http://www.cswap.com/1983/WarGames/cap/en/25fps/a/00_52
WarGames
:52:48
Oh. Beef up, huh?
:52:51
How about screwed up?
From 7/23/1973 ( I passed the Multistate Bar Examination ) To 10/9/1992 ( premiere US film "Under Siege" ) is 7018 days
7018 = 3509 + 3509
From 3/4/1959 ( my birth date UK ) To 10/11/1968 ( I was Apollo 7 spacecraft astronaut in orbit of planet Earth ) is 3509 days
From 5/1/1982 ( my graduation and commissioning U.S. Naval Academy Class of 1982 as Fleet Admiral Thomas Reagan U.S. Navy ) to 7/21/1987 ( formal wedding for my wife Phoebe and me ) is: 1907 days
From 7/21/1987 ( formal wedding for my wife Phoebe and me ) to 10/9/1992 ( premiere US film "Under Siege" ) is: 1907 days
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0105690/
Under Siege (1992)
Release Date: 9 October 1992 (USA)
Plot Outline: A former SEAL, now cook, is the only person who can stop a gang of terrorists when they sieze control of a US Navy battleship.
From 7/23/1973 ( I passed the Multistate Bar Examination ) to 11/17/2001 ( premiere US film "Behind Enemy Lines" ) is: 10344 days
10344 = 5172 + 5172
From 3/4/1959 ( my birth date UK ) to 5/1/1973 ( my graduation from University of Oxford at Lincoln College includes law degree ) is: 5172 days
From 5/21/1969 ( I am Princeton University medical doctor degree graduate ) to 11/17/2001 ( premiere US film "Behind Enemy Lines" ) is: 11868 days
11868 = 5934 + 5934
'59-34' ( my birth date UK )
From 6/8/1996 ( USS Cole DDG67 commissioned and I was the first Commanding Officer of USS Cole DDG 67 ) to 11/17/2001 ( premiere US film "Behind Enemy Lines" ) is: 1988 days
From 7/16/1963 ( my wife ) to 12/24/1968 ( I was Apollo 8 spacecraft astronaut in orbit of Earth's moon ) is: 1988 days
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0159273/releaseinfo
Release dates for
Behind Enemy Lines (2001)
USA 17 November 2001 (San Diego, California) (premiere)
}}}}} JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 09/01/07 7:05 AM
https://www.cia.gov/
Cracking the Code
How do you keep a secret? One way is esczfrs ncjaezrclasj.* If you understood that, you already may know a little about cryptography. For more than 3,000 years, people have encrypted messages to keep their communications secret. Today's encryption is much more sophisticated than the simple encryption from our past. And whether you know it or not, we deal with encryptions every day – every time we use our ATM card or type in our computer password.
{{{{{
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087985/quotes
Memorable quotes for
Red Dawn (1984)
Col. Andy Tanner: [Describing the invasion] West Coast. East Coast. Down here is Mexico. First wave of the attack came in disguised as commercial charter flights same way they did in Afghanistan in '80. Only they were crack Airborne outfits. Now they took these passes in the Rockies.
Jed Eckert: So that's what hit Calumet.
Col. Andy Tanner: I guess so. They coordinated with selective nuke strikes and the missiles were a helluva lot more accurate than we thought. They took out the silos here in the Dakotas, key points of communication.
Darryl Bates: Like what?
Col. Andy Tanner: Oh, like Omaha, Washington, Kansas City.
Darryl Bates: Gone?
Col. Andy Tanner: Yeah. That's right. Infiltrators came up illegal from Mexico. Cubans mostly. They managed to infiltrate SAC bases in the Midwest, several down in Texas and wreaked a helluva lot of havoc, I'm here to tell you. They opened up the door down here
http://www.cswap.com/1980/The_Final_Countdown/cap/en/2_Parts/a/00_25
The Final Countdown
:25:21
- A nuclear strike?
- Possibility.
:25:26
- Now, what action's been taken?
- Well, Skipper
:25:29
there's nothing on the Threat Board
:25:31
and there's been no
significant damage to the ship.
:25:33
- The crew's in good shape.
- Air wing is intact. First team's ready to go.
:25:37
E-2 is now showing the area clear,
and reconnaissance aircraft
:25:39
should be coming up on Pearl, sir.
:25:42
The reactor is stable.
All readings are normal.
:25:45
Capable for maximum speed,
Captain.
:25:47
- Lloyd.
- We can transmit and receive
:25:50
- but we haven't been able to reach anybody.
- Why's that?
:25:52
Tried everybody in the book...
CI NPAC, Joint Chiefs...
:25:55
I even took a crack
at the White House.
:25:57
Now, we do have some low-band
transmissions...
:25:59
strictly manual
stuff with very low power.
:26:00
We'll have to do some retuning
to transmit in that range.
:26:03
Get on with it!
:26:05
- Ops?
- All radar's up, all weapon systems check out.
:26:08
- We're ready, sir.
- Mr. Lasky. You have anything to add?
:26:14
- No, sir, not at this time.
"Space: Above And Beyond"
"Stardust"
April 19, 1996
Episode 20 DVD:
00:26:22
Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: They're dead, aren't they?
Commodore Ross: The Five Eight? Don't tell me you've succumbed to those bizarre rumors.
Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: In World War 2, prior to D-Day, the British placed false information about the European invasion on the body of a man who just died of pneumonia. They dressed him as a high-ranking officer, and put him in the English Channel via submarine. The Germans discovered the body, and re-deployed several Panzer divisions away from the area. It was a crucial deception that aided the Allied victory. The passengers in the APC are dead.
Commodore Ross: If I knew, I couldn't confirm.
Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: While looking into the Second World War I found something else. Operation Naye'i. Naye'i is a Navajo word for "alien gods." During the war we used Native Americans as radio operators. Navajo was the only native language the enemy couldn't crack. I assume any disinformation regarding the location of Operation Roundhammer would be written in code, to make it appear to the enemy to be top secret information.
Commodore Ross: We are not at liberty to discuss this.
Lt. Colonel T.C. McQueen: I have no problem with the mission - if that's what it is. But there is something that bothers me, Commodore. For disinformation to be effective, we would want the Chigs to crack the code. Why would the code be written in a language that even other people on Earth couldn't crack? Unless we knew the enemy was familiar with the language.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106400/quotes
Memorable quotes for
The Beverly Hillbillies (1993)
Clampett Relative: [to another relative] I hope cousin Bill's not too busy to make it to the wedding.
[establishing shot of the White House]
President Clinton: Hillary, where's that invitation?
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088763/quotes
Memorable quotes for
Back to the Future (1985)
Marvin Berry: Chuck. Chuck. It's Marvin - your cousin, Marvin BERRY. You know that new sound you're looking for? Well, listen to this.