Brandon Harris
2-11-98
4th Period
The Andromeda Strain By Michael Crichton
Space truly is the final frontier. All over the world people are trying to find out as
much as possible about this region. But what if what we found in space was something
deadly? What if something came back that threatened to destroy the entire human race?
This is exactly what happened in The Andromeda Strain by Michael Crichton.
In the opening incident of the book, a space probe sent into the upper atmosphere
of earth crashes unexpectedly in a remote area of Arizona. The probe was sent up to
determine if there were any organisms capable of survival in space. When the probe
landed, two men from the Military were sent down to survey the area and obtain the
probe. They found the town that it had landed in was in chaos. There were bodies
everywhere. Upon driving into the town, they immediately died.
It was immediately clear that the deaths of the population of this town and the
space probe’s crash were not coincidental. A committee had been formed 5 years prior to
the incident to determine what would be done in a situation such as this one. If the
organism could not be identified and neutralized, a nuclear bomb would be detonated on
Our Town An Essay On Theme Of The Play
In act one when the stage manager pulls Mr. Webb out of the play to talk with him on page 528, the lady in the box asks 'Oh Mr. Webb? Mr. Webb is there any culture or love of beauty in Grover's Corners?'. Mr. Webb her, there isn't much culture the way she might think, but '...we've got a lot of pleasures of a kind here: We like the sun comin' up over the mountain in the morning, and we all notice ...
the site. Here, a man versus nature conflict begins. Clearly, the probe had brought
something back from space. A team was assembled to determine exactly what that was.
The team consisted of five men from various fields of science. Most had
forgotten about The Wildfire Project, as it was called. They were gathered from their
homes throughout the country and flown to Arizona. The team consisted of five men;
Jeremy Stone (the coordinator), Peter Leavitt (a microbiologist), Charles Burton (a
pathologist), Christian Kirke (an anthropologist) and Mark Hall (a physician).
It was
thought that these men, when working together, could quickly discover the nature of the
organism and make a decision as to what would be done in destroying it.
The use of the nuclear device which the team was considering involved a very
serious decision. In order to give civilians the power to detonate such a device, the
oddman hypothesis was created. It stated that one of the members of the team be single,
and that it would be his responsibility to make the nuclear decision. He was to be given a
key that would only work for him. If a leak was detected in the examination facility, it
would be up to him to stop the detonation. The odd man of the team was Mark Hall.
This played a key factor in the climax.
The team was taken to the site of the landing. Upon examining the bodies they
discovered that this organism was actually a virus, and it acted by clotting the blood and
causing immediate death. They began to leave when they discovered that there were two
survivors, an old man and a baby. This added a new, useful factor to the equation. It
showed that this virus could be beaten.
After going through an elaborate sterilization process, they began work on the
virus. They performed many tests on the virus. They ran it through a microscope, it was
determined how large it was, it was even determined how it worked. They did tests on
the old man and the baby that had managed to survive, trying to find the link. No
connection between the two could be found.
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Virtual teams represent the next stage in the evolution of corporate organisations. Globalisation, downsizing, more flexible working practices and rapid advances in information technology has allowed and accelerated the need for businesses to span geographical and organisational boundaries (Merrick, 1996). A study of the meaning and characteristics of virtual teams shows how they meet the needs ...
That is when the unthinkable happened. When Burton was working on the virus,
he cut the gloves of his suit that sealed out the virus. Immediately the four men rushed to
see Burton. He was panicked, and screaming. It had been found that the virus did not
survive well in pure oxygen, so that was pumped into the room he was in. Burton
appeared to be fine, and when a sample of the virus in Burton’s area was analyzed, it was
discovered to be mutated into a harmless form. Apparently, the baby and the old man
had been lucky enough to avoid the virus until it mutated into a benign form. The
situation seemed to be under control.
But it was worse than they knew. The virus had contaminated the facility, and the
automatic nuclear detonation process had begun. If a nuclear device was set off, the
virus would mutate over and over into deadly variations, each killing in a different way.
In the climax of the story, it was up to Mark Hall to stop the detonation of the
device. He had to climb up the central core of the facility to access a station to stop the
detonation. The facility detected an unknown presence in the core and, thinking that
Mark was some sort of small lab animal that got into the core, the defense systems began
to shoot him with tranquilizer darts. As he climbed up the ladder to access the station he
was feeling very groggy, like he was a thousand pounds heavier, and everything moved in
slow motion to him. He crawled to the station, fighting the drug with all his might. He
was within two feet of the station when he began to lose consciousness.
When going into an unknown environment, be it space, a new school, a new job,
etc., there is always the potential for good and bad. But just because every now and then
bad things happen, that doesn’t mean we should stop doing new things, going new places,
and learning more.
Little is known about what kind, if any, life exists in space. Perhaps something
The Term Paper on Are Good Computer Viruses Still A Bad Idea
Are 'Good' Computer Viruses Still a Bad Idea? Vesselin Bontchev Research Associate Virus Test Center University of Hamburg Vogt-Koeln-Str. 30, 22527 Hamburg, -hamburg. de [Editor's note: Vesselin's current email address is ]During the past six years, computer viruses have caused unaccountable amount of damage - mostly due to loss of time and resources. For most users, the term " computer virus' is ...
good exists in space, such as the cure for AIDS or cancer. Perhaps something bad exists,
that would kill millions. We will never know unless we try.