Thursday, October 08, 2015

Flight of the Intruder




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

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


RIKER: Doctor, tomorrow morning when they detect the warp signature from your ship and realise that humans have discovered how to travel faster than light, they decide to alter their course and make first contact with Earth, right here.

COCHRANE: Here?

LAFORGE: [ Uh, ] actually over there.

RIKER: It is one of the pivotal moments in human history, Doctor. You get to make first contact with an alien race, and after you do, everything begins to change.

LAFORGE: Your theories on warp drive allow fleets of starships to be built and mankind to start exploring the Galaxy.

TROI: It unites humanity in a way no one ever thought possible when they realise they're not alone in the universe. Poverty, disease, war. They'll all be gone within the next fifty years.

RIKER: But unless you make that warp flight tomorrow morning before eleven fifteen, none of it will happen.

COCHRANE: And you people, you're all astronauts, ... on some kind of star trek?

LAFORGE: Look, Doc, I know this is a lot for you to take in, but we're running out of time here.

RIKER: We need your help. ...What do you say?










http://www.divxmoviesenglishsubtitles.com/F/Flight_Of_The_Intruder_CD1_1991.html


Flight Of The Intruder


[ Camparelli: ] Half the time, it isn't the mission you're flying that kills you, it's the one before-- do you read me?

[ Grafton: ] Yes, sir.

[ Camparelli: ] Good. I want you to write a letter to Morg's wife. I'll mail it in a couple of days along with one from me. Help put this thing behind you, okay?

[ Grafton: ] Thanks, skipper.

[ Camparelli: ] For what? You die, son, and I'll piss on your grave.










From 1/17/1974 ( premiere US TV series "Chopper One" ) To 1/18/1991 is 6210 days

6210 = 3105 + 3105

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 5/4/1974 ( Richard Nixon - Remarks Opening Expo '74, Spokane, Washington ) is 3105 days



From 1/17/1974 ( premiere US TV series "Firehouse" ) To 1/18/1991 is 6210 days

6210 = 3105 + 3105

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 5/4/1974 ( Richard Nixon - Remarks Opening Expo '74, Spokane, Washington ) is 3105 days



From 3/8/1950 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Clock"::"The Graveyard Shift" ) To 1/18/1991 is 14926 days

14926 = 7463 + 7463

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 4/9/1986 ( --- ) is 7463 days



From 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 ) To 1/18/1991 is 548 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 5/4/1967 ( Lyndon Johnson - Special Message to the Congress Transmitting Reports on Incentive Awards to Military Personnel ) is 548 days



From 8/18/1943 ( premiere US film "Beyond the Last Frontier" ) To 1/18/1991 is 17320 days

17320 = 8660 + 8660

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 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 8660 days



From 7/17/1934 ( premiere US film "Fighting Hero" ) To 10/2/1959 ( premiere US TV series "The Twilight Zone"::series premiere episode "Where Is Everybody?" ) is 9208 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 1/18/1991 is 9208 days



From 2/1/1963 ( the US Army 11th Air Assault Division activated ) To 4/18/1988 ( the United States Navy Operation Praying Mantis - my biological brother US Navy Fleet Admiral Thomas Reagan and I US Navy FC2 Kerry Wayne Burgess are both at the same time onboard the United States Navy warship USS Wainwright CG 28 when it evaded a Harpoon anti-ship missile from hostile Iran-Bill Gates-Microsoft-George Bush-Axis of Evil-Soviet Union-Communist forces but 2 United States Marine Corps aviators launched from USS Wainwright CG 28 killed this day ) is 9208 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 1/18/1991 is 9208 days



From 1/17/1902 ( Theodore Roosevelt - Executive Order ["The attention of the Departments is hereby called to the provisions of the laws giving preference to veterans in appointment and retention"] ) To 6/19/1952 ( the Special Forces of the United States Army first activated ) is 18416 days

18416 = 9208 + 9208

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 1/18/1991 is 9208 days



From 6/17/1972 ( the Watergate burglary ) To 1/18/1991 is 6789 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 6/4/1984 ( premiere US TV series "Body Language" ) is 6789 days



