This Is What I Think.
Saturday, October 08, 2016
Mastergate
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0186336/taglines
IMDb
Mastergate (1992 TV Movie)
Taglines
A Washington Scandal Of Hollywood Proportions!
http://www.simpsonsarchive.com/episodes/1F13.html
Deep Space Homer [ The Simpsons ]
Original airdate in N.A.: 24-Feb-94
Homer's next phone call from Moe's is to the President of the United States.
Homer: Hello, is this President Clinton? Good! I figured if anyone knew where to get some Tang, it'd be you. ...Shut up!
http://articles.latimes.com/1992-11-02/news/mn-1151_1_arkansas-governor
Los Angeles Times
Bush Cites Trust; Clinton Upbeat : Democrat: Arkansas governor basks in an emotional satellite rally from New Jersey. New polls boost confidence.
November 02, 1992 CATHLEEN DECKER TIMES POLITICAL WRITER
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — With confetti flying and spirits soaring, Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton reveled Sunday in an emotional climax to his 13-month campaign for the presidency, urging 20,000 supporters to "fight on" for another day to ensure victory.
One more day remains--one that Clinton will fill with most of a 30-hour, 4,106-mile journey to 10 states--but Sunday night's get-out-the-vote rally in the Brendan Byrne arena here served as a symbolic conclusion, in symmetry with the Democratic National Convention that propelled him and running mate Al Gore into the general election.
"My fellow Americans, in this last year and a month, I have done everything I could to reach the heart and the mind of America," said Clinton, his laryngitis-stricken voice rasping painfully. "I have done everything I could to make you believe that we could close the gap in this country between what is and what ought to be in the lives of every man and woman and every boy and girl in America.
"And I ask you now to remember that all the long walk is still to be consummated by Election Day . . . . I ask you to remember that there are 36 hours in which we can fight on, fight on for victory, fight on for a new future for America."
As he spoke, his ebullient supporters chanted: "One more day!"
The night was intentionally reminiscent of the triumphant close of the convention, held just across the river in New York City in July. The same Mylar confetti fell from the ceiling, the same music blared, and Gore even took a turn dancing with his wife, Tipper, as he did during the convention.
Gore, like Clinton, spoke emotionally of the close of their quest, in remarks laced with gibes at President Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle.
"This campaign has been a long and arduous campaign but one filled with excitement and hope," he said. "We are about to prove as a nation that nothing can stop us now.
". . . We believe that it is time to end the division that they (Bush and Quayle) have promoted, to bring our people together, and we believe that it is time for leadership to bring forth from our nation the best that is within us."
He added a plea against complacency: "Remember, there is still a lot of time between now and when the polls close."
At heart, however, neither the candidate nor the campaign appeared to be truly worried.
A CNN tracking poll, which inspired fear among the Clintonites earlier this week when its margin between Clinton and Bush hit a razor-thin one percentage point, showed a seven-point lead for Clinton Sunday morning and an eight-point lead by Sunday night. Other polls also showed a comfortable lead for the Democratic presidential nominee, and internal campaign polls put the gap at seven points.
"There's an emerging consensus in the polls, and that's reflected in our internal polls," said Clinton spokeswoman Dee Dee Myers.
The get-out-the-vote rally was linked by satellite to six other gatherings around the country, including one at the Museum of Flying in Santa Monica.
Clinton said that 100,000 people watched the revelry in all seven sites.
The rally closed out what had been a day filled with undeniable confidence for the Democratic presidential nominee, even if his voice was down to a croak.
In Cincinnati on Sunday morning, Clinton was able to rasp out only 21 seconds of talk before his mouth opened and nothing came out.
"We've fought for a year. We've got two days to go . . . . Fight on. Don't give up. Go!" he whispered.
In Wilkes-Barre, Pa., where he managed three minutes of talk, Clinton remonstrated against a last-minute barrage of criticism from the campaigns of Bush and independent candidate Ross Perot.
"Don't forget there've been a lot of charges and countercharges and ups and downs, but when you strip it all away, this election is a race between hope and fear, between the courage to change and the comfort of the status quo," he said, "between those who say things are fine and those of us who believe that we can do better--that America deserves better."
