LISTSERV mailing list manager LISTSERV 16.0

Help for PARKINSN Archives


PARKINSN Archives

PARKINSN Archives


PARKINSN@LISTSERV.UTORONTO.CA


View:

Message:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Topic:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Author:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

Font:

Proportional Font

LISTSERV Archives

LISTSERV Archives

PARKINSN Home

PARKINSN Home

PARKINSN  May 2000, Week 3

PARKINSN May 2000, Week 3

Subject:

NEWSWEEK - MJF: The new war on Parkinson’s

From:

Hans van der Genugten <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Parkinson's Information Exchange Network <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 15 May 2000 16:28:56 +0200

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (256 lines)

The new war on Parkinson’s

An explosion of research, aided by the energy of Michael J. Fox, is changing
the struggle against this brain disease, and giving hope to a million
Americans

By Geoffrey Cowley
NEWSWEEK
May 14, 2000

He arrives late, unshaven and walking with a bow-legged shuffle. “I’m just
waiting for the pill to kick in,” says Michael J. Fox, extending a handshake
and a request. “Could we wait a few more minutes? I’ll be more human then.”
He ducks back into his office, and moments later, he’s ready.

IN HIS BLACK T shirt and jeans, Fox, 38, still looks very much like the
open-faced teenager who stepped off the bus from Canada and into sitcom
history 18 years ago. Which of course is the irony: the actor who became
famous playing eternally youthful men on “Family Ties” and “Spin City” has
been stricken by a disease known mainly for hobbling the elderly: Parkinson’
s. The actor has accommodated it gracefully for the past nine years, and he
insists it hasn’t much hurt his day-to-day quality of life. With the help of
medication, and a brain operation he underwent quietly in 1998, Fox still
skates and skis. He plays with his three kids and travels with his wife,
actress Tracy Pollan. But like many Parkinson’s patients, he has found that
a decade is long enough to keep up appearances. On May 24, his TV series
“Spin City” will air his final episode. “It’s not that it was killing me,”
he says. “It’s not that I couldn’t have continued. It just seemed kind of
pointless, given that I have an opportunity to help.” From now on, he’ll
focus on the foundation he’s starting to hasten the search for a cure.

       Parkinson’s disease is mercifully rare in people Fox’s age, but his
candor has helped create a new sense of urgency about the condition. It
afflicts roughly a million Americans — including the likes of Billy Graham,
Muhammad Ali and U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno — and it is growing more
prevalent as the population ages. Parkinson’s is a degenerative illness, in
which the death of certain brain cells causes a progressive loss of muscle
control, leading eventually to paralysis and death. Yet unlike the other
major brain diseases — Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s, Lou Gehrig’s — Parkinson’s
is highly treatable, even at fairly advanced stages.

A SHIFT IN STRATEGIES

       Today’s treatments are aimed more at easing symptoms than at
repairing the brain, but that could soon change. Specialists are pursuing
several techniques for replacing the very cells that Parkinson’s destroys.
Over the past decade, scores of Parkinson’s patients have regained the use
of their bodies after having fetal neurons implanted in their brains. No one
expects to see fetal cells used on a mass scale, but the ongoing revolution
in stem-cell technology could soon make them unnecessary. Stem cells can be
cultivated endlessly. And as researchers learn to direct their development,
brain repair could become a routine part of clinical medicine. “We’re
standing at the same threshold that we reached with infectious disease 100
years ago,” says Dr. Abraham Lieberman, a neurologist at the University of
Miami and the National Parkinson’s Foundation. “The knowledge we’re gaining
could prove as revolutionary as germ theory.”

       Physicians have been diagnosing this syndrome since 1817, when the
English physician James Parkinson first described it. The symptoms can range
from impotence to depression and even dementia, but the cardinal features
are tremors that occur in relaxed limbs; stiffness or freezing of the
joints; bradykinesia, or slow, limited movement; and postural instability, a
lack of balance and coordination. “With Parkinson’s you don’t have any
control once you start to fall,” says Pauline Kael, the celebrated film
critic who left The New Yorker in 1992 after wrestling with the illness for
a decade. “Your mind is working, but when you try to stop you can’t. I fell
flat on my face on the New York streets over and over. I broke my nose so
many times I was embarrassed to go to the doctor.”

       Parkinson’s also involves well-defined changes within the brain.
Autopsies reveal a severe loss of neurons in the substantia nigra, a clump
of dark, vine-like cells that originate near the center of the organ
(chart). A healthy adult has roughly 500,000 of these nigral neurons. They
help initiate voluntary movement by releasing dopamine — a chemical that
nerve cells use to communicate with each other — into a nearby brain
structure called the striatum. We all lose nigral cells as we age, but
normal movement seems to require at least 100,000 of them. If the number
drops below that critical threshhold, the striatum ends up starved for
dopamine and the patient’s motor control deteriorates. The causes of this
destruction are something of a mystery. Heredity is not a strong risk
factor, but studies have implicated viruses and various environmental
toxins. Dr. Donald Calne of the University of British Columbia speculates
that these agents may destroy nigral cells as we encounter them, leaving us
no cushion against age-related attrition.

L-DOPA’S DOWNSIDE

         Parkinson’s progresses at different rates in different people, but
thanks to a 30-year-old drug called levodopa (L-dopa for short), virtually
anyone can suppress the symptoms for several years. When Fox was diagnosed
in 1991, his main symptom was a twitch in his left pinkie. But by 1993 his
whole arm was shaking violently. Sinemet, an oral medication that combines
L-dopa with a buffering agent called carbodopa, steadied him so well that
audiences never glimpsed his disability. There were close calls, when he
wasn’t sure the drug would take effect in time for some public appearance.
But with a little forethought, he could make himself presentable for
anything. “I’ve varied the regimen,” he says, “based on what I need to do.”

       L-dopa is closely related to dopamine — and unlike dopamine itself,
it can pass freely from the bloodstream into the brain. When a Parkinson’s
patient takes L-dopa orally, her surviving nigral cells absorb it, then
convert it into dopamine and fire it into the striatum to set the body in
motion. The patient still lacks nigral cells, but the drug enables the
surviving cells to perform heroically. Unfortunately, other brain cells are
equally sensitive to L-dopa — and the doses required to restore motor
control can overstimulate them, causing agitation and hallucinations. Kael
was ambivalent from the moment she started taking the drug. “I stopped
shaking and became much more alert,” she says, “but I got agonizing
hallucinations. It’s scary, if you’ve always been a commonsense rational
person, to have visitations in the night from animals and people. The bears
were quite convincing.”

