 Your mission, and we know you'll be glad to accept it, is to extend to 17 days on orbit. Congratulations, good work on the IFM. We advised we didn't respond to your previous call because the speaker was off of the flight deck. Because of pause, he had paused for the day, and I hope you were watching the live at the ground and you could see the crew response with your announcement, and we are willing, able, and eagerly anticipating all the data we're going to gather with that extra day on orbit. So, thanks a lot to management for giving us that extra day. This television picture from the Space Lab module showing payload commander Susan Helms on the left with her crewmates, mission specialist Chuck Brady, who is at the top of the picture, Jean-Jacques Favier, French payload specialist on the right. As life science research data continues to be collected. Here at the center of our screen, we can see mission specialist Chuck Brady participating in the Canal and Otolith Integration Study, or COIS. Chuck Brady is wearing some electronic light occlusion goggles, part of the hardware for the COIS investigation, and he's involved in voluntary head movement protocols in which he follows a target on the luminous target display, which we're viewing from the back near the foreground in this picture. On the other side, a series of light-emitting diodes, or LEDs, are lighting up at various times, and Chuck Brady must follow the movement of these LEDs to complete these protocols. Payload commander Susan Helms to Chuck Brady's immediate right as assisting with the operation of the COIS hardware. So for Pedro, does this remind you of anything? Yeah, this looks like an eel or maybe something that lives on the ground. Like maybe a snake? You know that the snake is always up here, so we're always thinking about you. Okay, thank you for the association. This was taken this morning when Dr. Brady was exercising, and we thought this was setting a new standard for ham radio operators. He's operating Sarex simultaneously with getting his daily exercise, and we thought this was above and beyond the call of duty. Happy birthday, Canada, from the Space Shuttle Columbia. Happy birthday, Canada, Dupre, Lenevet, Spatia, Columbia. Happy birthday, British Columbia, from the Space Shuttle Columbia. And Spatula, we've got the view and we like it. Okay. And your view was a little bit out of focus, but we could appreciate all the details in there. This is Space Lab Control Huntsville. We're currently looking at video from the Bubble Drop and Particle Unit Facility, a multi-user facility. Currently loaded in BDPU is a Straub test cartridge, and this is a test cartridge to investigate the fundamentals of boiling heat transfer on small heating elements of different shapes and sizes. And hopefully investigators will attempt to determine the conditions that nucleation and to optimize heat transfer. Bob Thursk, in the center of our screen, working the Canal and Oath Integration Study, is actually still performing the voluntary head movement portion of the experiment. The goggles that he has done are the electronic light occlusion goggles, and these have a crystal lens incorporated into modified ski goggles. The lens are opaque in its natural state, but will become translucent when an electric current is applied. When he is completed with the voluntary head movement portion of this experiment, he will continue to the optic kinetic nystagmus portion of the experiment.