Monday, October 27, 2014

The Stand




http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1349235/quotes

IMDb


The Stand (TV Mini-Series)

The Plague (1994)

Quotes


Dr. Dietz: Patty Greer says you've given her quite a bit of trouble, she's quite upset.

Stu Redman: Well, that makes two of us. Being hijacked by a bunch of government sons of bitches in space suits does that to me every time.










http://livedash.ark.com/transcript/stephen_king's_the_stand_(1_4)/8058/SYFYP/Saturday_September_04_2010/434297/

ark tv


Stephen King's The Stand


00:37:22 I don't want you to get the idea you're a volunteer.
00:37:26 You've been drafted.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 7:50 PM Friday, May 27, 2011


Now that was a spooky dream.





Barack Obama and Coke. Now I observe a highly relevant deetail about Lindsay Lohan.

What does it mean for that future? I don't know for certain. The setting in the dream was in the future. Something that I do not now recall was futuristic about that Coke machine that was in the lobby of that building was I was part of the security apparatus at the entrance of the building.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 27 May 2011 excerpt ends]










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/80261/King_-_The_Stand.html


Stephen King

The Stand - The Complete & Uncut Edition


Chapter 62

The Stand


So Hank says, ‘We better get Trashy out here when he gets back and see if he can figure it out.’”

“When he gets back?”

“Yeah, he’s a funny dude. He’s been in Vegas almost a week now, but he’ll be taking off again pretty quick.”

“Where does he go?”

“Into the desert. He takes a Land-Rover and just goes. He’s a strange guy, I tell you. In his way, Trash is almost as strange as the big guy himself. West of here there’s nothing but empty desert and godforsaken waste. I ought to know. I did time way up west in a hellhole called Brownsville Station. I don’t know how he lives out there, but he does. He looks for new toys, and he always comes back with a few.










http://livedash.ark.com/transcript/stephen_king's_the_stand_(1_4)/8058/SYFYP/Saturday_September_04_2010/434297/

ark tv


Stephen King's The Stand


00:37:26 You've been drafted.










http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20011014&slug=easy14

The Seattle Times


Sunday, October 14, 2001

Obtaining anthrax isn't that difficult

By Rick Weiss

The Washington Post

Deadly microbes, including the bacteria that cause anthrax, aren't especially difficult to obtain in today's global microbiological marketplace. Some can be ordered by phone, fax or e-mail and arrive in the mail a few days later.

Anyone seeking such bugs inside the United States, however, faces hurdles that didn't exist five years ago, thanks largely to the antics of former Ohio State University student Larry Wayne Harris.

On May 4, 1995, Harris sent a letter with a fake laboratory letterhead to the American Type Culture Collection, the world's largest distributor of frozen germs, then in Rockville, Md. The collection, which subsequently moved to Manassas, Va., and is known to scientists as ATCC, keeps a frozen menagerie of bacteria, viruses and DNA snippets for distribution to university scientists and other researchers.

Harris, who turned out to be affiliated with the white-supremacist group Aryan Nation, ordered three vials of Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that causes plague.

A week later, police officers, acting on a tip and armed with a search warrant, found the vials in the glove box of Harris' Subaru.

Harris was convicted of wire fraud.

Congress, concerned that luck had played too big a role in the government's discovery of Harris' purchase (and hearing testimony that Iraq had obtained starter cultures for its biowarfare arsenal from ATCC) demanded the Department of Health and Human Services tighten its regulation of culture collections.

Today, federal law significantly limits U.S. culture collections in their ability to distribute any of the 24 infectious microbes and 12 toxins that have been designated by federal officials as possible bioterrorism agents, including Bacillus anthracis, the bacterium that causes anthrax.

Anyone wishing to receive such agents must register with the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Registrants must prove they have a legitimate use for such agents, provide proper signatures with every order and open their labs to periodic safety and security inspections. Individual violators can be fined $250,000 or jailed for one year.

Experts said the system is working well. After the Harris incident, "ATCC got religion," said Amy Smithson, director of the Chemical and Biological Weapons Nonproliferation Project at the Henry L. Stimson Center in Washington, D.C.