The governor's aides ascribed the voice troubles to overuse and lack of sleep. At several points in the campaign, Clinton's voice has gone raw--in New Hampshire in February, when he was struggling to maintain his candidacy, and in the spring, when he was forced to take a week off to regain his voice.
Such was the state of Clinton's confidence on Sunday that he never so much as mentioned Bush's name nor Perot's.
Instead, Clinton's staff issued a broadside aimed at the half-hour infomercial Perot ran on television Sunday night, calling it a "multimillion-dollar smoke screen" that demonstrated a "detachment from reality."
The Perot commercial attacked Clinton and Bush. In response, the Clinton campaign released two pages of statistics contradicting Perot's criticisms of Clinton's record in Arkansas.
http://articles.latimes.com/1992-11-02/news/mn-1151_1_arkansas-governor/2
Los Angeles Times
(Page 2 of 2)
Bush Cites Trust; Clinton Upbeat : Democrat: Arkansas governor basks in an emotional satellite rally from New Jersey. New polls boost confidence.
November 02, 1992 CATHLEEN DECKER TIMES POLITICAL WRITER
"During the entire program, he never once mentions how he would rebuild America; he only attacks the other candidates," said Clinton's communications director, George Stephanopoulos. "He offers no solutions, because he doesn't have any."
Despite his confidence and his laryngitis, Clinton still planned to end the campaign with an underdog's schedule. In a surge that begins at dawn today and does not end until Tuesday morning, Clinton will appear in the key states of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Missouri, Kentucky, Texas (twice), New Mexico, Colorado and finally Arkansas.
The journey was scheduled to last 29 hours--if it ends on time, which was questionable--and clock out at 4,106 miles. The strategy behind the locations was simple.
"They're big states, without exception states that the Republicans won in 1988, states that, many of which, the Republicans need to win this year for an electoral majority," said Myers.
The barnstorming schedule demonstrated Clinton's strength going into the final 24 hours before the polls open.
Surveys taken last week in the individual states showed Clinton with leads in all but Michigan, which was a tossup, and Texas, which Bush controlled.
Clinton had planned one Texas stop but then threw on another, indicating the campaign's hope that Bush's lead in his adopted home state was withering.
Analysts have suggested that Perot, a Texan, could take more votes away from Bush than Clinton in his home state, and thus theoretically give the Democrat a chance.
Where Clinton will not go was also telling. As recently as last Tuesday, Clinton was in Florida as part of his longstanding effort to wrest that state from Republican control.
The fact that Florida is not on the list of states to be visited in the closing 24 hours suggests that the Democrats have conceded it, which, of course, they would not admit.
Clinton does have the luxury of not having to worry about three states worth 109 electoral votes--California, Illinois and New York--that the Democrats have struggled to win in recent years to no success.
In Cincinnati, where Clinton opened his day at church, the choir greeted him with a hymn: "I Don't Feel No Ways Tired." And he looked the part. At a tailgate party near Riverfront Stadium before the Cincinnati Bengals-Cleveland Browns football game, he bounded onto the stage and saluted Mayor Dwight Tillery with a rambunctious high-five.
"My voice'll be better by this afternoon, and I'll be there Monday, I'll be there Tuesday," Clinton said.
After his raspy, 21-second speech--perhaps to demonstrate that his illness was limited to his vocal cords--Clinton tossed around a football with his strategist Paul Begala.
In Wilkes-Barre, Clinton shook hands along a rope line for 35 minutes, hatless in the 45-degree cold.
"You can see I may have lost my voice, but with your help on Tuesday we will win a new day for America," he said. "I will fight for you every day in Washington if you give me a chance to do it."
http://articles.latimes.com/1992-11-02/news/mn-1175_1_bill-clinton
Los Angeles Times
Quayle Continues to Drop Hints of Clinton's Infidelity
November 02, 1992 PAUL RICHTER TIMES STAFF WRITER
CINCINNATI — Vice President Dan Quayle Sunday made a last frantic dash through the swing state of Ohio, dropping hints as he went that Democratic standard bearer Bill Clinton lacks fidelity.
