This Is What I Think.
Saturday, June 08, 2019
Silent Running
the-untouchables-1987_00h37m51s.jpg
the-untouchables-1987_00h39m01s.jpg
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094226/quotes
IMDb
The Untouchables (1987)
Quotes
Capone: [to the members of his crime family] A man becomes preeminent, he's expected to have enthusiasms. Enthusiasms, enthusiasms... What are mine? What draws my admiration? What is that which gives me joy?
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2004/jun/13/political-tree-hidden-away/
The Spokesman-Review
NEWS > SPOKANE
Political tree hidden away
Sun., June 13, 2004
The Bush elm was brought to Spokane by the president and planted in a public ceremony witnessed by hundreds in Riverfront Park on Sept. 19, 1989.
Posted by Kerry Burgess - H.V.O.M at 12:03 PM Tuesday, December 16, 2008
From 5/21/1969 ( I am Princeton University Medical Doctor degree graduate as Dr. Thomas Reagan M.D. ) to 7/21/1979 ( my wife Phoebe and I are married ) is: 3713 days
From 7/21/1979 ( my wife Phoebe and I are married ) to 9/19/1989 ( premiere US TV series "Doogie Howser, M.D." ) is: 3713 days
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doogie_Howser
Doogie Howser, M.D.
Original run September 19, 1989 – March 24, 1993
Doogie Howser, M.D. (1989–1993), is a television comedy-drama starring Neil Patrick Harris as a brilliant teenage doctor who was also faced with the problems of being a normal teenager, despite having graduated from Princeton University at age 10.
excerpt ends Posted by Kerry Burgess - H.V.O.M at 12:03 PM Tuesday, December 16, 2008
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2004/jun/13/political-tree-hidden-away/
The Spokesman-Review
NEWS > SPOKANE
Political tree hidden away
Sun., June 13, 2004
By Mike Prager
Sally Sullivan holds the branch of the Bush American elm that was moved from Riverfront Park to the Finch Arboretum in 1989 after it was vandalized. (Jed Conklin / The Spokesman-Review)
An American elm tree given to the city of Spokane in 1989 by President George H.W. Bush might as well be hiding in a shoebox somewhere.
The unmarked tree bends wildly against a crowded canopy in Finch Arboretum, showing no hint of its historical pedigree.
Local leaders better hope that current President Bush doesn’t ask to see what became of his father’s gift when he arrives in the Lilac City as planned on Thursday.
The tree is lopsided and virtually indistinguishable from the maples growing above and along two sides of it. It clearly doesn’t have enough room to reach its potential height of 75 feet.
The Bush elm was brought to Spokane by the president and planted in a public ceremony witnessed by hundreds in Riverfront Park on Sept. 19, 1989. It had been propagated from an American elm originally planted on the White House lawn in 1826 by President John Quincy Adams.
City parks staffers said it needs to be moved soon if it is to ever grow into the graceful specimen it was intended to be, and it probably will need corrective pruning to get it to once again grow upright.
When asked about the state of Spokane’s presidential tree, gardener Sally Sullivan at the arboretum said, “I’ll get a work order in to our arborist” to move the tree.
For 15 years, it has had routine care, a far cry from the fanfare that came with its arrival. The younger Bush will be the first president to visit downtown Spokane since his father’s tree-planting trip here.
Back in 1989, former U.S. Rep. Tom Foley, D-Spokane, had risen to become speaker of the House. Bush was midway through his first year as president.
The president spent part of his morning jogging on the Centennial Trail. Later, Bush and Foley planted the tree during a ceremony just north of the Opera House. The planting was tied to Bush’s twin messages of environmental awareness and political cooperation.
Shortly after the president’s visit, the sapling elm was badly vandalized. Some parks officials feared the act was politically motivated.
They placed splints on partly broken limbs, and then scooped up the tree for removal to a safe hiding place. The tree was replanted in an out-of-the-way corner of the arboretum among a collection of dogwoods. There are no signs or plaques denoting its historical significance.
It can be found growing along the gravel road to the Corey Glen parking area adjacent to Interstate 90. Only Sullivan and a small number of others know it’s there.
Aside from being crowded, the tree shows a large gash at its base, apparently the result of the vandalism in 1989. The main leader and limbs arch strongly to the southeast in an effort to gain light. The elm appears otherwise healthy.
