This Is What I Think.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes




http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=the-computer-wore-tennis-shoes

Springfield! Springfield!


The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969)


[ Opening lines: ] The computer
wore tennis shoes
And a twinkle in his eye
Never met a groovier dude,
an electric kind of guy
A socket shock
And suddenly socked him
into a real cerebral high
Growing his mind
into the kind
That leaves old Einstein
wigging out behind
The computer
wore tennis shoes
And a smile upon his face
Turnin' on every chick in town
at a cosmothropic pace
A guy that crazed and amazed
and otherwise dazed
The whole darn human race
Makin' the news,
payin' his dues
That turned-on, uptight,
flat out-of-sight
Totally together
computer in tennis shoes
A guy that crazed and amazed
and otherwise dazed
The whole darn human race
Makin' the news,
payin' his dues
That turned-on, uptight,
flat out-of-sight
Totally together
computer in tennis shoes
Doo-doo-doo-doo-doo
Baa, baa, baa, baa
Doo-doo-doo-doo-doo
Baa, ba-ba-ba-ba, baa, baa
Professor Quigley, I'm sure
that we all appreciate
your interest in progress,
but a computer.
Well, that is a luxury
that we just cannot afford.
Dean Higgins, today,
a computer can hardly
be considered a luxury.
Oh, very well.
Then it is a necessity
that we just cannot afford.
Now, unfortunately,
Medfield has quite
a long list of necessities,
and a computer
just does not have
a very high priority
on that list.
Now, it's not
that I'm old-fashioned.
You all know that I have
an open ear for progress



































2016_Nk20_DSCN0366.JPG










From 4/18/1988 ( the United States Navy Operation Praying Mantis ) To 6/16/1992 is 1520 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 12/31/1969 ( premiere US film "The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes" ) is 1520 days



From 9/22/1941 ( premiere US film "Doctors Don't Tell" ) To 6/16/1992 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 8/1/1964 ( Lyndon Johnson - Remarks Following a Briefing With Space Scientists on the Successful Flight to the Moon ) 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 9723 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 6/16/1992 is 9723 days



From 5/1/1949 ( the discovery of the planet Neptune moon Nereid by Gerard Kuiper ) To 12/14/1975 ( premiere US film "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother" ) is 9723 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 6/16/1992 is 9723 days



From 1/14/1945 ( premiere US film "The Great Flamarion" ) To 6/16/1992 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 4/9/1986 ( --- ) To 6/16/1992 is 2260 days

2260 = 1130 + 1130

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 12/6/1968 ( premiere US film "Star Trek"::"The Empath" ) is 1130 days



From 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 ) To 6/16/1992 is 516 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 4/2/1967 ( premiere US TV series episode "Bonanza"::"The Prince" ) is 516 days



From 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 ) To 6/16/1992 is 516 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 4/2/1967 ( premiere US TV series episode "Bonanza"::"The Prince" ) is 516 days





http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=21090

The American Presidency Project

George Bush

XLI President of the United States: 1989 - 1993

Remarks at the Arrival Ceremony for President Boris Yeltsin of Russia

June 16, 1992

Mr. President and Mrs. Yeltsin, distinguished members of the Russian delegation, welcome to the United States of America. Also, a welcome to all of you who have come here to welcome President Yeltsin and Mrs. Yeltsin. Welcome to the White House.

Mr. President, today marks the beginning of a new era, a new kind of summit, not a meeting between two powers struggling for global supremacy but between two partners striving to build a democratic peace. From this summit we see a new horizon, a new world of peace and hope, a new world of cooperation and partnership between the American and Russian people. Our hope is that this partnership will end forever the old antagonisms that kept our people apart, that kept the world in confrontation and conflict.

Mr. President, your nation is embarked on a great experiment, a new Russian revolution with freedom as its goal. The progress that Russia has made and the promise of more to come owes much to the courage and vision of President Boris Yeltsin. Mr. President, like Peter the Great, you are redefining Russia's understanding of itself, redefining Russia's role in the world. But for the first time in modern Russian history, a leader claims as his authority not the dispensation of history but a democratic mandate. You come here as an elected leader, elected by the people in free and fair elections. And we salute you.

Already, Mr. President, together we're transforming our relations with benefits not simply to our two nations but to the entire world. Today the threat of a cataclysmic conventional war has vanished with the Warsaw Pact and the rise of democracy in Russia. Today the threat of a nuclear nightmare is more distant now than at any time since the dawn of the nuclear age.

Mr. President, I say this with a sense of pride, a sense of awe, and above all, a sense of history. There is no greater gift to the people of America, to the people of Russia, to the people all over the world than an end to the awful specter of global war. And think for just a minute about what that means not for presidents, not for heads of state or historians but for parents and for their children. It means a future free from fear.