However, Smithson said, "there are more than 500 culture collections around the world, and the regulations on shipments of dangerous human pathogens have not been tightened everywhere. That's something that has to be dealt with right away."










http://www.tv.com/shows/stephen-kings-the-stand/the-plague-1178981/trivia/

tv.com


Stephen King's The Stand Season 1 Episode 1

The Plague

Aired Sunday 12:00 AM May 08, 1994 on ABC

Quotes


Leanore: Rae, I think the soldiers did it, I think they made a bug that started killing people.

Rae: That wouldn't be very American on them, now would it?

Leanore: No, I guess not.

Rae: Of course that's never stopped the real patriots among us, has it? You try to hang in there Leanore.

Leanore: I'm trying, Rae, but have you ever smelled bodies on fire?

Rae: Can't say that I have.

Leanore It's awful, Rae.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 11/1/2006 3:14 PM


I found it very hard to restrain the urge to laugh


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 01 November 2006 excerpt ends]










http://www.tv.com/shows/stephen-kings-the-stand/the-plague-1178981/trivia/

tv.com


Stephen King's The Stand Season 1 Episode 1

The Plague

Aired Sunday 12:00 AM May 08, 1994 on ABC

Quotes


Nick: I can hear, I can talk!

Mother Abigail: I know, Nick, praise God!










1994 television miniseries "The Stand" Disc 1 DVD video:

01:15:51


Stu Redman: [ startles awake from dream ]

Dr. Dietz: Well, how we feeling, Stu?

Stu Redman: Fine.

Dr. Dietz: Fine. Always fine. Now, just think. All the tests we ran on you and we never found a single immunity factor, not one. Oh, I'm curious. How would you explain it, Stu? Have you been touched by God? [ coughing ] Hmm?

Stu Redman: What you got behind your back?

Dr. Dietz: Hmm? [ chuckles ] Ah-ah.

Stu Redman: I see.

Dr. Dietz: Do you?

Stu Redman: I think I do, yeah.

Dr. Dietz: I wonder.

Stu Redman: Where's your buddy, Denninger?

Dr. Dietz: Oh. He's dead. They're all dead. Everyone except for me and thee.

Stu Redman: And you're here to take care of me, is that it?

Dr. Dietz: Hole in one.

Stu Redman: Why?

Dr. Dietz: Why? Because I've decided a piece of chicken-fried crap like you doesn't deserve to live. Not with so many good men dying.

Stu Redman: [ scoffs ] Those good men caused this mess.










http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20021028&slug=anthrax28

The Seattle Times


Monday, October 28, 2002

Experts: FBI anthrax probe flawed; attack beyond ability of a lone civilian

By Guy Gugliotta and Gary Matsumoto

The Washington Post

A significant number of scientists and biological-warfare experts are expressing skepticism about the FBI's view that a single disgruntled American scientist prepared the spores and mailed the deadly anthrax letters that killed five people last year.

These sources say that making a weaponized aerosol of such sophistication and virulence would require scientific knowledge, technical competence, access to expensive equipment and safety know-how that are probably beyond the capabilities of a lone individual.

As a result, a consensus has emerged in recent months among experts familiar with the technology needed to turn anthrax spores into the deadly aerosol that was sent to Sens. Tom Daschle, D-S.D., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., that some of the fundamental assumptions driving the FBI's investigation might be flawed.

"In my opinion, there are maybe four or five people in the whole country who might be able to make this stuff, and I'm one of them," said Richard Spertzel, chief biological inspector for the U.N. Special Commission between 1994 and 1998. "And even with a good lab and staff to help run it, it might take me a year to come up with a product as good."

Instead, suggested Spertzel and more than a dozen experts interviewed in recent weeks, investigators might want to re-examine the possibility of state-sponsored terrorism, or try to determine whether weaponized spores might have been stolen by the attacker from an existing, but secret, biodefense program, or perhaps given to the attacker by an accomplice.

The Defense Department and FBI refused repeated requests to discuss recent developments in the anthrax investigation. But in some important respects, the official version of events is at odds with the available evidence, the experts say.

An FBI profile of the attacker describes an angry, "lone individual" with "some" science background who could weaponize the anthrax in a basement laboratory for as little as $2,500. The FBI acknowledged the sender might not have been a native English speaker but emphasized there was no "direct or clear" linkage between the attacks and foreign terrorism.

