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  • The DNA of Top Achievers

    Of course by now we are all becoming aware of DNA. It is the source code that determines who we are. When we look at DNA we can see what a person will look like, what diseases they may come down with, etc. This has been a tremendous breakthrough for scientists and will continue to be so for some time, I think.

    This got me to thinking about what makes up those who are top achievers. Is there a "DNA" to them? Obviously, all top achievers wouldn't have the same literal DNA but what about a figurative DNA? Is there a common "gene" that they all have? Are there common "genes" perhaps? I th ...
    Author: Chris Widener
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    Today's Featured Articles:

  • Store Bought Vitamins - Synthetic?

    Did you know that most store bought vitamins and minerals are synthetic and are hard on your liver and kidneys? Have you noticed that if you do take store bought vitamins that you switch the brands like switching shampoos?

    Think about how a cell works. If someone was suffering from scurvy, all they had to do was eat an orange and the body would immediately recover because the cells recognized that copper is the center of vitamin C and that it has all of it's bioflavinoids surrounding it and just one tiny arm of the copper is vitamin C.

    When you buy synthetic vitamin C, you are o ...
    Author: Zach Thompson
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  • RFID Spychips! Grocery Store Surveillance
    Privacy Storm Over RFID Chips
    by Mike Banks Valentine


    American consumers

    RFID stands for Radio Frequency Identification and is a term
    that will become increasingly well known as usage of the new
    technology becomes pervasive. There is no question that the
    tiny chips, which enable tracking of physical goods from the
    assembly line to warehouse to retail outlet to checkstand,
    will replace the barcodes previously used for that purpose.

    Some RFID chips are tiny, they are nearly indistiguishable from
    dust in many cases. Pho ...
    Author:
    Mike Banks Valentine
    CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE

    Want to read more of our articles?  Check out the Archive.

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  • Wake-Up Call

    Direct Answers - Column for the week of October 7, 2002

    In the first half of May, I went through two remarkable changes. One was physical and the other involved emotional recall.

    The physical one was what I thought was flu and a heavy dose of it. It was accompanied by a surreal shivering never experienced before or since. The recall was of a family I knew in my school days more than 20 years ago.

    I imagined them not during the school years, when I knew them, but much earlier. I got images of all three children as handsome creatures having just come into this world. I saw t ...
    Author: Wayne Mitchell
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    Here are a few more sites I've chosen if you'd like to read more and do more research:

  • National Health Council Home Page
    The Human Cloning Ban and Stem Cell Research Protection Act. The proper use of human somatic cell nuclear transfer technology to. And/or disabilities that may benefit from this technology in the.


  • Greenebaum Cancer Center's Stem Cell Transpant Information Guide
    Appointment, or if you have a patient who would benefit from the expertise and treatment: Call: 1 (800. Page Greenebaum Cancer Center's Bone Marrow/Stem Cell Transplantation Program University of.


  • Embryonic Stem Cell Research
    This particular case? In the case of embryonic stem cell research, arguably, a human being is being. Human beings are sacrificed for other peoples benefit. Even with those noble ends, it should be.


  • Transplantation in children: hematopoietic stem cell, bone marrow, umbilical.
    Diseases and blood disorders, may benefit from a transplant of hematopoietic stem cells. Commonly known as a bone marrow transplant, the term hematopoietic stem cell transplant acknowledges the fact.


  • GoozNews: Is there a stem cell line for ethics?
    CIRM), the state's new stem cell research agency, will pay. Gene therapy - even stem cells - are the way of the. For the most part, we can't benefit improperly or misuse our.


  • Embryonic stem cell research
    True today as well. Suppose we find some benefit from this research. If this should happen (even though we would have similar results of nonembryonic stem cell research as we learn how to manipulate.


  • First Randomized Trial Of Adult Stem Cell Injections In Heart Failure Patien.
    04-26 Print this page Email to friend First Randomized Trial Of Adult Stem Cell Injections In Heart Failure Patients Shows Benefit TORONTO, April 25 Injections of adult stem cells into damaged heart.


  • You Are What You Eat - Genetically Modified Food
    Whenever we sit down to eat, we assume that the foods we consume are good for us, like milk, vegetables, fruits, and grains. Well, think again. In the last decade the foods we know (corn, tomato, potato, soybean, strawberries) have drastically changed due to the introduction of genetically modified (another word is genetically engineered) organisms in 1994. Over 60% of the items on your local grocery store shelves these days are genetically modified, and these items are not labeled as such.

    On the surface, these genetically modified foods look and taste similar to what we ate before 1994, b ...
    Author: Patty Apostolides
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  • Heredity Is Not Destiny: Do Health and Weight Problems Run in Your Family? It May Be Habits, Not Ge
    I grew up as an unathletic kid. My mother was unathletic, so she just assumed I was too. You see, our family has weak ankles and no coordination. It wasn't until I was an adult that I realized that all this was a lie. I wasn't unathletic - I just hated team sports. I discovered I actually had a flair for dance, which takes quite a bit of athleticism and coordination. Weak ankles? Of course they're weak if you don't do anything to build up their strength. A lot of the physical deficiencies that I thought I'd inherited were really born out of laziness and blind acceptance - those were the real d ...
    Author:
    Janiss Garza
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