This spring, it sports broad layers of deep green leaves on multiple branches. There are no signs of Dutch elm disease, an insect-borne fungus that has killed American elms across the United States and in Spokane.
“I think it looks pretty good,” Sullivan said.
Taylor Bressler, park maintenance manager, said he fears the tree would be vandalized again if its location were publicized, especially it if were returned to Riverfront Park and given a prominent location and plaque.
“Sure as heck, someone would come down and chop it,” Bressler said.
In a 1990 interview, Bressler said he intended to have the elm moved to a more public place once it recovered from the vandal damage.
This week, he said another location in Finch Arboretum might be more appropriate.
The city’s urban forester, Jim Flott, could not be reached for comment last week, but only recently learned of the tree’s existence, Sullivan said. Flott apparently will have a say on what, if anything, will be done with the tree.
“I’ll defer to my urban forestry guy,” Bressler said.
Maybe they could consult the president.
http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=4046
The American Presidency Project
Richard Nixon
XXXVII President of the United States: 1969 - 1974
334 - Question-and-Answer Session at the Annual Convention of the Associated Press Managing Editors Association, Orlando, Florida
November 17, 1973
THE PRESIDENT.
Richard Nixon: And I think, too, that I could say that in my years of public life, that I welcome this kind of examination, because people have got to know whether or not their President is a crook. Well, I am not a crook.
From 8/8/1974 ( Richard Nixon - Address to the Nation Announcing Decision To Resign the Office of President of the United States ) To 9/19/1989 is 5521 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 12/14/1980 ( premiere US TV series episode "Cosmos"::"Encyclopedia Galactica" ) is 5521 days
From 3/10/1972 ( premiere US film "Silent Running" ) To 9/19/1989 is 6402 days
6402 = 3201 + 3201
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 8/8/1974 ( Richard Nixon - Address to the Nation Announcing Decision To Resign the Office of President of the United States ) is 3201 days
From 8/18/1973 ( The Killian Document ) To 9/19/1989 is 5876 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 12/4/1981 ( premiere US TV series "Falcon Crest"::series premiere episode "In His Father's House" ) is 5876 days
From 1/26/1940 ( Jane Wyman and Ronald Reagan married until 18 July 1949 ) To 12/13/1963 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Twilight Zone"::"A Short Drink From a Certain Fountain" ) is 8722 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 9/19/1989 is 8722 days
From 7/16/1963 ( THAT Phoebe Cates ) To 6/2/1987 ( premiere US film "The Untouchables" ) is 8722 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 9/19/1989 is 8722 days
From 10/12/1915 ( Robert Innes announced the discovery of Proxima Centauri ) To 7/16/1963 ( THAT Phoebe Cates ) is 17444 days
17444 = 8722 + 8722
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 9/19/1989 is 8722 days
From 11/10/1967 ( premiere US TV series episode "Star Trek"::"Metamorphosis" ) To 9/19/1989 is 7984 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 9/12/1987 ( premiere US TV series "Showtime at the Apollo" ) is 7984 days
From 7/20/1969 ( my biological brother Thomas Reagan the United States Navy Commander circa 1969 was United States Apollo 11 Eagle spacecraft United States Navy astronaut landing and walking on the planet Earth's moon ) To 9/19/1989 is 7366 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 1/2/1986 ( premiere US TV series episode "Simon & Simon"::"Sunrise at Camp Apollo" ) is 7366 days
From 5/21/1969 ( from the the thoughts in my mind: the Princeton University doctor of medicine degree graduation of my biological brother Dr Thomas Reagan MD ) To 9/19/1989 is 7426 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 3/3/1986 ( premiere US TV series "Matlock" ) is 7426 days
From 5/1/1973 ( the graduation of my biological brother Thomas Reagan from the University of Oxford at Lincoln College includes law degree for my brother Thomas Reagan ) To 9/19/1989 is 5985 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 3/23/1982 ( premiere US TV series "Q.E.D." ) is 5985 days
https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/remarks-the-washington-centennial-celebration-spokane
The American Presidency Project
GEORGE BUSH
41st President of the United States: 1989 - 1993
Remarks at the Washington Centennial Celebration in Spokane
September 19, 1989
The President. Thank you very, very much. Thank you, Tom, thank you, Speaker Foley, for that very kind introduction. Please be seated -- sorry about that. [Laughter] Oh, heavens, what a day! And thanks to the magnificent performances and performers on the Opera House steps over here. You added considerably to this. Thank you all very much.
