Sunday, February 05, 2017

Stargate SG-1




http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


DANIEL
You were going to seal the Gate?

OMOC
Tollan is a world in cataclysm. Evacuation was complete, my team stayed to…Our final task was to close the Gate, so that no-one could return and be harmed.

CARTER
Well, wherever you were going, we can recalibrate the co-ordinates from here.

OMOC
The new settlement world is outside the Gate system. We'll need a ship.

DANIEL
Oh! Ah…we don't have ships. Not that kind, anyway.

CARTER
Our space program is relatively new.

INT—BRIEFING ROOM.

HAMMOND
Well, the bottom line here is your survivors have become refugees. If they don't want to be here, we've got to relocate them somewhere.

O'NEILL
You know, General, we have done some fairly good deeds out there. Maybe we should try calling in some markers.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


[Carter places the animal carrier on the bed and opens it, bringing out a ginger cat which miaows. Narim laughs.]

NARIM
I never thought I'd see a living animal.

CARTER
His name's Schroedinger.

[Carter passes the cat to Narim who holds it in his arms.]

CARTER
Oh…it's kind of a joke really. His name, that is. Schroedinger's cat…

NARIM
Oh?

CARTER
Right.
(Carter realizes that Narim does not understand)
Uh, see, there was an Earth physicist by the name of Erwin Schroedinger. He had this theoretical experiment. Put a cat in a box, add a can of poison gas, activated by the decay of a radioactive atom, and close the box.

[Narim continues to pet the cat.]

NARIM
Sounds like a cruel man.

CARTER
Oh, no, no. It was just a theory. He never really did it. He said that if he did do it at any one instant, the cat would be both dead and alive at the same time.

NARIM
Ah! Kulivrian physics. An atom state is indeterminate until measured by an outside observer.

CARTER
We call it quantum physics. You know the theory?

NARIM
Yeah, I've studied it…in among other misconceptions of elementary science.

CARTER
Misconception? You telling me that you guys have licked quantum physics?










From 9/19/1926 ( Masatoshi Koshiba ) 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 23554 days

23554 = 11777 + 11777

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 1/30/1998 is 11777 days



From 9/23/1846 ( Johann Galle and Urbain Le Verrier discover the planet Neptune ) To 3/21/1911 ( Walter Lincoln Hawkins ) is 23554 days

23554 = 11777 + 11777

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 1/30/1998 is 11777 days



From 9/27/1959 ( Dwight Eisenhower - Joint Statement Following Discussions With Chairman Khrushchev at Camp David ) To 12/25/1991 ( as United States Marine Corps chief warrant officer Kerry Wayne Burgess I was prisoner of war in Croatia ) is 11777 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/30/1998 is 11777 days



From 6/29/1995 ( the Mir space station docking of the United States space shuttle Atlantis orbiter vehicle mission STS-71 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-71 pilot astronaut ) To 1/30/1998 is 946 days

946 = 473 + 473

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 2/18/1967 ( Julius Robert Oppenheimer deceased ) is 473 days



From 6/5/1968 ( Robert Kennedy is fatally wounded by gunfire from Sirhan Sirhan ) To 1/30/1998 is 10831 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 6/29/1995 ( the Mir space station docking of the United States space shuttle Atlantis orbiter vehicle mission STS-71 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-71 pilot astronaut ) is 10831 days



From 4/1/1963 ( premiere US TV series "General Hospital" ) To 6/29/1995 ( the Mir space station docking of the United States space shuttle Atlantis orbiter vehicle mission STS-71 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-71 pilot astronaut ) is 11777 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/30/1998 is 11777 days



From 9/22/1962 ( John Kennedy - Remarks Recorded for the Ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial Commemorating the Centennial of the Emancipation Proclamation ) 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 11777 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 1/30/1998 is 11777 days





http://www.tv.com/shows/stargate-sg-1/enigma-7335/

tv.com


Stargate SG-1 Season 1 Episode 17

Enigma

Aired Friday 8:00 PM Jan 30, 1998


SG-1 rescues a group of survivors from a dying planet, but finds that it must deal with its own people when military intelligence wants access to their advanced technology.

AIRED: 1/30/98



http://stargate.mgm.com/view/episode/2518/index.html

STARGATE

THE OFFICIAL MGM SITE


Stargate SG-1 / Season 1 / Enigma

Enigma

Original Air Date: 01/30/1998










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


NARIM
Then Omoc is correct. Your people will use our knowledge for war.

CARTER
It's not us. We are dealing with another part of our government, one that specialises in chronic paranoia.

NARIM
Like Sureeta. It's going to happen again.

