 Copy, Andy. I understand. Now we're talking, Franklin. I hope you can bring some leftovers back for us here. Okay, we'll need the name of your supplier. Copy that. Looks like that jet engine running up there. Copy that, Scott. That's what it looks like, exactly. Yeah, it's the end of my office. It's nearly that night. Okay, we should be somewhere near the burn. We'll try it out. See where we are. Say again, story. We have a picture from the flight deck. Experience with Voice of America is still on for 20 minutes from now at 1825. Andy, you can give me a thumbs up. You guys are wonderful. Okay, good. And we will ask you, and I'm sure it's going to be astonishing to many people, how far you travel in a short space of time. We'll start first, if we could, with Lieutenant Colonel Horowitz. You have been conducting experiments. We love to refer to this as playing with fire. What have you been doing? A series of three different experiments we're working in our mid-deck glove box. The one that I am working on with the researchers out of Huntsville at Marshall Space Flight Center is called Therifty, which is a forced flame flow transfer experiment where they flow a little bit of air over a sample, and then under control conditions we ignite the sample and we look at how the flame propagates. And the big thing we learn, of course, is that the flame doesn't behave in space anything like on Earth. So we're learning a lot about fire safety and how flames work and some basic science and flame research. There has been a lot learned about fire and fire control in the various space missions. Good day, sirs. This is Terry Wing. Lieutenant Colonel Horowitz, I know that you're the pilot of this ship. Columbia underwent some overhauls back in 1992, but this buggy is 15 years old now and it's traveled 100 million kilometers. Is it time to give it a place in the air and space museum across the street from us? 10 kilometers to go. She's operating almost flawlessly. If you've been following the mission, we've had almost zero malfunctions on board. I think she's just like a good bottle of wine. She keeps getting better with age. I know all of you are scientists looking for answers that your friends back in Houston and back in Italy can dream up, but I was wondering something philosophical. Do you see any value in the experience of space flight for non-scientists? For example, artists or musicians or poets, is there anything valuable for them up there? It's mostly the scientists and the engineers that are up there flying. There's a tremendous amount to be shared in an artistic light. We try to bring some of that back in a lot of the photo we take. We take a tremendous amount of photos in space. A lot of it's used for earth observations, but I think a lot of it's very artistic also. If you go through all the archives of all the photos we've taken, you'll see some absolutely beautiful splendid pictures of the earth. Some views that would make people who are philosophers probably think real hard about the origins of the universe and life on the planet as we know it. It's a much different view up here. Even for some of us hardcore engineers, you can't help but get a little artistic and philosophical just looking at it, the beautiful planet below it.