This Is What I Think.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

"our political reform plan will open the airwaves and level the playing field"




http://www.snpp.com/episodes/8F13.html

Homer at the Bat


To help seal the victory, Burns hires a hypnotist.

Hynpotist: You are all very good players...

Team: [entranced] We are all very good players...

Hypnotist: You will beat Shelbyville...

Team: We will beat Shelbyville...

Hypnotist: You will give one hundred and ten percent...

Team: That's impossible. No one can give more than one hundred percent. By definition that is the most anyone can give...


Back in the field, a fly ball is hit to Homer, but Darryl Strawberry leaps upwards out of frame to catch the ball. When Homer complains, Darryl says to Burns, ``Some of these players have a bad attitude, Skip.''










From 5/21/1941 ( Bobby Cox ) To 5/8/1993 is 18980 days

18980 = 9490 + 9490

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 10/27/1991 ( the World Series Game 7 ) is 9490 days



From 2/20/1992 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Simpsons"::"Homer at the Bat" ) To 5/8/1993 is 443 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/19/1967 ( premiere US TV series episode "Star Trek"::"Arena" ) is 443 days



From 5/8/1993 To 10/3/1993 ( the Battle of Mogadishu Somalia begins ) is 148 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/30/1966 ( premiere US film "Cast a Giant Shadow" ) is 148 days



From 7/14/1963 ( premiere US film "Beach Party" ) To 1/17/1991 ( the date of record of my United States Navy Medal of Honor as Kerry Wayne Burgess chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps circa 1991 ) is 10049 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/8/1993 is 10049 days



From 7/14/1963 ( premiere US film "Beach Party" ) To 1/17/1991 ( the date of record of my United States Navy Medal of Honor as Kerry Wayne Burgess chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps circa 1991 ) is 10049 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/8/1993 is 10049 days



From 5/1/1962 ( premiere US film "Geronimo" ) To 5/8/1993 is 11330 days

11330 = 5665 + 5665

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/7/1981 ( Ronald Reagan - Remarks at the Welcoming Ceremony for Prime Minister Zenko Suzuki of Japan ) is 5665 days



From 11/10/1963 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Twentieth Century"::"The Road to Berlin" ) To 5/8/1993 is 10772 days

10772 = 5386 + 5386

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/1/1980 ( premiere US film "The Final Countdown" ) is 5386 days



From 3/6/1936 ( Marion Barry ) To 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate Columbia South Carolina ) is 20098 days

20098 = 10049 + 10049

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/8/1993 is 10049 days



From 1/23/1981 ( premiere US TV movie "The Oklahoma City Dolls" ) To 5/8/1993 is 4488 days

4488 = 2244 + 2244

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 12/25/1971 ( George Walker Bush the purveyor of illegal drugs strictly for his personal profit including the trafficking of massive amounts of cocaine into the United States confined to federal prison in Mexico for illegally smuggling narcotics in Mexico ) is 2244 days



From 11/22/1963 ( John Fitzgerald Kennedy killed by sniper rifle fire in Dallas Texas ) To 5/8/1993 is 10760 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 4/19/1995 ( the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building destroyed ) is 10760 days



From 1/10/1938 ( Donald Knuth ) To 1/19/1993 ( in Asheville North Carolina as Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess I was seriously wounded by gunfire when I returned fatal gunfire to a fugitive from United States federal justice ) is 20098 days

20098 = 10049 + 10049

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 5/8/1993 is 10049 days



From 12/22/1971 ( premiere US film "Dirty Harry" ) To 5/8/1993 is 7808 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/20/1987 ( premiere US film "Burglar" ) is 7808 days





http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=46537

The American Presidency Project

William J. Clinton

XLII President of the United States: 1993 - 2001

The President's Radio Address

May 8, 1993

Good morning. In the early days of our administration we've moved quickly to deal with the problems that concern you most. Our endeavors are ambitions and none will be accomplished easily, some will require time and repeated struggle. But all of them relate directly to improving our economy, to creating more jobs and better incomes and opportunity for hard-pressed working families.

Many of the efforts we're making are opposed by lobbyists, defenders of the status quo and special interests. We're fighting, after all, to do something that no generation of Americans has had to do before: to make dramatic reductions in the Federal deficit, even as we ask for new, very targeted investments in the education and training of our people, in incentives for our industries, in new technologies for new jobs in the 21st century.

Many special interests are trying to stop our every move. They don't believe in a program which cuts spending in areas they don't want to have spending cuts or which raises most of the tax burden from wealthy people whose incomes went up and taxes went down in the eighties, while the middle class paid more in taxes while their incomes went down. We want to reverse that, but most working people don't have lobbyists here to help them.

