APOD: Genesis Mission's Hard Impact (2009 July 5)
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APOD: Genesis Mission's Hard Impact (2009 July 5)
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The Book of Genesis (Greek: Γένεσις, "birth", "origin") is the first of five books of the Jewish Torah or Pentateuch.
The narrative runs from the creation of the world to the descent of the children of Israel into Egypt.
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090705.html
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This Island Earth (1955)
Joe Wilson: Cal, I - I know everybody's seeing flying saucers and screwy lights up in the sky. Well, you can put me in the booby hatch too, because, so help me, I saw this ship turn a bright green up there.
Dr. Cal Meacham: Are you sure, Joe?
Joe Wilson: Positive.
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Explanation: A flying saucer from outer space crash-landed in the Utah desert in 2004 after being tracked by radar and chased by helicopters. No space aliens were involved, however. The saucer was the Genesis sample return capsule, part of a human-made robot Genesis spaceship launched in 2001 by NASA itself to study the Sun. The unexpectedly hard landing at over 300 kilometers per hour occurred because the parachutes did not open as planned. Despite the crash landing, many return samples remained in good enough condition to analyze and research is ongoing.
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This Island Earth (1955)
[the cat appears]
Dr. Ruth Adams: It's only Neutron. We call him that because he's so positive.
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The Book of Genesis (Greek: Γένεσις, "birth", "origin") is the first of five books of the Jewish Torah or Pentateuch.
The narrative runs from the creation of the world to the descent of the children of Israel into Egypt.
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap090705.html
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This Island Earth (1955)
Joe Wilson: Cal, I - I know everybody's seeing flying saucers and screwy lights up in the sky. Well, you can put me in the booby hatch too, because, so help me, I saw this ship turn a bright green up there.
Dr. Cal Meacham: Are you sure, Joe?
Joe Wilson: Positive.
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Explanation: A flying saucer from outer space crash-landed in the Utah desert in 2004 after being tracked by radar and chased by helicopters. No space aliens were involved, however. The saucer was the Genesis sample return capsule, part of a human-made robot Genesis spaceship launched in 2001 by NASA itself to study the Sun. The unexpectedly hard landing at over 300 kilometers per hour occurred because the parachutes did not open as planned. Despite the crash landing, many return samples remained in good enough condition to analyze and research is ongoing.
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This Island Earth (1955)
[the cat appears]
Dr. Ruth Adams: It's only Neutron. We call him that because he's so positive.
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Art Neuendorffer
Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Genesis: The Search for Origins
NASA Mission Pages: Genesis
JPL Mission Details: Genesis
JPL Mission Home: Genesis
NASA Mission Pages: Genesis
JPL Mission Details: Genesis
JPL Mission Home: Genesis
Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
That makes no more sense than building an interocitor. I can't recall what MST3K had to say about it.neufer wrote:Dr. Ruth Adams: ... Neutron ... positive
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
----------------------------------apodman wrote:That makes no more sense than building an interocitor.neufer wrote:Dr. Ruth Adams: ... Neutron ... positive
I can't recall what MST3K had to say about it.
Joe Wilson: Here's something my wife could use in the house...
Crow T. Robot: A man?
Joe Wilson: ...an interocitor incorporating an electron sorter.
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Dr. Forrester: Oh, who doesn't own an interocitor these days?
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[as Cal and Joe assemble the Interocitor]
Crow T. Robot: Science and Industry!
Tom Servo: See big men sticking screw drivers into things - turning them - AND ADJUSTING THEM!
Crow T. Robot: Build your very own Atom Storage Box!
Mike: Bringing you state-of-the-art in soft-serve technology!
Crow T. Robot: Removes lids off bottles and jars of all sizes - and it really, really works.
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Servo mentions that he owns an interocitor like the one in This Island Earth. Mike and the bots swiftly sneak out of the theater, thinking that they can use Servo's interocitor to contact someone who can help them get back to Earth. They venture into Servo's bedroom to discover the interocitor beneath a pile of Servo's stuff, but the Metalunan they contact (who is credited as Benkitnorf) isn't much help.
Mike: Boy, the landlady's gonna be mad.