Speaking to reporters at the airport here, Quayle said that what the American people want "is a President who has been faithful to his country, faithful to his principles, faithful to his family. And George Bush certainly is that man."
Asked if he specifically was calling Clinton unfaithful, Quayle replied: "I'll let others answer that."
Quayle repeatedly has attacked Clinton's truthfulness. He has only hinted about allegations regarding Clinton's unfaithfulness to his wife.
Quayle flirted with that topic again Sunday when he charged that Clinton had failed the character test applied by Democrats when the late Sen. John Tower (R-Tex.), nominated to be secretary of defense by then-newly elected President Bush, was defeated in his confirmation battle.
Quayle said that, in discussing Tower's nomination, Sen. Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) "talked about women. He talked about alcohol. He talked about conflict of interest. He talked about three categories."
Quayle asserted that Clinton failed "the Tower test" because of his varied and contradictory statements about his draft record. But the vice president stopped short of directly condemning Clinton for infidelity.
The vice president revisited the trust theme during a stop in Portsmouth, Ohio.
"Would you trust Bill Clinton to take care of your family?" Quayle asked a crowd of several hundred at the U.S. Grant Middle School. "Would you trust Bill Clinton with your children?"
As the crowd responded with a resounding "No," Quayle added: "Then let's make sure we don't exchange George and Barbara Bush for Bill and Hillary Clinton."
Quayle visited the two-bedroom clapboard home in Portsmouth, where he had spent the first 18 months of his life. He lived in the modest house when his father was advertising sales manager at the Portsmouth Times.
The vice president used the visit to try to make a favorite point: that despite the multimillion-dollar fortune of his maternal grandfather, Eugene Pulliam, he came from modest beginnings.
"This is another example of the wealthy silver-spoon background that you people in the media have been reporting all these years," he told reporters as he left the house.
The Quayle campaign also touched down in the western Kentucky city of Hopkinsville. But torrential rains and tornadoes forced cancellation of a later Quayle rally in Louisiana, another state where the race is tight.
http://articles.latimes.com/1992-11-02/news/mn-1150_1_president-bush-campaigns
Los Angeles Times
Bush Cites Trust; Clinton Upbeat : Republican: The President hammers away at character issue as he raises new questions about rival's ROTC documents.
November 02, 1992 DOUGLAS JEHL TIMES STAFF WRITER
STRATFORD, Conn. — With his bid for reelection down to its penultimate day, President Bush rushed Sunday from the Midwest to the Northeast to sound a closing-hours appeal for Americans to cast their votes on the basis of trust.
Sensing opportunity in the debate over integrity, Bush fended off questions about his own role in the Iran-Contra scandal and instead demanded that voters scrutinize evidence of Clinton's ambition, his alleged duplicity and his Vietnam-era draft record.
He distilled that message into pure form at a nighttime rally in a packed airplane hangar, saying that the choice facing the nation on Tuesday is "who best to accept the trust of the American people to be in that Oval Office?"
But a closely watched national poll showed his own support slipping, and Bush, who must still pick up support in states crucial to his comeback hopes, also went out of his way throughout the day to call attention to a new charge of abuse related to Clinton's records.
First in a Michigan sports arena and then in this small Connecticut town, Bush thundered with outrage about the sworn claim by a former military officer that Clinton allies had acted in 1974 to seize records about the Democratic candidate's military draft history.
As the Oakland County, Mich., arena rocked with chants of "No way, Bill!" the President, whose prospects rest heavily on the industrial state, blamed the alleged seizure of Reserve Officer Training Corps records on Clinton's "friends and special connections." He demanded anew that the Democrat "level with the American people" about the steps he took to avoid the military draft.
An account of the incident first appeared in Saturday's editions of the Washington Times, and the officer, retired Army Lt. Col. Don Cake, signed an affidavit at the request of Bush aides Saturday evening.
The GOP knew of Cake's allegations in September and tried to interest several news organizations, including The Times, in them. The Times interviewed Cake but could not corroborate key elements of his story.