Let me say at the very beginning that Washington State is very lucky to have a friend like Tom Foley in the Nation's Capital. He is a man of integrity, decency, fairplay, and -- okay, he's a Democrat, but -- [laughter] -- he's a man I'm very proud and honored to work with. And you should be very fortunate to have him as your Congressman, just as I am to have him as the Nation's Speaker.
Mrs. Foley -- --
Audience member. Yea, mother! [Laughter]
The President. See, she brought the family. [Laughter] And my old friend, Joel Pritchard, the Lieutenant Governor. Thank you all for your warm welcome. My congratulations to cochairmen Ralph Monroe and Jean Gardner, Washington's first lady, on a great centennial. And Mayor pro tem Higgins, you've got a beautiful city here to be proud of. And then I'd like to just say hello all the way across the country to Senator Slade Gorton, thanking him for all his work on behalf of the people of this great State.
You know, back in 1889, when President Harrison sent a letter -- telegram, rather, to the first Governor of Washington to tell him that Washington had become the 42d State, he sent the telegram collect. [Laughter] Well, that's one way to balance the budget. [Laughter]
It's a pleasure to be here at the dawn of a second century of statehood, here in the Evergreen State. I'm not going to give you, you can be pleased to know, the usual stump speech. And I may be going out on a limb here, but I think most of America thinks of you as the real Washington. Yours is a land of rich resources and resourceful people. Salmon, gold, timber in abundance brought us here, as the promise of the Pacific brought the railroads west. There has always been, and will always be, a sense that the future is being decided here in this gateway to the Pacific.
Here in Washington you're doing well, living in a State with exports that went up nearly 40 percent last year alone, leading the Nation in exports per capita, and cutting unemployment from 10 percent to 6 percent over the last 5 years, during a time of rapid population growth. And last month you held a Pacific summit that reminded America how crucial the interrelations between nations are for our future. Even now your able Governor is in Japan -- Governor Gardner. Last Thursday he attended groundbreaking ceremonies for Washington Village, a housing development in Kobe, Japan, using Washington-finished forest products and U.S. construction methods. And that means $10 million for the State of Washington and a great American export to Japan.
Washington has had a wonderful 100 years, and you deserve a great centennial celebration. But it's the future that I'm here to talk to you about today. I took this trip out West because I'm concerned -- as I think we all are -- about the future of the planet we share. You see, it won't be enough to restore our balance of trade if we throw off the balance of nature.
In South Dakota, I talked about the need to restore the balance of nature here at home and how each of us can begin by planting a single tree. In Montana, I talked about interdependence, how the actions we take and the pollutants we create have consequences that are being felt the world over. And today I'm asking all Americans to join in the renewed spirit of conservation, a new commitment to a more careful stewardship of the natural world. And at my side I'm glad to have such an able and sensible Environmental Protection Agency -- EPA -- Administrator, Bill Reilly, with me here today, a man in whom I have a great deal of confidence and trust.
You see, I think many of us are beginning to understand something that native Americans understood long before we got here. When it comes to preservation of our precious environment, there's a connection between the smallest individual action and widespread global consequences. No words convey that better than a legendary speech given in the 1800's by an Indian chief named Seattle. "The Earth does not belong to man," he said, "man belongs to the Earth. Whatever happens to the Earth happens to the sons of the Earth. The sky, the lands which appear changeless and eternal may change. Continue to foul the Earth and you will achieve an end to living and the mere beginning of survival. You must teach your children that the Earth is rich. Teach your children that to harm the Earth is to heap contempt upon its Creator."
Chief Seattle understood what it has taken us a century to learn. Our material prosperity and economic growth have served us well. But now, together, we must find new ways to apply the creativity of the marketplace in the service of the environment. Sound ecology and a strong economy can and, indeed, must coexist. I am convinced that we need not yield to the extremes. We must and will protect the environment, and we must and will protect the jobs of the working men and women of the State of Washington. There is no question in my mind: We can do both.
