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Relatively few service members carry blood chits.
They drop change in an orange self-service dispenser, get back a chit with a number, and use that code to sign on to one of 78 PC screens in the fast-food outlet.
But he also cashed in some chits from his lengthy service to the Bush family.
They drop change in an orange self-service dispenser and get back a chit with a number.
So what role do the chits play today in helping service members find their way home?
At Nikon, for example, which employs 500 people in offices throughout the United States, Canada and Brazil, a code of conduct for using the service leaves little room for the idle chit-chat that is pervasive on Facebook.
Or give them chits to services like Kiva, DonorsChoose or ModestNeeds, where recipients can finance a specific entrepreneur in the developing world, public school class or needy individual.
In the simplest sense, a blood chit is a prepared message, written in local languages, that a lost service member can present to most anyone who might help.
The chits are carried by many air crews, particularly fixed-wing air crews, and by other service members deemed to be at what the military calls "high risk of isolation".
Today, At War looks at the use of blood chits, a little-known and partially classified American military system designed to help lost or stranded service members find their way to safety.
To chit or not to chit potatoes?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com