       The problems tend to worsen after three to five years, even as the
patient becomes more reliant on the drug. Many sufferers experience
dyskinesias, or wild, involuntary movements, whenever they’re on L-dopa. The
drug also starts to wear off faster, forcing them to dose themselves more
often. And even when the treatment is working, its effects may wax and wane
unpredictably, leaving the patient frozen one minute and twitching
uncontrollably the next. “The side effects can almost be worse than the
disease itself,” says Dr. William Langston of the Parkinson’s Institute in
Sunnyvale, Calif. “You reach a point where you can’t plan work, or your
bridge party or when you go to Safeway.”

       One way around this problem is simply to avoid L-dopa as long as
possible, and to use as little as possible. There are now several less
noxious drugs that can augment or even replace L-dopa for a while. Eldepryl,
a monamine oxidase inhibitor, helps preserve motor control by slowing the
breakdown of dopamine within the brain. And drugs known as dopamine agonists
can provide even stronger relief, by taking the place of dopamine within the
striatum. The older agonists were generally used in combination with L-dopa,
but SmithKline Beecham and Pharmacia & Upjohn have recently introduced
stronger ones. These drugs, sold as Requip and Mirapex, can be taken alone
for several years. They’re not free of side effects — many users experience
hallucinations and extreme drowsiness — but they’re less likely than L-dopa
to cause dyskinesias. “The benefits have been huge,” says Fox’s neurologist,
Dr. Allan Ropper of St. Elizabeth’s Medical Center in Boston. Fox takes
Requip.

THE SURGICAL OPTION

       A well-calibrated drug regimen may give a patient 10 or more good
years, regardless of his age, but the miracles eventually cease. Dr. Dan
Frost was a 39-year-old cancer surgeon in Los Angeles when he developed
Parkinson’s in 1989. He retired in 1993 and, with the help of medication,
pursued his passion for restoring classic motorcycles. He still loves to run
his elegant racing bikes down the mountain roads above Pasadena, but he’s
rarely able to do it anymore. “Just when you feel you can live with the
disease,” he says, “some new symptom comes along.” But even Frost has yet to
exhaust the treatment options. When the brain lacks a stable supply of
dopamine, the cells governing movement start firing erratically. If drugs
can’t solve the dopamine problem, a surgeon can sometimes ease symptoms by
disabling the errant cells.

         Parkinson’s surgery was common in the 1950s and ’60s but fell from
favor when L-dopa came along. Researchers in Sweden and France started
experimenting with surgery again during the 1980s, and American physicians
followed suit in the early 1990s. Until recently, the basic options were
thalamotomy, which involves destroying part of a brain structure called the
thalamus, and pallidotomy (which centers on the nearby globus pallidus). Fox
underwent a successful thalamotomy in 1998, when drugs could no longer
control the tremor in his arm. Unfortunately, these procedures can cause
disabling weakness and slurred speech if they’re performed on both sides of
the brain. So the benefits are confined to one side of the body.

       But techniques are rapidly improving. Surgeons have now hit upon a
third brain structure — the subthalamic nucleus — that has similar effects
on motor activity and can safely be altered on both sides. And researchers
have recently found a way to disable neurons in any of these brain
structures without destroying them. The procedure, known as deep brain
stimulation, involves placing a small electrode in the brain and wiring it
to a battery-powered stimulator implanted near the patient’s collarbone.
Errant cells can then be silenced by an electrical current. DBS isn’t risk
free. The wire connecting the electrode to the stimulator can cause
infection, and changing the battery requires minor surgery. But the current
can be adjusted to suit the patient’s needs — and turning off the stimulator
reverses the effects.

       Nicole Stedman struck gold with this technique. Three years ago, the
61-year-old California piano teacher had hit the limits of drug therapy. She
couldn’t function without L-dopa, but whenever she was on it she writhed and
twitched violently. “It was awful,” she recalls, “and it was getting worse
and worse.” Dr. Alim Benebid, the French neurologist who pioneered DBS,
happened to give a speech in Los Angeles in March of that year, and Stedman
wrangled a meeting with him. A few months later she traveled to his clinic
in Grenoble, where she had electrodes implanted in both sides of her
subthalamic nucleus. The effects were dramatic. She still required
medication, but she needed only a fraction of her usual dose — and cutting
the dose put an end to her dyskinesias. “It was all quiet,” she says. “Right
away. It was like being another person.”

IN SEARCH OF THE IDEAL

       Bigger breakthroughs are conceivable. The ideal therapy wouldn’t
merely ward off the symptoms of Parkinson’s. It would reverse the condition,
by replacing the dopamine-producing cells of the substantia nigra. Swedish
and American researchers have pursued this dream since the 1980s. Over the
years, they have grafted nigral cells from aborted fetuses into the brains
of about 250 Parkinson’s patients, and despite years of bitter controversy,
they’ve achieved some remarkable successes. Dan Stewart of Maumee, Ohio, had
run the gantlet of Parkinson’s drugs in 1994, when he went to the University
of Colorado Health Sciences Center to have cells from four fetuses implanted
in his striatum. The cells took, and within 16 months he was able to drop
all his medication. He’s still drug-free six years later, and suffering only
minor symptoms.

       Unfortunately, fetal cell implants don’t always work this well. In
one carefully designed study, researchers led by Dr. Curt Freed of the
University of Colorado and Dr. Stanley Fahn of Columbia University followed
40 patients. Half of them received brain grafts containing 2 million fetal
cells, while the other half underwent sham operations (a hole in the skull
but no cells) to control for the placebo effect. The surgery itself went
well; imaging tests showed that 16 of the 19 graft recipients incorporated
the fetal cells into their brains. But the clinical benefits were largely
confined to patients under age 60. For some reason, the older cell
recipients did no better, on average, than those receiving sham operations.
“The challenge,” says Freed, “is to make the results more predictable and
uniform.”

         That’s the first challenge, anyway. The next one is to find a
better source of implantable cells. A single brain graft requires tissue
from four or more electively aborted fetuses. And though federal policy
permits the use of fetal tissue for research purposes, no procedure that
requires large amounts is likely to find wide clinical use. So scientists
are racing to develop alternatives. At the biotech companies Genzyme and
Diacrin, researchers are working with fetal brain cells from pigs. In one
preliminary experiment, published this spring, the scientists transferred
pig cells into 12 advanced Parkinson’s sufferers and gave them
immunosuppressant drugs to prevent rejection. A year later most patients had
adopted at least some of the grafted cells, and three had experienced
clinical improvements. A larger study is now in the works.

