Ectopic Pregnancy Test

  

     

Ectopic Pregnancy Test

 Ectopic Pregnancy Test Ectopic Pregnancy Signs
 

Josef Seibel women's sandals for the trendy mums.

Community calendar

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following list comes from the organizations involved. Meeting changes and special speakers will be printed in the Little Argus section during the week. Notices, special speakers and meeting changes may be sent to Meeting Log, Current-Argus, P.O. Box 1629, Carlsbad, N.M. 88221-1629, or e-mailed to chart@currentargus.com. Sunday 7 a.m.-1 p.m., Knights of Columbus Pancake Breakfast, 2nd Sun., K of C Hall, corner of Shaw & Guadalupe, all you can eat, adults $4, children $3. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m., Alcoholics Anonymous, Alanon Club, 701 N. Guadalupe St. Call: 885-0491. 12:30 p.m., Boys & Girls Club Bingo Hall Appreciation Bingo, 3rd Sun., 206 E. Pecan, sales at 1 p.m., bingo at 2 p.m., masters $5, extras $2.50. Call: 885-8449. 1 p.m., Sportsman's Club opens the trap range for public shooting.


A New Series Is Born on Discovery Health

Complex pregnancies and high- risk births-these are worries for many parents-to-be, but they are everyday occurrences for Drs. Alane Park, Yvonne Bohn and Allison Hill. Discovery Health's new six-part docu-series, DELIVER ME, follows the careers and lives of these three dynamic women -- best friends who became partners in a demanding Los Angeles OB/GYN practice. In addition to their thriving careers, all three are mothers themselves, meaning each must juggle the pressures of delivering their patients' children with those of raising their own. Premiering Tuesday, March 4, at 10 PM (ET/PT), DELIVER ME gives viewers a behind-the-curtain peek at the professional and personal lives of these doctors, and the patients they treat.

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Twins adopted as embryos: 'Living proof' stirs stem cell debate

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. — When President Bush vetoed a bill June 20 that would have provided federal funding for embryonic stem cell research, Mike and Nicole Bell of Traverse City, Mich., were among those Americans rejoicing.

The Bells have two children, 17-month-old twins Michael and Paige, born via a relatively new method called embryo adoption. Michael and Paige once were so-called leftover embryos, stored frozen in a lab -- the same type of embryos many scientists want to use for research. They very well could still be there, if not for Mike and Nicole.

"They were orphans in a different sense of the word," Nicole, 35, told Baptist Press. "Embryos are not just cells. They're little people.

"We are opposed to embryonic stem cell research but we are in favor of other types of stem cell research -- adult stem cells, [umbilical] cord blood stem cells.


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