More recently, investigators appear to have abandoned the idea of an amateur attacker; they continue to focus on a lone, domestic scientist, probably an insider.

Scientists suggested the loner theory appeared flawed even in the opening days of the investigation.

The profile was issued after Army scientists examined the Daschle spores and found them to be 1.5 to 3 microns in size and processed to a grade of 1 trillion spores per gram — 50 times finer than anything produced by the now-defunct U.S. bioweapons program and 10 times finer than the finest known grade of Soviet anthrax. A micron is a millionth of a meter.

"Just collecting this stuff is a trick," said Steven Lancos, executive vice president for Niro Inc., one of the leading manufacturers of spray dryers, viewed by several sources as the likeliest tool needed to weaponize the anthrax. "Even on a small scale, you still need containment. If you're going to do it right, it could cost millions of dollars."

Also early in the case, U.S. authorities dismissed the possibility that Iraq could have sponsored the attacks because investigators determined the spores had been coated with silica to make them disperse quickly, rather than the mineral bentonite, regarded by the Army as Iraq's additive of choice.

Iraq's alleged preference for bentonite appears to be based on a single sample of a common pesticide collected by U.N. authorities from a biological-weapons facility in the mid-1990s. However, the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency warned in declassified documents as early as 1989 that Iraq was acquiring silica to use as a chemical-weapons additive.

In 1998, Iraq reported to the United Nations that it had conducted an artillery test of a live biological agent that used silica as a dispersant. And U.N. and U.S. intelligence documents show Iraq had bought all the essential equipment and ingredients needed to weaponize anthrax with silica to a grade consistent with the Daschle and Leahy letters.

Since the attacks one year ago, scientists have identified the anthrax used in the Daschle and Leahy letters as the "Ames strain," used in U.S. biodefense programs. Analysts are examining lab variants of the Ames strain to find possible sources for the original spores, but scientists and biowarfare experts say the additive used to disperse the spores may be as instructive as the spores.

Even the sparse evidence made public by the investigation has shown many researchers that whoever weaponized the spores was operating at the outer limits of known aerosol technology.

The anthrax mailer needed a powder that could negotiate the U.S. postal system without absorbing so much moisture that it would cake up. At the end of the trip, the coated spores had to be light enough to fly into the air with no delivery system beyond the rip of a letter opener.

Finally, the spores had to be small enough for potential victims to inhale them deep into their lungs so only a tiny number of spores would be needed to kill.

The answer was silica — the same silicon dioxide that comprises substances ranging from beach sand to window glass. The attacker needed a special kind of silica, however, for the aerosol that delivered the spores was as sophisticated as any on the market.

Several sources agreed that the most likely way to build the coated spores would be to use the fine glass particles, known generically as "fumed silica," or "solid smoke," and mix them with the spores in a spray dryer: "I know of no other technique that might give you that finished product," Spertzel said.

Some fumed silicas are extremely difficult to make, but at least two — Aerosil and Cab-O-Sil — are readily available and sold commercially in bulk. Aerosil is based in Germany and Cab-O-Sil in Boston. Both firms have offices around the world.

Ken Alibek, a former deputy director of the Soviet bioweapons program now running an Alexandria, Va., biotechnology firm, said the Soviets used Aerosil in agent powders, and a classified Defense Department memo in 1991 said Iraq had "imported approximately 100 MT (metric tons) of Aerosil during the last 8-9 years."

Spertzel said the United Nations reported in the 1990s that Iraq had 10 metric tons of Cab-O-Sil, probably destined for its chemical weapons program.

The United Nations also documented the presence of three Niro Inc. spray dryers in Iraq in the 1990s. Spertzel said two were destroyed, and the third was scoured and sterilized before inspectors could examine it.










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/80261/King_-_The_Stand.html


Stephen King

The Stand - The Complete & Uncut Edition


Chapter 21

Stu Redman was frightened.

He looked out the barred window of his new room in Stovington, Vermont, and what he saw was a small town far below, miniature gas station signs, some sort of mill, a main street, a river, the turnpike, and beyond the turnpike the granite backbone of far western New England—the Green Mountains.