       But pig cells are at best a stopgap. Ideally, physicians would not
have to dissect several fetuses for every patient needing help. Instead they
would cultivate huge populations of undifferentiated stem cells in
laboratory dishes, and use various signaling molecules to guide their
development. Because stem cells reproduce in culture, a small supply can
generate many more. “Fetal cell transplantation is the hunter-gatherer phase
of this technology,” says Ronald McKay, a research scientist at the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. “Cultivating stem cells is
more like settled agriculture.” McKay and his colleagues have already
succeeded at turning embryonic stem cells into dopamine-producing neurons in
lab experiments. And they’ve shown that the neurons can take root, and
relieve symptoms, in Parkinsonian rats. Will these tricks work in people?
Human trials could begin within the next few years. “There’s a lot of
practical work to be done,” says McKay, “but we’re growing cells in
clinically useful quantities.”

       Michael J. Fox is nearly a decade into his own battle with Parkinson’
s, but he’s unabashed in predicting he will live to see a cure. “I’m not a
scientist,” he says. “I haven’t even played one on TV. But things are going
to start happening very quickly. If there’s a concentrated effort, this is
done in 10 years.” Few researchers would make such a bold promise. Turning
stem cells into replicas of human nigral cells will take work, luck and
money. But there has never been more cause for optimism.

© 2000 Newsweek, Inc.