Tom Servo: Are you boys cooking up there?
Mike: No.
Tom Servo: Are you making an interocitor?
Mike: No!
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Benkitnorf: [the crew catches Benkitnorf in the shower on Tom Servo's interocitor]
. Man, you guys scared the living daylights out of me!
Mike: It's working! Hey! Hi, is Exeter there?
Benkitnorf: Nah, him and Brack went down to Headbutt Days for Shelly.
I gotta meet 'em in the beer tent in about fifteen minutes, so I gotta get going, 'kay?
Tom Servo: No, wait! We're trapped in space! Can we use this thing to get back to Earth?
Benkitnorf: I don't know. Geez... let's see, maybe this does something...
[pushes button, zapping Servo]
Benkitnorf: Crap. That's not it. Hang on...
[gets manual]
Benkitnorf: Okay. Did you use the Intensifier Disc?
All: Yes.
Benkitnorf: Turn the controls 18 degrees to the left?
All: Did that.
Benkitnorf: Are you in Europe? Do you need an adapter?
All: No.
Benkitnorf: Well, look. I don't know anything about this thing. Maybe this does something...
[pushes button, zapping Servo again]
Benkitnorf: Oops. That didn't work. Okay, well I'll be sure to tell Exeter to give you a call! Bye!
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interocitor wrote:
Dr. Cal Meecham:
"Complete line of iterociter parts, incorporating greater advances than hitherto known in the field of electronics."
What exactly is an iterociter?
<<In the film _This Island Earth_, advanced physicist Cal Meacham first becomes aware of an interocitor when a book arrives at his lab entitled, Electronic Service, Unit #16. Inside is contained a bill of materials for the interocitor, describing it as, "incorporating greater advances than hitherto known in the field of electronics". From the specifications, Meacham opines, "There's no limit to what it could do. Laying a four lane highway at the rate of a mile a minute would be a cinch."
Of the 2486 components comprising an interocitor, only three are named:
* Bead condenser (model #: AB-619)
* Cathermin tube with inindium complex of +4
* Intensifier disk
The instructions accompanying the components also caution that no interocitor part can be replaced, and to bear this in mind while assembling.
Once assembled and powered, Meacham places the intensifier disk into the right-hand control and rotates it 18 degrees counter-clockwise. Upon doing so, the telecommunication function of the interocitor is activated, and Meacham establishes contact with Exeter, the party responsible for sending him the device.
During their conversation, Meacham's lab assistant, Joe Wilson attempts to photograph the device, but is informed by Exeter that "Your camera will pick up nothing but black fog. Images on the interocitor don't register on film."
Later, Meacham boards a light aircraft autopiloted by an interocitor to join Exeter at his research facility. Exeter is also seen using an interocitor to remotely surveil a private conversation between Meacham and two other scientists at the facility, Ruth Adams and Steve Carlson. Later, Exeter's assistant, Brack, uses the weapons capability of the device to thwart the attempted escape of Meacham, Adams, and Carlson from the facility.>>
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
'Genesis'? Instead of promoting knowledge of outer space with athe APOD website, Is NASA's mission secretly the conversion of heathen populations to belief in Judaeo/Christian/Muslim scriptures? I can't say the world doesn't need more genuine belief in the Almighty.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Why didn't the capsule burn up like a meteorite would have?
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Not all meterorites burn up, some crash land just like the capsule. The capsule would have been shielded, possibly even have had rockets firing to slow it down. I guess your question would have to be answered by NASA, but I love to talk about things I don't really have a clue about, it helps expand my volcabulary, and creates exercise for otherwise unused lips .. my romantic notions died when I quit ecstacy.timbelina wrote:Why didn't the capsule burn up like a meteorite would have?
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
<<A meteorite is a natural object originating in outer space that survives an impact with the Earth's surface.Loco wrote:Not all meterorites burn up, some crash land just like the capsule.timbelina wrote:Why didn't the capsule burn up like a meteorite would have?
The capsule would have been shielded, possibly even have had rockets firing to slow it down.
While in space it is called a meteoroid.
