I don't know how you mean by defend with a syringe but im assuming yes, if it is a ^dirty^ needle? I highly advise that wouldn't be a good idea, we have aids to much already
Val Peterson has: Played Himself - Administrator, Federal Civil Defense Administration in "Longines Chronoscope" in 1951. Played Himself - Federal Civil Defense Administrator in "Longines Chronoscope" in 1951. Played Himself - Civil Defense Administrator in "Person to Person" in 1953. Played Himself - Director, National Civil Defense Administration in "Alert Today - Alive Tomorrow" in 1956. Played Himself - Director of Civil Defense in "The Atomic Cafe" in 1982.
Because he killed Bob to save Ponyboy from being killed and himself from getting hurt. He killed a person in self-defense.
it is spelt 'syringe'
the role of the defense is the person who is defending the victim
when you had sex with a person who has the virus, when you have sex with different partners and if you used a syringe or infused with blood that came from a person having HIV.
Syringe.................Some people use a syringe with drugs
The cast of Criminal Defense - 2012 includes: Adam Heyman as himself Aida Leisenring as herself Thomas Nixon Friedheim as himself
Syringe compatibility is simply whether you can mix medications in the same syringe
A syringe and needle assembly is used to administer drugs when a small amount of fluid is to be injected; when a person cannot take the drug by mouth; or when the drug would be destroyed by digestive secretions.
Leon Panetta has: Played Himself - Former White House Chief of Staff in "Meet the Press" in 1947. Played himself in "Face the Nation" in 1954. Played Himself (segment "Revolution") in "60 Minutes" in 1968. Played Himself (segment "Defense Secretary Panetta") in "60 Minutes" in 1968. Played Himself - Secretary of Defense in "60 Minutes" in 1968. Played Himself - Defense Secretary (segment "Stuxnet") in "60 Minutes" in 1968. Played Himself - United States Secretary of Defense in "NBC Nightly News" in 1970. Played Himself - Guest in "The Charlie Rose Show" in 1991. Played Himself - US Secretary of Defense in "This Week" in 1996. Played himself in "The Big Story" in 2000. Played himself in "The West Wing Documentary Special" in 2002. Played himself in "CBS News Special Report: Iraq Study Group News Conference" in 2006. Played himself in "Top Chef" in 2006. Played himself in "The Singularity Documentary" in 2010. Played himself in "Erin Burnett OutFront" in 2011. Performed in "The Singularity" in 2012. Played himself in "Ulmefilm" in 2012. Played himself in "The Hunt for Bin Laden" in 2012. Played Himself - Secretary of Defense in "The Invisible War" in 2012. Played Himself - US Secretary of Defense in "CBS This Morning" in 2012. Played himself in "World Wars" in 2014.
ALL used syringes and needles should always be considered as "infectious", or more aptly, it is "contaminated".First, whatever was in the syringe still coats the inside of the syringe. Anything else put in that syringe will pick up trace amounts of the last liquid that was in the syringe.Second, needles can contaminate the syringe with backflow of a person's blood, rendering both automatically contaminated.Third, removable needles carry microscopic bits of blood and skin cells, which means it is contaminated. Since each person's skin contains bacteria and yeast, even the same person should never reuse a needle because it will inject skin bacteria and yeast into the tissues or into the vein. So even with a clean barrel of the syringe, the needle will still be "dirty".These facts are in addition to blood-borne infectious germs and viruses.
0.3 ml in a 1.875 ml syringe is equal to 16% of the syringe's capacity.