Top of Message | Previous Page | Permalink

Advanced Options


Options

Log In

Log In

Get Password

Get Password


Search Archives

Search Archives


Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Subscribe or Unsubscribe


Archives

March 2024, Week 4
January 2022, Week 4
November 2021, Week 4
February 2021, Week 2
December 2020, Week 2
October 2020, Week 4
June 2020, Week 4
May 2020, Week 2
May 2020, Week 1
April 2020, Week 5
April 2020, Week 1
March 2020, Week 5
March 2020, Week 4
March 2020, Week 2
March 2020, Week 1
February 2020, Week 4
February 2020, Week 3
February 2020, Week 1
January 2020, Week 5
January 2020, Week 2
October 2019, Week 1
September 2019, Week 5
September 2019, Week 3
July 2019, Week 1
June 2019, Week 5
June 2019, Week 4
June 2019, Week 3
June 2019, Week 1
April 2019, Week 5
April 2019, Week 4
April 2019, Week 2
March 2019, Week 5
March 2019, Week 3
March 2019, Week 2
March 2019, Week 1
February 2019, Week 4
January 2019, Week 3
January 2019, Week 2
January 2019, Week 1
December 2018, Week 5
December 2018, Week 4
December 2018, Week 2
November 2018, Week 3
November 2018, Week 2
November 2018, Week 1
October 2018, Week 4
October 2018, Week 3
October 2018, Week 1
September 2018, Week 4
September 2018, Week 3
August 2018, Week 4
August 2018, Week 3
August 2018, Week 1
July 2018, Week 4
July 2018, Week 3
July 2018, Week 2
July 2018, Week 1
June 2018, Week 5
June 2018, Week 3
June 2018, Week 1
May 2018, Week 5
May 2018, Week 4
May 2018, Week 3
May 2018, Week 2
May 2018, Week 1
April 2018, Week 4
April 2018, Week 3
April 2018, Week 2
February 2018, Week 3
January 2018, Week 5
January 2018, Week 2
January 2018, Week 1
December 2017, Week 4
December 2017, Week 3
December 2017, Week 1
November 2017, Week 5
November 2017, Week 4
November 2017, Week 3
November 2017, Week 2
November 2017, Week 1
October 2017, Week 4
October 2017, Week 2
October 2017, Week 1
September 2017, Week 5
September 2017, Week 4
September 2017, Week 3
September 2017, Week 2
September 2017, Week 1
August 2017, Week 4
August 2017, Week 2
August 2017, Week 1
July 2017, Week 5
July 2017, Week 4
July 2017, Week 3
July 2017, Week 2
July 2017, Week 1
June 2017, Week 5
June 2017, Week 4
June 2017, Week 3
June 2017, Week 2
June 2017, Week 1
May 2017, Week 5
May 2017, Week 4
May 2017, Week 3
May 2017, Week 2
May 2017, Week 1
April 2017, Week 3
April 2017, Week 2
April 2017, Week 1
March 2017, Week 4
March 2017, Week 3
March 2017, Week 2
March 2017, Week 1
February 2017, Week 3
February 2017, Week 2
February 2017, Week 1
January 2017, Week 4
January 2017, Week 2
January 2017, Week 1
December 2016, Week 5
December 2016, Week 4
December 2016, Week 2
December 2016, Week 1
November 2016, Week 4
November 2016, Week 3
November 2016, Week 2
November 2016, Week 1
October 2016, Week 4
October 2016, Week 3
October 2016, Week 1
September 2016, Week 3
September 2016, Week 2
September 2016, Week 1
August 2016, Week 4
July 2016, Week 5
July 2016, Week 4
July 2016, Week 3
July 2016, Week 2
July 2016, Week 1
June 2016, Week 5
June 2016, Week 3
June 2016, Week 2
June 2016, Week 1
May 2016, Week 5
May 2016, Week 4
May 2016, Week 3
May 2016, Week 2
May 2016, Week 1
April 2016, Week 5
April 2016, Week 4
April 2016, Week 3
April 2016, Week 2
April 2016, Week 1
March 2016, Week 5
March 2016, Week 4
March 2016, Week 3
March 2016, Week 2
March 2016, Week 1
February 2016, Week 5
February 2016, Week 4
February 2016, Week 3
February 2016, Week 2
February 2016, Week 1
January 2016, Week 5
January 2016, Week 4
January 2016, Week 3
January 2016, Week 2
January 2016, Week 1
December 2015, Week 5
December 2015, Week 4
December 2015, Week 3
December 2015, Week 2
December 2015, Week 1
November 2015, Week 5
November 2015, Week 3
November 2015, Week 2
November 2015, Week 1
October 2015, Week 5
October 2015, Week 4
October 2015, Week 3
October 2015, Week 2
October 2015, Week 1
September 2015, Week 5
September 2015, Week 4
September 2015, Week 3
September 2015, Week 2
September 2015, Week 1
August 2015, Week 5
August 2015, Week 4
August 2015, Week 3
August 2015, Week 2
August 2015, Week 1
July 2015, Week 5
July 2015, Week 4
July 2015, Week 3
July 2015, Week 2
July 2015, Week 1
June 2015, Week 5
June 2015, Week 4
June 2015, Week 3
June 2015, Week 2
June 2015, Week 1
May 2015, Week 5
May 2015, Week 4
May 2015, Week 3
May 2015, Week 2
May 2015, Week 1
April 2015, Week 4
April 2015, Week 3
April 2015, Week 2
April 2015, Week 1
March 2015, Week 5
March 2015, Week 4
March 2015, Week 3
March 2015, Week 2
March 2015, Week 1
February 2015, Week 4
February 2015, Week 3
February 2015, Week 2
February 2015, Week 1
January 2015, Week 5
January 2015, Week 4
January 2015, Week 3
January 2015, Week 2
December 2014, Week 5
December 2014, Week 4
December 2014, Week 3
December 2014, Week 2
December 2014, Week 1
November 2014, Week 5
November 2014, Week 4
November 2014, Week 3
November 2014, Week 2
November 2014, Week 1
October 2014, Week 5
October 2014, Week 4
October 2014, Week 3
October 2014, Week 2
October 2014, Week 1
September 2014, Week 5
September 2014, Week 4
September 2014, Week 3
September 2014, Week 2
September 2014, Week 1
August 2014, Week 5
August 2014, Week 4
August 2014, Week 3
August 2014, Week 2
August 2014, Week 1
July 2014, Week 5
July 2014, Week 4
July 2014, Week 3
July 2014, Week 2
July 2014, Week 1
June 2014, Week 5
June 2014, Week 4
June 2014, Week 3
June 2014, Week 2
June 2014, Week 1
May 2014, Week 4
May 2014, Week 3
May 2014, Week 2
May 2014, Week 1
April 2014, Week 5
April 2014, Week 4
April 2014, Week 3
April 2014, Week 2
April 2014, Week 1
March 2014, Week 5
March 2014, Week 4
March 2014, Week 3
March 2014, Week 2
March 2014, Week 1
February 2014, Week 4
February 2014, Week 3
February 2014, Week 2
February 2014, Week 1
January 2014, Week 5
January 2014, Week 4
January 2014, Week 3
January 2014, Week 2
January 2014, Week 1
December 2013, Week 5
December 2013, Week 4
December 2013, Week 3
