Expand All Collapse All Extent 588 folders, approximately 26,437 pages Summary This collection deals with records addressing the issues of cloning, stem cells, family planning, and other related matters. These papers document the efforts of the Clinton Administration to expand family planning on both the domestic and international level, to put restrictions and limitations on cloning, and to arrive at some sort of agreement that would make it possible for stem cells to be used in research. The collection contains press releases, emails with attachments focusing on scheduling and legislation, drafts, executive orders, reports, correspondence, memoranda, and newspaper clippings Scope and Content Note The materials in FOIA 2013-0365-F are a selective body of documents responsive to the topic of the FOIA. Researchers should consult the archivist about related materials. On the fourth day of his presidency, January 23, 1993 (also the 20th anniversary of Roe v. Wade), the President signed a series of executive orders that reversed policies of the Reagan-Bush era dealing with abortion, contraception, and family planning. Specifically, he did away with the Global Gag Rule (also known as the Mexico City Policy) and, in the process, made it possible once again for U.S. funds to be utilized in support of international family planning and population control efforts. This change increased the availability of contraception and, as a consequence, drastically lowered the number of abortions. Other measures adopted included Title X Family Planning Programs, funding for Medicaid to expand family planning, and the authorization of the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) to test the drug RU-486. President Clinton also established the Office of Women's Initiatives and Outreach in June 1995 that worked on family planning as well as many other women’s issues. During the Clinton Administration a dramatic increase occurred in federal funding for new scientific endeavors such as biomedical research and nanotechnology. One of the issues addressed related to a strategy for dealing with AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome). Within a matter of months upon becoming President, Clinton signed the National Institutes of Health Revitalization Act of 1993. The bill created the Office of AIDS Research charged with formulating a federal plan of biomedical research for this disease. As his term in office was nearing an end, on June 26, 2000, President Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair announced the completion of a “rough draft” of the Human Genome Project (HGP). The main benefit concerned a rudimentary map of the human genetic code. Bioethical considerations and legislation on cloning and stem cells were also addressed during the Clinton Administration. The National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC), established by Executive Order 12975 on October 3, 1995, was initially tasked with studying the use of human subjects in experiments. President Clinton asked that the body analyze the cloning of human beings after the announcement in February 1997 of the successful cloning of a sheep from fully differentiated cells. The NBAC wrote the report "Cloning Human Beings" in June of 1997. The report endorsed the administration's prohibition on federal funding for the cloning of human beings and the request that the private sector adopt a self-imposed moratorium on cloning human beings. In response to recommendations in the report, the Office of Science and Technology, in collaboration with the Domestic Policy Council, developed legislation prohibiting the use of this technology to clone human beings that was transmitted by the President to Congress. After the publication of its 1997 report to the President, the NBAC continued to address issues related to the use of somatic cell nuclear transfer and stem cells. Responding to a request from the President, NBAC issued a report in November 1998 dealing with the ethical considerations of generating animal/human hybrid cells using cloning techniques. A more comprehensive examination of the ethical, medical, and legal issues associated with stem cell research, “Ethical Issues in Human Stem Cell Research” was published in September of 1999. The report recommended the use of stem cells for research which prompted President Clinton to have federal agencies create human stem cell guidelines. The White House Office of Records Management (WHORM)-Subject File-General contains a wide variety of material relating to family planning, biomedical research, cloning, and stem cells. Correspondence, memoranda, drafts, reports, notes, articles, clippings, executive orders, press releases, graphs, charts, and emails deal with these issues. There are letters from organizations such as the American Heart Association urging President Clinton to support increased funding for biomedical research as a way of finding new methods and drugs to fight debilitating illnesses and diseases. Memoranda, drafts of executive orders and charters, checklists, and notes highlight the creation of the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC). The same type of documents concern the extension of the charter of the NBAC and the appointment of individuals to serve on the board. Family planning and population assistance (and such related matters as the Title X “Gag Rule,” privately funded abortions at military hospitals, the importation of RU-486, and federal funding of fetal tissue transplantation research) receive coverage largely through tracking sheets and presidential memoranda published in the Federal Register. The records of the Chief of Staff contain reports, correspondence, memoranda, faxes, talking points, notes, drafts of bills and amendments, and press releases and statements focusing on specific issues related primarily to family planning and, to a lesser extent, biomedical research and stem cells. Often in the form of policy options on international population assistance, most of the memos are directed to President Clinton and offer a wide range of choices the administration could adopt in the matter of family planning. In another instance, USAID (United States Agency for International Development) occupies an integral position in the dispensing of aid to countries engaged in programs designed to reign in the alarming rise in abortions. Hence, a report entitled “The Role of Family Planning in Preventing Abortion” is produced. Elsewhere, outside groups such as Planned Parenthood and the Alan Guttmacher Institute (a non-profit organization with respect to advancing the cause of reproductive