As counter-intuitive as it may sound, a baby has been born that has the DNA of three separate people. While we’re quite familiar with the traditional combination of genetic material from two reproductive cells — ovum and sperm — this combination came from the DNA of the baby’s mother, father, and a separate egg donor.

This new procedure was employed because the baby’s mother carries the gene for Leigh syndrome, a neurological disorder that can be fatal to the infant within a few years after birth. Two previous children born to this individual succumbed to the disease, prompting her to seek help in avoiding passing the deadly gene on to yet another child.
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In the third and final interview with "Brian," we pick it up where last we left off: with his father, who worked in the aerospace industry, telling him he worked with aliens and alien technology. If Brian is telling the truth and his father was telling the truth… might it still be a lie? It might. And that’s only the jumping off point for this episode. Get ready for grays, mantis beings, UFOs, and the type of deep questioning such topics demand.
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A fantastic show about preparing for the afterlife, the nature of the soul and OBEs hosted by Marla Frees and featuring William and Susan Buhlman. In the last half hour of the program, Whitley Strieber talks to OBE master William Buhlman about the witnessed OBE he had at a conference a few weeks ago.

This extraordinary show, packed with valuable and unique information, will be broadcast in full on both our free and subscriber feeds.
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 Researchers from The Australian National University (ANU) have developed a method of freezing and storing light, an important step on the road to developing quantum computers. Most switches used in quantum computing experiments are made up of trapped ions or semiconductor particles, suspended in a state of quantum superposition. Photons, however, could interface much more efficiently with fiber optic networks, without the need for a way to translate the information between the qubit — the quantum-computing equivalent of a classical computer bit — and the computer’s network or interface.
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