Home Submit Link Suggest Category Latest Link Top Links Contact Us
Statistic

Categories:  (18)
Subcategories:  (2268)
Pending:  (3759)
Today:  (11)
Yesterday:  (76)
Total:  (19129)
This weeks:  (601)


Partner
Usato Hi-Fi
wGs Media Web Directory
If you are running a Family Friendly web site with quality content you are welcome to add your web site.wGs Media is seo friendly directory.


Directory Lists and Resources

Links Sort by: PageRank | Hits | Alphabetical

Last minute

Time.com - A series of reports on child abuse suggest that as many as nine in 10 cases of child maltreatment and neglect go unreported

Farhat Chishty, right, spends time with her mentally retarded son Haseeb Chishty at Denton State School in Denton, Texas, Jan. 16, 2008. In 2002 Haseeb nearly died after a beating and is now confined to a wheelchair and unable to feed himself or use the bathroom.  A care worker repeatedly kicked and punched Haseeb and is now serving 15 years for aggravated assault. (AP Photo/Donna McWilliam)AP - For more than a century, thousands of mentally disabled Americans were isolated from society, sometimes for life, by being confined to huge state institutions.


Vasiliki Kostoula, a Greek breast cancer patient, is framed through a breast x-ray after a radiological medical examination in an Athens hospital, October 29, 2008. (Yannis Behrakis/Reuters)Reuters - The most commonly used breast cancer drug may cause tumors to spread in a small number of women with low levels of a protein which makes cells stick together, British researchers said on Thursday.


HealthDay - (HealthDay News) -- Here are the latest clinical trials, courtesy of CenterWatch:

A group of young men exercise during training in Pokhara November 30, 2008. More than 20 thousand young Nepalis compete every year to be selected for the British Gurkha regiment where only 300 will be recruited. The training includes rigorous fitness exercises such as carrying heavy loads up and down a road. Picture taken November 30, 2008.  REUTERS/Gopal Chitrakar (NEPAL)HealthDay - WEDNESDAY, Dec. 3 (HealthDay News) -- Overweight kids may be able to work out their anger with exercise, a new report finds.