December 2013, Week 2
December 2013, Week 1
November 2013, Week 4
November 2013, Week 3
November 2013, Week 2
November 2013, Week 1
October 2013, Week 5
October 2013, Week 4
October 2013, Week 3
October 2013, Week 2
October 2013, Week 1
September 2013, Week 5
September 2013, Week 4
September 2013, Week 3
September 2013, Week 2
September 2013, Week 1
August 2013, Week 5
August 2013, Week 4
August 2013, Week 3
August 2013, Week 2
August 2013, Week 1
July 2013, Week 5
July 2013, Week 4
July 2013, Week 3
July 2013, Week 2
July 2013, Week 1
June 2013, Week 5
June 2013, Week 4
June 2013, Week 3
June 2013, Week 2
June 2013, Week 1
May 2013, Week 5
May 2013, Week 4
May 2013, Week 3
May 2013, Week 2
May 2013, Week 1
April 2013, Week 5
April 2013, Week 4
April 2013, Week 3
April 2013, Week 2
April 2013, Week 1
March 2013, Week 5
March 2013, Week 4
March 2013, Week 3
March 2013, Week 2
March 2013, Week 1
February 2013, Week 4
February 2013, Week 3
February 2013, Week 2
February 2013, Week 1
January 2013, Week 5
January 2013, Week 3
January 2013, Week 2
January 2013, Week 1
December 2012, Week 5
December 2012, Week 4
December 2012, Week 3
December 2012, Week 2
December 2012, Week 1
November 2012, Week 5
November 2012, Week 3
November 2012, Week 2
November 2012, Week 1
October 2012, Week 5
October 2012, Week 4
October 2012, Week 3
October 2012, Week 2
October 2012, Week 1
September 2012, Week 5
September 2012, Week 4
September 2012, Week 3
September 2012, Week 2
September 2012, Week 1
August 2012, Week 5
August 2012, Week 4
August 2012, Week 3
August 2012, Week 2
August 2012, Week 1
July 2012, Week 5
July 2012, Week 4
July 2012, Week 3
July 2012, Week 2
July 2012, Week 1
June 2012, Week 5
June 2012, Week 4
June 2012, Week 3
June 2012, Week 2
June 2012, Week 1
May 2012, Week 5
May 2012, Week 4
May 2012, Week 3
May 2012, Week 2
May 2012, Week 1
April 2012, Week 5
April 2012, Week 4
April 2012, Week 3
April 2012, Week 2
April 2012, Week 1
March 2012, Week 5
March 2012, Week 4
March 2012, Week 3
March 2012, Week 2
March 2012, Week 1
February 2012, Week 5
February 2012, Week 4
February 2012, Week 3
February 2012, Week 2
February 2012, Week 1
January 2012, Week 5
January 2012, Week 4
January 2012, Week 3
January 2012, Week 2
January 2012, Week 1
December 2011, Week 5
December 2011, Week 4
December 2011, Week 3
December 2011, Week 2
December 2011, Week 1
November 2011, Week 5
November 2011, Week 4
November 2011, Week 3
November 2011, Week 2
November 2011, Week 1
October 2011, Week 5
October 2011, Week 4
October 2011, Week 3
October 2011, Week 2
October 2011, Week 1
September 2011, Week 5
September 2011, Week 4
September 2011, Week 3
September 2011, Week 2
September 2011, Week 1
August 2011, Week 5
August 2011, Week 4
August 2011, Week 3
August 2011, Week 2
August 2011, Week 1
July 2011, Week 5
July 2011, Week 4
July 2011, Week 3
July 2011, Week 2
July 2011, Week 1
June 2011, Week 5
June 2011, Week 4
June 2011, Week 3
June 2011, Week 2
June 2011, Week 1
May 2011, Week 5
May 2011, Week 4
May 2011, Week 3
May 2011, Week 2
May 2011, Week 1
April 2011, Week 5
April 2011, Week 4
April 2011, Week 3
April 2011, Week 2
April 2011, Week 1
March 2011, Week 5
March 2011, Week 4
March 2011, Week 3
March 2011, Week 2
March 2011, Week 1
February 2011, Week 4
February 2011, Week 3
February 2011, Week 2
February 2011, Week 1
January 2011, Week 5
January 2011, Week 4
January 2011, Week 3
January 2011, Week 2
January 2011, Week 1
December 2010, Week 5
December 2010, Week 4
December 2010, Week 3
December 2010, Week 2
December 2010, Week 1
November 2010, Week 5
November 2010, Week 4
November 2010, Week 3
November 2010, Week 2
November 2010, Week 1
October 2010, Week 5
October 2010, Week 4
October 2010, Week 3
October 2010, Week 2
October 2010, Week 1
September 2010, Week 5
September 2010, Week 4
September 2010, Week 3
September 2010, Week 2
September 2010, Week 1
August 2010, Week 5
August 2010, Week 4
August 2010, Week 3
August 2010, Week 2
August 2010, Week 1
July 2010, Week 5
July 2010, Week 4
July 2010, Week 3
July 2010, Week 2
July 2010, Week 1
June 2010, Week 5
June 2010, Week 4
June 2010, Week 3
June 2010, Week 2
June 2010, Week 1
May 2010, Week 5
May 2010, Week 4
May 2010, Week 3
May 2010, Week 2
May 2010, Week 1
April 2010, Week 5
April 2010, Week 4
April 2010, Week 3
April 2010, Week 2
April 2010, Week 1
March 2010, Week 5
March 2010, Week 4
March 2010, Week 3
March 2010, Week 2
March 2010, Week 1
February 2010, Week 4
February 2010, Week 3
February 2010, Week 2
February 2010, Week 1
January 2010, Week 5
January 2010, Week 4
January 2010, Week 3
January 2010, Week 2
January 2010, Week 1
December 2009, Week 5
December 2009, Week 4
December 2009, Week 3
December 2009, Week 2
December 2009, Week 1
November 2009, Week 5
November 2009, Week 4
November 2009, Week 3
November 2009, Week 2
November 2009, Week 1
October 2009, Week 5
October 2009, Week 4
October 2009, Week 3
October 2009, Week 2
October 2009, Week 1
September 2009, Week 5
September 2009, Week 4
September 2009, Week 3
September 2009, Week 2
September 2009, Week 1
August 2009, Week 5
August 2009, Week 4
August 2009, Week 3
August 2009, Week 2
August 2009, Week 1
July 2009, Week 5
July 2009, Week 4
July 2009, Week 3
July 2009, Week 2
July 2009, Week 1
June 2009, Week 5
June 2009, Week 4
June 2009, Week 3
June 2009, Week 2
June 2009, Week 1
May 2009, Week 5
May 2009, Week 4
May 2009, Week 3
May 2009, Week 2
May 2009, Week 1
April 2009, Week 5
April 2009, Week 4
April 2009, Week 3
April 2009, Week 2
April 2009, Week 1
March 2009, Week 5
March 2009, Week 4
March 2009, Week 3
March 2009, Week 2
March 2009, Week 1
February 2009, Week 4
February 2009, Week 3
February 2009, Week 2
February 2009, Week 1
January 2009, Week 5
January 2009, Week 4
January 2009, Week 3
January 2009, Week 2
January 2009, Week 1
December 2008, Week 5
December 2008, Week 4
December 2008, Week 3
December 2008, Week 2
December 2008, Week 1
November 2008, Week 5
