Saturday, September 12, 2015

"chronometric particles"




http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/view_episode_scripts.php?episode=s04e03

Springfield! Springfield!


The Simpsons

Homer the Heretic


[ Homer Simpson: ] And what if we pick the wrong religion? Every week we're just making God madder and madder.










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


PICARD: Offering myself? ...That's it. I remember now. It wasn't enough that you assimilate me. I had to give myself freely to the Borg, ...to you.










From 2/11/1929 ( Vatican City established ) 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 22678 days

22678 = 11339 + 11339

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/18/1996 is 11339 days



From 12/4/1963 ( premiere US TV movie "Project: Man in Space" ) To 12/20/1994 ( in Bosnia as Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps captain this day is my United States Navy Cross medal date of record ) is 11339 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/18/1996 is 11339 days



From 5/7/1992 ( the first launch of the US space shuttle Endeavour orbiter vehicle mission STS-49 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-49 pilot astronaut ) To 11/18/1996 is 1656 days

1656 = 828 + 828

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 2/8/1968 ( premiere US film "Planet of the Apes" ) is 828 days



From 12/19/1984 ( as Kerry Wayne Burgess the E-3 Seaman United States Navy I reported aboard the USS Taylor FFG 50 - from my official United States Navy documents ) To 11/18/1996 is 4352 days

4352 = 2176 + 2176

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 10/18/1971 ( Richard Nixon - Executive Order 11628 - Establishing a Seal for the Environmental Protection Agency ) is 2176 days



[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2015/09/someones-knocking-at-door.html ]
[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2015/09/chronometric-particles.html ]


http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117731/releaseinfo

IMDb


Star Trek: First Contact (1996)

Release Info

USA 18 November 1996 (Hollywood, California) (premiere)










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


TROI: They're on a survey mission. They have no interest in Earth. ...Too primitive.

COCHRANE: Oh!










http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/secretariat_state/index_concordati-accordi_en.htm


AGREEMENTS OF THE HOLY SEE


Lateran Pact: Agreement between the Holy See and Italy (February 11, 1929)










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


BORG QUEEN: You can't begin to imagine the life you denied yourself.










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


LILY: ...How big is this ship?

PICARD: There are twenty-four decks. Almost seven hundred metres long.

LILY: It took me six months to scrounge up enough titanium just to build a four-metre cockpit. ...How much did this thing cost?

PICARD: The economics of the future are somewhat different. ...You see, money doesn't exist in the twenty-fourth century.

LILY: No money! That means you don't get paid.










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


PICARD: The acquisition of wealth is no longer the driving force in our lives. ...We work to better ourselves ...and the rest of humanity. Actually we're rather like yourself and Doctor Cochrane.










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/homer-the-heretic-1347/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 4 Episode 3

Homer the Heretic

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 08, 1992 on FOX

Quotes


Reverend Lovejoy: Homer, you remember Matthew 21-27, "The Foolish man who built his house on sand".

Homer: And you remember Matthew...21-17?

Reverend Lovejoy: And he left them, and went out of the city into Bethany; and he lodged there?

Homer: Yeah...(regains confidence) think about it.










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/homer-the-heretic-1347/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 4 Episode 3

Homer the Heretic

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Oct 08, 1992 on FOX

Quotes


Marge: I'm going to ask you one last time. Are you sure you won't come with us to church?

TV Announcer: Coming up next: make your own ladder!

Homer: Very sure.










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


LAFORGE: You know? I wish I had a picture of this.

COCHRANE: What?

LAFORGE: Oh well, you see, in the future this whole area becomes an historical monument. You're standing almost on the exact spot where your statue's gonna be.

COCHRANE: Statue?

LAFORGE: Yeah!










































https://mix.msfc.nasa.gov/IMAGES/HIGH/9257756.jpg










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


[Enterprise-E deflector dish]

(the three Starfleet officers spread out around the dish)

PICARD: For this to work all three maglocks will have to be released.
































http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/shuttle/sts-49/hires/s49-16-014.jpg










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063442/quotes

IMDb


Planet of the Apes (1968)

Quotes


George Taylor: Take your stinking paws off me, you damned dirty ape!










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


[Enterprise-E engineering]

BORG QUEEN: We've had a change of plans, Data.










http://www.startrek.com/database_article/braga

STAR TREK


Braga, Brannon

Brannon Braga is the co-creator and executive producer of Paramount Network Television's Star Trek: Enterprise for UPN.

