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Comics I Follow

Ben
By Daniel Shelton
Frank and Ernest
By Thaves
Li'l Abner
By Al Capp
Not Invented Here
By Bill Barnes and friends
Pickles
By Brian Crane
Prickly City
By Scott Stantis
Tarzan
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
Tank McNamara
By Bill Hinds
Calvin and Hobbes
By Bill Watterson
9 to 5
By Harley Schwadron
The Academia Waltz
By Berkeley Breathed
Annie
By Jay Maeder and Alan Kupperberg
Baldo
By Hector D. CantĂş and Carlos Castellanos
Basic Instructions
By Scott Meyer
Big Nate
By Lincoln Peirce
The Boondocks
By Aaron McGruder
For Better or For Worse
By Lynn Johnston
Gasoline Alley
By Jim Scancarelli
Today’s strip reveals Miller’s ignorance. For the truth about Catholicism and science. go to http://www.catholiceducation.org/en/science/catholic-contributions/the-church-opposes-science-the-myth-of-catholic-irrationality.html
A sample quote: "However, the Catholic Church as an institution funds, sponsors, and supports scientific research in the Pontifical Academy of Science and in the departments of science found in every Catholic university across the world, including those governed by Roman Catholic bishops, such as The Catholic University of America. This financial and institutional support of science by the Church began at the very birth of science in seventeenth-century Europe and continues today. Even Church buildings themselves were not only used for religious purposes but designed in part to foster scientific knowledge. As Thomas Woods notes:Cathedrals in Bologna, Florence, Paris, and Rome were designed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to function as world-class solar observatories. Nowhere in the world were there more precise instruments for the study of the sun. Each such cathedral contained holes through which sunlight could enter and time lines (or meridian lines) on the floor. It was by observing the path traced out by the sunlight on these lines that researchers could obtain accurate measurements of time and predict equinoxes. 2
In the words of J. L. Heilbron of the University of California, Berkeley, the “Roman Catholic Church gave more financial aid and social support to the study of astronomy over six centuries, from the recovery of ancient learning during the late Middle Ages into the Enlightenment, than any other, and probably, all other institutions.” 3 This financial and social support extended also to other branches of scientific inquiry."