So what is out there associated with my presumed assignment as Commanding Officer of the U.S. Navy Flight Demonstration Team, the Blue Angels? Was I the Commanding Officer for the 1992 demonstration season?
The movie "Captain Ron" premiered in 1992 and I noted the association with my USNA82 graduation. Something with Hornet, maybe. This episode was 10/17/1991 and seems to be the only episode listed on that website that has the word 'hornet' in it.
http://www.snpp.com/episodes/8F04.html
Homer Defined
TV Guide synopsis
Homer's averting of a nuclear meltdown earns him employee-of-the-month honors---and a call from Magic Johnson; a parental edict forbids Milhouse to play with Bart.
Marge: Why don't you go play with Milhouse?
Bart: I don't want to play with Milhouse.
Marge: You mean you still haven't made up with him?
Bart: It's his mom. She says I'm a bad influence.
[takes Maggie's hand] Come on, Maggie, let's go throw rocks at that hornet's nest.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homer_Defined
"Homer Defined" is the fifth episode of The Simpsons' third season, airing on October 17, 1991.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturdays_of_Thunder
"Saturdays of Thunder" is the ninth episode of the The Simpsons' third season, airing on November 14, 1991.
Martin presents his Honor Roller at a preliminary Soap Box Derby race
I do not recognize the following details about the television series "Space: Above And Beyond" as being legitimately associated with my true identity, which has tremendous commerical value and is known to be the target of organized crime.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_above_and_beyond
James Morrison — Lt. Col. Tyrus Cassius "T. C." McQueen (USMC, InVitro) callsign "Queen 6"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:AngryAngels.JPG
Image:AngryAngels.JPG
From 5/17/1987 (USS Stark FFG-31 attacked) to 2/11/1996 ("The Angriest Angel") is: 3192 days
3192 = 1596 + 1596
From 3/3/1959 to 7/16/1963 is: 1596 days
http://imdb.com/title/tt0706374/
"Space: Above and Beyond"
The Angriest Angel (1996)
Original Air Date: 11 February 1996 (Season 1, Episode 15)
James Morrison ... Lt. Col. Tyrus Cassius "T.C." McQueen
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilot_%28Space:_Above_and_Beyond_episode%29
"Pilot" is the two part first episode in the first season of Space: Above and Beyond. It originally aired in North America on September 24, 1995.
Pulling up to the base, the recruits see the 127th Air Wing (AKA the Angry Angels), an elite group of Marines. Shane reveals that they are "the best there is, and the best there ever will be" and that her dream is to one day join them.
From 4/21/1954 (James Morrison) to 4/14/1988 (USS Samuel B. Roberts FFG-58 attacked) is 33 years, 359 days
'333-59'
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0607175/
James Morrison (II)
Date of Birth: 21 April 1954
"Space: Above and Beyond" .... Lt. Col. Tyrus Cassius "T.C." McQueen (23 episodes, 1995-1996)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Morrison_%28actor%29
James Morrison (born April 21, 1954 in Bountiful, Utah) and raised in Anchorage, Alaska is an American actor.
A professional theater actor, Morrison has been on the professional stage since the early 1980s and has won awards such as the Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award for Outstanding Performance. He has also directed theater productions.
His most recent role is that of Counter Terrorist Unit Director Bill Buchanan on 24. He began as a guest star mid-way through the fourth season (2005), and was a main cast member in the fifth and sixth seasons (2006 and 2007). He is also returning in the seventh season (2008)
On television, Morrison has guest starred in series such as Frasier, The X-Files, JAG, The West Wing and Six Feet Under.
Morrison frequently works with producers Glen Morgan and James Wong, and was a main cast member of their 1995 series Space: Above and Beyond. Another project in which he worked alongside James Wong was in the movie The One where Morrison played the role of hero Jet Li's best friend.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identity_theft
Identity theft as a term first appears in U.S.A and in U.K literature in the 1990s, leading to the drafting of the Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act.[1]
In 1998, The Federal Trade Commission appeared before the Subcommittee on Technology, Terrorism and Government Information of the Committee of the Judiciary, United States Senate.[2] The FTC highlighted the concerns of consumers for financial crimes exploiting their credit worthiness to commit loan fraud, mortgage fraud, lines-of-credit fraud, credit card fraud, commodities and services frauds. With the rising awareness of consumers to an international problem, in particular through a proliferation of web sites and the media, the term "identity theft" has since morphed to encompass a much broader range of identification-based crimes. The more traditional crimes range anywhere from dead beat dads avoiding their financial obligations, to criminals providing the police with stolen or forged documents, thereby avoiding detection, as well as money laundering, trafficking in human beings, stock market manipulation and even to terrorism.
According to the non-profit Identity Theft Resource Center, identity theft is "sub-divided into four categories: Financial Identity Theft (using another's name and SSN to obtain goods and services), Criminal Identity Theft (posing as another when apprehended for a crime), Identity Cloning (using another's information to assume his or her identity in daily life) and Business/Commercial Identity Theft (using another's business name to obtain credit)."
The Identity Theft and Assumption Deterrence Act (2003)[ITADA] amended the U.S. Code, s. 1028 - "Fraud related to activity in connection with identification documents, authentication features, and information". The Code now makes possession of any "means of identification" to "knowingly transfer, possess, or use without lawful authority" a federal crime, alongside unlawful possession of identification documents.