Braga's tenure with Star Trek began in 1990










https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bozeman,_Montana


Bozeman, Montana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bozeman is a city in and the county seat of Gallatin County, Montana, United States, in the southwestern part of the state. The 2010 census put Bozeman's population at 37,280 and the 2014 census estimate put the population at 41,660 making it the fourth largest city in the state.










http://www.chakoteya.net/NextGen/218.htm

Cause and Effect

Stardate: 45652.1

Original Airdate: 23 Mar, 1992


PICARD: Mister Worf, end Red alert. And try to access a Federation time base beacon. Let's see if we can find out how long we've been in this causality loop.

WORF: Time base confirms our chronometers are off by seventeen point four days.

PICARD: Reset them, Mister Data.

DATA: Aye, sir.

WORF: Captain, we are being hailed by the other vessel. The computer identifies it as the USS Bozeman, a Federation starship, Soyuz class.

LAFORGE: Soyuz class? They haven't been in service in over eighty years.

PICARD: Open a channel.

BATESON [on viewscreen]: This is Captain Morgan Bateson of the Federation Starship Bozeman. Can we render assistance?

PICARD: I'm Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation Starship Enterprise. We were just going to ask you the same thing.

BATESON [on viewscreen]: Captain Picard, your vessel is not familiar to us.

PICARD: Captain, have you any idea what has just happened?

BATESON [on viewscreen]: Our sensors detected a temporal distortion. Then your ship appeared. We nearly hit you.

PICARD: The Enterprise has been caught in temporal causality loop, and I suspect that something similar may have happened to you.

BATESON [on viewscreen]: You must be mistaken. We left starbase only three weeks ago.

PICARD: Captain, do you know what year this is?

BATESON [on viewscreen]: Of course I do. It's twenty two seventy eight.

PICARD: Perhaps you should beam aboard our ship. There's something we need to discuss.










From 11/19/1959 ( premiere US TV series "Rocky and His Friends" ) To 4/9/1986 ( --- ) is 9638 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/23/1992 is 9638 days



From 2/28/1963 ( John Kennedy - Executive Order 11096 - Establishing a Seal for the United States Civil Service Commission ) To 7/19/1989 ( Bill Gates-Microsoft-George Bush kills 111 passengers and crew of United Airlines Flight 232 and destroys the United Airlines Flight 232 aircraft because I was a passenger of United Airlines Flight 232 as United States Navy Petty Officer Second Class Kerry Wayne Burgess and I was assigned to maintain custody of a non-violent offender military prisoner of the United States ) is 9638 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 3/23/1992 is 9638 days



From 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 ) To 3/23/1992 is 373 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/10/1966 ( premiere US TV series episode "Star Trek"::"The Corbomite Maneuver" ) is 373 days





http://www.startrek.com/database_article/cause-and-effect

STAR TREK


Cause and Effect

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Episode: TNG 218 - Cause and Effect

Season 5 Ep. 18

Air Date: 03/23/1992










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0098300/quotes

IMDb


Shag (1989)

Quotes


Buzz: I'm Buzz Ravenal. Let's dance.

Carson: I'm sorry, I'm engaged.

Buzz: Well, I'm sorry you're engaged, too.










http://www.chakoteya.net/NextGen/218.htm

Cause and Effect

Stardate: 45652.1

Original Airdate: 23 Mar, 1992


[Ready room]

PICARD: My Aunt Adele cured a lot of sleepless nights with this steamed milk.

CRUSHER: Thank you. Mmm, nutmeg.

PICARD: Whenever I get insomnia, I try to perfect the recipe.

CRUSHER: It was the eeriest feeling. When the glass broke, it triggered the sensation even more intensely that I'd done it all before.

PICARD: You know, earlier, I was reading this book, and I had the distinct feeling I'd read certain paragraphs before. But I assumed I'd read the book years ago and I'd forgotten.

CRUSHER: I've had this feeling for hours. And then the voices.

PICARD: Well, it could be nothing more than the result of a sleepless night. But let's be sure. Have Data and Geordi run a shipwide diagnostic, concentrating on the time and place you heard the voices, and we'll discuss the results tomorrow at seven hundred hours.

CRUSHER: Thank you. For everything.