health) bombard the White House with letters pleading for Clinton to continue policies which place the United States in a leading role as far as population control goes in the underdeveloped world. To that end the administration put together a conference called “Saving Women’s Lives, Protecting Women’s Health: U.S. Global Leadership in Family Planning” on April 7, 2000, in preparation for the White House World Health Day Ceremony. The records of the Counsel’s Office (in this case almost entirely belonging to Shelli Peterson) seem to deal for the most part with family planning and cloning. As an emerging scientific issue, cloning received a considerable amount of attention in the latter part of the Clinton Administration. Speech and letter drafts, charts outlining state legislation vis-à-vis cloning for 1997-1998, newspaper and scholarly articles, memoranda detailing policy options for President Clinton, and congressional testimony constitute the high points of coverage in the collection. The charts in question provide up-to-date information listing the bill number and and the date of its introduction in the state legislature, the bill’s sponsor, the main points of the bill in the form of a concise summary, and the status of the bill (dead, signed into law, referred to another legislative committee, etc.). Memos that are addressed to the President come from his advisors such as Todd Stern and concern proposed cloning legislation, a report on cloning from the National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC), and what should be said in a presidential statement on cloning. Furthermore, the records pertaining to family planning principally concern the Mexico City Policy that President Clinton sought to overturn. They come in the form of fact sheets, emails, drafts, handwritten notes, memoranda, faxes, transcripts, addresses, Department of State documents, papers listing legislative policy options, copies of pages from publications (generally dealing with the laws and statutes of the United States), and talking points. For example, on the question of lobbying and international family planning the Department of the Treasury advises the Associate Counsel to the President that foreign organizations receiving funds from USAID should not be permitted to influence decisions made by their respective governments. There are three folders of material entitled “Mexico City: Research on “Lobbying,” attesting to the perceived possible repercussions of the problem and the thought given to finding a solution. Finally, numerous memoranda and lists describe in detail legislative policy options regarding international population assistance. One such record bears the title “State/USAID List of Mexico City Options” with an asterisk denoting an option recommended by State/USAID staff. The records of the Domestic Policy Council (DPC) contain press releases and statements, drafts of bills and executive orders, memoranda, newspaper articles, correspondence, faxes, emails, lists, reports, and speeches in the midst of ongoing revisions. Typically, the memos give President Clinton information about hot-button issues (such as abortion), present him a range of options on specific points related to the matter at hand (abortion would be linked to the Hyde Amendment), and then describe for him the reasoning that led his advisors to prefer one choice (lined up as accept, reject, or discuss) above the other possible selections. Statements of administration policy generally undergo numerous changes in wording attempting to focus on the language crucial to the acceptance or rejection of a particular law. For example, the Clinton Administration decided to make its opposition to H.R. 2159 (Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Operations Appropriations Bill, FY 1998) clear and obvious and declared it would vote against any amendment prohibiting “foreign non-governmental organizations from receiving U.S. population funds if the organization uses any of its own funding from non-U.S government sources for abortion-related services.” Cloning is a topic covered extensively in the files of the DPC. “Cloning Human Beings: Report and Recommendations of the National Bioethics Advisory Commission” came out in June 1997 and devoted a major portion of the body of its work to religious perspectives and ethical considerations of the rapidly emerging and controversial scientific conundrum. Family planning took on an international flavor with two folders of material examining the practices of the People’s Republic of China. Legal opinions pertaining to the issue (especially the chance of Chinese aliens gaining asylum) can also be found in this part of the collection. Concentrating primarily on family planning and cloning, the records of the Office of Legislative Affairs provide substantial information and insight on at least a number of occasions. They come in the shape of fact sheets, drawings, talking points, correspondence, press releases, memoranda, bills, and handwritten notes. Memos are addressed to President Clinton and furnish him with updates on the move to repeal the Mexico City Policy by getting the requisite votes in Congress. A fact sheet devoted to the NBAC points out that the group reports to the President’s National Science and Technology Council. There are copies of the Florida Cloning Bill, possible legislative options (with respect to cloning) that need to be considered, and a diagram entitled “Reproductive and Therapeutic Cloning by Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer.” Coming into existence during the Clinton Administration, the National AIDS Policy Office helped to energize the national response to the challenges posed by HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) and AIDS. The records of this office contain memoranda, press releases, publications, correspondence, reports, faxes, and drafts. One of the press releases deals with President Clinton announcing the first ever National AIDS Strategy on December 16, 1996. Taking the form of a draft, Policy Information Notice #94 is entitled “Services for Patients with HIV Infection.” Published by the United States Conference of Mayors, AIDS Information Exchange has a lead article called “Safer-Sex Relapse: A Contemporary Challenge.” Memos originate with the Department of Health and Human Services (HEW) and, in one instance, address the need for a conference on adolescent gays and lesbians. Finally, there is an informative booklet put out by the Gay Men’s Health Crisis (GMHC). A product of the X International AIDS Conference held in Yokahoma, Japan, in August 1994, Current