When it enters the atmosphere, impact pressure causes the body to heat up and emit light, thus forming a fireball, also known as a meteor or shooting star.>>
Also the average density of the hollow capsule is much less than that of a meteor.http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/genesis/spacecraft/faq-2.html wrote:
<<The sample return capsule, still attached to the main Genesis spacecraft, will be aligned to its proper entry orientation about six hours before entry. At that time it will be spun to 15 revolutions per minute, adding stability for its descent into Earth's atmosphere. The capsule will be released two hours later.>>
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/genesis/media/Genesis_findings.html wrote:
Genesis Findings Solve Apollo Lunar Soil Mystery
<<Ever since astronauts returned from another world, scientists have been mystified by some of the moon rocks they brought back. Now one of the mysteries has been solved.
"We learned a great deal about the sun by going to the moon," said Don Burnett, Genesis principal investigator at California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. "Now, with our Genesis data, we are turning the tables, using the solar wind to better understand lunar processes."
Ansgar Grimberg from ETH Institute of Astronomy in Zurich and coworkers analyzed the composition of neon in a metallic glass exposed on NASA's Genesis mission. The team's findings are reported in a paper published in the Nov. 17 issue of the journal Science. Burnett is a co-author of the paper.
One of the stated goals of the Apollo missions was to understand the history of the sun in time. With no atmosphere or magnetic field to interfere, particles from the sun hit and imbedded themselves into the lunar surface for almost four billion years. This goal was not fully met due to the complexity of lunar materials and processes and to the limited duration of the Apollo field operations.
Many of the lunar sample studies were of the relative amounts of the isotopes of different solar gas elements. Many elements have atoms of different mass. For example, neon has a light isotope (Ne20) and a heavy isotope (Ne22).
One of the major surprises from study of the record of neon from the sun in lunar soil samples was evidence for two solar gas components with distinct isotopic compositions. One has been identified as solar wind, the other as higher-energy solar energetic particles because it was found at greater depths in the mineral grains. But the latter has long been puzzling to scientists because its relative amounts were much too large compared with present-day solar fluxes, suggesting very high solar activity in the past.
To investigate this problem, a bulk metallic glass specially synthesized by Charles Hays at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., was exposed to the solar wind for 27 months on NASA's Genesis mission. The advantage of this material is that when it is returned to Earth and analyzed in a laboratory, it can be uniformly etched with nitric acid vapor allowing the depth distribution of the solar wind neon to be measured by stepwise release.
The first experiments at the ETH Institute in Zurich revealed surprising results. Neon isotopic variations were not expected until relatively large depths when the solar energetic particle regime would be reached, but instead they were observed immediately. As etching proceeded, the results were almost identical to those found in many lunar samples, with two major differences.
First, Genesis samples do not contain detectable amounts of neon produced by galactic cosmic ray particles because no appreciable concentrations of such particles accumulated in 27 months. Thus they allowed scientists to analyze pure solar wind samples.
Second, the first gas extractions from the bulk metallic glass showed neon isotopic compositions never seen in lunar sample data. This finding suggests that space weathering and erosion over time reduced the levels of neon on the surface of all lunar samples, which in turn led to a misinterpretation of the lunar data.
The researchers conclude that the Apollo solar energetic particles do not exist. Both the Genesis and Apollo isotopic variations can be quantitatively explained by the fact that the Ne22 isotope is implanted deeper than the Ne20 isotope. Moreover, these findings indicate that there is no evidence for enhanced fluxes of high-energy solar particles billions of years ago compared to today.>>
Art Neuendorffer
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
The "ongoing" in the explanation is a link to an abstract of 'Genesis Solar Wind Array Collector Cataloging Status' by
Burkett, P. J.; Rodriguez, M. C.; Calaway, M. C.; Allton, J. H. Publication: 40th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, (Lunar and Planetary Science XL), held March 23-27, 2000 in The Woodlands, Texas, id.1373. Publication Date: 03/2009.
I assume the 2000 in March 23-27, 2000 is an error!
Burkett, P. J.; Rodriguez, M. C.; Calaway, M. C.; Allton, J. H. Publication: 40th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, (Lunar and Planetary Science XL), held March 23-27, 2000 in The Woodlands, Texas, id.1373. Publication Date: 03/2009.