From 8/17/1960 ( premiere US film "The Time Machine" ) To 11/2/1985 ( Ronald Reagan - Radio Address to the Nation on the Soviet-United States Nuclear and Space Arms Negotiations ) is 9208 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 1/18/1991 is 9208 days



From 8/17/1960 ( the Soviet Union trial of the United States Central Intelligence Agency pilot Gary Powers begins in Moscow Russia Soviet Union ) To 11/2/1985 ( Ronald Reagan - Radio Address to the Nation on the Soviet-United States Nuclear and Space Arms Negotiations ) is 9208 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 1/18/1991 is 9208 days





http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/75179/Flight-of-the-Intruder/misc-notes.html

TCM


FLIGHT OF THE INTRUDER (1991)


MISCELLANEOUS NOTES

Released in United States on Video July 18, 1991

Released in United States Winter January 18, 1991

Began shooting October 16, 1989.

Completed shooting January 15, 1990.



http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=flightoftheintruder.htm

Box Office Mojo


Flight of the Intruder

Domestic Total Gross: $14,587,732

Distributor: Paramount

Release Date: January 18, 1991

Production Budget: $35 million



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099587/releaseinfo

IMDb


Flight of the Intruder (1991)

Release Info

USA 18 January 1991










http://www.tv.com/shows/chopper-one/pilot-342974/

tv.com


Chopper One Season 1 Episode 1

Pilot

Aired Unknown Jan 17, 1974 on ABC

Fleeing criminals take a woman hostage and commandeer a police car to take them to the airport, but high-flying Chopper One is determined not to let them escape.

AIRED: 1/17/74










http://www.script-o-rama.com/movie_scripts/t/time-machine-script-transcript-wells.html


The Time Machine


The years rolled by,
everything unfamiliar.
Except the smile of my
never-aging friend.
What was this? Weird sounds
all around. What could it be?
My curiosity compelled me to stop.
At first I wondered if I was
the cause of the panic.
I was soon to find out I wasn't.










http://www.tv.com/shows/firehouse/brust-of-flame-730571/

tv.com


Firehouse Season 1 Episode 1

Brust of Flame

Aired Thursday 8:30 PM Jan 17, 1974 on ABC

AIRED: 1/17/74










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=4195

The American Presidency Project

Richard Nixon

XXXVII President of the United States: 1969 - 1974

128 - Remarks Opening Expo '74, Spokane, Washington.

May 4, 1974

Governor Evans, Secretary Dent, Congressman Foley, Your Excellencies representing the nations from abroad, Your Eminence, all of the distinguished guests and all of those here on this historic occasion for the opening of Expo '74:

I am honored to be here for a number of reasons: First, because the State of Washington, under the leadership of Governor Evans, I think is generally recognized to be the first State in the Nation in terms of trying to protect the environment. We congratulate this State, its Governor, and its legislators.

And then, it is a great privilege to be here on this sparkling, beautiful day to speak about what this particular occasion means, not only for now and the days ahead in this summer--when I hope that hundreds of thousands, and maybe millions, will come to see it but, looking down through the pages of history perhaps to the year 2000, 25 years from now, when we celebrate a new year that comes once in 1,000 years and when we look back to see what we did now to make that a new year that was not only the greatest new year for America but for every nation in the world.

Today, we speak of the environment in terms--as we should---of cleaning up the air and water, of a legacy of parks, of all of those other things that have to do with making our cities and our towns and our countryside more beautiful for our children and those that follow us.

The environment means all those things, but environment also means other things to people. It means, for example, for every family in America a job so that he can enjoy the environment around him. And there are those who sometimes say that the two are in conflict, that it is impossible to have a great, productive society like America--the most industrialized nation in the world--and a clean environment.

We have gone through a period in the energy crisis when there have been evidences that these two great interests--one, production which would provide jobs, and two, a clean environment--seem to come in conflict. But let me tell you what the answer is. We can have both, and we shall have both. And the way we can have both is to develop the great resources of this country in a way that they will not pollute the atmosphere, that they will contribute to a clean environment.