We have an opportunity to renew the environmental ethic in America and to reassert U.S. leadership on environmental challenges around the world. And that's an opportunity that we simply cannot afford to miss. In the 8 months since I was sworn in as President, we've moved fast and hard to make the environment a priority. We're seeking a worldwide ban by the year 2000 on CFC's [chlorofluorocarbons] which destroy the ozone layer. We've prohibited imports of ivory, and prices have dropped by 50 percent, making elephant poaching less profitable. And we're working for a policy that would ban the export of hazardous wastes unless we're sure they'll be disposed of safely. We've proposed tougher laws to eliminate medical waste on our beautiful beaches. And we want to expand dozens of forests and parks and refuges across America. We've announced a national goal of no net loss of wetlands. And we've laid out detailed proposals to stem acid rain, cut urban smog, clean up air toxics, and encourage the use of alternative fuels with a clean air bill that achieves 95 percent of the smog-causing VOC [volatile organic compounds] reductions sought by competing legislation at a cost of $6.5 billion less.
And that's just in 8 months. And as your President, I plan to stay involved, helping to protect our precious environment. As long as I remain President, I will do that. When it comes to clean air, we need action on the legislation that we've proposed -- now. Every day that passes is another day that we are postponing progress on clean air. And we've brought people together and put a sound proposal on the table, and now it is up to the United States Congress to pass this clean air legislation and pass it this year.
But if we really hope to recover, restore, and preserve our natural heritage, that other Washington can't do it alone. And the answer can't simply be limited to new laws. It must be more fundamental. It lies in a shared sense of personal responsibility, a new environmental awareness on the part of all Americans. Through millions of individual decisions -- simple, everyday, personal choices -- we are determining the fate of the Earth. So, the conclusion is also simple: We're all responsible, and it's surprisingly easy to move from being part of the problem to being part of the solution.
So many of the big problems -- coastal water pollution, pesticides in ground water, urban smog, and municipal garbage -- aren't simply caused by large power plants and refineries; and many can't be solved by national legislation alone. Millions of small, diverse sources contribute to these problems, including the everyday behavior of people at work and at home. And such overwhelming environmental challenges can be solved by individual determination that we can do better. Local communities; businesses, large and small; individual families -- all can learn to generate less waste, recycle more of the waste that is generated. In fact, those that do have discovered that there are sound economic side-effects. Environmental protection makes economic sense.
The people of Washington State, in fact, have a history of showing the rest of the Nation the way. Back in the 1940's, J.P. Weyerhaeuser moved the lumber industry from simply harvesting forest resources towards comprehensive management of tree farms that could endure indefinitely. And after research into product development, Weyerhaeuser began introducing marketable products made from what was once treated as waste.
The 3M Corporation announced last spring that since starting their pollution prevention program in 1975, the company has saved $408 million and prevented 111,000 tons of air pollutants, 15,000 tons of water pollutants, and 388,000 tons of solid waste from being released into the environment. And they've done it by rewarding employees for coming up with good ideas.
In the city of Seattle, fees for waste disposal have been an incentive for businesses and households to reduce the amount of waste produced. And I understand that over the last several years, waste has been cut here by nearly a fourth.
So, the power of the marketplace can encourage conservation with spectacular results, results that need to be duplicated everywhere in America. I am delighted to be able to make these comments about your city in your city, so they'll be heard across the rest of the United States.
You know, 15 years ago, when Spokane invited the world over for a visit at 1974 Expo, it became the first World's Fair to put the focus -- the world's focus, if you will -- on the environment. It was a good beginning, and we've made progress since then. And perhaps nothing better symbolizes that than the surging river that pulses through Spokane, a river that first lured men here as a source of protection, transportation, and sustenance. Such damage was done to this river by the early part of this century that by 1938 the Spokane River was called a serious health hazard. And over the past few decades, you have restored and reclaimed this magnificent river. The damage has been reversed, totally turned around. Nature's balance has been restored, and the river had been reborn.
The ethic of native Americans like Chief Seattle must also be reborn on this continent. His was a religious understanding: that the whole Earth has a soul that can be destroyed by man. He saw the world as a spiritual place of precious but fragile beauty. Over a century ago, he said: "Hold in your mind the memory of the land as it was when you found it. And with all your strength, with all your mind, with all your heart, preserve it for your children and love it as God loves us all."
