Thursday
Take a Trip to the Northpole!
Here, you can write to Santa and he will write back to you;
Visit the Toy Shop to look at toys;
Mrs. Claus' Kitchen has lots of yummy recipes;
AND LOTS AND LOTS MORE!
CLICK HERE!!!
Visit the Toy Shop to look at toys;
Mrs. Claus' Kitchen has lots of yummy recipes;
AND LOTS AND LOTS MORE!
CLICK HERE!!!
The History of Christmas
Plus, A White House Christmas!
View the video on this website. Lots of good information.
Each year, during the month of December, millions of homes across America are decorated with Christmas trees and fairy lights. But how much do you really know about this festive holiday? Explore this site to find out......
MORE INFO!!!
View the video on this website. Lots of good information.
Each year, during the month of December, millions of homes across America are decorated with Christmas trees and fairy lights. But how much do you really know about this festive holiday? Explore this site to find out......
MORE INFO!!!
Ignorance as Blessing
Foreknowledge: for God and not for us
by: Collin Hansen
With scientific advances, sometimes you need to read between the lines. At first glance, all looks well with a successful new test developed by researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. They can now test unborn children to discern if they have cystic fibrosis, b-thalassemia, or sickle cell anemia—ailments caused by a single mutated gene. Actually, tests already exist that can detect cystic fibrosis before birth. But they require doctors to insert a needle into the mother's womb, which sometimes results in miscarriage. The new test, announced online by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, requires no such invasive measures. It compares the baby's DNA in the mother's blood with her own DNA. The key breakthrough came when researchers employed digital technology to count individual mutant or normal DNA sequences.
MORE!!!
by: Collin Hansen
With scientific advances, sometimes you need to read between the lines. At first glance, all looks well with a successful new test developed by researchers at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. They can now test unborn children to discern if they have cystic fibrosis, b-thalassemia, or sickle cell anemia—ailments caused by a single mutated gene. Actually, tests already exist that can detect cystic fibrosis before birth. But they require doctors to insert a needle into the mother's womb, which sometimes results in miscarriage. The new test, announced online by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, requires no such invasive measures. It compares the baby's DNA in the mother's blood with her own DNA. The key breakthrough came when researchers employed digital technology to count individual mutant or normal DNA sequences.
MORE!!!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)