I assume the 2000 in March 23-27, 2000 is an error!
Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Yes, it should be 2009.DavidLeodis wrote:I assume the 2000 in March 23-27, 2000 is an error!
40th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, March 23-27, 2009, The Woodlands, TX
Solar Wind and Genesis: Measurements and Interpretation
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Thanks bystander.
I guessed it was an error but I liked the implication that it had taken 9 years to publish. Perhaps they just had to constantly update it!
I guessed it was an error but I liked the implication that it had taken 9 years to publish. Perhaps they just had to constantly update it!
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
It entered with the proper orientation, so its heat shield protected it. The heat shield is made of a very highly temperature resistant material that ablates as it heats. Ablation, or the spalling away of small pieces, carries away heat that would otherwise damage the capsule.timbelina wrote:Why didn't the capsule burn up like a meteorite would have?
It crashed because an improperly installed accelerometer caused the parachutes to not deploy after reaching the capsule's terminal velocity. At that point, it was moving slow enough that heat was not a problem.
"Any man whose errors take ten years to correct is quite a man." ~J. Robert Oppenheimer (speaking about Albert Einstein)
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
First of all, NASA shouldn't comment on religion either way unless they uncover evidence relevant to such commentary. Such an event seems highly unlikely to me, even as a Christian.Loco wrote:'Genesis'? Instead of promoting knowledge of outer space with athe APOD website, Is NASA's mission secretly the conversion of heathen populations to belief in Judaeo/Christian/Muslim scriptures? I can't say the world doesn't need more genuine belief in the Almighty.
Secondly, names reflecting religious traditions are common, especially when some parallel between the tradition and the object in question can be memorably made. Genesis aims at helping understand the formation of the solar system, so the name seems apt, in my opinion.
Similar cases include all of the planets, as well as missions like Juno, Kaguya, and Messenger.
"Any man whose errors take ten years to correct is quite a man." ~J. Robert Oppenheimer (speaking about Albert Einstein)
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
It reentered at 11 km/s (about the speed of the slowest meteors), and burned brightly (magnitude -9) like a natural meteor. The capsule had a heat shield that was designed to ablate and absorb that energy so that the contents would be protected. Without the shield, it would have burned up completely before anything could reach the ground (or possibly, a few bits and pieces would survive just as the occasional meteorite does).timbelina wrote:Why didn't the capsule burn up like a meteorite would have?
Chris
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Ah .. but what if they discovered water beyond the furthest star? That would prove Genesis Chapter One correct.iamlucky13 wrote:NASA shouldn't comment on religion either way unless they uncover evidence relevant to such commentary. Such an event seems highly unlikely to me, even as a Christian.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
If that's your criterion for "proof", why wouldn't it "prove" any number of creation myths? Certainly, there are many where the Universe starts out as water and everything else is created within that.Loco wrote:Ah .. but what if they discovered water beyond the furthest star? That would prove Genesis Chapter One correct.
In any case, astronomically, there isn't the slightest evidence that there is such a thing as "the furthest star", so the matter is unlikely to be put to that test.
Chris
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Genesis seems to be the foundation for all other creation myths .. Abram coming from Ur. What's your point?Chris Peterson wrote:If that's your criterion for "proof", why wouldn't it "prove" any number of creation myths? Certainly, there are many where the Universe starts out as water and everything else is created within that.Loco wrote:Ah .. but what if they discovered water beyond the furthest star? That would prove Genesis Chapter One correct.
Unless the universe is infinite, which is not likely as even Big Bangers point to a start point .. and if there is a start then there is a finish, and if there is a finish there is a furthest star.Chris wrote: In any case, astronomically, there isn't the slightest evidence that there is such a thing as "the furthest star", so the matter is unlikely to be put to that test.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
That's amusing. There are cultures all over the world that have never been exposed to the Judaic creation myth. Look at some of the native North American cultures and their creation stories.Loco wrote:Genesis seems to be the foundation for all other creation myths .. Abram coming from Ur.
