Wow, you\'re fast.
A theory is a body of work meant to describe observations. So we see things fall, and we can describe the speed of their fall approximately 32 ft /sec^2. The falling is a fact, the 32 ft/ sec^2 is the theory bit. That\'s where the distinction comes in.
It\'s true that this is not the common definition of the word \"theory\", but when in a scientific context, our language has to change. For instance, people use the term \"energy\" in a multitude of ways, but if you\'re talking physics, it cannot mean \"life force\". Once you enter that arena, the terminology becomes specific. This is very common problem.
Now, once again I have to disagree with you. It is possible to loose large chunks of dna even over one generation. Microsatellites are an example of little chunks, and I\'m trying to think of an example of the former...