He was frightened because this was more like a jail cell than a hospital room. He was frightened because Denninger was gone. He hadn’t seen Denninger since the whole crazy three-ring circus moved from Atlanta to here. Deitz was gone, too. Stu thought that maybe Denninger and Deitz were sick, perhaps dead already.

Somebody had slipped. Either that, or the disease that Charles D. Campion had brought to Arnette was a lot more communicable than anyone had guessed. Either way, the integrity of the Atlanta Plague Center had been breached, and Stu thought that everyone who had been there was now getting a chance to do a little firsthand research on the virus they called A-Prime or the superflu.

They still did tests on him here, but they seemed desultory. The schedule had become slipshod. Results were scrawled down and he had a suspicion that someone looked at them cursorily, shook his head, and dumped them in the nearest shredder.

That wasn’t the worst, though. The worst was the guns. The nurses who came in to take blood or spit or urine were now always accompanied by a soldier in a white-suit, and the soldier had a gun in a plastic Baggie. The Baggie was fastened over the wrist of the soldier’s right gauntlet. The gun was an army-issue .45, and Stu had no doubt that, if he tried any of the games he had tried with Deitz, the .45 would tear the end of the Baggie into smoking, burning shreds and Stu Redman would become a Golden Oldie.

If they were just going through the motions now, then he had become expendable. Being under detention was bad. Being under detention and being expendable… that was very bad.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=22790

The American Presidency Project

Herbert Hoover

XXXI President of the United States: 1929 - 1933

301 - Letter to the Acting Attorney General on the District of Columbia Police Force.

August 27, 1931

My dear Mr. Attorney General:

I am glad to approve, in the special circumstances of the Federal Government's relation to the District of Columbia, that the Department of Justice should accede to the request of the District Commissioners for aid in investigation of recent charges against certain members of the Washington police.

However, we must not overlook the fact that Washington has an able and devoted police force. The vast majority of its honest men should be protected by determining if there are unworthy men in their midst. It is always possible that occasional individuals may have overstepped the law and humanity in treatment of criminals and those charged with crime, and if so, they should be severely punished. But even in such charges the police should not be prejudged on the allegations of criminals themselves or those accused of crime. There is too much tendency on the part of some people to forget the devoted work of the police, to forget the safety of society and the victims of criminals out of sympathy with criminals themselves.

Yours faithfully,

HERBERT HOOVER

[The Honorable The Acting Attorney General, Washington, D.C.]

Note: Thomas Day Thacher was the Acting Attorney General.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/SGU_2.08_%22Malice%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


SGU 2.08 "Malice"


SIMEON
I have information.










From 8/27/1931 ( Herbert Hoover - Letter to the Acting Attorney General on the District of Columbia Police Force ) To 11/16/2010 is 28936 days

28936 = 14468 + 14468

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 6/13/2005 is 14468 days



From 6/13/2005 To 11/16/2010 is 1982 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 4/7/1971 ( Richard Nixon - Proclamation 4044 - National Farm Safety Week, 1971 ) is 1982 days





http://www.tv.com/shows/stargate-universe/malice-1361151/

tv.com


Stargate Universe Season 2 Episode 8

Malice

Aired Monday 9:00 PM Nov 16, 2010 on Syfy

AIRED: 11/16/10










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/80261/King_-_The_Stand.html


Stephen King

The Stand - The Complete & Uncut Edition


Chapter 21


If they were just going through the motions now, then he had become expendable. Being under detention was bad. Being under detention and being expendable… that was very bad.

He watched the six o’clock news very carefully every night now.










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/80261/King_-_The_Stand.html


Stephen King

The Stand - The Complete & Uncut Edition


Chapter 29


The red light went on over the door at just past 10 P.M., and Stu felt light perspiration break on his arms and face. It was this way every time the red light went on, because one of these times Elder would be alone. He would be alone because he wouldn’t want witnesses. There would be a furnace somewhere to cremate plague victims. Elder would bundle him into it. Snip. No more loose ends.

Elder stepped through the door. Alone.

Stu was sitting on his hospital bed, one hand resting on the back of his chair. At the sight of Elder he felt the familiar sickening drop in his belly. He felt the familiar urge to spill out a flood of loose, pleading words, in spite of his knowledge that such pleas would avail him nothing. There was no mercy in the face behind the white-suit’s transparent visor.