Directions in AIDS Research: An Analysis of AIDS Drug and Vaccine Development at the NIH contains 35 pages devoted to all aspects of NIH Clinical Research on AIDS. The records of the Office of Public Liaison include correspondence, memoranda, reports, emails, press releases, guidelines, correspondence, fact sheets, and handwritten notes seeming to center around the issue of stem cell research. Discussed at length pretty much everywhere in the files are the legal ramifications of stem cell research (most often in the shape of memos), with special emphasis being placed on permitting federal funding for research involving the use of embryonic stem cells that would open up the possibility for scientific advances in the treatment of cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer's, and Parkinson's. There is a list of organizations to be consulted in the legislative roll out of bills pertaining to stem cell research. Prominently featured groups are the American Cancer Society, Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, American Pediatric Society, American Medical Association, and Christopher Reeves Paralysis Foundation. Guidelines refers to “National Institute of Health Guidelines for Research Using Human Pluripotent Stem Cells,” published by the Public Health Service of the National Institutes of Health. These strictures take-up 25 pages with even the financial issues relating to stem cell research being mentioned. The records of the Office of Women’s Initiative and Outreach contain emails, handwritten notes, fact sheets, correspondence, newspaper articles, lists, memoranda, drafts, agendas, speeches, determinations (also known as findings), and faxes relating to family planning. Included is a list of approximately 20 individuals slated to attend a meeting on international family planning to be held at the White House in June 2000. Hosted by staffers Steve Ricchetti and LaJaycee Brown, the conference stood out for the remarkable number of organizations who sent representatives to Washington, D.C. They came from, among other groups, Population Action International, Zero Population Growth, Centre for Development and Population Activities, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Alan Guttmacher Institute, and National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association. Letters that can be found here include groups (such as American University for Women, American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Reproductive Law and Policy, etc.) importuning President Clinton to do everything within his power to keep the United States at the forefront of overseas family planning programs. Drafts of a justification memorandum leading up to the eventual issuance of a presidential determination point to the negative impact a four month delay (March 1, 1997 to July 1, 1997) in obligating appropriations for population assistance funding might have on many countries (Bolivia, Haiti, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Dominican Republic, Russia, Ukraine, the Philippines, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Mozambique, Uganda, and Zimbabwe in particular). Other documents of note outlining the gap in the availability of funds imposed by Congress range from informational in nature (“FY 1997 International Population Assistance Funding”) that were produced by Population Action International to a list of communications strategy options. The email in this collection are divided into five sections by topic: biomedical research, reproduction, and surrogacy; cloning; family planning; in vitro or infertility; and stem cells. Under each topic email is divided by office and there under organized chronologically. Typically the email from the offices of WHO, OPD, and CEA will contain email from and between White House staff whereas the email bucket Default will contain email from groups working outside the White House staff, such as the NBAC’s email exchanges. The biomedical research, reproduction, and surrogacy subsection contains email from 1994-2001. The topic of the email include: the National Bioethics Advisory Commission’s (NBAC’s) deliberations, drafts, and comments concerning their 1997 report, “Cloning Human Beings;” the work of the White House staff in response to the NBAC’s findings, and the President’s bill to Congress, "Cloning Prohibition Act of 1997;” as well as discussion among White House staff concerning policy and press strategy. This subseries greatly overlaps with the cloning subsection. The cloning subsection contains email from 1994-2001. The topic of the email also include the deliberations, drafts, meetings, many revisions, and comments concerning the above mentioned report; as well as the drafting, strategy, and deliberations concerning the above mentioned bill sent to congress in 1997. In addition, this section contains email concerning: the executive order creating the National Bioethics Advisory Commission and its membership; the Denver Summit of the Eight’s communique as it related to cloning internationally; remarks, memoranda, press releases, and questions and answers for President Clinton, First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, and Vice President Al Gore on cloning topics; scheduling of meetings and calls between White House staff, the NBAC, and/or community leaders; the cloning of Dolly the Sheep; the prohibition on federal funding for cloning of human beings; and the White House’s response to cloning in the private sector. The family planning subsection contains email from 1993-2001. The topic of the email include: the work of the Office for Women's Initiatives and Outreach; reproductive rights; teen pregnancy; contraception; abortion; abortion clinic violence; the Mexico City Policy or the Global Gag Rule and UN arrears; the authorization of the FDA to test RU-486; Title X Family Planning Programs; foreign aid and domestic federal budgets that fund family planning; legislative strategy; remarks, talking points, radio addresses, form letters to the public, and memoranda for President Clinton and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton; Planned Parenthood; the Supreme Court’s decision in Roe vs. Wade; the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL); an increase of funding for Medicaid to support family planning services; the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) Cairo+5 Forum; and National Institutes of Health’s research in infertility, contraception, and related matters. The in vitro or infertility subsection contains email from 1994-2000. The topic of the email greatly overlap with the cloning and family