And that is why we are going forward in terms of our huge Government programs in research and development for the purpose of seeing that our coal resources can be developed into a clean fuel. That is why we are going forward in our programs for the development of solar energy and nuclear power which, of course, would be clean fuel.

And I can assure all of you here that your Federal Government, working with the States, working with private enterprise, can and will achieve the goal of not only a better and cleaner environment in terms of our water and our air but also the jobs, the opportunity for all Americans that is so important for us to enjoy an environment.

Another aspect of environment that occurs to each of us, of course, is what this magnificent Expo is going to leave as a legacy. It will leave, I trust, some of these beautiful buildings. It will leave a 100-acre park in the heart of the city of Spokane, which was once a blighted area. These will be physical monuments to what you, the citizens of Spokane and the State of Washington, have done in putting on Expo '74.

But beyond those material things, it will leave something else, and that is a new spirit. And what impressed me as I read about how this Expo came about was that the idea did not come from Washington, D.C., it came from Washington State. Those who worked on it, those who conceived it, and most of the money that went into it, came from the people. And to the people of this State we give you the congratulations for a magnificent achievement.

And it is that spirit, that spirit of individual enterprise, that spirit of doing things and not depending upon someone else to do them for you, it is that spirit that developed the West and the Northwest. It is that spirit that will continue to make America a great nation, we trust, in the years ahead.

There is one other aspect of the environment to which I should like to refer, and it is particularly appropriate that I refer to it in the presence of these very distinguished representatives from the other nations who have exhibits here for Expo '74.

We can have good jobs and fine security and good health and clean air and clean water, and it will make no difference unless we find a way for the great nations of the world to settle their differences at the conference table and not on the battlefield. And that is why we have opened, as you know, negotiations with those who might have been our adversaries, negotiations which did not mean that either we or they agreed with each other in terms of philosophy, but negotiations that had one overriding concern, and that is this: World War I was destructive, World War II was destructive; there cannot be world war III, because it will destroy not only the nations that participate in it, it will destroy civilization as we know it, and we cannot let that happen, and we will not let it happen. That is what we must do if we are to have the kind of environment that we want for the future.

And now in the presence of the representative from the Soviet Union--as he knows, I will soon be having another round of talks with Mr. Brezhnev and his colleagues in Moscow. We will not agree on all things, we will have sharp debates, but let me tell you this: Whether it is with him or whether it is with leaders of other countries they are allied with or neutral countries in the world, there is no disagreement with regard to the need for all nations to cooperate, share their knowledge and their brains in cleaning up the environment of the world. We are not just talking about the environment of Spokane or the State of Washington or of the United States but of this whole globe on which we live. And that is a great enterprise that Expo '74 will be remembered for in the years ahead.

Because, as we look at where the great ideas, the great breakthroughs come which deal with the scourges which have afflicted mankind from the beginning of civilization, we find that no one can predict that it will come from one nation or from one continent or from one race, because that spark of genius might be in the Americas, it might be in Asia, it might be in Latin America, it might be in Africa. What we have to realize is that among the 3 billion people that live on this Earth, there are those men and women who have within themselves that genius that will find new answers that will help us to get the clean air and the clean water and all the other things that we want to have a clean environment.

And going further than that, in that whole world we must recognize that that spark of genius that will find the answer to the diseases that plague mankind, it may not be here in America, it may be in some other country. But the important thing for us to remember in this period when we have ended America's longest war and when we are moving through a generation and longer of peace, let us see that not just America but all nations, whatever their differences in philosophy, work together to clean up the environment, work together in the causes of peace, and in that way, we will make the progress that we want to make by the year 2000 which the whole human race can enjoy.

No national pride should be taken in the fact that one nation or another finds the answer to what may cure cancer in its various aspects, what may deal with some aspects of heart disease and many of the others that afflict mankind.

No one nation can take any jingoistic pride in the fact that one of its scientists or one of its technicians found an answer to the problem of a cleaner environment.

