Wednesday, November 11, 2015

"This is a story of how I died."




http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077394/quotes

IMDb


Damien: Omen II (1978)

Quotes


Richard Thorn: The boy has got to die!










From 6/5/1978 to 9/20/1993 is 5586 days



From 2/18/1963 to 6/5/1978 is 5586 days



From 1/21/1979 to 5/8/1994 is 5586 days



From 2/26/1990 to 6/13/2005 is 5586 days



From 3/31/1989 to 7/16/2004 is 5586 days



From 3/16/1991 to 7/1/2006 is 5586 days



































10800_DSC01669.JPG










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077394/quotes

IMDb


Damien: Omen II (1978)

Quotes


Richard Thorn: He's not human.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=47090

The American Presidency Project

William J. Clinton

XLII President of the United States: 1993-2001

Remarks to Physicians and Supporters on Health Care Reform

September 20, 1993

Good morning. I thank you for coming here, and I thank Dr. Koop for his stirring remarks. He always makes a lot of sense, doesn't he? And the Nation is in his debt for his work as Surgeon General and now, for the work he is about to undertake in behalf of the cause of health care reform.

I also want to thank the many physicians from all across America, from all walks of medical life who have made a contribution to the debate as it has progressed thus far. I got very interested in this subject years ago when, as the Governor of my State, I noticed I kept spending more and more for the same Medicaid and had less and less to spend on the education of our children or on preventive practices or other things which might make a profound difference in the future.

In 1990 I agreed to undertake a task force for the National Governors' Association, and I started by interviewing 900 people in my State who were involved in the delivery of medical care, including several hundred doctors. Some of them are in this room today. I thank them for their contributions, and I absolve them of anything I do which is unpopular with the rest of you. [Laughter]

I'm glad to see my dear friend and often my daughter's doctor, Dr. Betty Lowe, the incoming President of the American Academy of Pediatrics; my cardiologist, Dr. Drew Kumpuris, who pulls me off a treadmill once a year and tells me I'm trying to be 25 when I'm not— [laughter]—and Dr. Morriss Henry from Fayetteville, Arkansas, back here, an ophthalmologist who hosted the wedding reception that Hillary and I had in Morriss and Anne's home almost 18 years ago next month; Dr. Jim Weber, formerly president of the Arkansas Medical Society. We started a conversation with doctors long before I ever thought of running for President, much less knew I would have an opportunity to do this.

This is really an historic opportunity. It is terribly important for me. One of the central reasons that I ran for President of the United States was to try to resolve this issue, because I see this at the core of our absolute imperative in this sweeping time of change to both give the American people a greater sense of security in the health care that they have, and call forth from our people—all of our people, including the consumers of health care—a renewed sense of responsibility for doing what we all ought to do to make this country work again.

I am determined to pursue this in a completely bipartisan fashion. And I have reached out to both Republicans and Democrats, as well as the thoughtful independents to help. There is one person in the audience I want to introduce, a longtime friend of mine who has agreed to help mobilize support for this approach among the Democrats of the country, the distinguished former Governor of Ohio, my friend Dick Celeste, who's here. Thank you for being here.

When Dr. Koop talked about the ethical basis of this endeavor, he made perhaps the most important point. If I have learned anything in these years of public endeavors, or anything in the last several months of serving as your President, it is that once people decide to do something, they can figure out how to do it.

When, one week ago today, on the South Lawn of the White House, Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat signed that peace accord, they did not even know what the ultimate map-drawing of the city of Jericho would be, or how all the elections would be held, or how the Palestinians' candidates would advertise on the radio since the radio stations don't belong to the Palestinians. I could give you a hundred things they did not know the answer to. They knew one thing, they couldn't keep going in the direction they were going, and so they decided to take a different direction.

When President Kennedy's administration challenged this country to go to the Moon, they didn't have a clue about how they were going to go. The Vice President knows more about science than I, so he can tell it in a funnier way about they didn't understand what kind of rocket they were going on and what their uniforms would be like and on and on and on. But the ethical imperative is perhaps the most important thing. We have to decide that the costs, not just the financial costs but the human costs, the social costs of all of us continuing to conduct ourselves within the framework in which we are now operating is far higher than the risk of responsible change.

We have certainly tried to do this in a responsible way. I want to thank the First Lady and all the people who work with her. I want to thank Tipper and Ira and Judy and everybody who was involved in this. We have really worked hard to reach out to, literally, to thousands and thousands of people in this great medical drama that unfolds in America every day.

I want to thank Donna Shalala and the Department of Human Services for the terrific work they have done. We have really tried to do this in an embracing and a different way, almost a nonpolitical way. If you look around this room, we have doctors from Maine to Washington, from Minnesota to Florida. Some of you see patients in rural Virginia, some in public hospitals, others of you devote your lives to training the next generation of physicians.

But I think every one of you is committed to seeing that we provide the finest health care in the world. That means as we undertake this journey of change, we clearly must preserve what's right with our health care system: the close patient-doctor relationship, the best doctors and nurses, the best academic research, the best advanced technology in the world. We can do that and still fix what's wrong. In fact, we can enhance what's right by fixing what's wrong.

If we reduce the amount of unnecessary paperwork and governmental regulation and bureaucracy, that will by definition enhance the doctor-patient relationship. If we spend less money on paying more for the same health care and the incentives to churn the system, we will have some more money, for example, to invest more in medical research and advanced technology and breaking down the barriers which still limit our ability to solve the remaining problems before us. We need a discussion. We need constructive criticism. We need constructive disagreement on some points. This is a very complex issue.

I worked at this for over a year and realized when I was a Governor I was just beginning to come to grips with it. When we started this great enterprise and I asked Hillary to undertake this task and she looked at me as if I had slipped a gasket—[laughter]—I knew more about it than she did. Now, she knows a lot more about it than I do.