planning email. Very little is solely written in email concerning in vitro or infertility. The stem cell subsection contains email from 1996-2001. The topic of the email include: the NBAC’s deliberations, meetings, drafts, and comments as they wrote the September 1999 report, “Ethical Issues in Human Stem Cell Research,” and the Commission’s considerations on the issue of animal/human hybrid cells used for cloning; Dr. Harold Varmus, Director of the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH’s) testimony before the Senate Labor, Health and Human Services (HHS) Appropriations Subcommittee on human stem cell research; NIH and other federally funded scientists use of human embryonic stem cells for research; cloning; in vitro fertilization; talking points, press conferences, remarks, and memoranda for President Clinton regarding stem cells; debates on stem cell legislation; and NIH and HHS Human Stem Cell Guidelines. Record Type Textual System of Arrangement Records that are responsive to this FOIA request were found in these collection areas – Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM Alpha Files, Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM Subject Files, Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM Subject Files CF, Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM (OP), Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files, Clinton Presidential Records: Automated Records Management System Email, and Clinton Presidential Records: Tape Restoration Project Email. The White House Office of Records Management (WHORM) contains a variety of series created to organize and track documents and correspondence. The WHORM Alpha File was compiled by the White House Office of Records Management from 1993 – 1996 and is a series of documents arranged by name of persons, organizations, or events. The WHORM Subject File was compiled by the White House Office of Records Management and is a series of categories designated by a letter/number combination. In addition, there are WHORM, WHORM Counsel, WHORM (CL), WHORM (OP), WHORM (Too Late), WHORM (Various Offices), and WHORM (Alpha Project) series. Staff and Office Files are maintained at the folder level by staff members within their individual offices and document all levels of administration activity. White House Office of Records Management (WHORM) Files are processed at the document level; whereas, Staff and Office Files are processed at the folder level, that is, individual documents are not selected and removed from a folder for processing. While this method maintains folder integrity, it frequently results in the incidental processing of documents that are not wholly responsive to the subject area. The Automated Records Management System (ARMS) is a database that contains email records of the Executive Office of the President. This system maintained unclassified Presidential email. The ARMS dataset is comprised of 6 sub-series of email records called “Buckets.” The buckets include NPR, OPD, POTUS, WHO, CEA, and Default. ARMS emails are arranged chronologically by creation date. The Tape Restoration Project (TRP) is a database consisting of restored emails from the Automated Records Management System from July 1994 through June of 2000. The TRP is a database that contains email records of the Executive Office of the President. This system maintained unclassified Presidential record email. The TRP dataset is comprised of 6 sub-series of email records called “Buckets.” buckets include NPR, OPD, POTUS, WHO, CEA, and Default. ARMS emails are arranged chronologically by creation date. FOIA 2013-0365-F includes WHORM records from these subject codes: AG002 – Agriculture – Research Programs CO038 – China, People’s Republic of CO077 – India CO178 – United Kingdom FA – Federal Aid FA004 – Public Health FE002 – Declaration of Independence – Constitution FE003 – Executive Orders FG001 – President of the United States FG001-06 – Appointments – Interviews, Meetings with, Presidential FG001-07 – Appointments Granted, Presidential FG001-08 – Presidential Telephone Calls FG006-01 – White House Office FG006-03 – Chief of Staff FG006-06 – National Security Council (NSC) FG022 – Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) FG022-02 – National Cancer Institute FG022-03 – Public Health Service (NIH) FG065 – Independent Agencies, Boards and Commissions FG185 – National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) FG527 – National Bioethics Advisory Commission (NBAC) FI004 – Budget – Appropriations FI004-02 – Estimates, Budget FO003-02 – Mutual Security – Foreign Aid FO006 – International Conferences HE – Health HE001 – Diseases – Disabilities HE001-04 – Heart Disease HE001-05 – Mental Disorders HO – Holidays IM – Immigration –Naturalization IS001 – Accident – Hospital – Medical – Health – Medicare – Unemployment IT086 – Secretariat, United Nations IV – Invitations IV093 – Invitations for 1993 IV096 – Invitations for 1996 ME001-04 – Illness/Get Well PP005-01 – First Lady PR010 – Motion Pictures – Film Strips – Recordings PU001-07 – Clippings to the President SC – Sciences SP297-40 – Draft Legislation “Cloning Prohibition Act of 1997” SP400 – Radio Addresses WE001 – Children (Welfare Services – Adoption – Abuse) WE003 – Family Planning. Access Collection is open to all researchers. Access to Clinton Presidential Records is governed by the Presidential Records Act (PRA)(44 U.S.C. Chapter 22, as amended) and the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) (5 U.S.C. 552, as amended) and therefore records may be restricted in whole or in part in accordance with legal exemptions. Copyright Documents in this collection that were prepared by officials of the United States government as part of their official duties are in the public domain. Researchers are advised to consult copyright law of the United States (17 U.S.C. Chapter 1) which governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Provenance Official records of William Jefferson Clinton’s presidency are housed at the Clinton Presidential Library and administered by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) under the provisions of the Presidential Records Act (PRA). Processed by Staff Archivist, 2014. Previously restricted materials are added as they are released. Last Modified Date 2016-07-19 Container List The following is a list of documents and folders processed in response to FOIA 2013-0365-F: Please note that a single asterisk “*” indicates that the category is entirely processed and open. Box 1 Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM: Alpha File [Ban Human Cloning – Report of the American Bioethics Advisory Commission] [OA/ID 9410] [DeSarno, Judith – National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association] [OA/ID 16375] [Feldt, Gloria – Planned Parenthood] [OA/ID 16375] [Magee, Jodi – Physicians for Reproductive Choice & Health] [OA/ID 16375] Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM: Subject File Category Case Number AG002 207701 CO038 047445SS 050846SS CO077 266967 CO178 426111 FA 269620 285867 403313 FA004 207045 252549 [1] 252549 [2] 296995 [1] 296995 [2] FE002 255580 FE003 069607SS FG001 211180SS 255420SS 306244SS 314665SS 400282 FG001-06 318296 421215 421278 FG001-07 417029 417059 417063 [1] 417063 [2] 417076 [1] Category Case Number FG001-07 417076 [2] 417088 417101 417113 Box 2 Category Case Number FG001-07 417121 417141 417254 417259 417425 [1] 417425 [2] FG001-08 206923SS FG006-01 426313 FG006-03 001991 FG006-06 006601 FG022 302476 413731 FG022-02 112825 FG022-03 042258 077057 098252 435507 FG065 086111 139379 139761 147377 209345 FG185 155119 FG527* 090345 177408SS 210514 217493SS 218900 220345SS 220442SS 228053SS 268568 268609 285629SS 313144SS [1] 313144SS [2] Box 3 Category Case Number FG527 423615 Category Case Number FG527 426906 FI004 036307 051601 089268 150055 152130 154135 225665 255935 258153 291099 403229 404106 414327 431677 FI004-02 130813 132237 FO003-02 159057 FO006 068750 077626 HE 036798 037332 054157 139188SS 154924 293848 HE001 228376 258927 HE001-04 042519 043089 043557 044361 077581 077586 077587 077622 077649 077705 077997 078062 078065 078840 079190 079191 080195 080197 080205 080528 Category Case Number HE001-04 133963 134001 134017 139017 HE001-05 297030 302122 402498 Box 4 Category Case Number HO 040944SS IM ` 109366 125989SS IS001 225610SS 420756 IT086 155299SS IV 025412 026077 IV093 025419 025474 IV096 205700 ME001-04 191563 PP005-01 048744 060520 [Center for Biomedical Ethics] 073393 [Sophie Davis, School of Biomedical Education] 085119 [National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association] 087731 [Biomedical Marketing Association] 118704 [National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association] PR010 225400 PU001-07 036084SS 245606SS [1] 245606SS [2] 245606SS [3] 245606SS [4] 309316SS 401495 SC 022693 042899 043626 045595 093322 132810SS [1] 132810SS [2] 133363 Box 5 Category Case Number SC 208058SS Category Case Number SC 208130SS 208794SS 208852SS 209465 210874 211215SS 212780 214795 221757SS 222085SS [1] 222085SS [2] 222594 222751 250070 253056 253111 271824SS 274279 284007SS 304549SS 304924SS SP297-40 234754SS SP400 249567SS 405865 WE001 216537 WE003 000096SS [1] 000096SS [2] 001116SS 039130 039165 115560 155048 159587 174114 194441 203464SS [1] 203464SS [2] Box 6 Category Case Number WE003 203464SS [3] 204254 206549 209439 211046 214372 214498 403351 Category Case Number WE003 404270 405059 406187 406245 407517 407704 418312 424574 428761 WE012 201151 206693 206793 206794 208253 Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM: Subject File CF Category Case Number IM 065839SS WE003 160014 Clinton Presidential Records: WHORM (OP) 210378 [John McConnaughy, International Family Planning Funding] [OA/ID 8621] 256534 [Joslin Diabetes Center – Congressional Biomedical Research Caucus] [OA/ID 10896] 315053 [Maryland Commission for Celebration 2000] [OA/ID 13893] 407343 [Biomedical/Clinical Engineering Appreciation Week] [OA/ID 14777] 409594 [Family Planning of San Angelo, Texas] [OA/ID 14789] Clinton Presidential Records: White House Staff and Office Files President Has Seen Folder #2 – February 13, 1997 – Release – International Family Planning - House Approves Funds for Overseas Family Planning [OA/ID 9357] Agency Liaison Correspondence Natural Family Planning of Nebraska [OA/ID 7878] Cabinet Affairs McGuire, Anne Cloning [OA/ID 13166] Chief of Staff Echaveste, Maria Miscellaneous Issues [OA/ID 14591] Stem Cell [OA/ID 18904] Foley, Martha International Family Planning 1 [1] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 1 [2] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 1 [3] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 2 [1] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 2 [2] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 2 [3] [OA/ID 24407] Box 7 International Family Planning 3 [1] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 3 [2] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 3 [3] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 4 [1] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 4 [2] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 4 [3] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 5 [1] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 5 [2] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 5 [3] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 6 [1] [OA/ID 24407] International Family Planning 6 [2] [OA/ID 24407] Lewis, Ann Cloning [OA/ID 16427] Family Planning [1] [OA/ID 16429] Family Planning [2] [OA/ID 16429] Family Planning (Miscellaneous) [OA/ID 16429] Middleton, Mark Biomedical Industry Council [1] [OA/ID 4509] Biomedical Industry Council [2] [OA/ID 4509] Box 8 Biomedical Industry Council [3] [OA/ID 4509] Biomedical Industry Council [4] [OA/ID 4509] Biomedical Industry Council [5] [OA/ID 4509] Biomedical Industry Council [6] [OA/ID 4509] Podesta, John [Biomedical Research] [1] [OA/ID 24971] [Biomedical Resaerch] [2] [OA/ID 24971] [Stem Cells] [OA/ID 24971] Vellenga, Thomas Fam [Family] Planning [1] [OA/ID 8740] Fam [Family] Planning [2] [OA/ID 8740] Communications Costello, Brenda Family Planning [OA/ID 17326] Correspondence Presidential Letters Folders with Background Regarding Late Term Abortion Issue & Family Planning Issue [1] [OA/ID 13503] Folders with Background Regarding Late Term Abortion Issue & Family Planning Issue [2] [OA/ID 13503 Roddick, Trudy Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-403 FDA Approval of Can Cell Revisions – October 8, 1993 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-404 Breast Cancer Research Revisions – May 20, 1994, October 11, 1994, September 19, 1995, & April 16, 1997 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-404A Breast Cancer Research/Personal Involvement Revisions – May 20, 1994, October 11, 1994, September 25, 1995, & April 16, 1997 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-405 Health Care Reform/Concern Re Medicare Revisions – May 23, 1994 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-406 Health Care Reform/Physicians’ Concerns Revisions – None [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-407 Health