What we must do is to recognize that it is together, working together, thinking together, that we will find answers that we would never find if we were not talking to each other, negotiating with each other. And that is why I say to you, my friends gathered here on this magnificent day in the State of Washington, in the city of Spokane, you are dedicated to a great goal, celebrating a new and fresh environment for tomorrow. What will that tomorrow be, and for all those who are young and who will be here to celebrate that new year 25, 26 years from now?

I will tell you what I think it can be, and this is a beginning: It can be a time when the whole world can look back on progress in conquering the scourges of disease that have afflicted all people wherever they may live. We can look back on a period when the whole world enjoyed the benefits of what our scientists and engineers were able to find out in terms of making our air and our water cleaner and better for everybody.

But most important, let us hope and let us pray on this day that we can look back and say that over that 25 years, the peoples of the world, despite their differences in philosophy, lived together in peace. Let this be a day in which we concentrate, and consecrate as well, not only our efforts in America but also working with peoples in other nations toward the goal of a fresh, new environment in terms of peace for all mankind so that we can enjoy the magnificent environment that you see around us here today.
Thank you.

MARVIN MILLER (master of ceremonies). Ladies and gentlemen, as the fair officially opens, we invite you to celebrate with us "Tomorrow's Fresh, New Environment."

Mr. President, will you say the magic words.

THE PRESIDENT. At I e noon on this day, acting in my capacity as President of the United States, it is my high honor and privilege to declare Expo '74 officially open to all the citizens of the world.

Note: The President spoke at 11:46 a.m. at the Washington State Pavilion.




















http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/03147/Teletubbies-baby-s_3147210b.jpg










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099587/quotes

IMDb


Flight of the Intruder (1991)

Quotes


Court-Martial Captain: You took an oath, Mr. Cole. You, too, Mr. Grafton. You took an oath to defend the constitution and obey the orders of the officers appointed over you. It's the same oath that every officer in the navy has taken for damn near 200 years. And during all that time, the military has obeyed the civilian elected government. Now, they might not have always been right, or wise... or even smart, but they were elected. Any other way and the United States would be nothing more than another two-bit military dictatorship.

Admiral: Why did you do this, Cole? An officer with your fine record? Did you think you were going to win the war?

Cole: Frankly, sir, I think we're going to lose this one. But I do love the work.

Court-Martial Captain: Mr. Cole, you may find that amusing, but we don't. Gentlemen, this is our country you're messing with.










http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/19/AR2006041901099.html

The Washington Post


By Art Buchwald

Tuesday, July 30, 1974; Page B01


In an old blue shoe.
Just go, go, GO!
Please do, do, do, DO!










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0099587/quotes

IMDb


Flight of the Intruder (1991)

Quotes


Court-Martial Captain: We'd look like real idiots if we court-martialed an A-6 crew for doing what the President of the United States just told us to do. If even a rumor got back to the press, you can understand the ramifications.

Cdr. Camparelli: Yes. Yes, sir.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=5359

The American Presidency Project

Gerald Ford

XXXVIII President of the United States: 1974 - 1977

659 - Letter to the Chairman and Members of the Senate Select Committee To Study Governmental Operations With Respect to Intelligence Activities

November 4, 1975


I AM writing to urge the Select Committee not to make public the report on the subject of assassinations which I understand is currently in preparation. Reviews of the Select Committee's draft assassination report by officials of the Departments of State and Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency, who examined it at the request of your Committee, have been submitted to me by the heads of those departments and the agency. Under separate cover, I am providing these classified reviews for your consideration. Their substance was previously communicated to the Select Committee staff by the reviewing officials. I also want to offer my views on this matter and appeal to the Committee not to release this report publicly.

It is my opinion that public disclosure now of information I provided to the Senate Select Committee concerning allegations of political assassination activities of the United States Government will result in serious harm to the national interest and may endanger individuals.

As I stated publicly when the allegations were published, the very idea that any person or organization within the United States Government could consider assassination as an acceptable act is abhorrent. I know you share this view and a determination to make certain that such deeds will not take place in the future.