It is as likely that the Universe is infinite as otherwise. At this point, nobody knows. But even a finite Universe does not need a furthest star. In fact, the most common model of the Universe makes such an idea meaningless. The situation is further confounded by the fact that there are certainly stars which are outside the observable universe, so there will naturally be water beyond the farthest stars we might be able to see. When we see outwards, we see backwards. Eventually we see so far back that stars haven't formed yet. But there are other parts of the Universe that we can't see.Unless the universe is infinite, which is not likely as even Big Bangers point to a start point .. and if there is a start then there is a finish, and if there is a finish there is a furthest star.Chris wrote: In any case, astronomically, there isn't the slightest evidence that there is such a thing as "the furthest star", so the matter is unlikely to be put to that test.
Chris
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
We weren't talking about the "observable universe" we were talking about the universe, the physical reality, in which there has to be a farthest star from the centre unless there are multiple farthest stars.Chris Peterson wrote:That's amusing. There are cultures all over the world that have never been exposed to the Judaic creation myth. Look at some of the native North American cultures and their creation stories.Loco wrote:Genesis seems to be the foundation for all other creation myths .. Abram coming from Ur.
It is as likely that the Universe is infinite as otherwise. At this point, nobody knows. But even a finite Universe does not need a furthest star. In fact, the most common model of the Universe makes such an idea meaningless. The situation is further confounded by the fact that there are certainly stars which are outside the observable universe, so there will naturally be water beyond the farthest stars we might be able to see. When we see outwards, we see backwards. Eventually we see so far back that stars haven't formed yet. But there are other parts of the Universe that we can't see.Unless the universe is infinite, which is not likely as even Big Bangers point to a start point .. and if there is a start then there is a finish, and if there is a finish there is a furthest star.Chris wrote: In any case, astronomically, there isn't the slightest evidence that there is such a thing as "the furthest star", so the matter is unlikely to be put to that test.
Most of the cultures around the world were/are waiting a Messiah to save them from themselves and their enemies.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
You said:Loco wrote:We weren't talking about the "observable universe" we were talking about the universe, the physical reality, in which there has to be a farthest star from the centre unless there are multiple farthest stars.
So clearly we are talking about the observable Universe, since nothing can be discovered in the rest.Ah .. but what if they discovered water beyond the furthest star?
In the Universe as a whole, there does not need to be a furthest star in the sense you intended, either because the Universe is infinite, or because beyond the "furthest" star you actually start getting closer again.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
You DO know that you will go quite mad arguing with Loco/aristarchusinexile/sputnik.Chris Peterson wrote:In the Universe as a whole, there does not need to be a furthest star in the sense you intended, either because the Universe is infinite, or because beyond the "furthest" star you actually start getting closer again.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
Unless I drive him mad first. Oh... wait, hmmmm.neufer wrote:You DO know that you will go quite mad arguing with Loco/aristarchusinexile/sputnik.
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Re: The descent into Utah (APOD 2009 July 5)
PreciselyChris Peterson wrote:Unless I drive him mad first. Oh... wait, hmmmm.neufer wrote:You DO know that you will go quite mad arguing with Loco/aristarchusinexile/sputnik.
Art Neuendorffer
APOD: Genesis Mission's Hard Impact (2009 Jul 05)
Genesis Mission's Hard Impact
NASA Genesis Mission Page
LANL Genesis Mission Page
This is just a setup for more recent news.
JPL Genesis Mission PageExplanation: A flying saucer from outer space crash-landed in the Utah desert in 2004 after being tracked by radar and chased by helicopters. No space aliens were involved, however. The saucer, pictured above, was the Genesis sample return capsule, part of a human-made robot Genesis spaceship launched in 2001 by NASA itself to study the Sun. The unexpectedly hard landing at over 300 kilometers per hour occurred because the parachutes did not open as planned. The Genesis mission had been orbiting the Sun collecting solar wind particles that are usually deflected away by Earth's magnetic field. Despite the crash landing, many return samples remained in good enough condition to analyze and research is ongoing. So far, discoveries include new details about the composition of the Sun and the effects of the solar wind on unprotected material.
NASA Genesis Mission Page
LANL Genesis Mission Page
This is just a setup for more recent news.
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk. — Garrison Keillor