PICARD: Thank Aunt Adele.










http://www.tv.com/shows/rocky-and-his-friends/jet-fuel-formula-episode-1-253836/

tv.com


Rocky and His Friends Season 1 Episode 1

Jet Fuel Formula (Episode 1)

Aired Thursday 5:30 PM Nov 19, 1959 on ABC

AIRED: 11/19/59










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 05/06/10 6:13 AM
Especially interesting is that a few days ago I was thinking, imagining, a time I created a trail through the forested areas of, Vermont, forests and I was sweeping away the pine needles for a path for her to follow and the path led to a gazebo I had constructed out in the woods near our cabin, in the forest of, Vermont.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 06 May 2010 excerpt ends]










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=dead-zone-the

Springfield! Springfield!


Dead Zone, The (1983)


She knows him.
Not scared. She knows him.
All right.
Well, what did you want to show me?





http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=dead-zone-the

Springfield! Springfield!


Dead Zone, The (1983)


He just took off in your car, Sheriff.
I saw his face. I saw his face.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063442/releaseinfo

IMDb


Planet of the Apes (1968)

Release Info

USA 8 February 1968 (New York City, New York)










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


[last lines]

George Taylor: Oh my God. I'm back. I'm home. All the time, it was...










http://www.oocities.org/elzj78/bsgminiseries.html


BATTLESTAR GALACTICA: Miniseries (2003)


Six: Gaius. I can't die. When this body is destroyed, my memory, my consciousness, will be transmitted to a new one. I'll just wake up somewhere else in an identical body.

Baltar: You mean there's more out there like you?

Six: There are twelve models. I'm number six.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: posted by H.V.O.M at 1:27 PM Wednesday, September 14, 2005


The joy of seeing a ship

[ internet hyperlink lost ] I cannot express the confusion I was in, though the joy of seeing a ship, and one that I had reason to believe was manned by my own countrymen, and consequently friends, was such as I cannot describe; but yet I had some secret doubts hung about me - I cannot tell from whence they came - bidding me keep upon my guard. In the first place, it occurred to me to consider what business an English ship could have in that part of the world, since it was not the way to or from any part of the world where the English had any traffic; and I knew there had been no storms to drive them in there in distress; and that if they were really English it was most probable that they were here upon no good design; and that I had better continue as I was than fall into the hands of thieves and murderers.

Let no man despise the secret hints and notices of danger which sometimes are given him when he may think there is no possibility of its being real. That such hints and notices are given us I believe few that have made any observation of things can deny; that they are certain discoveries of an invisible world, and a converse of spirits, we cannot doubt; and if the tendency of them seems to be to warn us of danger, why should we not suppose they are from some friendly agent (whether supreme, or inferior and subordinate, is not the question), and that they are given for our good? [ excerpt from lost internet hyperlink ]

Robinson Crusoe - Daniel Defoe


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 14 September 2006 excerpt ends]










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie4.html

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)


McCOY: Come on Spock, it's me, McCoy! You really have gone where no man has gone before. Can't you tell me what it felt like?

SPOCK: It would be impossible to discuss the subject without a common frame of reference.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085407/quotes

IMDb


The Dead Zone (1983)

Quotes


Johnny Smith: I've been tutoring this boy named Stuart. In the vision, I saw him drown. But that's not the point. In the vision, something was missing.

Dr. Sam Weizak: How - how do you mean?

Johnny Smith: It was like... a blank spot, a dead zone.










http://www.gateworld.net/atlantis/s1/transcripts/101.shtml

GateWorld


STARGATE ATLANTIS

RISING, PART 1

EPISODE NUMBER - 101

DVD DISC - Season 1, Disc 1

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 07.16.04


SHEPPARD: Come on -- what are the odds of me having the same genes as these guys?










http://www.bozemandailychronicle.com/the-hidden-bozeman-trail/article_adb25e6b-d34e-5d44-a3a4-8a6b1f1b0a90.html

BOZEMAN DAILY CHRONICLE


The hidden Bozeman Trail

By GAIL SCHONTZLER Jul 6, 1996

Warren McGee strides along, undaunted by the burning July sun. He is 82, has one bad eye and one going blurry on him.

"The coconut's failing," he jokes when he can't remember a friend's name right away. Archie Marcotte. Archie owns the cattle pasture we're tramping through.