To facilitate legitimate investigation of allegations related to assassination, I have endeavored to make available all the materials in the Executive Branch on this subject to the Select Committees of the Senate and the House and the Department of Justice. This was done under procedures designed to serve the national interest. The materials were turned over in classified form. You will recall that I said on June 9, 1975:

"I know that the Members of the Congress involved will exercise utmost prudence in the handling of such information."

It is not a question of withholding information required by the Select Committee to carry out its inquiry into these allegations which relate entirely to past Administrations of both parties. On the contrary, I have endeavored to make all of the information available to your Committee so that legislation can be proposed, if necessary, and to the Justice Department to facilitate any investigation indicated. However, we must distinguish between disclosure to the Select Committee of sensitive information and publication of that information which is harmful to the national interest and may endanger the physical safety of individuals.

There is no question about access to these materials by appropriate officials. The only issue concerns publication which obviously cannot be limited to Members of Congress and other American citizens.

Public release of these official materials and information will do grievous damage to our country. It would likely be exploited by foreign nations and groups hostile to the United States in a manner designed to do maximum damage to the reputation and foreign policy of the United States. It would seriously impair our ability to exercise a positive leading role in world affairs.










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=flight-of-the-intruder

Springfield! Springfield!


Flight Of The Intruder (1991)


[ Callie Troy: ] Mr. Lieutenant?

[ Grafton: ] Oh. Excuse me.

[ Callie Troy: ] Thank you. I was looking for Mrs. McPherson. Sharon's gone. Her husband was killed.

[ Grafton: ] I know.

[ Callie Troy: ] You're here on a duty call. They send you here to stroke the widow?

[ Grafton: ] Who are you?










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-clock/graveyard-shift-1254982/

tv.com


The Clock Season 1 Episode 43

Graveyard Shift

Aired Wednesday 8:30 PM Mar 08, 1950 on NBC

AIRED: 3/8/50










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=28237

The American Presidency Project

Lyndon B. Johnson

XXXVI President of the United States: 1963-1969

208 - Special Message to the Congress Transmitting Reports on Incentive Awards to Military Personnel

May 4, 1967

To the Congress of the United States:

I am pleased to transmit the reports of the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of Transportation on cash awards made during Fiscal Year 1966 to members of the Armed Forces for suggestions, inventions, and scientific achievements.

This Government continually strives to increase the efficiency and economy of its operations. The Cash Awards Incentive Program is a vital part of that effort. By rewarding ideas and accomplishments which help to lower costs and improve effectiveness, we improve the operations of Government and encourage the search for new solutions and better methods of operation.

Incentive awards have been available to civilian employees of the Government for many years. In 1965, the Congress extended these benefits to our men and women in uniform.

The reports I am transmitting today clearly confirm the value of the contributions which members of our Armed Forces are making toward the goals of economy and efficiency:

--More than 141,000 suggestions were submitted during fiscal year 1966.

--Some 25,700 of these suggestions were adopted and cash awards totalling about $378,000 were made.

--The saving to the Government and the American taxpayer resulting from these ideas, in the first year of the program, was more than $33 million.

--Many intangible benefits not directly measurable in dollars, such as improved safety in operations, have resulted from the suggestions.

Many individual ideas produced sizable benefits. An Air Force sergeant, for example, eliminated the need for a large procurement of new gyroscopes by suggesting an inexpensive modification of gyroscopes already on hand. This saved $275,400. In the Coast Guard an enlisted man proposed a modification of helicopter test equipment, making it unnecessary to purchase new test equipment which would have cost an estimated $72,000.

Equally important, however, is the fact that the $33 million saving to American taxpayers resulted from the efforts of many thousands of individual servicemen and women. In this fact lies the real importance of this program. For, if we are to have true economy and efficiency, it must be the business, not just of a few, but of all the men and women serving in government.

These reports provide further evidence of the great service being rendered to the American people by the members of our Armed Forces. They man our defenses with unsurpassed skill and courage. They also, as these reports document, bring new economy and efficiency to the operations of their government.

