[tz] [PROPOSED PATCH 1/3] * tz-art.htm: Correct the Peanuts quote.

Paul Eggert eggert at cs.ucla.edu
Wed Aug 27 01:51:45 UTC 2014


Fix broken links and remove a broken-linked book that wasn't
that notable anyway.  Use italics for book and movie titles.
---
 tz-art.htm | 92 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++-------------------------------
 1 file changed, 46 insertions(+), 46 deletions(-)

diff --git a/tz-art.htm b/tz-art.htm
index fd56728..ef06675 100644
--- a/tz-art.htm
+++ b/tz-art.htm
@@ -277,8 +277,8 @@ savings days. Lousy farmers."</td></tr>
 <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
 
 <tr><td>Artist</td><td>Jules Verne</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Book</td><td>Le Tour du Monde en Quatre-Vingts Jours
-(Around the World in Eighty Days)</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Book</td><td><em>Around the World in Eighty Days</em>
+(<em>Le tour du monde en quatre-vingts jours</em>)</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Notes</td><td>Wall-clock time plays a central role in the plot.
 European readers of the 1870s clearly held the U.S. press in
 deep contempt; the protagonists cross the U.S. without once
@@ -292,8 +292,8 @@ An on-line English-language translation of the book is available at
 
 <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Artist</td><td>Umberto Eco</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Book</td><td>The Island of the Day Before
-(L'isola del giorno prima)</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Book</td><td><em>The Island of the Day Before</em>
+(<em>L'isola del giorno prima</em>)</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Copyright Date</td><td>1994</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Notes</td><td>
 "...the story of a 17th century Italian nobleman trapped near an island
@@ -301,86 +301,83 @@ on the International Date Line.  Time and time zones play an integral
 part in the novel." (Paul Eggert, 2006-04-22)
 </td></tr>
 <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Artist</td><td>David Jebb</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Book</td><td><a href="http://www.thethirteenthtimezone.com">
-The Thirteenth Time Zone</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td>Notes</td><td>
-"It's fiction, but it's based on his experiences and travels." (Paul Eggert, 2006-04-22)
-</td></tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Artist</td><td>John Dunning</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Book</td><td><a
-href="http://www.simonsays.com/content/book.cfm?sid=33&amp;pid=479719">Two
-O'Clock, Eastern Wartime</a></td></tr>
+href="http://books.simonandschuster.com/Two-OClock-Eastern-Wartime/John-Dunning/9781439171530"><em>Two
+O'Clock, Eastern Wartime</em></a></td></tr>
 <tr><td>Copyright Date</td><td>2001</td></tr>
 <tr><td>Notes</td><td>
 Mystery, history, daylight saving time, and old-time radio.
 </td></tr>
 <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Film</td><td>Bell Science &ndash; About Time</td></tr>
-<tr><td>Notes</td><td>The Frank Baxter/Richard Deacon extravaganza.
-Information is available at
-<a href="http://www.videoflicks.com/titles/1035/1035893.htm">http://www.videoflicks.com/titles/1035/1035893.htm</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Film</td><td><em>About Time</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td>Copyright Date</td><td>1962</td></tr>
+<tr><td>Notes</td><td>The Bell Science extravaganza, with Frank Baxter,
+Richard Deacon, and Les Tremayne.
+<a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0154110/">Information</a>
+is available at IMDb.</td></tr>
 </table>
 <hr>
 <ul>
 <li>
-An episode of "The Adventures of Superman" entitled "The Mysterious
+An episode of <em>The Adventures of Superman</em> entitled "The Mysterious
 Cube," first aired 1958-02-24, had Superman convincing the controllers
 of WWV to broadcast time signals five minutes ahead of actual time;
 doing so got a crook trying to beat the statute of limitations to
 emerge a bit too early from the titular enclosure.
 </li>
 <li>
-The 1960s ITC television series "The Prisoner" included an episode
+The 1960s ITC television series <em>The Prisoner</em> included an episode
 entitled "The Chimes of Big Ben" in which our protagonist tumbled to
 the fraudulent nature of a Poland-to-England escape upon hearing "Big
 Ben" chiming on Polish local time.
 </li>
 <li>
-The series "Seinfeld" included an episode entitled "The Susie," first
+The series <em>Seinfeld</em> included an episode entitled "The Susie," first
 broadcast 1997-02-13, in which Kramer decides that daylight saving time
 isn't coming fast enough, so he sets his watch ahead an hour.
 </li>
 <li>
-The syndicated comic strip "Dilbert" featured an all-too-rare example of
+The syndicated comic strip <em>Dilbert</em> featured an all-too-rare example of
 time zone humor on 1998-03-14.
 </li>
 <li>
 Surrealist artist Guy Billout's work "Date Line" appeared on page 103
-of the 1999-11 Atlantic Monthly.
+of the 1999-11 <em>Atlantic Monthly</em>.
 </li>
 <li>
-"Gloom, Gloom, Go Away" by Walter Kirn appeared on page 106 of Time
-Magazine's 2002-11-11 issue; among other things, it proposed
+"Gloom, Gloom, Go Away" by Walter Kirn appeared on page 106 of <em>Time</em>