Bad eyes and all, McGee can see what I can't: the ghost of the Bozeman Trail.

First it's just a faint line in the brush, then a depression a foot deep and wide as a wagon. Then we see the ruts, which swing wide to avoid a coulee.

In several places, yellow blossom sweetclover has taken root in the disturbed soil of the wagon route, making a yellow swath that points in the direction of the Yellowstone River. Here, McGee says, wagon trains forded the treacherous river.

"Now you can say you walked the Bozeman Trail. There's damned few people can say that." He calls it a privilege.

The buffalo followed the grass. The Indians followed the buffalo.

Over the centuries, the yearly migrations beat paths into the earth. In some places, the grooves sank 12 inches deep.

The white trappers and gold miners followed the game and Indian trails. Then came the wagon trains, with iron rimmed wheels that cut parallel ribbons of ruts into the earth.

They are all gone, but the trail lives on.

The story of the Bozeman Trail begins with John Bozeman.

Gold mining hadn't panned out very well for Bozeman. But he saw the glint of opportunity in guiding greenhorns to the gold mines.

"Bozeman was no fool," local historian Phyllis Smith tells me, sitting in the Pioneer Museum's upstairs archive room. "He could see it was dirty work, your feet got cold. He had more gentlemanly pursuits in mind."

Bozeman, 27, a brash Georgian, had left behind a wife and three daughters when he headed to Colorado in 1860 to search for gold. Two years later, after failing to strike it rich in Montana's gold fields, Bozeman teamed up with a longtime Montana trapper, John Jacobs, to find a shortcut from the Oregon Trail to the gold digs of Bannack and Virginia City.

The old route was less direct, taking the Oregon Trail across southern Wyoming all the way to Fort Hall, Idaho, before heading north to Montana.

Bozeman, Jacobs and Jacobs' little girl Emma, whose mother was a Flathead Indian, rode east along the Yellowstone River. At the Powder River, they were overtaken by a party of Sioux, who stole their horses, food and guns. The Sioux beat Emma for being with white men and left them with some scrawny Indian ponies. The three survived by eating grasshoppers. They reached the Oregon Trail, covering hundreds of miles along what would become the Bozeman Trail.

Bozeman and Jacobs soon found wagon trains of prospectors eager for a shortcut. Bozeman told them his route, along the east side of Wyoming's Big Horn Mountains, offered good grass, wood and water.

The only problem was that it trespassed on the Oglala Sioux's hunting grounds, guaranteed by the Fort Laramie treaty of 1851. Bozeman knew his route was illegal, but argued it was a natural highway.

His first wagon train was stopped about 100 miles northwest of Fort Laramie by an angry party of Indians, who told them to go back or be destroyed. The wagon train retreated.

But Bozeman led nine men some 700 miles along his route to Virginia City. They traveled at night to avoid discovery by the Sioux and just "gunned it," Smith said.

A fellow Georgian, W.S. Mackenzie, once recalled John Bozeman "was afraid of nothing on earth."

The following year, 1864, Bozeman returned to Fort Laramie. This time he succeeded in leading a wagon train up the east side of the Big Horns through Indian territory.

One Bozeman Trail wagon train was described as including 150 wagons, 69 men, 36 women, 56 children, 636 oxen, 194 cows, 79 horses, and a dozen mules. The wagon train, one member wrote in his diary, could fire 1,867 times without reloading.

That same summer, Jim Bridger, a more experienced guide, led a wagon train along the Wind River Canyon, west of the Big Horns, a route safer from Indian attack. Both wagon trains made it to Virginia City.

Bozeman's gamble had paid off, and his trail became the popular route to the gold fields. But it enraged the Sioux.

"The Indians could see the treaties didn't amount to a hill of beans," Smith said. It was one of the first steps toward the warfare that climaxed in the Custer massacre.

As soon as he'd delivered his 1864 wagon train to Virginia City, John Bozeman rode back to the Gallatin Valley. He had persuaded William Rouse and Daniel Beall, who'd been ranching near Three Forks, that the more fertile east end of the valley would be a superior townsite. Bozeman wrote to his mother that "this is the most healthy country I ever saw."

Bozeman also foresaw greater opportunity in farming the land and making greenbacks off the greenhorns than in mining.

On Aug. 9, 1864, the town was officially named Bozeman, and the next day the founders started recording land claims.