This first U.S.-Russia summit gives us a chance to lay the foundation of a more peaceful and prosperous future for all of our citizens. We'll discuss Russia's historic transition to the free market, its integration into the world economy, and our commitment to support those reforms. We will seek new ways to expand trade between our two nations; to create wealth and growth and jobs; new levels of military cooperation to reduce further the risk of war; and finally, new agreements to reduce nuclear arms and to remove from our arsenals the most destructive weapons.

But this morning I want to focus on our ultimate goal, on the challenge we face to forge a new peace, a permanent peace between two nations who must never again be adversaries. Right now, the people of Russia are waging a valiant struggle for the very same rights and freedoms that we Americans prize so deeply. The fate of that revolution, the future of democracy in Russia and other new nations of the old Soviet empire is the most important foreign policy issue of our time. The United States and its democratic allies must play a key role in helping forge a democratic peace.

That is why I urge the Congress of the United States once again to pass the "FREEDOM Support Act" to strengthen democratic reform in Russia and the other new nations of the old Soviet Union. And yes, the aid that I've requested from the Congress is significant, but it is also a tiny fraction of the $4 trillion that this Nation spent to secure peace during the long cold war. The resources we devote now are an investment in a new century of peace with Russia.

History offers us a rare chance, a chance to achieve what twice before this century has escaped our grasp. It is the vision that perished twice in the battlefields of Europe, the vision that gave us hope through the long cold war, the dream of a new world of freedom.

Mr. President, when we think of the world our children and theirs will inherit, no single factor will shape their future more than the fate of the revolution now unfolding in Russia. Your Russian revolution, like our American Revolution, simply must succeed.

Once again, my friend, welcome to the White House. And may God grant a peaceful future to the American and the Russian people. Welcome, sir. Glad you're here.

Note: The President spoke at 10:11 a.m. on the South Lawn at the White House.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103776/releaseinfo

IMDb


Batman Returns (1992)

Release Info

USA 16 June 1992 (Hollywood, California) (premiere)



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103776/fullcredits

IMDb


Batman Returns (1992)

Full Cast & Crew

Michael Keaton ... Batman / Bruce Wayne










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103776/quotes

IMDb


Batman Returns (1992)

Quotes


Selina Kyle: It's the so-called "normal" guys who always let you down. Sickos never scare me. Least they're committed.










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=batman-returns

Springfield! Springfield!


Batman Returns (1992)


Listen...
...it's our secret. Honest.
How can you be so mean
to someone so meaningless?
This power plant...
...is my legacy. It's what I leave behind.
For Chip.
Nothing must prevent that.
Go ahead. Intimidate me.
Bully me, if it makes you feel big.
It's not like you can kill me!
Actually, it's a lot like that.
For a second, you really frightened me.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103776/quotes

IMDb


Batman Returns (1992)

Quotes


Maximillian 'Max' Shreck: Selina! Selina Kyle, you're fired! And Bruce Wayne, why are you dressed up like Batman?

Catwoman: Because he *is* Batman, you moron!

Maximillian 'Max' Shreck: Was.










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=the-computer-wore-tennis-shoes

Springfield! Springfield!


The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes (1969)


- Anything yet, Bradley?
- For our cafeteria.
- Not on us.
- Talk about modernization.
- Quig's still fighting the battle of the computer.
- And it's expensive, too.
How's he doing?
Yeah, that figures.
Aw, Higgins is
weaseling out again.
What's he pulling
this time?
Ah, he's got a new one.
- Hi, Dex.
- He says he's spending too much money
for frogs and Bunsen burners
and garbage disposals.
Thanks.
Quigley, you talk
about $ 10, 000
as though it were 10 cents.
You just don't understand
the problem.
Do you know what the telephone
bill alone is here every month?
Take State.
I don't want to hear
about State.
Yeah,
but do you realize
that they give an entire
course in computer technology?
Now, I don't like to draw
comparisons, gentlemen,
but if we want to keep
abreast of the times
and raise
our academic average,
We have got to modernize.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0033539/releaseinfo

IMDb


Doctors Don't Tell (1941)

Release Info

USA 22 September 1941










http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/nereid/indepth

NASA


Nereid: In Depth


Nereid is one of the outermost of Neptune's known moons and is among the largest. Nereid is unique because it has one of the most eccentric orbits of any moon in our solar system. Nereid is so far from Neptune that it requires 360 Earth days to make one orbit. This odd orbit suggests that Nereid may be a captured asteroid or Kuiper Belt object or that it was greatly disturbed during the capture of Neptune's largest moon Triton.