Now everything seemed very clear to him, very colorful, very slow. He could almost hear his eyes rolling in their bed of lubrication as he followed Elder’s progress into the room. He was a big man, stocky, and his white-suit was stretched too tight over him. The hole at the end of the pistol he held looked tunnel-size.

“How are you feeling?” Elder asked, and even through the tinny speaker Stu could hear the nasal quality of Elder’s voice. Elder was sick.

“Just the same,” Stu said, surprised at the evenness of his voice. “Say, when do I get out of here?”

“Very soon now,” Elder said. He was pointing the gun in Stu’s general direction, not precisely at him, but not precisely away, either. He uttered a muffled sneeze. “You don’t talk much, do you?”

Stu shrugged.

“I like that in a man,” Elder said. “Your big talkers, they’re your whimperers and whiners and belly-achers. I just got the word on you about twenty minutes ago, Mr. Redman. They’re not such hot orders, but I think you’ll do okay.”

“What orders?”

“Well, I’ve been ordered to—”

Stu’s eyes flicked past Elder’s shoulder, toward the high, riveted sill of the airlock door. “Christ Jesus!” he exclaimed. “That’s a fucking rat, what kind of place are you running with rats in it?”










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Thursday, October 25, 2007 Posted by H.V.O.M at 3:06 PM


----- Original Message ----
From: Kerry Burgess
To: fbise@leo.gov
Cc: inspector.general@usdoj.gov; hotline@dodig.mil; NAVIGHotlines@navy.mil; House Speaker
Sent: Wednesday, October 24, 2007 10:39:43 AM
Subject: Re: Seattle FBI

From: Kerry W. Burgess (official United States federal undercover identity, an identity completely compromised by forces hostile to the United States of America)




Congratulations, Larry Carr. You and your crew have been outlawed by superior federal authority granted to me.

The manner in which I bring you and your crew to justice is up to you.

Are you finally going to stand up and face me like a man or do you just gang up and shoot American soldiers in the back?

Your days as corrupted public officials are numbered. You should make them count.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 25 October 2007 excerpt ends]










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0115759/quotes

IMDb


Broken Arrow (1996)

Quotes


Giles Prentice: I don't know what's scarier, losing nuclear weapons, or that it happens so often there's actually a term for it.










2006 film "The Queen" DVD video:


His Royal Highness Prince Charles the Prince of Wales: Are you game?










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-simpsons&episode=s15e01

Springfield! Springfield!


The Simpsons

Treehouse of Horror XIV


The Nobel Prize? Finally! So, it's for what? My whole deal? This is Professor John Frink, isn't it?





http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?tv-show=the-simpsons&episode=s15e01

Springfield! Springfield!


The Simpsons

Treehouse of Horror XIV


I only wish my dear father were here to see me win.
Is there a problem with your father? Well, our relationship was never great.
Mother used to say we got along like positrons and anti-neutrinos.
(LAUGHING) Yes.
I'm a geek.
I was always a disappointment to him.
You see, he was one of those he-man scientists who worked on the atom bomb by day, and slept with Marilyn Monroe by night, and sold secrets to the Russians at lunch.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 3:31 AM Monday, March 05, 2012


Microsoft had me sitting next to a physics graduate when I was working at Microsoft here in the criminally rebellious State of Washington. He exclaimed to me one day, when we were working that Microsoft office in Issaquah Washington, not long after, that thanks to Microsoft, he and I never would have met, if not for Microsoft seating us in the cubicles next to each other.

One day he called me over to elaborate to him about some detail about some Microsoft product I was focused on, Visual Basic perhaps, but maybe something else, but we talked about some other details and that was the time I found some reason to write on his whiteboard that the speed of light equals 186,282 miles per second. I also wrote on his whiteboard that pi equals 3.1415926536 as that was a topic of conversation during that time.