Bozeman was an impressive man. Admirers said he was more than 6 feet tall, 225 pounds, young, strong and attractive to the ladies. He liked to gamble, loved the saloon and had what one writer described as an elastic sense of morals. One visitor mocked his standing in the community, writing, "he is looked up to among emigrants much as Chief Justice Marshall is among lawyers."

A week after the town's founding, W.J. Davies, traveling with an immigrant train, arrived in Bozeman and camped near a few houses (another visitor described them as "a half dozen huts, dignified by the name Bozeman City"). In the morning Rouse and Bozeman visited and persuaded Davies to move "to the great city of Bozeman."

"They spoke eloquently of its many advantages, its water privileges and its standing right in the gate of the mountains ready to swallow up all the tenderfeet that would reach the territory from the east, with their golden fleeces to be taken care of."

Stores and houses were built right on the Bozeman Trail. The earliest photo of the town shows a few covered wagons on a muddy road in front of a dozen wooden buildings. The largest is the two story Osborne's Drug Store, built in 1864.

"That's how Main Street got to be Main Street," McGee said.

All these years, the Bozeman Trail has been right under my feet.

It took Warren McGee seven years to trace the Bozeman Trail and pinpoint the Yellowstone Ford.

A retired railroad conductor from Livingston and a history buff, McGee found it using Jim Bridger's 1866 survey of the trail for the Army. Bridger described the Yellowstone Ford as 12 and a half miles west of Big Timber.

McGee also used common sense. There are very few places the river doesn't have steep banks on one side or the other.

You have to think like a buffalo, he said. Or think like a wagon. A wagon could never go sideways around a hill, the pressure would bust the wooden wheel spokes. A wagon had to avoid the marshy places along the river.

Springdale fit the bill, and McGee found ruts in a pasture that had never been cultivated. He brought historians, including the late Merrill Burlingame, on expeditions to confirm his discoveries.

In 1972, McGee succeeded in having the Yellowstone Ford named a national historic site. He fought for years to get the state Highway Department to mark the Bozeman Trail in 20 places. He succeeded in getting large signs on the Norris hill.

But here in the pasture, where we can actually walk the trail, there is no sign. It's just an anonymous field on the frontage road east of the Springdale off ramp. Except for a few historians, McGee said, "ain't anyone but me knows where it is."

Just beyond the pasture, the Yellowstone River looks swollen, muddy, frightening. Here men and women who'd braved Indian country had to cross a treacherous river. They trusted their lives to a rope John Bozeman strung across from one side to the other, tied to stout cottonwoods.

The rope ran diagonally across, so the force of the current would push the wagons downstream. The wagons were stripped of their wheels and floated like boats. John Bozeman described a June 1866 crossing in a letter.

"I crost the Rope on the 24th and crost one Wagon and four horses. The boat swamped. Drowned one Man and one Boy and one Horse and lost some things. The cause for the Boat swamping I had the boat tide to a tree on this side and the River was very high and the current was so strong that it puld the tree up by the Roots. … On the 25th I crost 45 wagons and had no bad luck. Emigrants well pleased."

Back then, McGee said, life was cheap.

It's remarkable what these people did, he said, what they suffered. I can't imagine their courage.

They called it the Bloody Bozeman.

Wagon trains passed the makeshift graves of settlers killed by Indians and hurriedly buried. Wolves dug up the bodies, and the immigrants saw bodies that were both half eaten and scalped.

The Sioux were determined to stop the settlers' invasion, and the Army responded by building Fort Reno and Fort Phil Kearney in Wyoming and Fort C.F. Smith in Montana to protect the Bozeman Trail.

Nelson Story, having made money in the Montana gold fields, decided in 1866 to drive 600 Texas longhorns up the Bozeman Trail to feed the miners and soldiers. He and his 27 men were more feared by the Indians than the 300 soldiers at the forts, for Story's men had breech loading Remington rifles, which allowed much faster reloading than the soldiers' old Springfields.

The deadliest event on the Bozeman Trail, the Fetterman massacre, occurred the following December, when a reckless officer led 81 men into an ambush near Fort Phil Kearney.

The government abandoned the forts in 1868. McGee said by that time, Chief Red Cloud's Sioux were so relentless, civilians had abandoned the Bozeman Trail. The main traffic on the road was resupply shipments to the forts. When the Army pulled out of Fort Smith, the Indians burned it before the soldiers were out of sight.