LYNDON B. JOHNSON

The White House

May 4, 1967










1991 film "Flight of the Intruder" DVD video:


Title Card: Off the coast of North Vietnam after 7 years of war.

Title Card: September 10, 1972.

Grafton: Hey, Morg. Did you ever notice how - how some nights you could see more stars than other nights? Huh? You ever notice that?










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0035676/releaseinfo

IMDb


Beyond the Last Frontier (1943)

Release Info

USA 18 August 1943































http://gallery.phoebe-cates.com/v/current/ [ Original source of image I downloaded from the Internet ]










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-twilight-zone/where-is-everybody-12585/trivia/

tv.com


The Twilight Zone Season 1 Episode 1

Where is Everybody?

Aired Unknown Oct 02, 1959 on CBS

Quotes


Mike: Look, I don't want you to think I'm nuts or anything. It's nothing like that. It's just that, well... it's just that I don't seem to remember who I am.










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-twilight-zone/where-is-everybody-12585/

tv.com


The Twilight Zone Season 1 Episode 1

Where is Everybody?

AIRED: 10/2/59










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0026350/releaseinfo

IMDb


Fighting Hero (1934)

Release Info

USA 17 July 1934










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=flight-of-the-intruder

Springfield! Springfield!


Flight Of The Intruder (1991)


Hey, Jack, you were with a Marine detachment. You ever get used to it?

Yeah, I got used to it. I'm a doc-- that's what I do.

Naw, nobody gets used to it. You can put your job in front of it like the skipper, or you can even joke about it, but nobody gets used to it.










http://www.tv.com/shows/body-language/bl-1-1337739/

tv.com


Body Language Season 1 Episode 0

BL-1

Aired Weekdays 4:00 PM Jun 04, 1984 on CBS

AIRED: 6/4/84










http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/061872-1.htm

The Washington Post


5 Held in Plot to Bug Democrats' Office Here

By Alfred E. Lewis

Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday, June 18, 1972; Page A01

Five men, one of whom said he is a former employee of the Central Intelligence Agency, were arrested at 2:30 a.m. yesterday in what authorities described as an elaborate plot to bug the offices of the Democratic National Committee here.

Three of the men were native-born Cubans and another was said to have trained Cuban exiles for guerrilla activity after the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion.

They were surprised at gunpoint by three plain-clothes officers of the metropolitan police department in a sixth floor office at the plush Watergate










1991 film "Flight of the Intruder" DVD video:

00:13:03


USS Independence CV 62 Commander Air Group: Uh, somebody close that door back there, will you?










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=flight-of-the-intruder

Springfield! Springfield!


Flight Of The Intruder (1991)


Yeah, I got used to it. I'm a doc-- that's what I do.

Naw, nobody gets used to it.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0102926/quotes

IMDb


The Silence of the Lambs (1991)

Quotes


Jame "Buffalo Bill" Gumb: It rubs the lotion on its skin. It does this whenever it is told.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=4324

The American Presidency Project

Richard Nixon

XXXVII President of the United States: 1969-1974

244 - Address to the Nation Announcing Decision To Resign the Office of President of the United States

August 8, 1974


I have never been a quitter. To leave office before my term is completed is abhorrent to every instinct in my body.










http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/19/AR2006041901099.html

The Washington Post


By Art Buchwald

Tuesday, July 30, 1974; Page B01


You can go on stilts.
You can go by fish.
You can go in a Crunk-Car
If you wish.
If you wish
You may go
By lion's tale.
Or stamp yourself
And go by mail.
Richard M. Nixon
Don't you know
The time has come










http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/19/AR2006041901099.html

The Washington Post


By Art Buchwald

Tuesday, July 30, 1974; Page B01


In an old blue shoe.
Just go, go, GO!
Please do, do, do, DO!










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054387/releaseinfo

IMDb


The Time Machine (1960)

Release Info

USA 17 August 1960



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0054387/fullcredits

IMDb


The Time Machine (1960)

Full Cast & Crew

Rod Taylor ... H. George Wells










1960 film "The Time Machine" DVD video:

00:41:33


Filby: That's the last alert! Hurry! Hurry!