I remember thinking about his facial reaction when the discussion turned to ballistics. My sense at the time was that he was watching me as I was watching him when the discussion turned to the distinction between physics and astrophysics. But who can really say. That was a long time ago. That was very probably the year 2003 during the discussion about physics.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 05 March 2012 excerpt ends]










http://articles.latimes.com/1995-07-01/news/mn-19226_1_mir-aboard-atlantis

Los Angeles Times


Doctor, Two Cosmonauts Undergo Medical Tests Aboard Atlantis-Mir

July 01, 1995 From Associated Press

HOUSTON — After 3 1/2 months of being the doctor, astronaut Norman E. Thagard became the patient Friday and was poked and probed aboard Atlantis-Mir, the linked U.S. shuttle and Russian space station.

Dr. Ellen Baker drew blood from Thagard, a physician, and his two Russian crew mates and performed physical exams to help scientists understand the effects on the body of long stays in space. Thagard spent 3 1/2 months aboard the space station Mir, a U.S. space endurance record.

Mission Control, meanwhile, was puzzled by the higher than expected use of fuel by Atlantis. The shuttle is controlling the position of the sprawling, half-million-pound complex by firing small jets so Mir's power-generating solar panels point constantly toward the sun.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103924/quotes

IMDb


Memorable quotes for

Captain Ron (1992)


Martin Harvey: Slow down! There's boats all over the place!

Captain Ron: Don't worry. They'll get out of the way. I learned that driving the Saratoga.



http://www.divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.com/C/Captain_Ron.html


Captain Ron


- "U.S.S. Saratoga"? - Yeah, the old Sara.
(MUSIC CONTINUES)
- Slow down! - Get ready to kick the fenders over.
- What are fenders?










http://articles.latimes.com/1995-07-03/news/mn-19901_1_american-astronaut

Los Angeles Times


Astronauts Undergo More Tests Aboard Joined Spacecraft

July 03, 1995 From Associated Press

HOUSTON — They call themselves "lab rats," not astronauts and cosmonauts, as they undergo nonstop examinations measuring every imaginable body function in orbit.

For the third straight day Sunday, American astronaut Norman E. Thagard and his two Russian comrades endured a battery of blood, heart and lung tests aboard the linked U.S. shuttle Atlantis and the Russian space station Mir.

Even as they slept, a blood pressure cuff inflated and deflated automatically every half-hour. And for one 24-hour stretch over the weekend, each had to wear an electronic heart monitor with wires stuck to sandpaper spots on their chests.

"I guess our main function is to be sort of lab rats," Thagard said Sunday, his 110th day in orbit, nearly all of it on Mir.

Sometimes, enough is enough, even for a doctor. Thagard, a physician, made it clear he only wanted to wear the heart monitor once, said NASA mission scientist Tom Sullivan.

"I've had to wear it a few times myself for medical tests, and it's not a pain at all, but they do have to shave their chest hair off and your skin is kind of sensitive afterward," Sullivan said.

NASA has never had an opportunity to study such long-duration space fliers, and consequently wants to know everything about Thagard and cosmonauts Vladimir Dezhurov and Gennady Strekalov.

"I know they are tired at the end of the day. It's a long day," Sullivan said. "But I think they truly believe in the work that's being done, and they're excited about the results."

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Russian space agency tested the communication systems on Atlantis, Mir and the Soyuz capsule attached to Mir on Sunday in preparation for the undocking Tuesday.

Thagard, who turns 52 today, said that while he is looking forward to leaving Mir, it has been a memorable four months.

"I joked with these guys . . . you call for a taxi and wait forever," he said. "But the fact is, [Thursday's docking] was an emotional experience, one of the highest, I guess, of my life. I'm awfully glad to be here, and I'm really looking forward to seeing my family."

Atlantis-Mir will be visible as a bright star tonight at 22 degrees above the north-northwest horizon, from 9:01 to 9:05 p.m. PDT.










http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antlers,_Oklahoma


Antlers, Oklahoma

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antlers is a city and county seat of Pushmataha County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 2,453 at the 2010 census










http://www.divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.com/T/Time_Machine_The.html


Time Machine The



Area of inquiry?
- Do you know anything about physics? - Ah, accessing physics.
Mechanical engineering.
Dimensional optics. Chronography.
Temporal causality, temporal paradox.
- Time travel?










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0268695/quotes

IMDb


The Time Machine (2002)

Quotes


Alexander Hartdegen: My question is why can't one change the past?

Vox: Because one cannot travel into the past.


































scbg.jpg



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 7:36 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Monday 27 October 2014