Care Coverage/Concerns About Independent Contractors Revisions – March 29, 1994 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-408 Coverage of Abortion in Health Care Act Revisions – None [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-409 Questions Regarding Health Care Plan Revisions – None [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-410 Serious Illness Revisions – May 31, 1994 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-410A Medical Research/Concerns Re Specific Diseases Revisions – June 7, 1994 [OA/ID 19954] Box 9 Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-411 Marijuana/Medical Purposes Revisions – May 9, 1997 [OA/ID 19954] Presidential Correspondence – Mail Analysis; P-412 Cloning Revisions – May 13, 1997 [OA/ID 19954] Counsel’s Office Aronowitz, Michelle Stem Cell Research [OA/ID 24515] Belk, Peter Boards & Commissions – National Bioethics Advisory Comm. [Commission] [OA/ID 18955] Klein, Joel National Bioethics Advisory Commission [OA/ID 6041] Peterson, Shelli Cloning [OA/ID 16441] Draft FY [Fiscal Year] 2000 Population Assistance Certification [OA/ID 21947] [Family Planning & USAID (Agency for International Development)]: [loose] [documents] [1] [OA/ID 21947] [Family Planning & USAID (Agency for International Development)]: [loose] [documents] [2] [OA/ID 21947] [Family Planning & USAID (United States Agency for International Development)]: [USAID Family Planning & International Community] [OA/ID 21947] [Family Planning & USAID (United States Agency for International Development)]: [USAID Population Assistance FY (Fiscal Year) 2000] [1] [OA/ID 21947] [Family Planning & USAID (United States Agency for International Development)]: [USAID Population Assistance FY (Fiscal Year) 2000] [2] [OA/ID 21947] Gilman-Pelosi [OA/ID 21947] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – 1997 State Legislation on Cloning [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – 1998 State Legislation on Cloning [1] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – 1998 State Legislation on Cloning [2] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: [Human Cloning – The Bread Line] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Denver Summit [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – FDA [Food and Drug Administration] Jurisdiction [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Glossary of Genomics Terms [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Human Cloning Acts & Bills State Legislation on Human Cloning [1] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Human Cloning Acts & Bills State Legislation on Human Cloning [2] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Legal Protection for Bio-Technological Inventions [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Medical Research [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: [Human Cloning – Memo Christina Tsai to Michelle Peterson; re: Cloning Files] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Memos for the President [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – National Bioethics Advisory Commission/BIO [Biotechnology Industry Organization]/PhRMA [Pharmaceutical Research & Manufacturers of America] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Press Clips [1] [OA/ID 16438] Box 10 [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Press Clips [2] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 2]: Human Cloning – Remarks by the President [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Albany Law Journal of Science & Technology – “The Clonal Child: Procreative Liberty & Asexual Reproduction,” by Katheryn D. Katz] [1] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Albany Law Journal of Science & Technology – “The Clonal Child: Procreative Liberty & Asexual Reproduction,” by Katheryn D. Katz] [2] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Harvard Journal of Law & Technology – “Does the FDA Have Authority To Regulate Human Cloning?” by Elizabeth C. Price] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Harvard Journal of Law & Technology – “Is There A Right to Clone?: Constitutional Challenges to Bans on Human Cloning,” by Lori B. Andrews] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Harvard Law Review – “Human Cloning & Substantive Due Process”] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Texas Law Review – “Liberty, Identity, & Human Cloning,” by John A. Robertson] [1] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [Texas Law Review – “Liberty, Identity, & Human Cloning,” by John A. Robertson] [2] [OA/ID 16438] [Folder 3]: [White House & Minority Scholarship Issue] [OA/ID 16438] [International Family Planning] [OA/ID 21947] [Loose Documents Re: Family Planning & USAID (Agency for International Development)] [unfoldered] [1] [OA/ID 21947] [Loose Documents Re: Family Planning & USAID (Agency for International Development)] [unfoldered] [2] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City [1] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City [2] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City [3] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City [4] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: AID [Agency for International Development] Options Memo [empty] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Explanatory Memos & Talking Points [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Factual Background Memos [1] [OA/ID 21947] Box 11 Mexico City: Factual Background Memos [2] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Reagan Era Regs. [Regulations] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Research on “Lobbying” [1] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Research on “Lobbying” [2] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Research on “Lobbying” [3] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: State Options Memos [empty] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City: Waiver Examples [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City Implementation WHO [White House Office] – Mar 95: [International Family Planning] [1] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City Implementation WHO [White House Office] – Mar 95: [International Family Planning] [2] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City Implementation WHO [White House Office] – Mar 95: Mexico City Lang. [Language] Implementation, 99-00 [1] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City Implementation WHO [White House Office] – Mar 95: Mexico City Lang. [Language] Implementation, 99-00 [2] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City