This is a learning effort. We are going to start today, as many of you know, this health care university, we call it, for Members of Congress, and about 400 Members of Congress have signed up for 2 intensive days of learning. That is an astonishing thing. I have never seen anything like it: these Members, without regard to their party and completely without respect to the committees they are on, since most of them are on committees that would not have direct jurisdiction over this, hungering to know what you go through every day, hungering to learn, wanting to avoid making an irresponsible decision but determined that they should make some decisions to change this system. I think that is a terrific cause for hope.

For patients, the reform we seek will mean more choices. Today, employers are too often forced by rising health care costs to decide which plans to offer their employees, and often they are inadequate or too costly. The decision is usually based on the bottom line, and is a moving bottom line as more and more Americans every month actually lose their health insurance for good. Our plans give consumers the power to choose between a broad range of plans within their region, giving them more freedom to find and to stay with a doctor they like.

For doctors, reform will mean the flexibility to choose which networks or providers you want to join. If you want to be involved with one, that's fine. If you want to be involved with more than one, that's fine. So that whatever you want to do to continue to see the patients you see today, you will be able to do it. It's your choice.

We intend to see a reform that drastically simplifies this system, freeing you from paperwork and bureaucratic nightmares that have already been well discussed. I cannot tell you how moved I was when we were at the Washington Children's Hospital the other day and we heard not only the statistics that the hospital has calculated that they spend $2 million a year on paperwork unrelated to patient care and keeping up with the procedures, but the human stories. I mean, we had a nurse actually tell us about being pleaded with by a young child with cancer to play with the child, and she couldn't do it because she had to go to a little seminar on how to learn how to fill out a new set of forms that they were being confronted with, and she said, that really was a picture of what their life was like; an eloquent doctor who said she wanted to live in Washington, DC, she wanted to care for the poor children in the area. She did not go to medical school to spend her life poring over a piece of paper. And all of you have had that experience.

We can do better than this. We also know we're going to have to trim back Government regulations that get in your way and do little to protect the patients or provide better care. If we simplify the system, we will reduce the apparently insatiable bureaucratic urge that runs through administrations of both parties and seems to be a permanent fixture of our national life to micromanage whatever aspect of tax dollars they have some jurisdiction over. We are determined to undo much of that. We want to respect your training, your judgment, and your knowledge and not unduly interfere with what you do.

We also are determined to preserve the quality of health care that our people receive. Today, part of the reason we have the finest doctors in the world are the academic health centers. For years they have been the guardians, the guarantors of quality, training doctors and health care professionals and reaching into surrounding communities to provide help for those in need. In the coming years, these centers, if our plan passes, will have even greater responsibility to turn out high quality physicians, particularly primary care physicians who will work in underserved areas, and to create a system of lifelong learning for health care professionals. And they must continue to expand their partnerships with communities around them.

The initiative I am offering offers the possibility of giving real building blocks to this Nation's health care system to fill in a lot of the gaps which exist for millions of Americans, not just universal coverage gaps but also organizational problems and the lack of adequate access.

I want this plan to be fair, compassionate, and realistic, and I believe it is. Health security can be provided to the American people so that you don't lose your health care when you lose your job; you don't get frozen into a job because someone in your family has been sick and you're in the grip of the preexisting condition syndrome, which is literally undermining labor mobility in a world where the average 18-yearold American must change work eight times in a lifetime to be fully competitive, when security means the ability to continuously learn and find new and evermore challenging work, not to stick in the same rut you're in anymore. We don't have that option. We are literally rendering people insecure through job lock, undermining their potential, keeping them from moving on, and also keeping others from moving up into the positions they previously held. This is a serious economic problem.

This plan will guarantee that every patient who walks in your door is covered. It will make sure you are paid to keep your patients healthy as well as to treat them when they're sick. It will give you the flexibility and freedom you need to do your jobs. In return, it must demand more responsibility from all of us. We must have a new generation of doctors which has a recommitment to primary care. We don't have enough primary care physicians in America, and I think we all know it. We have to care about family practice, pediatrics, and preventive medicine. And we all have to work together to get medical costs under control.

But I'm convinced with your leadership we can do that. Without your help, we could not have covered as much ground as we have covered so far. I thank Dr. Koop for what he said. But the attention to detail by this project is the direct result of the painstaking effort and the hours that have been provided by physicians and other health care providers who have come to this town and spent day after day after day after day almost always at their own expense just to do something to help their country as well as to improve the quality of their own practice. We know that this will not be done overnight. We know that we will have to have a long-term commitment from individuals, from Government, from businesses, and from health care professionals. But we know that we have to begin now. This is a magic moment.

Let me just say two things in closing. There are a lot of other things we haven't discussed, and I know that, but we didn't come here for a seminar on the details of it. We are trying some innovative approaches to the malpractice problem, which I think will find broad favor. We are going to do some things that will increase public health clinics' ability to access people who are otherwise left out of the system and try to deal with these horrible statistics on immunization and the absence of prenatal care. There are a lot of those things that are going to be dealt with.

But I want to make two points in closing. First of all, there are a lot of disconnects as you might imagine between Washington, DC, and the rest of America, which everybody loves to talk about when they get alienated from the Federal Government. But one of the most amazing in this has been the following thing: I don't talk to any doctor or any hospital administrator or any nurse with any seniority in nursing who doesn't believe that there's a huge amount of waste in this system, that has nothing to do with caring for people, which can be gotten rid of. I don't talk to anybody in Washington who thinks you can do it. [Laughter]

Our friends in the press are laughing because you know I'll finish this talk, then they'll go talk to somebody on the Hill who will say, "Aahh, they can't save that money in Medicare and Medicaid. It's got to be that way. We really need a room under the garage in the Children's Hospital in Washington, DC, which is piling up paper 6 1/2 feet a day. We've got to have that. How would we function?"

