HEY!
Today was not bad, had my chem/bio practical Prelims.
it's so funny what everyone was talking about right after the exam,
cause there were two positive test for anion. & there goes everyone dicussing whether it was Ammonium Chloride or Ammonium Nirate.
Alan ang checked it out on the internet with teacher's laptop, & found out that Ammonium Nirate is used to make bombs or whatever, & it's explosive.
that cleared things out so the correct answer is:
Ammonium Chloride!
Had lunch at subway westmall just now, it was my first time eating at subway. so paiseh!
haha..but everyone'd got their first time.
I love the cookie! heard J-ing talking about it, all along i thought it was some small free-gift cookie, but it was fucking nice & chewy(choo-y).
With Alan choo info that there's new version of Ipod nanos, i went to check it out.
they're certainly getting cuter!

Peiqi want the red one, sadly there ain't pink like nano 2 (i admit i like pink, happy?)
so i want
red too! hehehehehe

Oh yes, this picture is for Danial & Clarinda.
told you two about the youngest mother? this is her during her prenancy;

Here's her story:
Regardless of our squeamishness, we have to note that the claim of a five-year-old girl giving birth is apparently true. Her name was Lina Medina, a Peruvian girl from the Andean village of Ticrapo who made medical history when she gave birth to a boy by caesarean section in May 1939 at the age of five years, seven months and 21 days. Lina's parents initially thought their daughter had a large abdominal tumor, but after they took her to a hospital in the town of Pisco physicians confirmed that her abdominal swelling was due to pregnancy.
Lina was eventually transferred to a hospital in Lima, where she delivered a six-pound baby boy by Cesarean section on 14 May 1939 (coincidentally the date on which Mother's Day was celebrated that year). Lina's father was temporarily jailed on suspicion of incest, but he was released for a lack of evidence and authorities were never able to determine who fathered Lina's child.
Lina's incredible story was documented in contemporaneous reports by Edmundo Escomel, one of Peru's preeminent physician-researchers of the period and a laureate of the prestigious French Academy of Sciences. Escomel's first correspondence to the editors of La Presse Medicale1 (which is undated but appeared in the 13 May 1939 issue) noted that Lina first came to the attention of Dr. Gérado Lozada, chief physician of the Hospital of Pisco, when she appeared at that hospital in early April 1939 for evaluation of what was assumed to be a massive abdominal tumor.
It soon became obvious to the stunned Lozada, however, that the little girl was pregnant. A medical history revealed that she had been having regular periods since age 3, but that she had stopped menstruating for the past 7½ months. Additionally, she had fully developed breasts. Further examination revealed a fetal heartbeat, and an X-ray confirmed the pregnancy. Escomel stated that Lozada had submitted a report about the case to the Academy of Medicine in Lima.