That Bush chose to give the claims prominence in the waning days of his campaign reflected his continuing need to highlight the traits that he contends render his rival unqualified for high office. "The bottom line is we simply can't take the risk on Gov. Clinton," the President shouted from a podium placed beneath a banner that proclaimed: "Bush Wins!"
"His experience and character simply do not match the criterion for the Oval Office."
In the affidavit, which Bush campaign aides released as Bush finished his speech in Auburn Hills, Mich., Cake said two co-workers told him in late 1973 or early 1974 that two Clinton representatives had demanded and eventually taken from the office Clinton's ROTC file. Cake admits he did not see the alleged Clinton representatives, and says one of the people who told him this was his boss at the time, Col. Guy Tutwiler--then the commander of the university's ROTC program.
Last week, The Times contacted Tutwiler, a Republican who is supporting Bush. He denied Cake's story, although he said he wished it were true. The retired colonel said the only document he remembered involving Clinton was the Dec. 3, 1969, letter to the ROTC in which he backed out of his commitment. Tutwiler said he sent that letter to his commanding general at Ft. Riley in Kansas, on his own initiative, because he considered it politically sensitive. This was in 1974, he said, just as Clinton was involved in his first political campaign, a losing effort to win a seat in Congress.
As Bush flew from Wisconsin to Michigan to Connecticut and on to New Jersey, he repeated in every rally and television interview what has become his familiar refrain: that integrity should matter more than any other trait in the quest for the White House.
With internal Republican polls suggesting that many Americans have not yet finally decided how to cast their votes, White House strategists said that the appeal was intended to overcome Clinton's lead by persuading his supporters to decide, at the last minute, that they "better not" vote for him.
Bush found his offensive somewhat stalled, however, during an uncomfortable interview on CNN in which he met with a series of questions about his role in the Iran-Contra scandal. That topic has been the focus of Clinton's counterattack on character issues, and an uncharacteristically testy Bush maintained a bitter silence during commercial breaks.
In the interview, Bush expressed displeasure with the decision of special prosecutor Lawrence E. Walsh to issue a second indictment of former Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger only four days before the election. That indictment included disclosure of a note Weinberger drafted at the height of the affair, listing Bush as supporting the initiative to swap arms for hostages. The President, whose previous accounts appeared to be contradicted by the note, did not rule out the prospect of firing the special prosecutor if reelected.
http://articles.latimes.com/1992-11-02/news/mn-1150_1_president-bush-campaigns/2
Los Angeles Times
(Page 2 of 2)
Bush Cites Trust; Clinton Upbeat : Republican: The President hammers away at character issue as he raises new questions about rival's ROTC documents.
November 02, 1992 DOUGLAS JEHL TIMES STAFF WRITER
"I am not going to discuss what I'll do about that," Bush said. But "I think it's been a big witch hunt. . . ."
A CNN/USA Today tracking poll, which earlier in the week showed the President closing to just one percentage point behind Clinton and sparked hope in the Bush camp, late Sunday showed Clinton's lead widening to 44% to 36%.
Bush aides emphasized, however, that other polls showed the race holding steady at the national level, and they said that internal polling in key states showed the President to be making gains in Georgia, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. Campaign chairman Robert M. Teeter said that he still believes Bush stands "a very good chance" of winning.
The President himself was clearly weary in the final hours of what will be a nonstop nine-day campaign blitz. But he gave no public hint of any internal despair.
But as his aides weighed polls and other evidence to plan for a final day of campaigning, they expressed uneasiness at the signs that the race might no longer be tightening.
In Michigan, where a Detroit News poll showed Clinton holding a 10-point lead, GOP strategists who have regarded a victory in the state as crucial to the Bush electoral battle plan said that their task there has become unexpectedly difficult. They said that they hope Bush victories in states such as Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Tennessee--all of which have been leaning toward Clinton--could help to make amends should Bush fall short in a state he had hoped would end up in his column.
But the tentative road map for Bush's final day on the campaign trail today served to underscore how little room he has for error. With Clinton holding apparently insurmountable leads in California, New York and Illinois, all-but-final plans call for Bush to try to shore up his own prospects in the battlegrounds of Ohio, New Jersey and Texas, while aiming also at upsets in Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Louisiana.