Implementation WHO [White House Office] – Mar 95: Mexico City Lang. [Language] Implementation, 99-00 [3] [OA/ID 21947] Mexico City Implementation WHO [White House Office] – Mar 95: Mexico City Lang. [Language] Implementation, 99-00 [4] [OA/ID 21947] Smith Language [OA/ID 21947] Stem Cell Research [OA/ID 21948] Various Drafts of Options [OA/ID 21947] [Voluntary Family Planning Projects] [1] [OA/ID 21947] [Voluntary Family Planning Projects] [2] [OA/ID 21947] Rundlet, Peter National Bioethics Advisory Commission [OA/ID 23837] Shurman, Kara & Pflomm, Kristen [Legal Notepad w/Handwritten Notes Re: Cloning] [loose] [OA/ID 20837] Young, Jonathan Stem Cell Research [OA/ID 40204] Box 12 Domestic Policy Council Abrams, Janet [Materials on Abortion and Family Planning] [loose] [1] [OA/ID 7389] [Materials on Abortion and Family Planning] [loose] [2] [OA/ID 7389] Ben-Ami, Jeremy – Subject Files Family Planning [OA/ID 103147] Bianchi, Sarah California Family Planning [OA/ID 103819] Dailard, Cynthia International Family Planning [OA/ID 12974] Drye, Elizabeth Cloning [OA/ID 10450] Cloning Contracts [OA/ID 10450] Cloning Documents [OA/ID 10450] Cloning – Event [OA/ID 10450] Cloning – Final Materials [OA/ID 10450] Cloning – G8 [OA/ID 10450] Cloning Legislation [OA/ID 10450] Cloning – NBAC [National Bioethics Advisory Commission [OA/ID 10450] Cloning – Press [OA/ID 10450] Cloning Q&A/Fact Sheet [OA/ID 10450] Freedman, Tom Cloning [empty] [OA/ID 17542] Cloning [1] [OA/ID 17542] Cloning [2] [OA/ID 17542] Cloning Bills and Acts [OA/ID 17542] Cloning Meetings [OA/ID 17542] Cloning (OMB [Office of Management & Budget] Legislative Referral Memorandum) [OA/ID 17542] Cloning (President’s Statements) [OA/ID 17542] Klein, Jennifer In Vitro [OA/ID 104223] Kullman, Karin Cloning Event – June 9, 1997 – Rose Garden [1] [OA/ID 15365] Cloning Event – June 9, 1997 – Rose Garden [2] [OA/ID 15365] Family Planning Radio Address, Oval Office, January 7, 2000: 1/8/00 Family Planning Radio Address [OA/ID 21987] Little, Bethany Family Planning/Teen Pregnancy [OA/ID 103847] Reed, Bruce – Publications Family Planning [OA/ID 102849] Smith, Mary Cloning [1] [OA/ID 16167] Cloning [2] [OA/ID 16167] Cloning [3] [OA/ID 16167] Tanden, Neera – Subject Files Choice – Family Planning Meeting, 1/22/99 [OA/ID 103065] Choice – Title X/Family Planning [OA/ID 103065] Warnath, Stephen Coercive Family Planning [1] [OA/ID 8553] Box 13 Coercive Family Planning [2] [OA/ID 8553] Washington, Essence Cloning Meeting [OA/ID 18933] Conference Call on Cloning [OA/ID 18933] First Lady’s Office Books, Pamphlets [Family Planning Advocates of New York] [OA/ID 1530] [National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association] [OA/ID 1529] Rabner, Nicole Choice – Clinic Violence [OA/ID 103682] Choice – International Family Planning [OA/ID 103682] Family Planning Saves Lives [OA/ID 103730] Fertility & Family Planning in Latin America [OA/ID 103730] Health – Family Planning - International [OA/ID 103682] Schiller, Laura - Speechwriting HRC [Hillary Rodham Clinton] Speeches 1/96 – 4/96: [2/27 National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association (video)] [OA/ID 24622] HRC [Hillary Rodham Clinton] Weekly Column: [Bolivia/Family Planning – 12/3/96] [OA/ID 24623] Shamir, Ruby – Subject Files Family Planning/Teen Pregnancy [OA/ID 103489] Verveer, Melanne International Family Planning [Folder 1] [OA/ID 20038] International Family Planning [Folder 2] [OA/ID 20038] International Family Planning [Folder 1]: Planet [OA/ID 20038] Mexico Family Planning [OA/ID 20042] Women & Micro-Enterprises: An Assessment of UNFPA [United Nations Population Fund] Experience: Income Generation & Family Planning for Working Women in Urban Slums of Madras & Rural Areas of Tamilnadu [OA/ID 17868] Health Care Task Force Boorstin, Robert HC [Health Care] – Family Planning Services [OA/ID 3342] Tarmey, Marjorie [Family Planning] [loose] [1] [OA/ID 1971] [Family Planning] [loose] [2] [OA/ID 1971] [Family Planning] [loose] [3] [OA/ID 1971] [The Impact on Clinics of the California Office of Family Planning Budget Cuts] [loose] [OA/ID 1978] [A Study of the Cost Implications Resulting from the Elimination of the California Office Of Family Planning] [loose] [OA/ID 1978] Legislative Affairs Casstevens, Kay Family Planning [OA/ID 19832] Griffin, Pat & Brophy, Susan & Paster, Howard [May 26, 1993 – Memorandum for Carol Rasco - From: Nancy-Ann Min – Subject: Family Planning/Abortion Q’s & A’s – Choice] [loose] [OA/ID 11003] Murguia, Janet Family Planning [OA/ID 11030] Subject Files Family Planning [OA/ID 17133] Cloning [OA/ID 18360] Thornton, Tracey Cloning [1] [OA/ID 17372] Cloning [2] [OA/ID 17372] Cloning [3] [OA/ID 17372] Box 14 Wyman, Lucia Cloning [OA/ID 11837] Family Planning [OA/ID 11837] Millennium Council Howes, Sarah Photocopy of Washington Post – Saturday, October 9, 1999 – “Stem Cell Discovery Grows Into Debate” [OA/ID 21053] National Aids Policy Office Biomedical & Behavioral Research Plan & Response to the HIV/AIDS Crisis, 9/94 [1] [OA/ID 19422] Biomedical & Behavioral Research Plan & Response to the HIV/AIDS Crisis, 9/94 [2] [OA/ID 19422] Murguia, Matthew National Bioethics Commission Report [1] [OA/ID 21076] National Bioethics Commission Report [2] [OA/ID 21076] National Bioethics Commission Report [3] [OA/ID 21076] National Economic Council Daum, Michael Pre-Publication – Nanoscience & Nanotechnology in Shaping Biomedical Research [OA/ID 23936] Matzner, Barbara Denver Summit: Bioethics (Human Cloning) [OA/ID CF 1053] Presidential Personnel Dominguez, Marie Therese National Bioethics Advisory Commission [1] [OA/ID 9840] National Bioethics Advisory Commission [2] [OA/ID 9840] General Files National Bioethics Advisory Commission [OA/ID 24007] Public Liaison Dunn, Jackson Cloning [OA/ID 14322] Cloning Statement [OA/ID 14322] Fine, Deborah Biomedical Research [OA/ID 8752] International Family Planning [OA/ID 8752] Natl. [National] Family Planning Representatives Health Assn. [Association] [OA/ID 5290] Rivera, Martiza H2: Hispano-American Biomedical Association [OA/ID 14734] Shea, Maureen Cloning [OA/ID 20944] Woolley, Barbara Stem Cell [OA/ID 20953] [Stem Cell Guidelines] [OA/ID 20954] Box 15 Stem Cell Issue [1] [OA/ID 20953] Stem Cell Issue [2] [OA/ID 20953] Stem Cell Issue [3] [OA/ID 20953] Yager, Marilyn & Woolley, Barbara President Clinton Announces Cloning Prohibition Act of 1997 [OA/ID 10676] Speechwriting Curiel, Carolyn International Family Planning [1] [OA/ID 10993] International Family Planning [2] [OA/ID 10993] Edmonds, Terry Cloning [OA/ID 10987] Hurlburt, Heather Family