Hillary goes to the Mayo Clinic; they've already got their annual average cost increases now down under 4 percent. And we talk about, you know, maybe getting it down over the next 3 or 4 years to inflation plus population plus 2 percent, and they talk about how we are slashing Medicare and Medicaid, when what we really want to do is take the same money and not take it out of health care, but use it to cover the uninsured, unemployed, use it to cover some new services to do more preventive primary health care. So this is an interesting thing. Dr. Koop said: In the past, reform has been imposed on the doctors. You might have to come up here and impose it on the politicians and the bureaucrats. You may have to do that.

I say that not to be critical of the Congress. We are all—all of us see the world—[laughter]—no, no, no, I don't—all of us see the world through the prism of our own experience, don't we? You do. I do. We all do that. And they are so used to believing that the only way they can be decent stewards of the public trust, to take care of the poor on Medicaid and the elderly on Medicare, they are so used to believing that the only way they can do it is just to write out a check to pay more for the same health care, never mind if it's 2 or 3 or 4 times the rate of inflation; never mind if there's a 16percent increase in the Medicaid budget for the coming year, when we estimate no more than a 2-percent increase in the enrollments in Medicaid.

We're just so used to believing that in this town that we have to have your help to believe that it can be different, and you can enhance the care people get, not undermine it. I don't want to minimize that. Yes, we need your critical scrutiny of the specific plan the administration will propose. Yes, we do. But we also need for you to convince the people who live here, who believe we are trapped in this system, that it can be different. And you are the ones who have responsibility for caring for people. If you can believe it can be different, you can convince the Congress that it can be different, that they are not going to hurt, they are going to help by making some of these changes.

The second point I want to make in closing is this: This is really a part of a great national discussion we have to have about what kind of people we are and what kind of country we're going to be. And Dr. Koop said it better than I could, but we can't really get the kind of health care system we need until there is a real renewed sense of responsibility on the part of everyone in this system. It is terribly important to recognize that we have certain group behaviors in this country that, unless they are changed, we will never get health care costs down to the level that our competitors have.

It's not just high rates of AIDS and excessive smoking; it's high rates of teen pregnancy, of low birth weight, of poor immunization of children. It's outrageous rates of violence that we willfully refuse to deal with by taking away the main cause of it, which is the unrestricted access that young people in our most violent areas have to guns that give them better weapons than the police.

Yes, within the health care system, doctors shouldn't perform unnecessary procedures, patients shouldn't bring frivolous malpractice suits, people who use the health care system now, who aren't in it now, are going to have to pay a little for their health care, so they realize there is a price for everything instead of when all of the money just comes from a third-party source they don't know. There needs to be more responsibility within this system but we also have got to remember that if we can plant the ethical roots that Dr. Koop talked about, we may then be able not only to change this system but to use this success to try to change some of the destructive group behavior that is tearing this country apart.

But believe me, it all begins here. If we can give the security of decent health care to every American family, it will be the most important thing that the Government has done with—not for but with—the American people in a generation. And it can only happen if people like you lead the way.

Thank you very much.

[At this point, Hillary Clinton invited participants to breakfast.]

Q. Mr. President, is Senator Moynihan wrong?

The President. [Inaudible]—you heard what he said yesterday? What he said was absolutely right. I mean, based on the experience of the last decade, you can't get the cost down to zero, but that's not what we proposed. We proposed working over a 5-year period to move the Government's cost to inflation plus population growth. And in the beginning—we have inflation plus population growth plus another 2 or 3 percent. Where this group care is working well, like at the Mayo Clinic, they now are down to less than inflation plus population growth. So I believe that if you give us 5 years to do it, we can get there. But it will require some substantial changes.

What I said was true. People in Washington can't imagine that it can be different because of the experiences they've had over the last 5 years. But to say we're trying to cut Medicare and Medicaid, it's not true. We propose never to take it below inflation plus population growth.

NOTE: The President spoke at 8:45 a.m. in the East Room at the White House.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077394/releaseinfo

IMDb


Damien: Omen II (1978)

Release Info

USA 5 June 1978 (Chicago, Illinois) (premiere)



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077394/fullcredits

IMDb


Damien: Omen II (1978)

Full Cast & Crew


Jonathan Scott-Taylor ... 'Damien' / Damien Thorn










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-andy-griffith-show/opie-and-the-spoiled-kid-9113/

tv.com


The Andy Griffith Show Season 3 Episode 21

Opie and the Spoiled Kid

Aired Monday 9:30 PM Feb 18, 1963 on CBS

When a spoiled kid moves to town, he thinks he can walk all over the townsfolk, including Andy and Barney. Of course when his bike gets impounded and his dad wants to sell it, Arnold gets a rude awakening.

AIRED: 2/18/63










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=9565

The American Presidency Project

John F. Kennedy

XXXV President of the United States: 1961 - 1963

68 - Remarks Upon Presenting the National Medal of Science to Theodore von Karman.

February 18, 1963

Gentlemen:

Dr. von Karman, it is a great pleasure for me to select you as the first recipient of the National Medal of Science. I know of no one else who more completely represents all of the areas with which this award is appropriately concerned--science, engineering, and education.

This Nation, and indeed the entire free world, holds you in the highest esteem and respect for your devoted service, for your scientific achievements, and for your warmly human gifts as a teacher and counselor. Your assistance to the United States Air Force and to the NATO Advisory Group for Aeronautical Research and Development have been outstanding. We also are deeply indebted to you for your continuing efforts in the promotion of international cooperation in science and in engineering.

It is hard to visualize what the world would be like without aircraft and jet propulsion, or without the vision we have, just entering the realm of reality, of exploring space. I am especially glad to present this first National Medal of Science to one of the pioneers who has helped make all of this new and exciting age possible.

The citation says: "The National Medal of Science is awarded by the President of the United States to Theodore von Karman for his leadership in the science and engineering basic to aeronautics, for distinguished counsel to the Armed Services and for promoting international cooperation in science and engineering."

