 OK, we're with you, Franklin. Welcome to the Space Shuttle Columbia on its mission STS-75. We have spent the last several days conducting research in microgravity science. One particular experiment which I wanted to mention to you is the world involving the crystallization of proteins in weightlessness. You know, proteins are some of the most fundamental building blocks for all life on our planet Earth. They also play a key role in the life cycle of disease. They control, for example, critical functions like reproduction, like growth, and of course, death. But with this in mind and in their continuous war against disease, modern medicine and pharmacology have focused more on the microscopic than the microscopic world. It is, in fact, in this realm that we can better understand and, hence, defeat the enemy. In fact, the more precisely we know the protein structure of a disease or a parasite, the more effectively that we can engineer drugs and medications or vaccines to correct them. If we were able to transport ourselves to the microscopic world, we would find that these proteins look very much like this model right here. They are, in fact, three-dimensional arranged in very specific patterns. Protein structures present very specific notes and crannies to which other proteins bind and relate to their surroundings. These binding sides hold the key to many of the critical functions of the living organism. Inhibiting some of the sites can alter, can arrest, can neutralize, or, in fact, in the case of a disease, can kill it. Oh, Jeff, I caught. We're looking in the window at you. Columbia, we're handed over to Goldstone. We got you a lot of clarification. Now, same, Columbia, through Goldstone. OK, and I got the big picture from Rich. When you ready to copy? OK, Story, go ahead with the big picture. OK, we will bring up Edwards for tomorrow. We will not attempt the first rev at KSC. That's orbit 234. We will take, aim at the second opportunity at KSC, which is 235. If we wave off on that one, we will evaluate 236 at KSC. We will also evaluate 236 at Edwards. If we wave off of KSC, we'll take a hard look at Saturday's weather at KSC. And we will keep that option open for a Saturday landing at KSC. So the first one we'll try is a second opportunity at KSC. If we wave off there, we'll look at the third opportunity at KSC and also look at Edwards. But we will keep our options open. If it is optimistic for Saturday landing at KSC, we'll try that also. OK, I copy that. And if you have a pessimistic forecast for Saturday, then you may end up taking us into Edwards on that second rev. Yes, sir. The second or the third opportunity at Edwards, that's 236 or 237. So if the Saturday forecast is really poor for KSC, the chances are you'll go to Edwards on 236 or 237. We copy. And I've got some proposed sleep times for you. We're ready to copy. Yeah, if the blue team's not in bed, they can be heading that way about now. We're proposing your sleep, red sleep at 14 days, two hours and 45 minutes. We're proposing blue to be up at 14 days, two hours in 30 minutes. And you all read to be up at 14 days, 10 hours and 45 minutes.