Medical miracles happen all the time–maybe someday soon, one of them will benefit YOU (NOTE: Subscribers can still listen to these provocative interviews).

New research shows how embryonic stem cells–taken from your own body–can renew themselves indefinitely and to turn into all types of mature cells.
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Lately, astronomers have been searching for life on the MOONS of planets, but they’ve also discovered a new planet–one that wandering through the galaxy "homeless," rather than orbiting around a star.

Researcher Jonathan Gagné says, "Over the past few years, several objects of this type have been identified, but their existence could not be established (before)."

Astrophysicist Étienne Artigau says, "Although theorists had established the existence of this type of very cold and young planet, one had never been observed until (now)."
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Whitley and I just celebrated our 42nd wedding anniversary. It’s kind of hard to believe we’ve been together so long: I realized that we’ve been married to each other for over half our lives. We’ve had our fights (who hasn’t?), but we’re not tired of each other yet.

I was a dumb young girl when I met Whitley, so I consider myself lucky, not smart, to have realized I’d met the right man. Like most young women, I dated plenty of the "wrong guys."
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William Henry, Chad Steumke and Mark Gray are all deeply involved in the search for stargates and portals to other realities. Here, they discuss why they believe that Google’s new game, Ingress, debases this quest by using it as the basis for conflict-centered game. The game trivializes a quest that has profoundly affected the lives of many people, including William, Chad and Mark, by reducing it to a conflict-soaked fictional narrative. At the same time, a significant amount of genuine information has been used in the game, creating the false impression that the search for stargates is in some way related to conflict, which it is not.
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