Discovery:

Nereid was discovered on 1 May 1949 by Gerard P. Kuiper with a ground-based telescope. It was the last satellite of Neptune to be discovered before Voyager 2's discoveries four decades later.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=26413

The American Presidency Project

Lyndon B. Johnson

XXXVI President of the United States: 1963-1969

493 - Remarks Following a Briefing With Space Scientists on the Successful Flight to the Moon.

August 1, 1964

I WANT to say that all Americans are very proud of you today. We are proud of this historic extension of man's knowledge. We are proud of our scientists, and our engineers, and all the great team, under the leadership of one of the greatest of all Americans, Jim Webb, who are responsible for this success. We can be duly proud of our free and open society, our system of government.

We started behind in space. We were making many apologies just a few years ago. We had our failures, but we kept our faith in the ways of freedom, and we did not follow the easy or the inexpensive course.

We know this morning that the United States has achieved fully the leadership we have sought for free men. But we do not claim this as an American triumph alone. In the brief period of time that I have occupied the office of the Presidency, I have visited with the leaders of many countries, more than 25 and less than 50, some 30 of them, big countries and small countries, densely populated peoples, sparsely populated regions, but I have found a deep and exciting interest among all these leaders in cooperating with us and extending their hands to us to supplement the work that we are doing.

I thank them for their tracking stations. I thank them for their joint participation with us. We have considered this adventure a truly peace weapon, rather than a military might.

I think we can say this morning that this is a victory for peaceful civilian international cooperation in this hour of frustration, when so many people are getting upset at some minor disappointments.

I think we can all take great pride in this development. More than 60 countries all around the world work for us and work for peaceful progress and work for peaceful uses of outer space. It is good to learn from this event that we are on the right course.

We know that if we can continue on that course, and if you great scientists, most of whom know no party and no political allegiance, who are concerned with freedom first and America second--if we continue to give you support without any tinge of partisanship, you will give us the leadership and ultimately the supremacy in an area that is essential to the prolongation of civilization itself.

If we could only supplant the fear and the hate, the bitterness and the division, the poison and the venom that our fellow man contains, with the hope and the optimism and the achievements represented by this venture here, how much better our world will be for ourselves, our children, and our grandchildren.

I want to say this in conclusion. In this century in which we live, all my life we have been either preparing for war or fighting a war or protecting ourselves from war. When I grew up as a kid, one of my first real memories was hearing the powder go off on an anvil on Armistice Day.

I remember the terror that flowed from the sinking of the Lusitania. I remember seeing the boys come marching home, and the welcome we gave them at our little schoolhouse. I remember leaving, the day after I voted, to go to Pearl Harbor and crossing the Pacific, and later the Atlantic, and all the men who gave their lives that we could win World War II.

I have seen the billions and billions of dollars that we have spent in the 17 years since that war to protect Western civilization. Now I think it is the most powerful Nation in the world, and I would remind you that we spent $30 billion more in the last 4 years on defense alone than was being spent 4 years ago.

We were spending about $42 billion a year then, and we are spending $51 billion now. So $7.5 billion extra a year for 4 years is $30 billion. That has bought a good many more missiles, and that has bought a good many more combat-fit men. That has bought a good many more antisubmarine weapons, and it has bought a great deal more research.

But now, today, as the most powerful nation in the world, why do we have satisfaction from that? Not just because it protects our scalps and allows us to sleep at night knowing that we are safe, but (2) it gives us the opportunity to enjoy the fruits of this society and to develop this land, not just with parks and recreational areas, highways and swimming pools, things of that kind, but all the blessings that are going to flow from these scientific discoveries and achievements.

Hundreds of lives, millions of dollars were saved in Hurricane Carla in my State alone because they gave them hours of advance notice to get ready: "This is coming, and your lives will be snuffed out if you don't get out of the way." They rode bumper to bumper for dozens of miles getting out of there, 48 hours before it hit. That is what it means to you and to your neighbors.

These men don't wear a DSM this morning, and we are not presenting them any Congressional Medal of Honor. But they do have--they and all of their associates from Mr. Webb down to the fellow who sweeps out the dust in the remote test laboratory, deserve the gratitude and the admiration of all Americans of all faiths, of all parties, of all regions.

You are welcome to the White House. The people who live here are mighty proud of you.

Note: The President spoke at 10 o'clock in the Cabinet Room at the White House.










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=batman-returns

Springfield! Springfield!


Batman Returns (1992)


Don't be naive. The law doesn't
apply to people like him... or us.
Wrong on both counts.
Why do this?
Let's just take him to the police.
Then we can go home...
...together.
Selina...
...don't you see?
We're the same.
We're the same.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 10:56 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Tuesday 26 January 2016