We're fighting hard to reform our health care system. And soon, we'll put forward a plan to provide real security and health care for every American family. And already, special interests are trying to carve the plan to bits.

We're trying to make it possible for every young person to go to college, to borrow the money that he or she needs and then to pay it back as a small portion of their incomes after they go to work. And already, banks and their allies are out in force since they make enormous profits from the current student loan system, even though it imposes great burdens on many students.

Well, this is what always happens in Washington. Narrow interests exercise powerful influence. They try to stop reform, delay change, deny progress, simply because they profit from the status quo. Because big money and the special access it buys are the problem, we have to reform the political system even as we try to improve the economy, and open opportunities to all our people.

Unless we change fundamentally the way campaigns are financed, everything else we seek to do to improve the lives of our people will be much harder to achieve. Economic reform and reform of the political system go hand-in-hand. It's time to curb the role of special interests and to empower average citizens in the way our country is governed.

Yesterday I announced a comprehensive campaign finance reform proposal, a proposal to reform the political process, restore faith in our democracy, and ensure once again that the voice of the people is heard over the voices of special interests. The plan will change the way Washington works, the way campaigns are financed, and the way the game of politics is played. Here's how it will work: First, it will impose strict spending limits on congressional campaigns. Spending has gone up too far and too fast. When spending is out of control, candidates who lack access to big money simply can't compete. In the last 2-year election cycle, spending on congressional campaigns increased by 50 percent over the previous 2 years.

Second, this plan will rein in the special interests by restricting the role of lobbyists and PAC's, political action committees. For the very first time, our plan will ban contributions from lobbyists to the lawmakers they lobby. It will bar lobbyists from raising money for the lawmakers that they lobby. If adopted, believe me, this proposal will change the culture of Washington. And it will curb the role of political action committees. We want to cap the amount of money any candidate can receive from PAC's. And we'll limit PAC contributions to $1,000 for Presidential candidates and $2,500 for Senate candidates.

Third, our political reform plan will open the airwaves and level the playing field between incumbents and challengers by providing access to the broad airwaves, for candidates who agree to the spending limits.

Let me make this clear, this broadcast time will not be paid for by middle class taxpayers. It will be funded by repealing a major tax loophole that allows many businesses to deduct the cost of their lobbyists. Corporate lobbying has only been deductible since 1962. We can close that loophole and use that money to open the airwaves to all candidates.

This proposal will change the status quo. And, believe me, the special interests will mobilize against it. They don't want to see their ability to give or to raise campaign contributions curbed. They don't want to see the influence of PAC's curbed. They don't want to see limits on election spending.

But Government will work only for middle class America, if Washington works in the national interest and not just for narrow interests. And that won't happen unless we change the way we finance campaigns in this country.

This political reform bill is for real. It goes hand-in-hand with another bill we're supporting, which has already passed the United States Senate. That bill requires all lobbyists to register and now requires them to report all the money they spend on particular Members of Congress to try to influence or support their causes. And even if the special interests object to these efforts, even if they try to filibuster this campaign finance reform legislation or delay, I believe we will pass it. And I'll sign it because I think you will support it.

When all is said and done, this issue is really about our liberty. It's a matter of preserving our personal freedoms and expanding our opportunity by revitalizing the political freedoms on which they rest. To create jobs, as we must, to increase incomes, to make our health care system better, to open more educational opportunities, we need a democracy where more, not fewer, Americans play a role and have a real say in the decisions that powerfully affect their lives.

Last November, we had a huge increase in turnout, especially among our young people. Since then, I have received more letters in the first 3 1/2 months of my first year than my predecessor did in the entire year of 1992. The American people want to be heard in their political system. If you want to do it, we've got to pass the lobbying bill and we've got to pass this campaign finance reform bill which will pay for equal access through lobbying contributions, control the influence of lobbyists, limit PAC's, and limit campaign spending.

These are changes I'm fighting for. But they won't happen unless you'll fight for them, too. If you'll help we can win this battle and we can keep turning America around. Thanks for listening.

NOTE: The President spoke at 10:06 a.m. from the Oval Office at the White House.










http://amturing.acm.org/award_winners/knuth_1013846.cfm

A.M. TURING AWARD


Donald ("Don") Ervin Knuth

United States – 1974

CITATION

For his major contributions to the analysis of algorithms and the design of programming languages, and in particular for his contributions to the "art of computer programming" through his well-known books in a continuous series by this title.