CARTER
It doesn't have to…that's why I am here. Narim, I am hoping that you can convince Omoc to consider one of the other planets we've presented.

NARIM
Look, it's no use. He's right. If they are all as primitive or more primitive than you are, Sureeta could happen on any of them.

CARTER
I wish you would stop calling us primitive.










http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/physics/laureates/2002/koshiba-facts.html

Nobelprize.org

The Official Web Site of the Nobel Prize

The Nobel Prize in Physics 2002

Raymond Davis Jr., Masatoshi Koshiba, Riccardo Giacconi


Masatoshi Koshiba

Born: 19 September 1926, Toyohashi, Japan

Affiliation at the time of the award: University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Prize motivation: "for pioneering contributions to astrophysics, in particular for the detection of cosmic neutrinos"

Field: neutrino astrophysics

Prize share: 1/4

Life

Masatoshi Koshiba was born in Toyohashi, Aichi Prefecture in Japan. After first studying at Tokyo University he later earned his PhD from the University of Rochester in New York in 1955. After several years spent working at the University of Chicago, Koshiba returned to Tokyo, where he continues to work and where he conducted his Nobel Prize-awarded research. Masatoshi Koshiba married Kyoko Kato in 1959.

Work

Certain nuclear reactions, including those where hydrogen atoms combine with helium, form elusive particles called neutrinos. By proving the existence of neutrinos in cosmic radiation, Raymond Davis showed that the sun's energy originates from such nuclear reactions. From 1980, Masatoshi Koshiba provided further proof of this through measurements taken inside an enormous water tank within a mine. In rare cases, neutrinos react with atomic nuclei in water, creating an electron and thus a flash of light that can be detected.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


CARTER
Narim…can you tell me why Omoc is so…you know…

NARIM
Obstinate?

CARTER
Yeah…

NARIM
The nearest planet in our solar system was called Sureeta. When we began to explore space, we learned she was inhabited.

CARTER
Did you make contact?

NARIM
Yes, when we thought they were sufficiently advanced. They were on a level very similar to yours.

CARTER
So what happened?

NARIM
We offered them a device…to produce unlimited productive energy. And they used it to make war.

CARTER
How bad was it?

NARIM
In one rotation of our planet, they had destroyed theirs.

CARTER
One day?

NARIM
The destruction shifted our planet's orbit point 3 tekanna, enough to begin a chain of events that…made our world unstable.

CARTER
So that would explain why he's so afraid to give a society like ours any of your technology.

NARIM
Yes.

CARTER
Tell me, what…what were you really doing outside last night.

NARIM
Omoc spoke the truth. By setting the position of your stars, we were able to calibrate the distance between Earth and the new homeworld. It is very far away, Samantha. Too far to hope for a ship in our lifetime.










http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/23_September

EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY


1846: On 23 September 1846, Neptune was first observed very near to the locations independently predicted by astronomers Adams and Le Verrier. They had made their calculations based on the positions of Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus.

An international dispute arose between the English and French (though not, apparently between Adams and Le Verrier personally) over priority and the right to name the new planet; they are now jointly credited with Neptune's discovery. Subsequent observations have shown that the orbits calculated by Adams and Le Verrier diverge from Neptune's actual orbit fairly quickly. Had the search for the planet taken place a few years earlier or later it would not have been found anywhere near the predicted location.





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


Discovery of Neptune

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The planet Neptune was mathematically predicted before it was directly observed. With a prediction by Urbain Le Verrier, telescopic observations confirming the existence of a major planet were made on the night of September 23–24, 1846, at the Berlin Observatory, by astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle (assisted by Heinrich Louis d'Arrest), working from Le Verrier's calculations. It was a sensational moment of 19th century science and dramatic confirmation of Newtonian gravitational theory. In François Arago's apt phrase, Le Verrier had discovered a planet "with the point of his pen".

In retrospect, after it was discovered it turned out it had been observed many times before but not recognized, and there were others who made various calculations about its location, which did not lead to its observation. By 1847 the planet Uranus had completed nearly one full orbit since its discovery by William Herschel in 1781, and astronomers had detected a series of irregularities in its path that could not be entirely explained by Newton's law of gravitation. These irregularities could, however, be resolved if the gravity of a farther, unknown planet were disturbing its path around the Sun. In 1845 astronomers Urbain Le Verrier in Paris and John Couch Adams in Cambridge separately began calculations to determine the nature and position of such a planet. Le Verrier's success also led to a tense international dispute over priority, because shortly after the discovery George Airy, at the time British Astronomer Royal, announced that Adams had also predicted the discovery of the planet. Nevertheless, the Royal Society awarded Le Verrier the Copley medal in 1846 for his achievement, without mention of Adams.










http://lemelson.mit.edu/resources/w-lincoln-hawkins

LEMELSON-MIT


W. Lincoln Hawkins

Polymer Cable Sheath

Walter Lincoln Hawkins was born on March 21, 1911. He was orphaned as a young child and was raised by his sister. He faced a difficult upbringing in a world where it was difficult for African Americans to find adequate encouragement in education and at work. He attended the acclaimed, all-black Dunbar High School in Washington, D.C., where he showed promise in math and science and developed a sense of self-confidence that propelled him toward his dreams.