As he braced for that final blitz, Bush on Sunday maintained an oddly languid public pace, appearing at just two rallies over the course of the day. But aboard Air Force One and at each stop, he gave interviews to local television journalists at an almost nonstop pace.
At the rallies, however, Bush remained relentlessly defiant. Seizing on reports that Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein is planning a massive street party to celebrate his ouster, Bush inspired patriotic eruptions both in Michigan and Connecticut as he vowed once again to confound his wartime foe.
"They are not going to have a demonstration in Baghdad, because they're going to have to contend with me for four more years," he said.
Bush voiced similar disdain for Clinton, whom he suggested had plans to play his own saxophone in an inaugural procession. "Hold the phone, Bill," he counseled his younger rival in an appearance in Auburn Hills. "You are not going to be in the White House, and you are not going to have that parade."
Today on the Trail . . .
Gov. Bill Clinton campaigns in Philadelphia, Cleveland, Romulus, Mich., St. Louis, Paducah, Ky., Ft. Worth and McAllen, Tex., Albuquerque and Denver.
President Bush campaigns in Madison, N.J., Philadelphia, Akron, Ohio, Louisville, Ky., Baton Rouge, La., and Houston.
Ross Perot campaigns in Dallas and Ft. Worth.
TELEVISION
Clinton is a guest on MTV's "Choose or Lose: The Home Stretch" at 8 p.m. PST.
Clinton airs a 30-minute commercial on NBC at 8 p.m. PST, CBS at 8:30 p.m. PST and ABC at 10:30 p.m. PST.
Perot airs a 30-minute commercial on CBS at 8 p.m. PST, a 30-minute commercial on ABC at 10 p.m. PST and an hourlong commercial on NBC at 10 p.m. PST.
From 8/19/1946 ( Bill Clinton ) To 8/18/1973 ( The Killian Document ) is 9861 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/1/1992 is 9861 days
From 7/19/1980 ( Jimmy Carter - Congressional Medal of Honor Remarks on Presenting the Medal to Lt. Col. Matt Urban, U.S. Army, Retired ) To 11/1/1992 is 4488 days
4488 = 2244 + 2244
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 12/25/1971 ( 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 ) is 2244 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 11/1/1992 is 654 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 8/18/1967 ( premiere US film "The Born Losers" ) is 654 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 11/1/1992 is 654 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 8/18/1967 ( premiere US film "The Born Losers" ) is 654 days
From 5/7/1992 ( the first launch of the US space shuttle Endeavour orbiter vehicle mission STS-49 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-49 pilot astronaut ) To 11/1/1992 is 178 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 4/29/1966 ( William Henry Eccles deceased ) is 178 days
From 10/25/1984 ( from my official United States Navy documents: "You received CO's NJP for this offense" ) To 11/1/1992 is 2929 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/9/1973 ( the Watergate burglars sentenced to federal prison ) is 2929 days
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0186336/releaseinfo
IMDb
Mastergate (1992 TV Movie)
Release Info
USA 1 November 1992
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0186336/plotsummary
IMDb
Mastergate (1992 TV Movie)
Plot Summary
Based on a satirical play about the U.S. Senate Watergate hearings in 1973-74.
http://www.simpsonsarchive.com/episodes/1F13.html
Deep Space Homer [ The Simpsons ]
Original airdate in N.A.: 24-Feb-94
The scientist sees the common theme in the popular shows.
Researcher: Why, they're all a bunch of blue-collar slobs!
Scientist: People, that's who we need for our next astronaut.
Assistant: I suggest a lengthy, inefficient search. At the taxpayers' expense, of course.
Scientist: I wish there was an easier way.
[Phone rings]
Homer: Hello, is this NASA?
Scientist: Yes?
Homer: Good! Listen: I'm sick of your boring space launches. Now I'm just an ordinary, blue-collar slob, but I know what I likes on TV.
Scientist: How did you get this number?