Birth and Education

Donald Ervin “Don” Knuth was born January 10, 1938, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.


During the summer between his freshman and sophomore years, Knuth worked in the statistics lab drawing graphs, key punching tabulating cards, and using a card sorter. While there, he spotted the newly installed IBM 650 computer across the hall. The 650 intrigued him, and he learned to program using it. He wrote a variety of interesting programs during his undergraduate years, including one to rate the performance of members of the basketball team he managed.

Knuth was so good at mathematical studies at Case that the faculty awarded him an M.S. in mathematics when he finished his B.S. work.

The Art of Computer Programming

While working on his PhD in mathematics at the California Institute of Technology, Knuth also did private consulting, and wrote compilers for various computers. The word got around that he knew a lot about compilers, and in January 1962, in his second year at Cal Tech, Addison-Wesley asked him to write a book on compilers. He sketched 12 chapters and signed a contract.

After receiving his PhD in 1963, Knuth began working on a chapter on sorting, a topic related to some compilers. He read many technical articles, and noticed the spotty and sometimes unreliable nature of the literature in the, then new, field of computer science.



http://computer.org/computer-pioneers/knuth.html

IEEE computer society


Donald Ervin Knuth

Born January 10, 1938, Milwaukee, Wis.; writer and teacher of the Art of Programming, three of seven promised volumes having been completed; developer of the text language TEX.

Education: BA and MS, [The work for Knuth's bachelor's degree was so distinguished that the faculty of the Case Institute of Technology voted to award simultaneous bachelor's and master's degrees.] summa cum laude, physics, Case Institute of Technology, 1960; PhD, mathematics, California Institute of Technology, 1963.

Professional Experience: faculty member, California Institute of Technology, 1963-1968; mathematician, Institute for Defense Analysis, Princeton, N.J., 1968-1969; Fletcher Jones Professor of Computer Science, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1969-1989; professor of the Art of Programming, 1990-present.



http://www.sis.pitt.edu/~mbsclass/hall_of_fame/knuth.html

University of Pittsburgh


School of Information Science - Hall of Fame

Donald Knuth

Born: January 10, 1938

Field: Computer science

Focus: Achieved fame for publications on computer science and algorithms. Developed the TeX typesetting system.

Country: United States

Era: 1970 to 1989

Donald Knuth is best known for authoring one of the most respected references in the computer science field, "The Art of Computer Programming." He has also worked in the fields of the theoretical computer science and the analysis of algorithms. Knuth is the creator of the TeX typesetting system and of the Metafont font design system. He is considered to be a pioneer in the concept of literate programming.

In 1968 Knuth joined the faculty of Stanford University and is a Professor Emeritus of the Art of Computer Programming. He was the recipient of the first ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award in 1971. He has also received the Turing Award, the National Medal of Science, the John von Neumann Medal and the Kyoto Prize. Knuth earned his bachelor's degree in mathematics from Case Western Reserve University and his Ph.D. from the California Institute of Technology in 1963.










http://www.tv.com/shows/star-trek/arena-24903/

tv.com


Star Trek Season 1 Episode 18

Arena

Aired Unknown Jan 19, 1967 on NBC

AIRED: 1/19/67










http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/19.htm

Arena

Stardate: 3045.6

Original Airdate: Jan 19, 1967


METRON [OC]: We are the Metrons. You are one of two crafts which have come into our space on a mission of violence. This is not permissible. Yet we have analysed you and have learned that your violent tendencies are inherent. So be it. We will control them. We will resolve your conflict in the way most suited to your limited mentalities. Captain James Kirk.

KIRK: This is Kirk.

METRON [OC]: We have prepared a planet with a suitable atmosphere. You will be taken there, as will the Captain of the Gorn ship which you have been pursuing. There you will settle your dispute.

KIRK: I don't understand.

METRON [OC]:You will be provided with a recording-translating device, in hopes that a chronicle of this contest will serve to dissuade others of your kind from entering our system, but you will not be permitted to communicate with your ship. You will each be totally alone.

KIRK: What makes you think you can interfere with

METRON [OC]: It is you who are interfering. We are simply putting a stop to it. The place we have prepared for you contains sufficient elements for either of you to construct weapons lethal enough to destroy the other, which seems to be your intention. The winner of the contest will be permitted to go his way unharmed. The loser, along with his ship, shall be destroyed in the interests of peace. The contest will be one of ingenuity against ingenuity, brute strength against brute strength. The results will be final.

KIRK: Just a minute

METRON [OC]: There will be no discussion. It is done.