Hawkins pursued a degree in chemical engineering at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, from where he graduated in 1932. He went on to complete a master's degree in chemistry at Howard University and a doctoral degree at McGill University in Montreal. His specialization was cellulose chemistry.

After completing his education, Hawkins took on a postdoctoral fellowship at Columbia University. In 1942, he was offered a position at AT&T’s Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, New Jersey, where he became the first African American scientist on staff. Over the course of his 34-year career at Bell Labs, he developed a reputation for adding years to the life of plastics, enabling universal telephone service, and, even more important to service providers, making it economical.

At Bell Labs, Hawkins conducted research on polymers, specifically thermal and oxidative stabilization of polymers for telecommunications. Up until about 1950, telephone cables were coated with a costly, as well as toxic, lead-based material. This was replaced with polyethelene, which was introduced after World War II by the British. Unfortunately, these early plastic coatings quickly became brittle and breakable in sunlight.

In 1956, Hawkins, along with partner Victor Lanza, invented a polymer that had all the desired characteristics. This polymer was essentially a plastic that contains a chemical additive composed of carbon and antioxidants that prevents the material from deteriorating, even in severely hot or cold weather conditions. The new material, now known as “plastic cable sheath,” went into production in the 1960s and became widely used as an inexpensive, durable, and safe coating for telecommunications wire. It is still used today to protect fiber optic cable.

Hawkins was named Head of Plastics Chemistry R&D at Bell Labs and later, Assistant Director of the Chemical Research Laboratory. In 1963, he became Bell Labs' Supervisor of Applied Research, and in 1972, he was promoted to department head. Among his numerous technical achievements at Bell Labs was his design of a lab test using spectroscopy to predict the durability of a plastic surface. He also contributed to the development of techniques for recycling and reusing plastics. He published three books, more than 50 scientific papers, and earned 18 U.S. and 129 foreign patents. He was also very active as a mentor of disadvantaged and minority youth; he became the first chairman of the American Chemical Society's Project SEED (Summer Educational Experience for the Economically Disadvantaged).

In 1976, he retired from Bell Labs, but he remained active as a mentor, educator, and industrial visionary for many years after. From 1976 to 1983, he served as the research director of the Plastics Institute of America. He also taught at New York's Polytechnic Institute and acted as a technical consultant for chemical and pharmaceutical companies.

Before his death in 1992, Hawkins was honored with a National Medal of Technology, presented to him by President George H.W. Bush. His awards and distinctions also include the International Award from the Society of Plastics Engineers, the Percy L. Julian Award, the Distinguished Alumni Award from Howard University, and at least five honorary degrees. In 1975, he became the first black engineer to be inducted into the National Academy of Engineering. Bell Labs’ annual W. Lincoln Hawkins Mentoring Excellence Award is named in his honor. In 2010, he was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


OMOC
Do you know where this planet is?

DANIEL
Yes, I have the coordinates right here.

[Daniel takes a notebook from his pocket.]

OMOC
Then we must go back to the mountaintop.

DANIEL
Really? Uh…I can't…I can't…I can't get you out of here.

OMOC
That's not a problem.

DANIEL
Right. Oh, but I have to go with you.

[Omoc looks around at the other Tollan. While Omoc is thinking, Narim and Daniel appear concerned.]

OMOC
Give me your hand.

[Omoc raises his hand towards Daniel. Narim turns in surprise.]

DANIEL
What?

OMOC
Do you wish to come or not?

[Daniel grips Omoc's hand. Omoc touches a device on his arm, which lights up. As he touches it, a shivering sound is heard and Omoc walks through a wall, pulling Daniel with him.]

EXT—NIGHTTIME

[Omoc and Daniel are walking in the woods. Omoc stops to look up at the star-filled sky.]

OMOC
The coordinates.

[Daniel takes the notebook out of his pocket and leafs through it. He hands the notebook to Omoc. After studying the coordinates, Omoc removes a device from his upper sleeve and places it on the ground. Daniel sits on the ground as Omoc switches on the device. A beam of light shoots upwards.]