November 2008, Week 4
November 2008, Week 3
November 2008, Week 2
November 2008, Week 1
October 2008, Week 5
October 2008, Week 4
October 2008, Week 3
October 2008, Week 2
October 2008, Week 1
September 2008, Week 5
September 2008, Week 4
September 2008, Week 3
September 2008, Week 2
September 2008, Week 1
August 2008, Week 5
August 2008, Week 4
August 2008, Week 3
August 2008, Week 2
August 2008, Week 1
July 2008, Week 5
July 2008, Week 4
July 2008, Week 3
July 2008, Week 2
July 2008, Week 1
June 2008, Week 5
June 2008, Week 4
June 2008, Week 3
June 2008, Week 2
June 2008, Week 1
May 2008, Week 5
May 2008, Week 4
May 2008, Week 3
May 2008, Week 2
May 2008, Week 1
April 2008, Week 5
April 2008, Week 4
April 2008, Week 3
April 2008, Week 2
April 2008, Week 1
March 2008, Week 5
March 2008, Week 4
March 2008, Week 3
March 2008, Week 2
March 2008, Week 1
February 2008, Week 5
February 2008, Week 4
February 2008, Week 3
February 2008, Week 2
February 2008, Week 1
January 2008, Week 5
January 2008, Week 4
January 2008, Week 3
January 2008, Week 2
January 2008, Week 1
December 2007, Week 5
December 2007, Week 4
December 2007, Week 3
December 2007, Week 2
December 2007, Week 1
November 2007, Week 5
November 2007, Week 4
November 2007, Week 3
November 2007, Week 2
November 2007, Week 1
October 2007, Week 5
October 2007, Week 4
October 2007, Week 3
October 2007, Week 2
October 2007, Week 1
September 2007, Week 5
September 2007, Week 4
September 2007, Week 3
September 2007, Week 2
September 2007, Week 1
August 2007, Week 5
August 2007, Week 4
August 2007, Week 3
August 2007, Week 2
August 2007, Week 1
July 2007, Week 5
July 2007, Week 4
July 2007, Week 3
July 2007, Week 2
July 2007, Week 1
June 2007, Week 5
June 2007, Week 4
June 2007, Week 3
June 2007, Week 2
June 2007, Week 1
May 2007, Week 5
May 2007, Week 4
May 2007, Week 3
May 2007, Week 2
May 2007, Week 1
April 2007, Week 5
April 2007, Week 4
April 2007, Week 3
April 2007, Week 2
April 2007, Week 1
March 2007, Week 5
March 2007, Week 4
March 2007, Week 3
March 2007, Week 2
March 2007, Week 1
February 2007, Week 4
February 2007, Week 3
February 2007, Week 2
February 2007, Week 1
January 2007, Week 5
January 2007, Week 4
January 2007, Week 3
January 2007, Week 2
January 2007, Week 1
December 2006, Week 5
December 2006, Week 4
December 2006, Week 3
December 2006, Week 2
December 2006, Week 1
November 2006, Week 5
November 2006, Week 4
November 2006, Week 3
November 2006, Week 2
November 2006, Week 1
October 2006, Week 5
October 2006, Week 4
October 2006, Week 3
October 2006, Week 2
October 2006, Week 1
September 2006, Week 5
September 2006, Week 4
September 2006, Week 3
September 2006, Week 2
September 2006, Week 1
August 2006, Week 5
August 2006, Week 4
August 2006, Week 3
August 2006, Week 2
August 2006, Week 1
July 2006, Week 5
July 2006, Week 4
July 2006, Week 3
July 2006, Week 2
July 2006, Week 1
June 2006, Week 5
June 2006, Week 4
June 2006, Week 3
June 2006, Week 2
June 2006, Week 1
May 2006, Week 5
May 2006, Week 4
May 2006, Week 3
May 2006, Week 2
May 2006, Week 1
April 2006, Week 5
April 2006, Week 4
April 2006, Week 3
April 2006, Week 2
April 2006, Week 1
March 2006, Week 5
March 2006, Week 4
March 2006, Week 3
March 2006, Week 2
March 2006, Week 1
February 2006, Week 4
February 2006, Week 3
February 2006, Week 2
February 2006, Week 1
January 2006, Week 5
January 2006, Week 4
January 2006, Week 3
January 2006, Week 2
January 2006, Week 1
December 2005, Week 5
December 2005, Week 4
December 2005, Week 3
December 2005, Week 2
December 2005, Week 1
November 2005, Week 5
November 2005, Week 4
November 2005, Week 3
November 2005, Week 2
November 2005, Week 1
October 2005, Week 5
October 2005, Week 4
October 2005, Week 3
October 2005, Week 2
October 2005, Week 1
September 2005, Week 5
September 2005, Week 4
September 2005, Week 3
September 2005, Week 2
September 2005, Week 1
August 2005, Week 5
August 2005, Week 4
August 2005, Week 3
August 2005, Week 2
August 2005, Week 1
July 2005, Week 5
July 2005, Week 4
July 2005, Week 3
July 2005, Week 2
July 2005, Week 1
June 2005, Week 5
June 2005, Week 4
June 2005, Week 3
June 2005, Week 2
June 2005, Week 1
May 2005, Week 5
May 2005, Week 4
May 2005, Week 3
May 2005, Week 2
May 2005, Week 1
April 2005, Week 5
April 2005, Week 4
April 2005, Week 3
April 2005, Week 2
April 2005, Week 1
March 2005, Week 5
March 2005, Week 4
March 2005, Week 3
March 2005, Week 2
March 2005, Week 1
February 2005, Week 4
February 2005, Week 3
February 2005, Week 2
February 2005, Week 1
January 2005, Week 5
January 2005, Week 4
January 2005, Week 3
January 2005, Week 2
January 2005, Week 1
December 2004, Week 5
December 2004, Week 4
December 2004, Week 3
December 2004, Week 2
December 2004, Week 1
November 2004, Week 5
November 2004, Week 4
November 2004, Week 3
November 2004, Week 2
November 2004, Week 1
October 2004, Week 5
October 2004, Week 4
October 2004, Week 3
October 2004, Week 2
October 2004, Week 1
September 2004, Week 5
September 2004, Week 4
September 2004, Week 3
September 2004, Week 2
September 2004, Week 1
August 2004, Week 5
August 2004, Week 4
August 2004, Week 3
August 2004, Week 2
August 2004, Week 1
July 2004, Week 5
July 2004, Week 4
July 2004, Week 3
July 2004, Week 2
July 2004, Week 1
June 2004, Week 5
June 2004, Week 4
June 2004, Week 3
June 2004, Week 2
June 2004, Week 1
May 2004, Week 5
May 2004, Week 4
May 2004, Week 3
May 2004, Week 2
May 2004, Week 1
April 2004, Week 5
April 2004, Week 4
April 2004, Week 3
April 2004, Week 2
April 2004, Week 1
March 2004, Week 5
March 2004, Week 4
March 2004, Week 3
March 2004, Week 2
March 2004, Week 1
February 2004, Week 5
February 2004, Week 4
February 2004, Week 3
February 2004, Week 2
February 2004, Week 1
January 2004, Week 5
January 2004, Week 4
January 2004, Week 3
January 2004, Week 2
January 2004, Week 1
December 2003, Week 5
December 2003, Week 4
December 2003, Week 3
December 2003, Week 2
December 2003, Week 1