(Kirk vanishes, and Uhura screams)










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/homer-at-the-bat-1337/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 3 Episode 17

Homer at the Bat

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Feb 20, 1992 on FOX

AIRED: 2/20/92










http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1757978/bio

IMDb


Bobby Cox

Biography

Date of Birth 21 May 1941 , Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA

Birth Name Robert Joseph Cox










http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1991-10-27/sports/9104070091_1_twins-scott-erickson-gm-job-atlanta-airport

Chicago Tribune


Cox Likes Managing Better Than Gm Job

October 27, 1991 By Alan Solomon, Chicago Tribune.

MINNEAPOLIS — Bobby Cox was general manager of the Atlanta Braves until club President Stan Kasten asked him to take over for Russ Nixon in the dugout midway through last season.

Cox likes this job.

``This is a lot better job, believe me,`` Cox said before Saturday night`s Game 6 of the World Series. ``Work a few months, take a few off. The other job, you don`t get any off.``

The GM experience at Atlanta-from October 1985-didn`t hurt, he said.

``It gives you a good understanding of what the front office has to go through, I guess,`` Cox said. ``A lot of managers don`t understand.``

But doing both, which he did for awhile in 1990, wasn`t fun.

``The general manager`s in sort of a no-win situation,`` Cox said. ``With the agents, the way they manipulate the players, you`re always the bad guy. No matter what you do, it`s still not enough.

``There`s no way in the world anybody can do both jobs. If anybody says he can do both jobs properly, he`s lying.``

- When Minnesota`s Kirby Puckett tripled in the first inning, it was the eighth of the Series, the most since 1919, when the White Sox (three) and Reds (seven) combined for 10.

- The Twins` Scott Erickson has this thing about being bothered by teammates during a game. The message: Stay clear.

``What it takes for me to be successful is to have my mind 100 percent on the game and nothing else around me,`` Erickson said. ``If I start wandering off and thinking about other things, I seem to lose a little bit out on the field. So I just don`t want to be bothered by anything during the game.``

Have any players inadvertently violated the rule?

``No,`` Erickson said. ``It`s just kind of a known thing that I go about my business by myself. If something needs to be said, it`ll be said, but looking up in the stands or telling a joke or something-they don`t involve me in that type of thing.``

- With Ron Gant`s second homer of the Series, the Braves became the first NL team ever to have three players with two or more home runs in a Series. Lonnie Smith has three and David Justice two.

On Thursday, Smith, who had not homered in his first 22 World Series games, became the fifth player to hit home runs in three straight. The others: Lou Gehrig (1928), Johnny Mize (1952), Hank Bauer (1958) and Reggie Jackson

(1977). All did it for the Yankees.

- A crowd estimated at 3,000 bade farewell to the Braves Friday at the Atlanta airport.

As late as May 20 and 21 this season, the Braves were drawing home crowds of 7,800 and 8,808 at home.

- Chuck Knoblauch, in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, on the ``Tomahawk Chop:`` ``I think it`s a bunch of baloney. People made it more than it really was. It`s dumb. It has no effect.``

On the Metrodome: ``I know if I was a visiting player, the Metrodome would be the one building I would hate to go into.``

- The umpire at first base Saturday night was Don Denkinger. He will be remembered forever by St. Louis Cardinals fans for his blown call there in the 1985 Series against the Kansas City Royals.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056860/releaseinfo

IMDb


Beach Party (1963)

Release Info

USA 14 July 1963 (premiere)










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056860/quotes?ref_=ttfc_ql_trv_4


Beach Party (1963)

Quotes


Cappy: Just one thing, Professor, will you level with me? What's with the feather duster? The beard? You think it moves the chicks?

Prof. Robert O. Sutwell: No, it usually works the other way.

Cappy: I don't dig. You don't want to level with me?

Prof. Robert O. Sutwell: All right, I'll level with you. When I first started out at Harvard, I was the youngest professor at the university. I was so young that it was sickening. No one took me seriously. Every time when I opened my mouth to speak, my students laughed, the other professors laughed, even the janitors laughted. Well, I knew it couldn't go on for long before I would be fired by the dean who did not want a professor that his students didn't take seriously. So one day at lunch, I sat down in the student cafeteria and presented my problem to this old professor friend of mine. And without even glancing up from his soup, he said to me: "buy yourself a pair of glasses and grow a beard." So you see, all of this is just 18 years of professor windowdressing.

Cappy: Amazing how our lives parallel. You have that, and I have this.