Note: The President spoke at noon before an invited audience in the Flower Garden at the White House.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0512528/plotsummary

IMDb


The Andy Griffith Show (TV Series)

Opie and the Spoiled Kid (1963)

Plot Summary


Opie's friend Arnold seems to have it all--a new bike, fat allowance, and plenty of leisure time. When the pressure's on, though, Opie learns that these assets are actually Arnold's greatest weakness.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0512528/plotsummary

IMDb


The Andy Griffith Show (TV Series)

Opie and the Spoiled Kid (1963)

Plot Summary


Mayberry is having a bit of a problem with a boy who is continually riding his bike on the sidewalks and knocking people over. The boy, Arnold Winkler, has just gotten his new bicycle and for Opie, it's a beauty. Actually, Opie thinks Arnold, who has just moved to Mayberry with his family, is the luckiest kid around. He not only has a new $70 bike, but he gets a much bigger allowance and doesn't have to do chores to get it. He thinks Opie is a sap and gives him some hints on how to get what he wants out of parents, like stomping your feet, holding your breath and pretending to cry. When Opie tries it with Andy, it doesn't get him very far. When Andy and Barney impound Arnold's bike for again riding on the sidewalk, they get a visit from the boy's father who soon comes to realize just how selfish and arrogant his little boy is.










From 4/23/1968 ( Timothy James McVeigh ) To 6/27/1993 is 9196 days

9196 = 4598 + 4598

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 6/5/1978 ( premiere US film "Damien: Omen II" ) is 4598 days



From 8/29/1940 ( premiere US film "Oklahoma Renegades" ) To 4/23/1968 ( Timothy James McVeigh ) is 10099 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 6/27/1993 is 10099 days



From 10/2/1937 ( premiere US film "Love Is on the Air" ) To 1/19/1993 ( in Asheville North Carolina as United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess I was seriously wounded by gunfire when I returned fatal gunfire to a fugitive from United States federal justice who was another criminal sent by Bill Gates-Nazi-Microsoft-George Bush the cowardly violent criminal in another attempt to kill me the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) is 20198 days

20198 = 10099 + 10099

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 6/27/1993 is 10099 days



From 1/27/1943 ( my biological maternal grandfather Ronald Reagan the United States Army first lieutenant begins active duty service with the First Motion Picture Unit United States Army ) To 6/27/1993 is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

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 1/17/1991 ( the date of record of my United States Navy Medal of Honor as Kerry Wayne Burgess chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps circa 1991 ) is 9207 days



From 1/27/1943 ( my biological maternal grandfather Ronald Reagan the United States Army first lieutenant begins active duty service with the First Motion Picture Unit United States Army ) To 6/27/1993 is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

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 1/17/1991 ( RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 - the Persian Gulf War begins as scheduled severe criminal activity against the United States of America ) is 9207 days



[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2014/07/oklahoma-renegades.html ]


http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=19930627&slug=1708542

The Seattle Times


Sunday, June 27, 1993

U.S. Bombs Baghdad To Retaliate For Plot To Kill Bush

Times News Services

The United States launched a missile attack against Iraqi intelligence headquarters in Baghdad last night in retaliation for what President Clinton described as a "loathsome and cowardly" attempt to assassinate former President Bush during a visit to Kuwait in April.

Saying a "firm and commensurate response was essential to protect our sovereignty," Clinton condemned Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, who he said "ruled by atrocity."

The cruise-missile attack on Iraqi intelligence headquarters lit up the Baghdad night sky, but the city was quiet.

Iraqi U.N. Ambassador Nizar Hamdoun acknowledged the U.S. missiles had struck Iraqi government buildings, but would not say whether the intelligence service was hit. He said some missiles fell in residential neighborhoods.

"There were numerous civilian casualties," Hamdoun said, giving no number. "We're still counting the wounded and dead."

Hamdoun denied Iraq was involved in an assassination attempt.

"The attack was completely unwarranted and unjustified," he said.

In a short televised address to the nation last night, Clinton used blunt language and said the attack was needed to "affirm the expectation of civilized behavior among nations."

The target of the American raid, which was carried out by Tomahawk cruise missiles from a U.S. Navy destroyer and cruiser based in the Red Sea and the Persian Gulf, was the main headquarters of the Iraqi intelligence service in downtown Baghdad. The missiles struck about 3 p.m. PDT, or early Sunday morning in Iraq.










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

tv.com


Stephen King's The Stand Season 1 Episode 1

The Plague

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

AIRED: 5/8/94










http://www.tv.com/shows/battlestar-galactica-1978/war-of-the-gods-2-15062/

tv.com


Battlestar Galactica Season 1 Episode 16

War of the Gods (2)

Aired Sunday 7:00 PM Jan 21, 1979 on ABC

Count Iblis gains overwhelming popularity with the Council, but Commander Adama remains unconvinced. He sends Apollo, Starbuck and Sheba back to the planet where they found the Count to investigate and find out the truth about Iblis before it is too late.

AIRED: 1/21/79










http://www.tv.com/shows/battlestar-galactica-1978/war-of-the-gods-2-15062/trivia/

tv.com


Battlestar Galactica Season 1 Episode 16

War of the Gods (2)

Aired Sunday 7:00 PM Jan 21, 1979 on ABC

Quotes


Iblis: I fear no man, no creature!

Adama : Not even God?

Iblis: What do you primitive creatures know of what you call God?

Adama: Only that we have been given laws that can not be broken by any man or creature!

Iblis: Those laws do not apply to me.

Adama: I wonder....










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0519760/quotes

IMDb


Battlestar Galactica (TV Series)

War of the Gods: Part 2 (1979)

Quotes


Count Iblis: Let her go, I command it!

Captain Apollo: You command no one who does not willingly give you dominion. You have no power over me!

Count Iblis: You know who I am.

Captain Apollo: Yes. I FINALLY know.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0519760/quotes

IMDb


Battlestar Galactica (TV Series)

War of the Gods: Part 2 (1979)

Quotes


Commander Adama: There are very few who've had the opportunity to experience the light of good and truth at first hand.

Sheba: Then you mean that's what happened to us? We got caught in the war between good and evil?