November 2003, Week 5
November 2003, Week 4
November 2003, Week 3
November 2003, Week 2
November 2003, Week 1
October 2003, Week 5
October 2003, Week 4
October 2003, Week 3
October 2003, Week 2
October 2003, Week 1
September 2003, Week 5
September 2003, Week 4
September 2003, Week 3
September 2003, Week 2
September 2003, Week 1
August 2003, Week 5
August 2003, Week 4
August 2003, Week 3
August 2003, Week 2
August 2003, Week 1
July 2003, Week 5
July 2003, Week 4
July 2003, Week 3
July 2003, Week 2
July 2003, Week 1
June 2003, Week 5
June 2003, Week 4
June 2003, Week 3
June 2003, Week 2
June 2003, Week 1
May 2003, Week 5
May 2003, Week 4
May 2003, Week 3
May 2003, Week 2
May 2003, Week 1
April 2003, Week 5
April 2003, Week 4
April 2003, Week 3
April 2003, Week 2
April 2003, Week 1
March 2003, Week 5
March 2003, Week 4
March 2003, Week 3
March 2003, Week 2
March 2003, Week 1
February 2003, Week 4
February 2003, Week 3
February 2003, Week 2
February 2003, Week 1
January 2003, Week 5
January 2003, Week 4
January 2003, Week 3
January 2003, Week 2
January 2003, Week 1
December 2002, Week 5
December 2002, Week 4
December 2002, Week 3
December 2002, Week 2
December 2002, Week 1
November 2002, Week 5
November 2002, Week 4
November 2002, Week 3
November 2002, Week 2
November 2002, Week 1
October 2002, Week 5
October 2002, Week 4
October 2002, Week 3
October 2002, Week 2
October 2002, Week 1
September 2002, Week 5
September 2002, Week 4
September 2002, Week 3
September 2002, Week 2
September 2002, Week 1
August 2002, Week 5
August 2002, Week 4
August 2002, Week 3
August 2002, Week 2
August 2002, Week 1
July 2002, Week 5
July 2002, Week 4
July 2002, Week 3
July 2002, Week 2
July 2002, Week 1
June 2002, Week 5
June 2002, Week 4
June 2002, Week 3
June 2002, Week 2
June 2002, Week 1
May 2002, Week 5
May 2002, Week 4
May 2002, Week 3
May 2002, Week 2
May 2002, Week 1
April 2002, Week 5
April 2002, Week 4
April 2002, Week 3
April 2002, Week 2
April 2002, Week 1
March 2002, Week 5
March 2002, Week 4
March 2002, Week 3
March 2002, Week 2
March 2002, Week 1
February 2002, Week 4
February 2002, Week 3
February 2002, Week 2
February 2002, Week 1
January 2002, Week 5
January 2002, Week 4
January 2002, Week 3
January 2002, Week 2
January 2002, Week 1
December 2001, Week 5
December 2001, Week 4
December 2001, Week 3
December 2001, Week 2
December 2001, Week 1
November 2001, Week 5
November 2001, Week 4
November 2001, Week 3
November 2001, Week 2
November 2001, Week 1
October 2001, Week 5
October 2001, Week 4
October 2001, Week 3
October 2001, Week 2
October 2001, Week 1
September 2001, Week 5
September 2001, Week 4
September 2001, Week 3
September 2001, Week 2
September 2001, Week 1
August 2001, Week 5
August 2001, Week 4
August 2001, Week 3
August 2001, Week 2
August 2001, Week 1
July 2001, Week 5
July 2001, Week 4
July 2001, Week 3
July 2001, Week 2
July 2001, Week 1
June 2001, Week 5
June 2001, Week 4
June 2001, Week 3
June 2001, Week 2
June 2001, Week 1
May 2001, Week 5
May 2001, Week 4
May 2001, Week 3
May 2001, Week 2
May 2001, Week 1
April 2001, Week 5
April 2001, Week 4
April 2001, Week 3
April 2001, Week 2
April 2001, Week 1
March 2001, Week 5
March 2001, Week 4
March 2001, Week 3
March 2001, Week 2
March 2001, Week 1
February 2001, Week 4
February 2001, Week 3
February 2001, Week 2
February 2001, Week 1
January 2001, Week 5
January 2001, Week 4
January 2001, Week 3
January 2001, Week 2
January 2001, Week 1
December 2000, Week 5
December 2000, Week 4
December 2000, Week 3
December 2000, Week 2
December 2000, Week 1
November 2000, Week 5
November 2000, Week 4
November 2000, Week 3
November 2000, Week 2
November 2000, Week 1
October 2000, Week 5
October 2000, Week 4
October 2000, Week 3
October 2000, Week 2
October 2000, Week 1
September 2000, Week 5
September 2000, Week 4
September 2000, Week 3
September 2000, Week 2
September 2000, Week 1
August 2000, Week 5
August 2000, Week 4
August 2000, Week 3
August 2000, Week 2
August 2000, Week 1
July 2000, Week 5
July 2000, Week 4
July 2000, Week 3
July 2000, Week 2
July 2000, Week 1
June 2000, Week 5
June 2000, Week 4
June 2000, Week 3
June 2000, Week 2
June 2000, Week 1
May 2000, Week 5
May 2000, Week 4
May 2000, Week 3
May 2000, Week 2
May 2000, Week 1
April 2000, Week 5
April 2000, Week 4
April 2000, Week 3
April 2000, Week 2
April 2000, Week 1
March 2000, Week 5
March 2000, Week 4
March 2000, Week 3
March 2000, Week 2
March 2000, Week 1
February 2000, Week 5
February 2000, Week 4
February 2000, Week 3
February 2000, Week 2
February 2000, Week 1
January 2000, Week 5
January 2000, Week 4
January 2000, Week 3
January 2000, Week 2
January 2000, Week 1
December 1999, Week 5
December 1999, Week 4
December 1999, Week 3
December 1999, Week 2
December 1999, Week 1
November 1999, Week 5
November 1999, Week 4
November 1999, Week 3
November 1999, Week 2
November 1999, Week 1
October 1999, Week 5
October 1999, Week 4
October 1999, Week 3
October 1999, Week 2
October 1999, Week 1
September 1999, Week 5
September 1999, Week 4
September 1999, Week 3
September 1999, Week 2
September 1999, Week 1
August 1999, Week 5
August 1999, Week 4
August 1999, Week 3
August 1999, Week 2
August 1999, Week 1
July 1999, Week 5
July 1999, Week 4
July 1999, Week 3
July 1999, Week 2
July 1999, Week 1
June 1999, Week 5
June 1999, Week 4
June 1999, Week 3
June 1999, Week 2
June 1999, Week 1
May 1999, Week 5
May 1999, Week 4
May 1999, Week 3
May 1999, Week 2
May 1999, Week 1
April 1999, Week 5
April 1999, Week 4
April 1999, Week 3
April 1999, Week 2
April 1999, Week 1
March 1999, Week 5
March 1999, Week 4
March 1999, Week 3
March 1999, Week 2
March 1999, Week 1
February 1999, Week 4
February 1999, Week 3
February 1999, Week 2
February 1999, Week 1
January 1999, Week 5
January 1999, Week 4
January 1999, Week 3
January 1999, Week 2
January 1999, Week 1
December 1998, Week 5
December 1998, Week 4
December 1998, Week 3
December 1998, Week 2
December 1998, Week 1
