Jim, dottore...
Starting back traveling to synchrotrons in the beginning of 80 I say, do not 
volunteer information, more magic words you say, more papers you fetch, more 
faxes you send in advance 
more they will torture you. You do not need custom declaration anywhere (at 
least in Europe), in states I would drive
We have send a fax with a full description of Polaroid 3000ASA in 1992 in 
Heathrow, and they ( security, I was ready to take them apart) burn these 
sensitive films on the purpose  by X-rays
on our way to Photon Factory.
Many years after that in 2008, one of these people (I have very good memory) 
again in Heathrow told me - you have two choices - either irradiation or 
invasive check, and we will not be gentle.
I choose irradiation. I will met him next time in a  bar or  a pub and will 
take very nice care of him :-)


DO NOT  VOLUNTEER INFORMATION, IT WILL BE AGAINST YOU….
If it is written non-infectious, they will read infectious, you will write 
non-hazardous - they will read hazardous, you will say lysozyme - they will 
read anthrax….
And the most terrible thing for you will be if they will apply frontal check, 
not selection which you may snick, but total check. 
Just go forward, take another person with you, takes doubles, go to different 
check-in points, system is working sporadically, increase your chance by 
multiplication
FF

Dr Felix Frolow   
Professor of Structural Biology and Biotechnology, Department of Molecular 
Microbiology and Biotechnology
Tel Aviv University 69978, Israel

Acta Crystallographica F, co-editor

e-mail: mbfro...@post.tau.ac.il
Tel:  ++972-3640-8723
Fax: ++972-3640-9407
Cellular: 0547 459 608

On Nov 6, 2012, at 22:25 , Jim Pflugrath <jim.pflugr...@rigaku.com> wrote:

> I was asked by our shipping folks what we should put on the Customs 
> Declaration so that samples that we ship or that are shipped to us (in 
> dewars, styrofoam boxes, and/or padded envelopes) would not be held up in 
> Customs.
> 
> I had them put:  
> 
> "Scientific samples of less than 1 mg of non-infectious, non-hazardous 
> protein.  No health hazard."
> 
> but it has been so long that I have had to do so.  I suppose I could name the 
> exact protein, (e.g. hen egg white lysozyme), but maybe that is not a good 
> idea.
> 
> What wording do folks put on these forms nowadays?  What works?  Do I need to 
> put the buffer components?  
> 
> Thanks for responses.
> 
> Jim

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