prinzeugen wrote: » In the event of a nuclear war, France would use its weapons against any invading force that threatens French soil. If that should be the Russian army in Germany, then France would nuke Germany to protect itself.
prinzeugen wrote: » Indian Railways are the largest non military employer in the world.
Chancer3001 wrote: » The guy who plays Sick Boy in trainspotting used to be married to Angelina Jolie
AndyBoBandy wrote: » He also stared with her in the movie Hackers
eviltimeban wrote: » When the oldest living person on earth was born, there was an entirely different set of people living on the planet than there is now.
Squall Leonhart wrote: » Obvious as day when you read it, but quite an amazing thing if you actually think about what it means. Very cool.
twinytwo wrote: » -Elephants are the only mammals that can't jump
Buford T. Justice V wrote: » They did, two very funny lads. I love the thought process by some lads to work out a fantastic nickname like that so fast:)
Noo wrote: » They're up there alright but i thought it was Walmart.
stimpson wrote: » The following terms are banned from being used in the Dail: corner boy, fruit booty, west middleton towel dropper, dunny dancer, morton's steam peddler, cab stander, uptown nightie boy, old farmer's hand warmer, batty boy, lucker tucker
Chancer3001 wrote: » Sharks don't have bones. That's why there's never any skeletons from sharks. Just their teeth. They have stuff like cartilage, like what we have in our ears and the tips of our nose - that's why skulls have no ears or noses on themy Might be very obvious or might be something you've never thought about!
Malari wrote: » Same as all other cartilaginous fish. And no bones mean no bone marrow so they need other organs to manufacture red blood cells.
cabledude wrote: » The most widely used (and highest earning in dollar terms) bio pharmaceutical drugs are manufactured using cells from the ovaries of Chinese hamsters. CHO (Chinese Hamster Ovary) cells are the best producing cell lines known to biologics and in dollar terms 5 out of the top 6 biologic medicines are developed from CHO. This is a very specific and complicated process which makes it extremely expensive.
Thargor wrote: » In a similar vein, Henrietta Lacks was a random African American steelworker in Virginia who died of cervical cancer in 1951. Before she died a biopsy of the tumor on her cervix was given to a researcher at the hospital. He found the tumor was like no other cells they'd ever seen before back then, cancerous or otherwise, they were ridiculously tough and practically immortal, he managed to grow them into the HeLa (named after their owner) cell line and it revolutionised biotech research because now scientists had an unlimited supply of human (-ish) cells they could do whatever they want with. Jonas Salk wouldn't have had any way to grow live Polio for his polio vaccines without HeLa so they saved millions of lives just a couple of years after she died, and literally millions of similar experiments have been done with them, thousands and thousands of patents have been granted off the back of them and they're still growing strong today, in fact they grow so well they're prone to contaminating laboratories and production facilities, theres a good chance they'll play a major role in whatever the eventual cure for cancer turns out to be.
IvyTheTerrible wrote: » Controversy about how her cells were taken without her informed consent also let to changes in research ethics. (I recommend heartily the book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks).
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » Irish Home Ruler John Redmond's family once owned the infamous Loftus Hall in Wexford, known as Redmonds Hall at the time. They were ran off during the Cromwellian conquest and the Hall and surrounding lands were taken over by the Loftus family. A bunch of aristocratic planters.