Commander Adama: We've always been caught between good and evil.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0519760/quotes

IMDb


Battlestar Galactica (TV Series)

War of the Gods: Part 2 (1979)

Quotes


Commander Adama: Now, I want you to go back there, alone. You musn't tell anyone of this. And you must forget this conversation. Iblis will pick out your thoughts as easily as listening to a klaxon.

Captain Apollo: I understand.

Commander Adama: I hope so. This could be the most important mission of your life.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 2006


Reading about them riding in that small transport plane for debriefing reminds me of something similar in my memory, I'm pretty sure I wrote about this a couple years ago. I was leaving the Wainwright to return to the States for the end of my enlistment. We were anchored off Monaco and I had to ride in to port in the Captain's gig. Our Senior Chief, who later became Master Chief, met me on the quarterdeck to shake my hand and send me off.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 2006 excerpt ends]



































DSC03588.JPG










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 3:10 AM Friday, April 22, 2011


What was that port during our Med cruise in 1989? The ending of this film got me thinking of that. That would have been late 1989 or very early 1989. The Fire Controlman Senior Chief Petty Officer of our division, who became the Master Chief Petty Officer after I left, told me he was glad I had gone up on the deck of the forecastle that day. We were in port somewhere in the Med, I don't think that was in Naples Italy, but it could have been, but I reject that notion because as I recall no one liked Naples and if a riot was going to happen then we expect it there, but it could have been somewhere. We were in Valencia Spain, which was a place I enjoyed a lot and had never been there before but I don't think that happened there but who really knows because I was on duty the day the rally happened on the pier and thus was sober while usually when on the beach in the Med, I usually was not and there were always girls from Britain. No matter what port we were in, there were always girls who told us they were on holiday from Britain. So where was that? France? Toulon France? Maybe. That was my last stop before flying back to the United States, similar to the 1991 film where they are going to Mexico, I was riding from Monaco France to Toulon France in the back of the mail truck and I was seriously hung over from drinking too much and I was crashed on a pile of boxes in the back of the mail truck that would take me to the US military flight back to Charleston SC. A serious windstorm had blown through Monaco just about that time. The plane flew for what seemed to be only a few minutes before we had several hours of wait time at another airport to repair something that had gone wrong with the airplane.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 22 April 2011 excerpt ends]










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: - posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 10:53 AM Pacific Time near Seattle Washington State USA Sunday 07 July 2013 - http://hvom.blogspot.com/2013/07/speed-racer.html


Speed racer



Somewhere I was writing about my memory of Monaco in 1990 and of how I was disappointed that we arrived in port too late to see the Grand Prix race. All the road barricades and stuff was still up. We must have just missed it.

But then that must have been something else, some other race. I don't now recall.

Yeah, and Brazil. That would explain a lot of unexplained thoughts I have had for a very long time.

Monaco was the last port I visited when I was still assigned to the USS Wainwright CG 28 and I left the ship there for an airplane flight back to the United States.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 07 July 2013 excerpt ends]










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess

To: Kerry Burgess

Sent: Tue, June 20, 2006 9:29:33 PM

Subject: Re: Journal June 20, 2006, Supplemental 2


Kerry Burgess wrote:

What is it about Paris? In my memory, the Wainwright made a port call to Le Havre, France after we earlier visited Portsmouth, England. Several of us went to London for the day. I made a joke as we were leaving port, something like, this is how I like it, roll in to port, raise hell, sneak out at dawn.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 20 June 2006 except ends]










http://www.imdb.com/video/hulu/vi1729037081/

IMDb


Quantum Leap Full Episode (Star-Crossed: June 15, 1972)


Title: Quantum Leap Full Episode (Star-Crossed: June 15, 1972)

Description: Sam (Scott Bakula) leaps into the persona of a womanizing college professor in 1972, encounters his lost love (Teri Hatcher) and attempts to reshape the past. With Dean Stockwell.


Quantum Leap

Star-Crossed: June 15, 1972

Episode 2 Season 1


00:14:12


Dr. Sam Beckett: [ narrating ] She knew. She knew how I liked my burger. Shove that up your gauge circuits, Ziggy.

Dr. Sam Beckett: Thank you. Uh, Donna, Um, could I talk with you?

Donna Eleese: I really don't have time, Dr. Bryant.

Dr. Sam Beckett: Oh, yeah, um, uh. Maybe. Well, I just wait til you finish work.

Donna Eleese: Dr. Bryant, please. Um. I'm quite capable of getting an A in your class by simply doing the work.










http://www.tv.com/shows/quantum-leap/star-crossed-3885/

tv.com


Quantum Leap Season 1 Episode 3

Star-Crossed

Aired Friday 12:00 AM Mar 31, 1989 on NBC

June 15, 1972: As Dr. Gerald Bryant, a literature professor at the same Ohio college attended by his one-time fiancée, Sam has to prevent an amorous co-ed from attaching to him and ruining her life. Despite threats to his job, Al gives Sam the information he needs to reunite his star-crossed lover with her father and, perhaps, giving Sam a second shot at marriage.

AIRED: 3/31/89










http://www.tv.com/shows/quantum-leap/star-crossed-3885/trivia/

tv.com


Quantum Leap Season 1 Episode 3

Star-Crossed

Aired Friday 12:00 AM Mar 31, 1989 on NBC

Quotes


Sam: Hieroglyphics? I can, I can read hieroglyphics?










http://www.tv.com/shows/stargate-atlantis/rising-1-281227/

tv.com


Stargate Atlantis Season 1 Episode 1

Rising (1)

AIRED: 7/16/04










http://gateworld.net/atlantis/s1/transcripts/102.shtml

GateWorld


RISING, PART 2

EPISODE NUMBER - 102

DVD DISC - Season 1, Disc 1

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 07.16.04


WRAITH HALL.

WRAITH: What do you call yourself?

SUMNER: Colonel Marshall Sumner, United States Marine Corps.

WRAITH: So little fear. Is it valour ... or ignorance?