DANIEL
Listen, I'm no astronomer, but won't that take thousands of years to reach the Nox world?

OMOC
Why would it?

DANIEL
Well, that's just a laser, right? I mean…light takes a long time to travel that far.

[Omoc looks to the sky, then picks up a branch.]

OMOC
The distance between these two points…
Omoc looks to both ends of the branch…
seems far. Until you do this.

[Omoc bends the branch to join the two ends together.]

DANIEL
OK…OK, I remember this from college physics. One of our scientists, Einstein, explained this the same way. You are talking about actually folding space.

OMOC
No. You wouldn't understand.

DANIEL
No, I guess not. I just hope the Nox do.

[Omoc and Daniel look to the stars.]










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


HAMMOND
As an act of good faith, we're returning the devices you were wearing.

OMOC
They are not weapons.

HAMMOND
That's what our technicians thought.

OMOC
So you had them tested? Not much of an act of good faith.

DANIEL
Well, actually, we couldn't figure out exactly what they were.

HAMMOND
I want to assure you, we're doing all we can to re-locate your people.

OMOC
Are we to have some say in the matter?

DANIEL
Oh, yes. Self-determination is a concept that's very important to us.

HAMMOND
We'll do our best. In the meantime, we'll make you as comfortable as possible, but I want you to understand, you're restricted to the immediate premises.

OMOC
Are we prisoners?

DANIEL
No. No, absolutely not.

HAMMOND
But you are from an alien environment. It's as much for your safety as for ours.












http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e7/Navycross.jpg










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=8890

The American Presidency Project

John F. Kennedy

XXXV President of the United States: 1961 - 1963

399 - Remarks Recorded for the Ceremony at the Lincoln Memorial Commemorating the Centennial of the Emancipation Proclamation.

September 22, 1962

I TAKE great pleasure in greeting you on this centennial commemoration of one of the most solemn moments in American history. One hundred years ago today Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation. He thereby began the process which brought a final end to the evil of human slavery, which wiped out from our Nation what John Quincy Adams called the great stain upon the North American Union. But the Emancipation Proclamation was not an end. It was a beginning. The century since has seen the struggle to convert freedom from rhetoric to reality. It has been in many respects a somber story. For many years progress towards the realization of equal rights was very slow. A structure of segregation divided the Negro from his fellow American citizen. He was denied equal opportunity in education and employment. In many places he could not vote. For a long time he was exposed to violence and to terror. These were bitter years of humiliation and deprivation.

Looking back at this period, one must observe two remarkable facts. The first is that despite humiliation and deprivation, the Negro retained his loyalty to the United States and to democratic institutions. He showed this loyalty by brave service in two world wars, by the rejection of extreme or violent policies, by a quiet and proud determination to work for long-denied rights within the framework of the American Constitution.

The second is that despite humiliation and deprivation the Negro has never stopped working for his own salvation. There is no more impressive chapter in our history than the one in which our Negro fellow citizens sought better education for themselves and their children, built better schools and better houses, carved out their own economic opportunities, enlarged their press, fostered their arts, and clarified and strengthened their purpose as a people.

In doing these things, the Negroes enlisted the support of many of their fellow citizens both North and South. But the essential effort, the sustained struggle, was borne by the Negro alone with steadfast dignity and faith. And in due course the effort had its results. The last generation has seen a belated, but still spectacular, quickening of the pace of full emancipation. Twenty-five years ago the Nation would have been unbelieving at the progress to be made by the time of this centennial, progress in education, in employment, in the even-handed administration of justice, in access to the ballot, in the assumption of places of responsibility and leadership, in public and private life.

It has been a striking change, and a change wrought in large measure by the courage and perseverance of Negro men and women. It can be said, I believe, that Abraham Lincoln emancipated the slaves, but that in this century since, our Negro citizens have emancipated themselves.

And the task is not finished. Much remains to be done to eradicate the vestiges of discrimination and segregation, to make equal rights a reality for all of our people, to fulfill finally the promises of the Declaration of Independence. Like the proclamation we celebrate, this observance must be regarded not as an end, but a beginning. The best commemoration lies not in what we say today, but in what we do in the days and months ahead to complete the work begun by Abraham Lincoln a century ago. "In giving freedom to the slaves," President Lincoln said, "we assure freedom to the free." In giving rights to others which belong to them, we give rights to ourselves and to our country.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


TEAL'C
Colonel O'Neill was correct. Many of the worlds we have visited are eager to be of service.