That is a challenge to us all. The American people -- all people -- need a fuller relationship with the world they live in, a better understanding of causes and effects. And if the Earth is an altar, we must make it an altar not of sacrifice but of celebration, a place where our commitment to restoring its natural beauty is felt in a thousand everyday decisions. You've made one of those decisions today by deciding to plant a centennial tree. May it grow, flourish, and symbolize the hope of a new century: that man will one day be reconciled to nature once again.
What a spectacular day in the State of Washington! Thank you for inviting me. God bless you, God [ SUPERSTITIOUS blathering from a coward ] bless this State, and God bless the United States of America. Thank you all very, very much.
Note: The President spoke at 10:02 a.m. in Riverfront Park.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Q.E.D.
Q.E.D.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Q.E.D. or QED (sometimes italicized) is an initialism of the Latin phrase "quod erat demonstrandum", literally meaning "what was to be shown". Traditionally, the abbreviation is placed at the end of a mathematical proof or philosophical argument to indicate that the proof or argument is complete, therefore used with the meaning "thus it has been demonstrated".
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067756/releaseinfo
IMDb
Silent Running (1972)
Release Info
USA 10 March 1972
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067756/fullcredits
IMDb
Silent Running (1972)
Full Cast & Crew
Bruce Dern ... Freeman Lowell
http://www.tv.com/shows/the-twilight-zone/a-short-drink-from-a-certain-fountain-12716/
tv.com
The Twilight Zone Season 5 Episode 11
A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain
Aired Dec 13, 1963 on CBS
AIRED: 12/13/63
https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000121/bio
IMDb
Phoebe Cates
Biography
Born July 16, 1963 in New York City, New York, USA
Birth Name Phoebe Belle Cates
the-twilight-zone_season5-ep12_00h01m30s.jpg
http://www.tv.com/shows/doogie-howser-md/pilot-66279/
tv.com
Doogie Howser, M.D. Season 1 Episode 1
Pilot
AIRED: 9/19/89
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0081930/plotsummary
IMDb
Simon & Simon (1981–1989)
Plot
Two brothers of disparate tastes and manners run a private detective agency.
http://www.tv.com/shows/simon-simon/sunrise-at-camp-apollo-13339/
tv.com
Simon & Simon Season 5 Episode 12
Sunrise at Camp Apollo
AIRED: 1/2/86
From 9/19/1989 ( premiere US TV series "Doogie Howser, M.D." ) To 2/21/1997 ( the landing of the US space shuttle Discovery orbiter vehicle mission STS-82 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-82 pilot astronaut and my 4th official United States of America National Aeronautics Space Administration orbital flight of 4 overall ) is 2712 days
2712 = 1356 + 1356
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 7/20/1969 ( my biological brother Thomas Reagan the United States Navy Commander circa 1969 was United States Apollo 11 Eagle spacecraft United States Navy astronaut landing and walking on the planet Earth's moon ) is 1356 days
From 5/30/1946 ( premiere US film "Somewhere in the Night" ) To 2/21/1997 is 18530 days
18530 = 9265 + 9265
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate ) is 9265 days
From 12/19/1953 ( Robert Andrews Millikan dead ) To 2/21/1997 is 15770 days
15770 = 7885 + 7885
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 6/5/1987 ( as Kerry Burgess my official United States Navy documents includes: Earned NEC 1189 - Based on graduation from the Terrier Mk 152 Guided-missiles Fire Control Computer Complex course - Naval Guided Missiles School, Dam Neck, Virginia Beach, Virginia ) is 7885 days
From 1/23/1959 ( Oakland Tribune reports: "Soon: Guided Missile Mail" ) To 5/14/1990 ( departing as United States Navy Fire Controlman Second Class Petty Officer Kerry Wayne Burgess my honorable discharge from United States Navy active service for commissioning as chief warrant officer United States Marine Corps and continuing to Kerry Burgess the United States Marine Corps general ) is 11434 days
From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA as Kerry Burgess ) To 2/21/1997) is 11434 days
Other posts by me on this topic
Los Angeles Times
Shuttle Lights the Sky in Rare Night Landing
February 22, 1997 From Washington Post
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. — Putting on a spectacular light show, the shuttle Discovery returned to Earth before dawn Friday like a blazing comet, leaving the refurbished Hubble Space Telescope behind in orbit with a new lease on life.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094226/quotes
IMDb
The Untouchables (1987)
Quotes
Malone: [to Ness as they assemble their team] If you're afraid of getting a rotten apple, don't go to the barrel. Get it off the tree.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0734549/quotes
IMDb
The Twilight Zone (TV Series)
A Short Drink from a Certain Fountain (1963)
Quotes
Harmon Gordon: [after receiving the experimental serum] Well, when can I expect some change?