Driving back along Bozeman's Main Street gives me a strange sensation. Past the Bozeman Hotel, Bozeman City Hall, John Bozeman's Bistro, the Montana Trails Gallery and the sign to Bridger Bowl.

The giant mural on the side of the Eagles Club features a handsome, benign looking John Bozeman, welcoming newcomers, and their fleeces, to his city.

"He was foolhardy," McGee said gruffly. "He was a plain damn fool.

"He served a very useful purpose, bringing people to the West. Now, there's too damn many of them."





https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Bozeman


John Bozeman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Merin Bozeman (January 1837 – April 20, 1867) was born in Pickens County, Georgia. He was an early Montana pioneer and helped create the Bozeman Trail through Wyoming Territory into the gold fields of southwest Montana Territory. He helped found his namesake city of Bozeman, Montana in 1864.


Gold mining and the Bozeman Trail

In 1860, John Bozeman headed west to join in the Pike's Peak Gold Rush in Colorado, leaving behind his wife and children. After his mining claims in Colorado failed, Bozeman traveled to Deer Lodge in western Montana Territory in 1862 to work the gold fields discovered by Granville and James Stuart. Bozeman joined the January 1863 rush to newly discovered gold in Bannack, Montana but his claims there proved unsuccessful.

Seeing that it would be more profitable to "mine the miners" than to mine for gold. , Bozeman enlisted the support of another unsuccessful Bannack prospector and friend, John Jacobs, to explore a new and shorter route into Montana Territory from the East. In 1863, he and John Jacobs blazed the Bozeman Trail, a cutoff route from the Oregon Trail in Wyoming to Bannack, Montana, and guided miners to Virginia City through the Gallatin Valley. Bozeman settled in the Gallatin Valley at a site "standing right in the gate of the mountains, ready to swallow up all tenderfeet that would reach the territory from the east, with their golden fleeces to be taken care of".


Death

Bozeman was murdered while traveling along the Yellowstone River in April 1867. His partner, Tom Cover, reported they had been attacked by a band of Blackfeet Indians. Inconsistencies in his story have led historians to suspect that Bozeman was killed by Cover himself.























https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b6/Vatican_Obelisk_St_Peter's_Square.jpg










http://www.divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.com/P/Planet_of_the_Apes_1968.html


Planet of the Apes


But what about your theory? The existence|of someone like Taylor might prove it.
- You want to get my head chopped off?|- Don't be foolish.
- If it's true, they'll have to accept it.|- No, they won't.
Cornelius has developed|the most brilliant hypothesis.
But I'm probably wrong.
That the ape evolved from|a lower order of primate, possibly man.
In the forbidden zone, he discovered traces|of a culture older than recorded time.
- The evidence was meagre.|- You didn't think so then.
That was before Dr Zaius and half|of the Academy said my idea was heresy.










http://www.divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.com/P/Planet_of_the_Apes_1968.html


Planet of the Apes


How can scientific truth be heresy? What if|Taylor is exactly the proof you needed?
A mutation. A missing link|between the unevolved primate and the ape.
Touchy, isn't he?
"I am not a missing link."
Well, if he were a missing link, the sacred|scrolls wouldn't be worth their parchment.
Well, maybe they're not.
Oh, no, thank you.|I'm not going to get into that battle.










http://www.divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.com/P/Planet_of_the_Apes_1968.html


Planet of the Apes


By your leave, Mr President, this tribunal has|not yet defined the purpose for this inquiry.
You asked for the opportunity to present your|case. Surely you must know why you're here.
At the very least, this man has the right to|know whether there's a charge against him.
Objection. This exhibit is indeed a man.|Therefore he has no rights under ape law.
- Dr Zira, this is a man, is it not?|- He is unlike any man you have ever seen.
- As we hope to prove.|- Answer the question, Dr Zira. Is it a man?
Sir, perhaps the question is the point at issue.
Is he a man, is he a deviant,|or a freak of nature?
- Objection.|- Sustained.
Now, Dr Zira, in all fairness, you must admit|that the accused is a non-ape
and therefore has no rights under ape law.
Then why is he called the accused? Your|Honours must think him guilty of something.
The creature's not being tried.|He's being disposed of.

[ Dr. Zaius: ] It is scientific heresy that is being tried here.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 8:56 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Saturday 12 September 2015