Employment at AAAS FoldNumber = 8; //How many toplinks do you have? CSTC « Home     About    Mission Staff Internships S&T Newsletter    Current Issue Archived Issues S&T Bill Trackers     Legislative Tracker 2008 Legislative Tracker 2007 Legislative Tracker 2006 Cap-&-Trade/Carbon Tax Legislation Top Issues     2008 Presidential Election Climate Change & Energy Innovation R&D Budget Info Stem Cell Research STEM Education Policy Briefs     A-110: Access to Data Biofuels Carbon Capture & Storage Coal-to-Liquid Technology Data Quality Human Cloning Peer Review Patent Reform Stem Cell Research Publications & Events     AAAS Statements & Letters      
 

A

summary

of

recent

issues

and

events

related

to

human

embryonic

stem

cell

research,

and

an

extensive

collection

of

links.

http://www.aaas.org/spp/cstc/briefs/stemcells/index.shtml

AAAS Policy Brief: Stem Cell Research 2008 August

dvd rental

dvd


A summary of recent issues and events related to human embryonic stem cell research, and an extensive collection of links.

Rules




© 2008 Internet Explorer 5+ or Netscape 6+

Recommended Sites: 1. Arts - Business - Computers - Games - Health - Home - Kids and Teens - News - Recreation - Reference - Regional - Science - Shopping - Society - Sports - World Miss Gallery - Top Anime Hentai - DVD rental by mail - Blog5 Game Cheats - Image Hosting - Free Credit Score - Pay Day Loans - Xbox Mod Chips
2008-08-21 05:59:14

Copyright 2005, 2006 by Webmaster
Websites is cool :) 135Hotel Japan - Acomplia - Poznan Hotels - Schornstein - Krakow Hotels