Dr. Raymond Gordon: Within 6 hours. That's when the first physical change is noted. As for the mental change, none of the rats or guinea pigs have told me what the feeling was.
Other posts by me on this topic
https://www.facebook.com/DanamarieMcNicholl/videos/429707020794971/
KREM 2 News
Danamarie McNicholl
Monday April 2, 2018 at 6:50 pm
The Ice Ribbon has officially converted over to a roller rink. You can bring your scooter and skateboard in addition to your skates. Admission is FREE!
Rollerball (1975)
(internet transcript)
Librarian: The famous Jonathan E. Hard to believe! Sorry things are in a mess. The rollerball champion. Wonderful! Not many people come to see us, you know. We're not easy to talk to, Zero and I. We're a little confused again here today. This is embarrassing. It's embarrassing to misplace things.
Jonathan E: You've misplaced some data?
Librarian: Mm, the whole of the 13th century. Misplaced the computers - several conventional computers. We can't find them. We're always moving things around, getting organised, my assistants and I. But this is Zero's fault. Zero, he's the world's file cabinet. Pity. Poor old 13th century. Well, come along now. You want to get started, don't you?
Jonathan E: Yes, sir.
Librarian: This way. Now... We've lost those computers with all of the 13th century in them. Not much in the century - just Dante and a few corrupt popes. But it's so distracting and annoying. You've unlimited restrictions here, of course, but you'll have to come so, so many times. It all takes such effort.
Jonathan E: Do the executives still come here?
Librarian: Oh, they used to, some of them.
Jonathan E: What about the books?
Librarian: Books, books? They're all changed. All transcribed. All information is here. We've Zero, of course. He's the central brain, the world's brain. Fluid mechanics, fluidics. He's liquid, you see. His waters touch all knowledge. Everything we ask has become so complicated now. Each thing we ask... This morning we wanted to know about the 13th century. He flows out into all our storage systems. He considers everything. He's become so ambiguous now, as if he knows nothing at all.
https://hvom.blogspot.com/2018/11/anne-mcclain-spokane.html
Posted by Kerry Burgess at 1:52 PM
Number 878: The Farthest Man From Home
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
facebook_danamarie_04-02-2018.jpg
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094226/quotes
IMDb
The Untouchables (1987)
Quotes
Capone: But... I get nowhere unless the team wins.
Hoods: Team!
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0575943/
IMDb
Falcon Crest (1981–1990)
In His Father's House
Episode aired 4 December 1981
Season 1 Episode 1
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0575943/fullcredits
IMDb
Falcon Crest (TV Series)
In His Father's House (1981)
Full Cast & Crew
Jane Wyman ... Angela Channing
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79095492.html
Library of Congress
From Library of Congress Name Authority File
Conard, Henry S. (Henry Shoemaker), 1874-1971
Birth Date 1874-09-12
Death Date 1971-10-07
http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2004/jun/13/political-tree-hidden-away/
The Spokesman-Review
NEWS > SPOKANE
Political tree hidden away
Sun., June 13, 2004
In a 1990 interview, Bressler said he intended to have the elm moved to a more public place once it recovered from the vandal damage.
This week, he said another location in Finch Arboretum might be more appropriate.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067756/quotes
IMDb
Silent Running (1972)
Quotes
Freeman Lowell: It calls back a time when there were flowers all over the Earth... and there were valleys. And there were plains of tall green grass that you could lie down in - you could go to sleep in. And there were blue skies, and there was fresh air... and there were things growing all over the place, not just in some domed enclosures blasted some millions of miles out in to space.
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- posted by Kerry Burgess 4:38 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Saturday 08 June 2019