Where's the petri dish thread?
Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2018 5:22 pm
All Things Kansas.
https://www.kansascrimson.com/boards/
Scary. Along a different, but I think similar line, and just as scary is this:TraditionKU wrote: ↑Mon Nov 26, 2018 6:38 am https://www.axios.com/crispr-gene-edite ... 6c187.html
this is such a slippery slope...
Sounds like my last trip to Branson.defixione wrote: ↑Mon Nov 12, 2018 7:49 pm I flew into Douala in January of 1981 to go cross country to Cairo. Chad just happened to be at war with Sudan when I arrived so those plans got tossed. We decided to take bush taxis around the west coast to Cairo but Raleigh had just overthrown the Ghana government when we got to Togo, so we went north through Mali, up to Timbuctu, then back south to Abidjian in the Ivory Coast and around the west coast. Hung out in Dakar for quite a while then took a train headed to Rabat but Morrocan jets were strafing the trains (another war) so we headed back to Dakar until we flew home. Made it as far south as Equatorial Guinea and Gabon (couldn't go farther south because of apartheid, no northern countries would let us back in with visa stamps from those countries in our passports). Never made it to Cairo.
Wait, don't you play 24 shows a week there?chiknbut wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2019 2:44 pmSounds like my last trip to Branson.defixione wrote: ↑Mon Nov 12, 2018 7:49 pm I flew into Douala in January of 1981 to go cross country to Cairo. Chad just happened to be at war with Sudan when I arrived so those plans got tossed. We decided to take bush taxis around the west coast to Cairo but Raleigh had just overthrown the Ghana government when we got to Togo, so we went north through Mali, up to Timbuctu, then back south to Abidjian in the Ivory Coast and around the west coast. Hung out in Dakar for quite a while then took a train headed to Rabat but Morrocan jets were strafing the trains (another war) so we headed back to Dakar until we flew home. Made it as far south as Equatorial Guinea and Gabon (couldn't go farther south because of apartheid, no northern countries would let us back in with visa stamps from those countries in our passports). Never made it to Cairo.
Yes. This happens quite often, as you could guess.jeepinjayhawk wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2019 2:57 pmWait, don't you play 24 shows a week there?chiknbut wrote: ↑Fri Mar 22, 2019 2:44 pmSounds like my last trip to Branson.defixione wrote: ↑Mon Nov 12, 2018 7:49 pm I flew into Douala in January of 1981 to go cross country to Cairo. Chad just happened to be at war with Sudan when I arrived so those plans got tossed. We decided to take bush taxis around the west coast to Cairo but Raleigh had just overthrown the Ghana government when we got to Togo, so we went north through Mali, up to Timbuctu, then back south to Abidjian in the Ivory Coast and around the west coast. Hung out in Dakar for quite a while then took a train headed to Rabat but Morrocan jets were strafing the trains (another war) so we headed back to Dakar until we flew home. Made it as far south as Equatorial Guinea and Gabon (couldn't go farther south because of apartheid, no northern countries would let us back in with visa stamps from those countries in our passports). Never made it to Cairo.
Yet more evidence that you Phuds will do anything to act out your resentment and hostility toward the selfless servants of medicine whose only motivation is the betterment of mankind?zsn wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2019 10:37 pm Back in the early 90’s when I was a post-doc at UPitt I pointed out to the manager of the Wendy’s across the street from the medical center/hospital that it’s not proper for doctors and residents to show up there with their coats on. The manager basically said “you don’t have to eat here if you don’t want to”. I wasn’t thinking drug-resistant bugs back then but I wasn’t too far off. Just imagine!