[points to the goatee on his chin]

Cappy: You know why I grew this? I got a dimple in my chin and I didn't want anyone mistaking me for Kirk Douglas.

Prof. Robert O. Sutwell: But you don't look anything like Kirk Douglas.

Cappy: See? It works.










1980 film "The Final Countdown" DVD video:


US Navy radio operator: All right, whoever the hell you are use of military frequencies by unauthorized personnel is a felony.

Samuel S. Chapman: Now just a minute here, sir.

US Navy radio operator: As we have no aircraft carrier Nimitz and no Captain Yelland I suggest asshole, that you stop impersonating some other asshole and get off the air. You're wasting our time.

Samuel S. Chapman: How dare you talk to me that way! Captain, tell him who you are. Speak to them!










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066999/quotes

IMDb


Memorable quotes for

Dirty Harry (1971)


Harry Callahan: I know what you're thinking










1980 film "The Final Countdown" DVD video:


US Navy lieutenant Perry: Captain, we're getting something you might want to hear.

US Navy Captain Matthew Yelland - USS Nimitz CVN 68 commanding officer: In the Plot Room.










http://www.airforcemag.com/MagazineArchive/Pages/1991/October%201991/1091apache.aspx


Air Force Magazine


October 1991

Apache Attack

By Richard Mackenzie

The helicopters would open the war. They had to take out Iraq's early warning net, and they had to get it all.

At ten seconds before 2:38 in a moonless sky over Iraq, eight US AH-64 Apache helicopters zeroed in on their targets. On their forward-looking infrared screens appeared the images of two Iraqi radar sites just north of Saudi Arabia, placed there to detect intruding fighters. They were linked to four Iraqi fighter bases and to the Intelligence Operations Center in Baghdad.

The unseen Apaches hovered low, four miles south of the radars. At the controls of Number 976, 1st Lt. Tom Drew broke radio silence. "Party in ten," he said. On cue, ten seconds later, the helicopters unleashed a salvo of laser-guided Hellfire missiles. "This one's for you, Saddam ," muttered CW03 Dave Jones, the pilot of another Apache.

The shots, fired in the predawn hours of January 17, 1991, marked the start of Operation Desert Storm and were among the most critical of the war, blinding Iraq's early warning net at a key moment. US Central Command relied entirely on the Apaches and USAF special operations helicopters to do the job. "If something had happened and we didn't do 100 percent [destruction]," said one gunner, CW04 Lou Hall, "a lot of people were going to get hurt."

The Apaches did achieve 100 percent destruction, or close to it. Eyewitnesses report that, when the Hellfires hit the targets, the radar bases evaporated in clouds of smoke and flame. In the four and a half minutes it took to complete the task, the Apaches had, in the words of Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf, "plucked out the eyes" of Iraq's Soviet-supplied air defenses.

Nearly 100 allied planes, arriving twenty-two minutes after the raid, roared through the gaping hole in Iraq's network and raced north to strike critical, first-night targets. Air Force F-117s, relying on their stealthiness, already had penetrated Iraqi airspace and were nearing Baghdad by the time the Apaches fired, but destruction of the early warning sites greatly eased the task of nonstealthy allied planes sent into action that night.


Looking Skyward

Without doubt, they got the drop on the Iraqis, who were looking skyward for fast movers, not for helicopters. It is believed they noticed something resembling "ground clutter" on their screens about two minutes before they were hit but were still trying to figure it out when the Hellfires arrived.

"OK, I've got the target area," CW02 Thomas "Tip" O'Neal told his pilot, CW03 Jones, when their Apache was still seven miles from the radar sites.

"Slowing back," said Jones, asking the range.

"I'm showing 12.2 [kilometers]."

"I'll keep moving."

"I've got one of the big 'uns all the way on the right."

Moving the FLIR lens, CW03 Jones closed in on the first building they must hit. "There's the generator right there."

"OK."

"Aha!"

"Party in ten!" said Lieutenant Drew from the lead AH-64. The FLIR screen flashed "LAUNCH." A clock counted down the missile's flight time. An Iraqi technician, seeing flashes in the distance as he emerged from a building, ran back inside. A dozen figures ran out other doors.

Then chaos engulfed the radar station.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess

Sent: Sunday, May 21, 2006 11:04 AM

To: Kerry Burgess

Subject: Re: Journal May 21, 2006


Kerry Burgess wrote:


So I must have been a pretty busy guy. Especially because I have thoughts that I was some kind of mathmetician too.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 21 May 2006 excerpt ends]



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 9:41 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Thursday 10 July 2014