[Hammond enters.]

HAMMOND
People! We have a problem. The refugees seem to have escaped.

CARTER
Escaped?

O'NEILL
How did they get past the guards.

HAMMOND
You can ask them that when you find them.

EXT—NIGHTIME

[A search dog leads the team through woodland.]

UNKNOWN VOICE
They're over here.

O'NEILL
Hold fire.

[The refugees are together in a group, not running. Omoc walks towards O'Neill.]

OMOC
We were merely observing the stars.

O'NEILL
Well, you're all going to have to come back in now.

OMOC
So we are prisoners.










https://www.cia.gov/news-information/featured-story-archive/2014-featured-story-archive/a-look-back-25-years-since-the-fall-of-the-berlin-wall.html

CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


On December 25, 1991, Gorbachev resigned and the Soviet Union ceased to exist










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


INT—REFUGEE CENTRE

[The room contains the Tollan, plus Omoc and SG-1.]

OMOC
Our escape was a test. You did exactly what I knew you would do. You used threat and force to solve your problem.

CARTER
You didn't give us any other choice.

OMOC
You could have come for us unarmed.

O'NEILL
Hey! You haven't exactly behaved like someone I want to trust. I'm not going to put my team at risk.

OMOC
And I will not risk my people in your care.

O'NEILL
Look…Omoc. If you're so advanced, why don't you let your people decide for themselves?

CARTER
Narim, this is a free country. Every year we take in thousands of refugees fleeing repression. If you request asylum, you can stay here no matter what Omoc wants.

OMOC
You don't care anything about Narim's rights. You only want our technology, nothing more.

O'NEILL
As a matter of fact, I wouldn't mind knowing how you got the hell out of this place. Technically speaking, of course.

OMOC
You don't need to know how, only that we did, and we can do it again any time we need to.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=11537


The American Presidency Project

Dwight D. Eisenhower

XXXIV President of the United States: 1953 - 1961

242 - Joint Statement Following Discussions With Chairman Khrushchev at Camp David.

September 27, 1959

THE CHAIRMAN of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, N. S. Khrushchev, and President Eisenhower have had a frank exchange of opinions at Camp David. In some of these conversations United States Secretary of State Herter and Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko, as well as other officials from both countries, participated.

Chairman Khrushchev and the President have agreed that these discussions have been useful in clarifying each other's position on a number of subjects. The talks were not undertaken to negotiate issues. It is hoped, however, that their exchanges of view will contribute to a better understanding of the motives and position of each and thus to the achievement of a just and lasting peace.

The Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR and the President of the United States agreed that the question of general disarmament is the most important one facing the world today. Both governments will make every effort to achieve a constructive solution of this problem.

In the course of the conversations an exchange of views took place on the question of Germany including the question of a peace treaty with Germany, in which the positions of both sides were expounded.

With respect to the specific Berlin question, an understanding was reached, subject to the approval of the other parties directly concerned, that negotiations would be reopened with a view to achieving a solution which would be in accordance with the interests of all concerned and in the interest of the maintenance of peace.

In addition to these matters useful conversations were held on a number of questions affecting the relations between the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the United States. These subjects included the question of trade between the two countries. With respect to an increase in exchanges of persons and ideas, substantial progress was made in discussions between officials and it is expected that certain agreements will be reached in the near future.

The Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR and the President of the United States agreed that all outstanding international questions should be settled not by the application of force but by peaceful means through negotiation.

Finally it was agreed that an exact date for the return visit of the President to the Soviet Union next spring would be arranged through diplomatic channels.

Note: This statement was released at Gettysburg, Pa.










http://www.stargate-sg1-solutions.com/wiki/1.17_%22Enigma%22_Transcript

STARGATE WIKI


Stargate SG-1 - Enigma - season 1 episdode 17 - Friday 30 January 1998


TUPLO
Good to see you. General Hammond, before we begin, I wish to thank you for allowing me to be the first visitor to your Earth from the Land of Light. It is indeed an honour.

[Hammond, O'Neill and Carter sit.]

TUPLO
My lord Omoc, the Land of Light is a world of eternal brightness, where fertility abounds. Our farms produce rich harvests. Our rivers are blessed with fish and fowl. We would be honoured to share our land with your people.

OMOC
You have no idea who or what we are.

[Hammond and Tuplo look surprised.]

TUPLO
We know that you are in need, and that you are here among those who have proven themselves our friends. That is enough.

OMOC
You're missing the point.

[Omoc rises.]

OMOC
(to Hammond)
His planet is unacceptable to us. These people are even more primitive than you.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 9:13 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Sunday 05 February 2017