This Is What I Think.

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Spartanburg




http://www.tv.com/shows/ncis/shell-game-3422355/

tv.com


NCIS Season 14 Episode 6

Shell Game

Aired Tuesday 8:00 PM Oct 25, 2016 on CBS

AIRED: 10/25/16



http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=ncis&episode=s14e06

Springfield! Springfield!


NCIS

Shell Game


Boss, the documents that were given to you in the parking garage were doctored












2016_Nk20_DSCN4173.jpg










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 03/24/07 3:52 AM
I find myself thinking of some "memories" of when I was assigned to the USS Wainwright. The ship had left port for a short regional deployment and I stayed back because I had a medical appointment on base. Or something like that. Not really sure why I didn't leave with the ship but it was because of some appointment on base. After that appointment, there was a period before the ship was due back when I was assigned to work in an office there on base.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 24 March 2007 excerpt ends]










1973 film "The Last Detail" DVD video:

00:06:43


Master Chief Petty Officer - Master at Arms: Now, I want to tell you something off the record. The old man and his old lady have a personal interest in this case. If you fuck up, you know what. Are you all set, Cochise?










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=red-planet

Springfield! Springfield!


Red Planet (2000)


This is Mars- 1 ground crew.
Do you copy? Hello?
We're the guys on Mars.
Come on. Someone talk to us.
Try again.
This is Mars- 1 ground crew.
Do you copy?
This is Mars- 1 ground crew.
Do you copy?
Maybe they'll hear us back in 1997.










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=red-planet

Springfield! Springfield!


Red Planet (2000)


You all right?
AMEE jammed the transmitters
so we won't know where she is.
You all right?
Only hurts when I breathe.










http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1993-10-19/news/9310200350_1_saliva-and-urine-samples-david-wolf-metabolism

Chicago Tribune


Astronauts Begin Body-fluids Tests

October 19, 1993

Columbia's astronauts on Tuesday donated blood, saliva and urine samples as they began their first full day of medical experiments on the longest shuttle flight to date. The seven-member crew, including a doctor, a biochemist and a veterinarian, are serving as investigators and test subjects on the 14-day mission to study how the human body adjusts to freedom from gravity. Soon after being awakened by Mission Control, astronauts M. Rhea Seddon, David Wolf, Shannon Lucid and Martin Fettman resumed a test of protein metabolism that will continue throughout their voyage.













https://www.google.com/maps/@34.0265847,-81.0999992,3a,75y,316h,99.24t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sTqOH1YHyOOGV0UCwZSkRwg!2e0!7i13312!8i6656

Google Maps

US-76

Columbia, South Carolina












deed_29June1995.jpg










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0104257/quotes

IMDb


Memorable quotes for

A Few Good Men (1992)


Galloway: Tell your friend not to get cute down there, the Marines at Gitmo are fanatical.

Lt. Weinberg: Fanatical about what?

Galloway: About being Marines.










http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1993-10-18/features/9310180035_1_plants-chromosome-sperm

Chicago Tribune


Clearing The Air About The Ability Of Plants To Clean It

October 18, 1993 By Dr. Allan Bruckheim, Tribune Media Services.

Q-In the old days, when you were hospitalized, people would send you "get well" plants and flowers. At night, the nurse would come in and take the plants out, so they wouldn't use the oxygen in the room. During the day, they "cleaned" the air in the room. Couldn't plants be used to cure the air inside buildings where people get sick from the recirculated air?

A-I remember those times, too, as they don't seem to do that anymore. Yes, it's true that plants only produce oxygen during the day, using the process known as photosynthesis. And plants do use some of that same oxygen at night for their own metabolism. But it would take a great number of plants in a room to affect the circulating air in any measurable way.

Plants do absorb some of the contaminants found in buildings "suffering" from the so-called sick-building syndrome. Experiments are under way to see how well they can achieve this task, which is a matter of importance to maintaining a supply of fresh air in the closed environment of a space station, for example. And so the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is more than interested.

At present, NASA-funded research has determined that plants can do a fair job on small quantities of such things as toluene, benzene, formaldehyde and trichloroethylene, all chemical contaminants often found in "sick" buildings. But it would take an enormous number of plants to get it all done. Besides, a properly designed, well-maintained and satisfactorily operating ventilation system can do the job as well and in much less time than the plants.

Q-I've heard that there are more boys born than girl babies. Is this to offset the fact that men die faster than women? It seems to me that if a man produces the same number of male and female sperm, the numbers would be even. How do scientists explain the difference, if in fact there is one?

A-You're right, the number should be even if all the X chromosome-bearing sperm produced a girl baby, and all the Y chromosome-bearing sperm produced a boy baby. But the statistics in the United States, which vary a bit year by year, always show the number of boys among whites to be a bit ahead at birth, by 106 to 100. It varies from one ethnic group to another and by countries, but boys are always more numerous.

But the numeric advantage doesn't last too long. By age 20, the ratio is even, and with each passing decade more women survive than men. By age 85, there are two women survivors for every male, and by age 100 (there are 25,000 Americans over the age of 100) the ratio is 5-1 in favor of women.

No one really knows why more boys are born, but if nature is trying to keep the ratio even, it isn't doing the job too well. One common explanation is that since the male sperm carries the smaller Y chromosome (smaller than the X chromosome, that is), it has less of a load to carry and so makes the journey to the egg in less time-so more boys are produced.

Across my desk: During the past two years, the treatment of gallstone disease has been revolutionized by a new surgical technique called laparascope (a telescope-like instrument), which permits the surgeon to view the surgical field. About 80 percent of all gallbladders are now removed using this technique.

Because of a growing concern about the safety of the procedure, a consensus development conference was held by the National Institutes of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease. The panel called the procedure a safe one, provided it was performed by properly trained physicians, and so the panel endorsed stringent guidelines for training. Patients also should be carefully selected for the procedure to avoid possible complicaions.

Hospitals can now formulate their own standards following this panel's recommendations to ensure the well-being of their patients.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 01:53 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Thursday 27 October 2016