SUMNER: We travelled through the Stargate as peaceful explorers.

WRAITH: You must eat, yet you resist your hunger. Why?

SUMNER: Why have you taken my people prisoner?

WRAITH: You trespassed upon our feeding ground.

SUMNER: Feeding ground?










http://gateworld.net/atlantis/s1/transcripts/102.shtml

GateWorld


RISING, PART 2

EPISODE NUMBER - 102

DVD DISC - Season 1, Disc 1

ORIGINAL U.S. AIR DATE - 07.16.04


WRAITH: All living things must eat. In this I'm sure we are similar. You feel hunger even now -- I can sense it. Yet you resist. Why?

SUMNER: Why do you care?

WRAITH: Hunger is distasteful.

SUMNER (looking at Toran's corpse): Looks to me like the food didn't agree with him.

WRAITH: There we are quite dissimilar, Colonel Sumner. (She leans over Toran, running a long fingernail down his head.) We don't require our food to agree with us.

(Nearby, Sheppard -- with the help of his scanner -- is searching for the colonel.)

WRAITH: What do you call your world?

(Sumner refuses to answer. The Wraith repeats the question but this time her mouth doesn't move and the sound of her voice reverberates. She's clearly exerting telepathic force on Sumner, who struggles under the pressure.)

WRAITH (silently): What do you call your world?

SUMNER (struggling not to speak, but unable to resist): Earth.

WRAITH: It is not among our stars.

SUMNER (still struggling): No.

WRAITH: Tell me of Earth. How many more are there of your kind? (Again, Sumner tries not to let her into his mind.) Thousands? Millions? (delighted) More. Our feeding ground has not been so rich in ten thousand years.

(Sheppard is still making his way towards the hall.)

WRAITH: Your will is strong. (She points at Toran.) This one begged for his life.

SUMNER: Is that the kind of treatment I can expect for myself and my people?

WRAITH: As I have said, all living things must eat.

SUMNER: Then we're done talking.

WRAITH: I think not. Kneel. (Sumner doesn't move. She reaches towards his head. He grabs for her hand but she runs a fingernail down the side of his face. Her voice echoes in his mind.) Kneel. (Sumner falls to his knees.) I have not tasted such strength in so long.










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


WEIR: We've only found a handful of people who are genetically compatible with the Ancient technology and despite your heroic efforts to interface ours with theirs, we need every one of them to sit in this Chair, including Doctor Beckett.

McKAY: What am I supposed to do? He's afraid of that thing.

WEIR: This Chair controls the most powerful weapons known to humankind. I'm afraid of the thing.










From 10/22/1953 ( Dwight Eisenhower - Citation Accompanying Medal of Honor Presented to Second Lieutenant Raymond G. Murphy ) To 7/16/2004 is 18530 days

18530 = 9265 + 9265

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 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate Columbia South Carolina ) is 9265 days



From 4/12/1946 ( premiere US film "Universal Special: Roosevelt - Man of Destiny" ) To 7/16/2004 is 21280 days

21280 = 10640 + 10640

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 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 10640 days



From 2/15/1954 ( Matt Groening ) To 7/16/2004 ( premiere US TV series "Stargate: Atlantis" ) is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/17/1991 ( the date of record of my United States Navy Medal of Honor as Kerry Wayne Burgess chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps circa 1991 ) is 9207 days



From 2/15/1954 ( Matt Groening ) To 7/16/2004 ( premiere US TV series "Stargate: Atlantis" ) is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official Deputy United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/17/1991 ( RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 - the Persian Gulf War begins as scheduled severe criminal activity against the United States of America ) is 9207 days



From 3/28/1999 ( premiere US TV series "Futurama"::series premiere episode "Space Pilot 3000" ) To 7/16/2004 ( premiere US TV series "Stargate: Atlantis" ) is 1937 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 2/21/1971 ( the Convention on Psychotropic Substances ) is 1937 days



From 12/25/1971 ( George Walker Bush the purveyor of illegal drugs strictly for his personal profit including the trafficking of massive amounts of cocaine into the United States confined to federal prison in Mexico for illegally smuggling narcotics in Mexico ) To 7/16/2004 ( premiere US TV series "Stargate: Atlantis" ) is 11892 days

11892 = 5946 + 5946

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 2/12/1982 ( premiere US film "Missing" ) is 5946 days



http://www.tv.com/shows/stargate-atlantis/rising-1-281227/

tv.com


Stargate Atlantis Season 1 Episode 1

Rising (1)

AIRED: 7/16/04










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0822291/releaseinfo

IMDb


Walmart Soundcheck (TV Series)

Julie Roberts (2006)

Release Info

USA 1 July 2006

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0822291/

IMDb


Walmart Soundcheck: Season 1, Episode 10

Julie Roberts (1 Jul. 2006)

TV Episode

Release Date: 1 July 2006 (USA)










http://www.tv.com/shows/doctor-who-2005/army-of-ghosts-1-452192/

tv.com


Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 12

Army of Ghosts (1)

Aired Saturday 8:00 PM Jul 01, 2006 on BBC America

Location: London, Torchwood Tower Date: 2007 Enemies: Cybermen, Torchwood

AIRED: 7/1/06










http://www.tv.com/shows/doctor-who-2005/army-of-ghosts-1-452192/trivia/

tv.com


Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 12

Army of Ghosts (1)

Aired Saturday 8:00 PM Jul 01, 2006 on BBC America

Quotes


Rose: (voiceover) Planet Earth. This is where I was born. And this is where I died. The first nineteen years of my life, nothing happened. Nothing at all, not ever. And then I met a man called 'The Doctor'. A man who could change his face. And he took me away from home in his magical machine. He showed me the whole of time and space. I thought it would never end.

The Doctor: How long are you going to stay with me?

Rose: Forever.