H. George Wells: Listen - listen, this is important.

Filby: Look. An atomic satellite zeroing in. That's important. Come on! Come on!

H. George Wells: But I've got to talk to you!










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=38014

The American Presidency Project

Ronald Reagan

XL President of the United States: 1981 - 1989

Radio Address to the Nation on the Soviet-United States Nuclear and Space Arms Negotiations

November 2, 1985

My fellow Americans:

Yesterday in Geneva American negotiators presented to their Soviet counterparts new proposals designed to achieve real reductions in the nuclear arsenals of both the United States and the Soviet Union. My instructions to our negotiators also asked that this round of the negotiations be extended into this coming week so that our team can make a full presentation of our new proposals and so that the Soviets have the opportunity to ask questions about them. I am very pleased that the Soviet Union has agreed to this extension of the talks. I know you join me in hoping that this will be a productive week in Geneva. Our new proposals address all three areas of these negotiations: strategic nuclear arms, intermediate-range nuclear forces, and defense and space systems. They build upon the concrete reduction proposals American negotiators have had on the table since early in the talks, and they take into account expressed Soviet concerns.

Our objective since the start of the administration in 1981 has been to achieve real progress in reducing not only nuclear arms but conventional forces and chemical weapons as well. We've been firm and consistent in our arms control approach. Just as important, we have placed great value on maintaining the strength and unity of our alliances and ensuring that the security interests of our allies are enhanced in these negotiations. And we've demonstrated flexibility in taking legitimate Soviet interests into account. I'm pleased to report to you that our strategy has been working. I believe we've laid the groundwork for productive negotiations in Geneva. The first sign of this was when Soviet Foreign Minister Shevardnadze presented to me at our White House meeting in September a Soviet counteroffer to our own earlier proposals. The Soviet negotiators then presented this in detail in Geneva, and our negotiators and our experts here at home have had a chance to analyze it carefully.

Based on this analysis, I decided upon the new U.S. proposals and instructed our negotiating team to present them in Geneva. Judged against our very careful criteria for reaching sound arms control agreements, we found that the Soviet counterproposal had some flaws and in some ways was one-sided. But as I made clear in my speech to the United Nations, the Soviet move also had certain positive seeds which we wish to nurture. Our new proposals build upon these positive elements. One of them is the Soviet call for 50-percent reduction in certain types of nuclear arms. For more than 3 years we've been proposing a reduction of about half in the strategic ballistic missiles of both sides. We therefore have accepted the 50-percent reduction proposed by the Soviets.

At the same time, we're making it clear that we have a safer and more stable world. And if we're to have that, reductions must be applied to systems which are comparable, and especially to those which would give either side a destabilizing first-strike advantage. We not only want to bring nuclear arms way down to equal levels in a stable way, we also want to decrease our mutual reliance for security on these extremely destructive offensive arsenals. Thus, we're seeking to discuss at the same time with the Soviets in Geneva how together we can try to help make the world a safer place by relying more on defenses which threaten no one, rather than on these offensive arsenals. Each of us is pursuing research on such defenses, and we need to be talking to each other about it.

I have written to both allied leaders and Soviet General Secretary Gorbachev about our new proposals. And I have informed Mr. Gorbachev how much I am looking forward to our meeting later this month in Geneva. He and I will have a broad agenda at our meeting, one that includes human rights, regional issues, and contacts between our peoples, as well as the Geneva and other arms control negotiations. If we hope to succeed in our efforts to create a safer world and to bring about a fresh start in the U.S.-Soviet relationship, progress will be needed in all of these areas. And this can only be accomplished if the Soviet leaders share our determination. We're encouraged because after a long wait, legitimate negotiations are underway.

Now, we've had a proposal on the table in Geneva for quite a while. Now the Soviet Union has offered a counterproposal, and we, in turn, have a new proposal now reflecting some of the elements of both of the others. And this is what negotiation is all about. I can't give you any more details about our new arms control proposals because we have to let the negotiators work this out behind closed doors in Geneva. But I want to leave you with the four key objectives our American negotiators are seeking: deep cuts, no first-strike advantages, defensive research—because defense is much safer than offense—and no cheating.

