 program this morning. We actually have five crew members dancing out of their sleeping bags up here in space. It sounded like Tina and Jason at the Hoffa house and I can't think of a better way to start my morning here than Polka. As you all know, Cleveland is considered the Polka. You know, Mark Garneau has told me recently that Canada has claimed that title, but in my heart it's always Cleveland. Thanks a lot. Well, you're very welcome. I'm sure Gene wishes he was up there with you. But I hope you got that video tape. I would love to see a Zergy Polka. We'll try to get that for you. It was fantastic up here. Good morning story. Thanks a lot. You're welcome. This morning's wake-up music for Don Thomas, mission specialist. Claims Cleveland, Ohio has his hometown. Beer barrel Polka performed by a friend of Don's Gene Hackamack, who is an employee here at the Johnson Space Center, performs locally. He should be getting down right now. Nancy, we're getting downlinked right now. Okay. The first part, as he caught it, was bought on AirGomner this morning working out. And this is Kevin and Tom working with Hercules trying the activation portion on AirGomner. Yes, we did catch him. And here's Commander Tom Henrichs working on one of the laptop computers on board the shuttle. He's in the forward flight deck area right now in the commander's seat. We're used to 90 seconds to ZOE. We'll pick you up at 1919. Mark, we had about 20 minutes of this, so when we lose Kate, you'll pick it back up at 1945. Copy, Nancy. And we sure like the video. We realize now how big an experiment Hercules really is. I wasn't sure whether you would receive too much downlink. It's been quite a crowded place here on the flight deck, as you might imagine with this camera, the Windex camera, and all our other cameras on board. So it's been hard to get some footage, but if you see a foot in the corner of the picture here, that's me trying to get up in the smallest corner possible to get this footage. Good job. Mission specialist Don Thomas completing his shampoo for the day. This is MS-2 during the CPCG status check. Is it good on your end? It looks good at our end, and we're looking at Don right now. He's working Sarex here. I think he's taken a 900 call. That's what we thought. MS-3 working on BDS during the fluid flow study. This view on the videotape downlink is mission specialist Mary Ellen Weber working with the bioreactor, looking at how fluids flow in that reactor as it slowly turns. And Mark, this is a picture, as you can see, of the people who got us ready for orbit here. This is our training team, and without their help, we sure couldn't have been doing the great job we did today in the past week, and we never would have gotten the T-dress off on time without these people. So we really owe the success of this mission to this group of people. We've got Robert, Alan, Bill, Charlie Bob, David in the white shirt, Big Lou, Brian, Walter, Tim, Alan, Myron, Gary, Jenny, and at the end there with Stacey, our number one crew secretary who really helped out with our families and has been keeping our life organized for the last six months or so. So we thank all those people. We missed all of you, and look forward to seeing you back in Houston on Friday. Copy, Don. This is Mission Control, Houston. These views from Discovery are as the spacecraft passes over northern Mexico, currently on a course that will take it just to the south of Brownsville, Texas, before it moves out over the Gulf. Good morning from the Orbit 2 team. Good to report that Hercules is deact and the dosimeter reading is 67.7. So Hercules is put to bed.