Rose: (voiceover) That's what I thought. But then came the army of ghosts, then came Torchwood and the war. That's when it all ended. This is the story of how I died.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess

Sent: Saturday, July 1, 2006 6:34 PM

To: Kerry Burgess

Subject: Re: Journal July 1, 2006

And every day I have to resist the urge to beat the crap out of these motherfuckers trying to secretly get me into the field of an image with someone else. That's what that guy was doing that hosted the Thanksgiving Day dinner at the place here in Pioneer Square. He walked up behind me, put his hand on my shoulder and when I turned my head, the guy stationed in front of me took the picture. Someday when this is all over and I am hanging onto my sanity by my fingernails, he'll have a great photo to hang on his wall to show off and all it took for him to exploit the situation was to provide a meal to the people in this homeless shelter.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 01 July 2006 excerpt ends]










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0756449/plotsummary

IMDb


Doctor Who (TV Series)

Army of Ghosts (2006)

Plot Summary


As the ghosts of loved ones appear, the whole world celebrates. But as the Doctor investigates he believes that there is a more sinister motive behind their appearence.










http://www.tv.com/shows/doctor-who-2005/army-of-ghosts-1-452192/trivia/

tv.com


Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 12

Army of Ghosts (1)

Aired Saturday 8:00 PM Jul 01, 2006 on BBC America

Quotes


Jackie: What happens when I'm gone?

Rose: Don't talk like that!

Jackie: No, but really. When I'm dead and buried, you won't have any reason to come back home. What happens then?

Rose: I don't know.

Jackie: Do you think you'll ever settle down?

Rose: The Doctor never will so I can't. I'll just keep on travelling.

Jackie: And you'll keep on changing. And in forty years time, fifty, there'll be this woman, this strange woman, walking through the marketplace on some planet a billion miles from Earth. She's not Rose Tyler. Not any more. She's not even human.










http://www.tv.com/shows/doctor-who-2005/army-of-ghosts-1-452192/trivia/

tv.com


Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 12

Army of Ghosts (1)

Aired Saturday 8:00 PM Jul 01, 2006 on BBC America

Quotes


Jackie: You're always doing this. Reducing it to science. Why can't it be real? Just think of it, though. All the people we've lost. Our families coming back home. Don't you think it's beautiful?

The Doctor: I think it's horrific.










http://www.tv.com/shows/doctor-who-2005/army-of-ghosts-1-452192/trivia/

tv.com


Doctor Who Season 2 Episode 12

Army of Ghosts (1)

Aired Saturday 8:00 PM Jul 01, 2006 on BBC America

Quotes


(The Doctor sees the large sphere)

The Doctor: This is a void ship.

Yvonne Hartman: And what is that?

The Doctor: Well, it's impossible for starters. I always thought it was just a theory. It's a vessel designed to exist outside time and space. Travelling through the void.

Dr Singh: What's the void?

The Doctor: The space between dimensions. There's all sorts of realities around us, different dimensions, billions of parallel universes all stacked up against each other. The void is the space in between. Containing absolutely nothing. Imagine that. Nothing. No light, no dark, no up, no down. No life. No time. Without end. My people call it the void, the Eternals call it the Howling. But some people call it hell.

Dr Singh: But someone built the sphere. What for? Why go there?

The Doctor: To explore. To escape. You could sit inside that thing, an eternity could pass you by. The Big Bang, end of the universe, start of the next… wouldn't even touch the sides. You'd exist outside the whole of creation.

Yvonne Hartman: You see? We were right. There is something inside it.

The Doctor: Oh yes.

Dr Singh: So how do we get in there?

The Doctor: We don't. We send that thing back into hell.










http://www.tv.com/shows/futurama/space-pilot-3000-1534/trivia/

tv.com


Futurama Season 1 Episode 1

Space Pilot 3000

Aired Wednesday 10:00 PM Mar 28, 1999 on Comedy Central

Quotes


Fry: Hello! Pizza delivery for... I.C. Wiener? Aww, crud. I always thought by this point in my life I'd be the one making the crank calls.






























http://media.jrn.com/images/SouthCarolina_Logo11.jpg










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


Stephen King

The Stand - The Complete & Uncut Edition


Chapter 38


George McDougall lived in Nyack, New York. He had been a teacher of high school mathematics, specializing in remedial work.


Now that everyone was gone, he still jogged. Every day. For hours. It was only when he was jogging, concentrating on nothing more than the thud of his tennis shoes on the sidewalk and the swing of his arms and his steady harsh respiration, that he lost that feeling of impending madness.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 8:47 PM Monday, August 20, 2007


11/4/2006 10:26 PM


http://www.ontherunevents.com/xmasmarathon/
Christmas Classic Marathon


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 20 August 2007 excerpt ends]










From 12/7/1998 ( my first day working at Microsoft Corporation as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and the active duty United States Marine Corps lieutenant colonel circa 1998 ) To 9/12/2000 is 645 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 8/9/1967 ( United States Marines launch Operation Cochise during United States involvement in the Vietnam War ) is 645 days



From 4/14/1950 ( the US National Security Council Report 68 ) To 9/12/2000 is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

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 1/17/1991 ( the date of record of my United States Navy Medal of Honor as Kerry Wayne Burgess chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps circa 1991 also known as Matthew Kline for official duty and also known as Wayne Newman for official duty ) is 9207 days



From 4/14/1950 ( the US National Security Council Report 68 ) To 9/12/2000 is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

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 1/17/1991 ( RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 - the Persian Gulf War begins as scheduled severe criminal activity against the United States of America ) is 9207 days



From 4/14/1950 ( Francis Sellers Collins ) To 9/12/2000 is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

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 1/17/1991 ( the date of record of my United States Navy Medal of Honor as Kerry Wayne Burgess chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps circa 1991 also known as Matthew Kline for official duty and also known as Wayne Newman for official duty ) is 9207 days



From 4/14/1950 ( Francis Sellers Collins ) To 9/12/2000 is 18414 days

18414 = 9207 + 9207

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 1/17/1991 ( RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 - the Persian Gulf War begins as scheduled severe criminal activity against the United States of America ) is 9207 days