Planning/Reproductive Health Stuff (Remarks to Women’s Health Event, 4-7-00) [OA/ID 19910] Muscatine, Lissa HRC [Hillary Rodham Clinton] Video/National Family Planning & Reproductive Health Association, 2/27/96 [OA/ID 12076] Tamagni, Jordan Background Material on Cloning, 1/8/97 [binder] [OA/ID 14672] Health – Cloning [OA/ID 14669] Waldman, Michael Tobacco/Biomedical [OA/ID 14459] Weiss, Lowell Stem Cells [OA/ID 17197] Women’s Initiative & Outreach Brown, LaJaycee Notes for International Family Planning Briefing [OA/ID 21953] General Files Cloning [OA/ID 24077] Domestic Family Planning [OA/ID 24076] Family Planning [empty] [OA/ID 24055] Family Planning [OA/ID 11062] Family Planning 1 [1] [OA/ID 11063] Family Planning 1 [2] [OA/ID 11063] Family Planning 1 [3] [OA/ID 11063] Family Planning 2 [1] [OA/ID 11063] Family Planning 2 [2] [OA/ID 11063] Family Planning/Choice [OA/ID 24070] International Family Planning [1] [OA/ID 11063] International Family Planning [2] [OA/ID 11063] Title X – Family Planning [OA/ID 24050] Supina, Lauren Family Planning [OA/ID 24149] Box 16 Clinton Presidential Records: Automated Records Management System [Email] OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Biomedical, Reproductive, and Surrogacy] [6/10/1997 – 1/3/2001] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Biomedical, Reproductive, and Surrogacy] [3/27/1996 – 9/27/2000] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Biomedical, Reproductive, and Surrogacy] [4/8/1994 – 5/21/1997] [5/21/1997 – 9/13/1999] OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Cloning] [3/18/1995 – 4/11/1997] [4/14/1997 – 5/27/1997] [5/27/1997 – 5/29/1997] [5/29/1997 – 6/4/1997] Box 17 OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Cloning] [6/4/1997 – 6/6/1997] [6/6/1997 – 6/9/1997] [6/9/1997 – 12/4/1997] [1/7/1998 – 2/27/1998] [3/8/1998 – 12/7/2000] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Cloning] [12/4/1994 – 2/28/1997] [2/24/1997 – 3/4/1997] Box 18 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Cloning] [3/4/1997 – 5/20/1997] [5/27/1997 – 6/5/1997] [6/5/1997 – 6/6/1997] [6/6/1997 – 6/9/1997] [6/9/1997 – 6/18/1997] [6/18/1997 – 1/21/1998] [1/21/1998 – 2/5/1998] Box 19 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Cloning] [2/6/1998 – 3/17/1998] [3/17/1998 – 11/19/1998] [12/9/1998 – 1/11/2001] CEA [OA/ID 950000] [Cloning] [6/5/1997 – 9/14/1999] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Cloning] [10/3/1995 – 2/28/1997] [2/28/1997 – 3/12/1997] [3/13/1997 – 3/26/1997] [3/27/1997 – 4/23/1997] Box 20 Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Cloning] [4/23/1997 – 5/8/1997] [5/8/1997 – 5/16/1997] [5/16/1997 – 5/23/1997] [5/23/1997 – 6/2/1997] [6/2/1997 – 6/6/1997] [6/6/1997 – 6/10/1997] Box 21 Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Cloning] [6/10/1997 – 7/21/1997] [7/23/1997 – 1/14/1998] [1/14/1998 – 11/20/1998] [1/13/2001] OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Family Planning] [8/13/1993 – 7/23/1996] [8/5/1996 – 1/16/1997] Box 22 OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Family Planning] [1/21/1997 – 10/1/1998] [10/1/1998 – 1/18/1999] [1/18/1999 – 10/18/1999] [10/20/1999 – 1/6/2000] [1/6/2000 – 2/7/2000] [2/14/2000 – 8/1/2000] [8/1/2000 – 9/25/2000] Box 23 OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Family Planning] [9/27/2000 – 11/2/2000] [11/2/2000 – 1/17/2001] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Family Planning] [2/4/1993 – 7/25/1995] [8/1/1995 – 4/23/1996] [4/25/1996 – 9/9/1996] [9/9/1996 – 10/29/1996] [10/29/1996 – 1/21/1997] Box 24 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Family Planning] [1/21/1997 – 1/30/1997] [1/30/1997 – 2/13/1997] [2/13/1997 – 6/11/1997] [6/12/1997 – 1/13/1998] [1/13/1998 – 5/28/1998] [6/4/1998 – 10/5/1998] [10/5/1998 – 1/8/1999] Box 25 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Family Planning] [1/8/1999 – 1/21/1999] [1/21/1999 – 1/27/1999] [1/27/1999 – 3/25/1999] [3/30/1999 – 9/27/1999] [9/28/1999 – 11/15/1999] [11/16/1999 – 11/22/1999] [11/22/1999 – 12/10/1999] [12/10/1999 – 1/6/2000] Box 26 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Family Planning] [1/6/2000 – 1/7/2000] [1/7/2000 – 2/4/2000] [2/7/2000 – 3/13/2000] [3/14/2000 – 3/29/2000] [3/30/2000 – 6/15/2000] [6/15/2000 – 6/26/2000] [6/27/2000 – 8/23/2000] Box 27 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Family Planning] [8/28/2000 – 9/28/2000] [9/28/2000 – 11/15/2000] [11/15/2000 – 1/17/2001] CEA [OA/ID 950000] [Family Planning] [3/6/1997 – 8/7/2000] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Family Planning] [3/15/1993 – 4/8/1997] [6/5/1997 – 11/18/1999] [11/18/1999 – 1/18/2001] OPD [OA/ID 250000] [In Vitro or Infertility] [8/17/1994 – 2/3/1998] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [In Vitro or Infertility] [7/1/1996 – 9/26/2000] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [In Vitro or Infertility] [8/8/1996 – 2/17/2000] Box 28 OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Stem Cells] [11/10/1998 – 1/26/1999] [1/11/1999 – 6/1/1999] [6/20/1999 – 9/18/1999] [9/9/1999 – 4/21/2000] [4/25/2000 – 8/8/2000] [8/8/2000 – 1/7/2001] Box 29 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Stem Cells] [6/28/1996 – 12/2/1998] [12/2/1998 – 1/25/1999] [2/11/1999 – 3/31/1999] [4/1/1999 – 5/13/1999] [5/14/1999 – 7/14/1999] [7/14/1999 – 8/4/1999] [8/1/1999 – 9/15/1999] Box 30 WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Stem Cells] [9/15/1999 – 9/30/1999] [9/30/1999 – 12/6/1999] [12/13/1999 – 8/7/2000] [8/8/2000 – 8/23/2000] [8/23/2000 – 9/21/2000] [9/21/2000 – 1/18/2001] Box 31 Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Stem Cells] [3/3/1997 – 1/15/1999] [1/21/1999 – 5/6/1999] [5/18/1999 – 6/15/1999] [6/18/1999 – 7/9/1999] [7/12/1999 – 7/20/1999] [7/21/1999 – 8/3/1999] Box 32 Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Stem Cells] [8/3/1999 – 9/6/1999] [9/7/1999 – 12/2/1999] [12/4/1999 – 11/1/2000 Clinton Presidential Records: Tape Restoration Project (TRP) [Email] OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Cloning] [6/3/1997 – 7/23/1997] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Cloning] [1/13/1998 – 3/26/1998] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Cloning] [3/3/1997 – 2/11/1998] OPD [OA/ID 250000] [Family Planning] [5/14/1998 – 1/18/1999] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [Family Planning] [1/23/1997 – 11/18/1999] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Family Planning] [10/23/1995 – 7/15/1998] WHO [OA/ID 500000] [In Vitro or Infertility] [3/13/1997] Default [OA/ID 1100000] [Stem Cells] [11/18/1998 – 1/19/1999]