November 1998, Week 5
November 1998, Week 4
November 1998, Week 3
November 1998, Week 2
November 1998, Week 1
October 1998, Week 5
October 1998, Week 4
October 1998, Week 3
October 1998, Week 2
October 1998, Week 1
September 1998, Week 5
September 1998, Week 4
September 1998, Week 3
September 1998, Week 2
September 1998, Week 1
August 1998, Week 5
August 1998, Week 4
August 1998, Week 3
August 1998, Week 2
August 1998, Week 1
July 1998, Week 5
July 1998, Week 4
July 1998, Week 3
July 1998, Week 2
July 1998, Week 1
June 1998, Week 5
June 1998, Week 4
June 1998, Week 3
June 1998, Week 2
June 1998, Week 1
May 1998, Week 5
May 1998, Week 4
May 1998, Week 3
May 1998, Week 2
May 1998, Week 1
April 1998, Week 5
April 1998, Week 4
April 1998, Week 3
April 1998, Week 2
April 1998, Week 1
March 1998, Week 5
March 1998, Week 4
March 1998, Week 3
March 1998, Week 2
March 1998, Week 1
February 1998, Week 5
February 1998, Week 4
February 1998, Week 3
February 1998, Week 2
February 1998, Week 1
January 1998, Week 5
January 1998, Week 4
January 1998, Week 3
January 1998, Week 2
January 1998, Week 1
December 1997, Week 5
December 1997, Week 4
December 1997, Week 3
December 1997, Week 2
December 1997, Week 1
November 1997, Week 5
November 1997, Week 4
November 1997, Week 3
November 1997, Week 2
November 1997, Week 1
October 1997, Week 5
October 1997, Week 4
October 1997, Week 3
October 1997, Week 2
October 1997, Week 1
September 1997, Week 5
September 1997, Week 4
September 1997, Week 3
September 1997, Week 2
September 1997, Week 1
August 1997, Week 5
August 1997, Week 4
August 1997, Week 3
August 1997, Week 2
August 1997, Week 1
July 1997, Week 5
July 1997, Week 4
July 1997, Week 3
July 1997, Week 2
July 1997, Week 1
June 1997, Week 5
June 1997, Week 4
June 1997, Week 3
June 1997, Week 2
June 1997, Week 1
May 1997, Week 5
May 1997, Week 4
May 1997, Week 3
May 1997, Week 2
May 1997, Week 1
April 1997, Week 5
April 1997, Week 4
April 1997, Week 3
April 1997, Week 2
April 1997, Week 1
March 1997, Week 5
March 1997, Week 4
March 1997, Week 3
March 1997, Week 2
March 1997, Week 1
February 1997, Week 5
February 1997, Week 4
February 1997, Week 3
February 1997, Week 2
February 1997, Week 1
January 1997, Week 5
January 1997, Week 4
January 1997, Week 3
January 1997, Week 2
January 1997, Week 1
December 1996, Week 5
December 1996, Week 4
December 1996, Week 3
December 1996, Week 2
December 1996, Week 1
November 1996, Week 5
November 1996, Week 4
November 1996, Week 3
November 1996, Week 2
November 1996, Week 1
October 1996, Week 5
October 1996, Week 4
October 1996, Week 3
October 1996, Week 2
October 1996, Week 1
September 1996, Week 5
September 1996, Week 4
September 1996, Week 3
September 1996, Week 2
September 1996, Week 1
August 1996, Week 5
August 1996, Week 4
August 1996, Week 3
August 1996, Week 2
August 1996, Week 1
July 1996, Week 5
July 1996, Week 4
July 1996, Week 3
July 1996, Week 2
July 1996, Week 1
June 1996, Week 5
June 1996, Week 4
June 1996, Week 3
June 1996, Week 2
June 1996, Week 1
May 1996, Week 5
May 1996, Week 4
May 1996, Week 3
May 1996, Week 2
May 1996, Week 1
April 1996, Week 5
April 1996, Week 4
April 1996, Week 3
April 1996, Week 2
April 1996, Week 1
March 1996, Week 5
March 1996, Week 4
March 1996, Week 3
March 1996, Week 2
March 1996, Week 1
February 1996, Week 5
February 1996, Week 4
February 1996, Week 3
February 1996, Week 2
February 1996, Week 1
January 1996, Week 5
January 1996, Week 4
January 1996, Week 3
January 1996, Week 2
January 1996, Week 1
December 1995, Week 5
December 1995, Week 4
December 1995, Week 3
December 1995, Week 2
December 1995, Week 1
November 1995, Week 5
November 1995, Week 4
November 1995, Week 3
November 1995, Week 2
November 1995, Week 1
October 1995, Week 5
October 1995, Week 4
October 1995, Week 3
October 1995, Week 2
October 1995, Week 1
September 1995, Week 5
September 1995, Week 4
September 1995, Week 3
September 1995, Week 2
September 1995, Week 1
August 1995, Week 5
August 1995, Week 4
August 1995, Week 3
August 1995, Week 2
August 1995, Week 1
July 1995, Week 5
July 1995, Week 4
July 1995, Week 3
July 1995, Week 2
July 1995, Week 1
June 1995, Week 5
June 1995, Week 4
June 1995, Week 3
June 1995, Week 2
June 1995, Week 1
May 1995, Week 5
May 1995, Week 4
May 1995, Week 3
May 1995, Week 2
May 1995, Week 1
April 1995, Week 5
April 1995, Week 4
April 1995, Week 3
April 1995, Week 2
April 1995, Week 1
March 1995, Week 5
March 1995, Week 4
March 1995, Week 3
March 1995, Week 2
March 1995, Week 1
February 1995, Week 4
February 1995, Week 3
February 1995, Week 2
February 1995, Week 1
January 1995, Week 5
January 1995, Week 4
January 1995, Week 3
January 1995, Week 2
January 1995, Week 1
December 1994, Week 5
December 1994, Week 4
December 1994, Week 3
December 1994, Week 2
December 1994, Week 1
November 1994, Week 5
November 1994, Week 4
November 1994, Week 3
November 1994, Week 2
November 1994, Week 1
October 1994, Week 5
October 1994, Week 4
October 1994, Week 3
October 1994, Week 2
October 1994, Week 1
September 1994, Week 5
September 1994, Week 4
September 1994, Week 3
September 1994, Week 2
September 1994, Week 1
August 1994, Week 5
August 1994, Week 4
August 1994, Week 3
August 1994, Week 2
August 1994, Week 1
July 1994, Week 5
July 1994, Week 4
July 1994, Week 3
July 1994, Week 2
July 1994, Week 1
June 1994, Week 5
June 1994, Week 4
June 1994, Week 3
June 1994, Week 2
June 1994, Week 1
May 1994, Week 5
May 1994, Week 4
May 1994, Week 3
May 1994, Week 2
May 1994, Week 1
April 1994, Week 5
April 1994, Week 4
April 1994, Week 3
April 1994, Week 2
April 1994, Week 1
March 1994, Week 5
March 1994, Week 4
March 1994, Week 3
March 1994, Week 2
March 1994, Week 1
February 1994, Week 4
February 1994, Week 3
February 1994, Week 2
February 1994, Week 1
February 1994
January 1994
December 1993
November 1993

ATOM RSS1 RSS2



LISTSERV.UTORONTO.CA

CataList Email List Search Powered by the LISTSERV Email List Manager