From 5/14/1992 ( as Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps chief warrant officer circa 1992 and United States chief test pilot I performed the first flight of the US Army and Boeing AH-64D Apache Longbow ) To 9/12/2000 is 3043 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 3/3/1974 ( premiere US TV series "Nova" ) is 3043 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 9/12/2000 is 3050 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 3/10/1974 ( Hiroo Onoda surrenders in the Philippines ) is 3050 days



From 9/23/1963 ( the King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals founded in Saudi Arabia ) To 8/3/1998 ( Tom Clancy "Rainbow Six" ) is 12733 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 9/12/2000 is 12733 days



From 9/12/2000 To 9/11/2001 ( the scheduled terrorist attack by force of violence to destroy the New York City World Trade Center and the Headquarters of the United States Department of Defense "The Pentagon" by Bill Gates-Microsoft-Corbis-George Bush the cowardly violent criminal with massive fatalities and destruction ) is 364 days

364 = 182 + 182

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 5/3/1966 ( premiere US TV series episode "F Troop"::"The Day the Indians Won" ) is 182 days



[ See also: http://hvom.blogspot.com/2015/07/francis-sellers-collins.html ]


http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Media-Center/Speeches/2000/09/Bill-Gates-Global-Foundation

Bill & Melinda Gates foundation [ RACKETEER INFLUENCED AND CORRUPT ORGANIZATIONS US Title 18 ]


PRESS ROOM

SPEECHES

Bill Gates - Global Foundation Address

September 12, 2000

Remarks by Bill Gates, co-chair

Good evening. Thank you Gus, and thank you to the Excellencies and Ministers who are in attendance tonight, and to David Miles, the Chair of The Global Foundation, which made this evening possible.

It's great to be among so many people who care deeply about these important issues. This is actually the first talk I've ever given touching on the foundation and the health-giving that we've been doing.

All day long I've been talking about the wonders of new technology and software. That's a very familiar thing for me, because I feel it very passionately but no more passionately than I feel about the causes that we're talking about tonight.

It's great to be here in Australia. My wife and I will have a chance to take a few weeks off and see a week of the Games. We're very much looking forward to that. The Games were last here in Melbourne back in 1956. I was one year old at the time, the same age as my son is right now. But it's interesting to think how the world has changed since then, and it's changed in some very, very positive ways. If you think of health, if you think of the situation that women are in, if you think of access to technology that lets people pursue their curiosity, we have come a long ways.










http://www.amazon.com/Rainbow-Six-Tom-Clancy/dp/0399143904/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1408391541&sr=1-2&keywords=tom+clancy+rainbow+six

amazon


Rainbow Six Hardcover – August 3, 1998

by Tom Clancy (Author)


Product Details

Hardcover: 738 pages

Publisher: Putnam Adult; First Edition edition (August 3, 1998)










http://www.britannica.com/biography/Francis-Collins

Encyclopædia Britannica


Francis Collins

American geneticist

Francis Collins, in full Francis Sellers Collins (born April 14, 1950, Staunton, Va., U.S.)










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 11/29/07 10:18 AM
With your kind of support, Leahy, it is no wonder I have been 100% deployed for 10 years.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 29 November 2007 excerpt ends]





JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 01/14/08 12:32 PM
I find myself underwhelmed with support after being 100% deployed for the past 10 years.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 14 January 2008 excerpt ends]





JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 03/17/08 11:25 AM
c = a - ( b / 3 )

JOURNAL ARCHIVE: 03/17/08 11:34 AM
Today is March 17, 2008. The piracy of my identity continues and I remain 100% deployed and away from home with no end in sight.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 17 March 2008 excerpt ends]










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: - posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 07:21 AM Pacific Time Seattle USA Tuesday 12 March 2013 - http://hvom.blogspot.com/2013/03/wouldnt-it-blow-your-mind-to-hear.html


They stuck a lot of needles in me when I was inpatient at the University of Washington Medical Center back in the summer of 2005. I remember one very dark night when I was in a mental haze from the drugs they were forcing on me (only because I went to the City of Kent Washington police department to report criminal activity directed at my personal property and which continues unabated to this very day) and I awoke in the dark in that hospital bed and a woman was glaring at me as she stuck another needle in hand. I thought about that later and I decided she was glaring at me because she was possibly expected me to club her with my fist, which I did not.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 12 March 2013 excerpt ends]










http://www.tv.com/shows/alien-nation-1989/crossing-the-line-51969/trivia/

tv.com


Alien Nation (1989) Season 1 Episode 18

Crossing the Line

Aired Monday 9:00 PM Feb 26, 1990 on FOX

Quotes


Doctor Death: We meet again. Now the circle is complete, you looked better in uniform.

Matt: It's all over this time.

Doctor Death: I'm outta here or he learns the truth. Drop the gun.

Matt: I've seen how you keep your word.

Doctor Death: Haha.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0519760/quotes

IMDb


Battlestar Galactica (TV Series)

War of the Gods: Part 2 (1979)

Quotes


Lt. Starbuck: [tearfully] I don't know who you are, but whatever you want from me, you can have.

Being of Light: We want nothing from you.

Lt. Starbuck: Then why are you doing all this?

Being of Light: Because we fight a common foe - the forces of darkness and evil throughout the stars.










http://www.azlyrics.com/j/jimcroce.html

AZ

JIM CROCE

album: "You Don't Mess Around With Jim" (1972)



http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/jimcroce/youdontmessaroundwithjim.html

AZ

JIM CROCE

"You Don't Mess Around With Jim"

Uptown got it's hustlers
The bowery got it's bums
42nd Street got Big Jim Walker
He's a pool-shootin' son of a gun
Yeah, he big and dumb as a man can come
But he stronger than a country hoss
And when the bad folks all get together at night
You know they all call big Jim "Boss", just because
And they say

You don't tug on Superman's cape



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 05:38 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Wednesday 11 November 2015