Until next week, thanks for listening. God bless you.

Note: The President spoke at 12:06 p.m. from Camp David, MD.










http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/flight-of-the-intruder-1991

FLIGHT OF THE INTRUDER


Roger Ebert


January 18, 1991

"Flight of the Intruder" is a buddy movie about Navy pilots in the Vietnam War, circa 1972. It's a little darker than most buddy movies - the buddies keep having to be replaced when pilots are killed - and it has the germ of an idea to it. But it's a strangely disconnected movie that leads up to a point, makes it, and then drones on for another 45 minutes in increasingly witless cliches.

The early scenes are the best. We're onboard an aircraft carrier off Vietnam, with pilot Brad Johnson, who is frustrated because he's being asked to risk his life to hit meaningless targets in the jungle. Objectives of military importance seem to be off limits, and so the hurt is deep when his bombardier is killed by a lucky rifle shot during a tree-top mission.

He expresses his frustration to his commanding officer, played by Danny Glover, but Glover talks tough and won't listen to complaints. Then there's a brief break for R & R, during which the Barroom Brawl Rule is observed ("If the characters in a movie go into a rough-and-tumble saloon, a fight will eventually break out"), and then Johnson meets a young Navy widow (Rosanna Arquette) and spends a sweet interlude with her.





http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/longterm/movies/videos/flightoftheintruderpg13hinson_a0a9cb.htm

Washington Post


‘Flight of the Intruder’

By Hal Hinson

Washington Post Staff Writer

January 18, 1991


It's one of recent history's stranger twists that John Milius's jingoistic, warmongering "Flight of the Intruder" should move onto our nation's movie screens this weekend. Timing indeed is everything, and in this case it transforms a routinely bad war movie -- one that would under normal circumstances vanish quickly from memory -- into an unsavory though chillingly relevant detail on the landscape of current events.

Set aboard an aircraft carrier in the South China Sea in 1972, the film is a "Top Gun" clone that looks with something like loving nostalgia at the glory days of the Vietnam War. In general the story centers on a group of American pilots flying the Navy's A-6 fighter jet -- nicknamed the Intruder -- and in particular on a fighter jock named Grafton (Brad Johnson) and his attempts to take his revenge on the North Vietnamese for the death of his partner. What he wants to do is fly into Hanoi, which is off-limits to American bombs but contains a large concentration of missiles, and blow them to smithereens.

Of course, Grafton manages to pull another pilot (Willem Dafoe) into his plot and execute his revenge. He is after all an American cowboy hero who makes his own rules and is darned cute in the process. Milius likes to operate on a mythic level, and "Intruder" is his comic-book depiction of the noble American soldier hero and the modern brotherhood of the sword. It's about camaraderie and male bonding, about grace under pressure, macho sacrifice and nervy disregard for any authority beyond your own conscience. More than that, though, it's about blowing stuff up, and while this may be questionable under normal circumstances, at this particular moment it seems offensive in the extreme.










1991 film "Flight of the Intruder" DVD video:

01:26:47


US Navy Commander Frank "Dooke" Camparelli - USS Independence CV 62 air squadron commander: I want you out of my squadron. You'll be transferred out at my convenience.

US Navy Lieutenant Jake "Cool Hand" Grafton - USS Independence CV 62 US Navy A-6 Intruder pilot: Wait a minute! Good men die, and all we care about is following the rules, huh?

US Navy Commander Frank "Dooke" Camparelli - USS Independence CV 62 air squadron commander: What are you looking for, Grafton? Revenge? Now, this is not the place for it. You're going to shake your fist at God and say, "Give me revenge?" Well, He ain't listening. You know what's going on back home. Bombs, riots, people spitting on soldiers in airports. The whole country is tearing itself apart. Is there anything in this pissant war worth that? Christ, all we really got is each other. I want you to think about that while we're out there this morning, Mr. Grafton.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 4:17 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Thursday 08 October 2015