Homer: Shut up! And another thing: how come I can't get no Tang 'round here? And also -- [a toilet flushes]
Scientist: People, our long search is over.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=44777
The American Presidency Project
Jimmy Carter
XXXIX President of the United States: 1977 - 1981
Congressional Medal of Honor Remarks on Presenting the Medal to Lt. Col. Matt Urban, U.S. Army, Retired.
July 19, 1980
Secretary Alexander, General Meyer, General Craig, Colonel Kingley, Colonel and Mrs. Urban, men of the 9th Division and the wives that stand beside you:
I can't get over how young you look. [Laughter] It's a special pleasure to be with the men whose service in World War II—in Sicily, in Africa, France—was responsible for the 9th Division being known ever after as the "Old Reliables."
We are here today to honor a hero. Unfortunately, he has had to wait almost 36 years for official recognition from the Government of his special act of heroism. But as the eye witness accounts testify and as the documents prepared at that time testify and as those of you who served with him know, Matt Urban is truly a hero of this great Nation.
Matt Urban becomes the sixth of the "Old Reliables" to be awarded the Medal of Honor for World War II service. His conduct throughout the period from June the 14th until September the 3d, 1944, was an outstanding example of the bold, courageous, inspired, and heroic action which this medal was established to honor.
We also have a special picture of the kind of leadership that sets Matt Urban apart. He galvanized his men, and he led them to success while repeatedly risking his life to save others and to break his troops out of positions when they were pinned down, in sometimes apparently hopeless circumstances, by punishing enemy fire. He was wounded several times. I notice that he wears the Purple Heart with six oak-leaf clusters. But he always kept coming back, and each time his presence brought something extra to his men when they needed it most. He was always willing to give the last ounce of his strength and the last full measure of courage and devotion to his comrades and to his Nation.
War is a terrible thing, wasting the young before they have a chance to reach their full potential. But there are moments, terrible in their danger and devastation, that can also bring out unimaginable courage and leadership that cannot be fully described; but once seen and felt, can never be forgotten.
It is of such soldiers like Lieutenant Colonel Urban and many of you that victory is made, not just in individual battles but in the ultimate conflict between the champions of justice and liberty and all those forces that are marshaled against them. Such men not only draw the full measure of capability 'from within themselves but call forth the best from those around them, inspiring in others the courage and the tenacity to go beyond the limits of endurance and sometimes even beyond the limits of hope, and to succeed in doing what, just a moment before, seemed to be impossible.
I deeply regret the delay of this ceremony for so many years, but I'm grateful, as President and as Commander in Chief, for the privilege of presenting the Medal of Honor to Lieutenant Colonel Urban. I'm grateful, too, for this reminder, so many years later, to our Nation of what freedom means, what it has cost us in the past, what really is at stake when we talk about the spirit of America, what might be demanded of us in the future to protect our Nation's honor and to preserve peace through strength.
As a people we need heroes, real heroes, who when tested excel and in doing so inspire others to reach for greatness within themselves. We need heroes not just for the victories that they make possible on the battlefield but in later days to remind us of what America at its best can be now and in the future—the greatest nation on Earth.
Thank you very much.
Note: The President spoke at 9:31 a.m. at a ceremony in the Regency Ballroom at the Shoreham Hotel.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061420/releaseinfo
IMDb
The Internet Movie Database
Release dates for
The Born Losers (1967)
Country Date
USA 18 August 1967
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b4/Diode_symbol.svg/1000px-Diode_symbol.svg.png
http://www.simpsonsarchive.com/episodes/1F13.html
Deep Space Homer [ The Simpsons ]
Original airdate in N.A.: 24-Feb-94
Assistant: Excuse me --
Homer: Aah!
Assistant: Are you the person that called NASA yesterday?
Homer: No, it wasn't me, I swear! It was...him! [points to Barney]
Scientist: Sir, how would you like to get higher than you've ever been in your life?
Barney: Be an astronaut? Sure!
Scientist: Well, welcome aboard. I think you'll find this will win you the respect of your family and friends.
Homer: [gasps] Respect? Nooo! It was me. _I_ made the crank call. I do it all the time! Check with the FBI: I have a file. I have a file!
- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 05:40 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Saturday 08 October 2016