+magazine's 2002-11-11 issue; among other things, it proposed
 year-round DST as a way of lessening wintertime despair.
 </li>
 <li>
-The "20 Hours in America" episode of "The West Wing," first aired 2002-09-25,
+The "20 Hours in America" episode of <em>The West Wing</em>,
+first aired 2002-09-25,
 saw White House staffers stranded in Indiana; they thought they had time to
 catch Air Force One but were done in by intra-Indiana local time changes.
 </li>
 <li>
 "In what time zone would you find New York City?" was a $200 question on
-the 1999-11-13 United States airing of "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?"
-"In 1883, what industry led the movement to divide the U.S. into four time
+the 1999-11-13 United States airing of <em>Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?</em>,
+and "In 1883, what industry led the movement to divide the U.S. into four time
 zones?" was a $32,000 question on the 2001-05-23 United States airing of
-"Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?" At this rate, the million-dollar time-zone
+the same show. At this rate, the million-dollar time-zone
 question should have been asked 2002-06-04.
 </li>
 <li>
 A private jet's mid-flight change of time zones distorts Alison Dubois'
-premonition in the "We Had a Dream" episode of "Medium"
+premonition in the "We Had a Dream" episode of <em>Medium</em>
 (originally aired 2007-02-28).
 </li>
 <li>
-In the "30 Rock" episode "Anna Howard Shaw Day" (first broadcast 2010-02-11),
+In the <em>30 Rock</em> episode "Anna Howard Shaw Day"
+(first broadcast 2010-02-11),
 Jack Donaghy's date realizes that a Geneva-to-New-York business phone call
 received in the evening must be fake given the difference in local times.
 </li>
 <li>
-In the 1946 movie "A Matter of Life and Death"
-(U.S. title "Stairway to Heaven")
+In the 1946 movie <em>A Matter of Life and Death</em>
+(U.S. title <em>Stairway to Heaven</em>)
 there is a reference to British Double Summer Time.
 The time does not play a large part in the plot;
 it's just a passing reference to the time when one of the
@@ -390,7 +387,7 @@ The IMDb page is at
 http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0038733/
 </a>. (Dave Cantor)
 <li>
-The 1953 railway comedy movie "The Titfield Thunderbolt" includes a
+The 1953 railway comedy movie <em>The Titfield Thunderbolt</em> includes a
 play on words on British Double Summer Time. Valentine's wife wants
 him to leave the pub and asks him, "Do you know what time it is?"
 And he, happy where he is, replies: "Yes, my love. Summer double time."
@@ -400,7 +397,7 @@ http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0046436/
 </a>. (Mark Brader, 2009-10-02)
 </li>
 <li>
-The premise of the 1999 caper movie "Entrapment" involves computers
+The premise of the 1999 caper movie <em>Entrapment</em> involves computers
 in an international banking network being shut down briefly at
 midnight in each time zone to avoid any problems at the transition
 from the year 1999 to 2000 in that zone. (Hmmmm.) If this shutdown
@@ -415,14 +412,14 @@ http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0137494/
 </a>. (Mark Brader, 2009-10-02)
 </li>
 <li>
-In the "Run by the Monkeys" episode of "Da Vinci's Inquest"
+In the "Run by the Monkeys" episode of <em>Da Vinci's Inquest</em>
 (first broadcast 2002-11-17),
 a witness in a five-year-old fire case realizes they may not have set
 their clock back when daylight saving ended on the day of the fire,
 introducing the possibility of an hour when arson might have occurred.
 </li>
 <li>
-In "The Todd Couple" episode of "Outsourced" (first aired 2011-02-10),
+In "The Todd Couple" episode of <em>Outsourced</em> (first aired 2011-02-10),
 Manmeet sets up Valentine's Day teledates for 6:00 and 9:00pm;
 since one is with a New Yorker and the other with a San Franciscan,
 hilarity ensues.
@@ -435,7 +432,7 @@ proceeds as though it's also mid-evening there.)
 <li>
 "We've been using the five-cent nickel in this country since 1492.
 Now that's pretty near 100 years, daylight saving."
-(Groucho Marx as Captain Spaulding in "Animal Crackers", 1930,
+(Groucho Marx as Captain Spaulding in <em>Animal Crackers</em>, 1930,
 as noted by Will Fitzgerald)
 </li>
 <li>
@@ -446,7 +443,7 @@ Drummond: "That Eastern Standard Time? (Laughter)  Or Rocky Mountain
 Time? (More laughter)  It wasn't daylight-saving time, was it?  Because
 the Lord didn't make the sun until the fourth day!"
 <br>
-(From the play "Inherit the Wind" by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee,
+(From the play <em>Inherit the Wind</em> by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee,
 filmed in 1960 with Spencer Tracy as Drummond and Fredric March as
 Brady, and several other times. Thanks to Mark Brader.)
 </li>
@@ -454,7 +451,7 @@ Brady, and several other times. Thanks to Mark Brader.)
 "Good news."
 "What did they do? Extend Daylight Saving Time year round?"
 (Professional tanner George Hamilton, in dialog from a
-May, 1999 episode of the syndicated television series "Baywatch")
+May, 1999 episode of the syndicated television series <em>Baywatch</em>)
 </li>
 <li>
 "A fundamental belief held by Americans is that if you are on land, you
@@ -470,32 +467,35 @@ when you turn the clocks ahead."
 </li>
 <li>
 "Would it impress you if I told you I invented Daylight Savings Time?"
-("Sahjhan" to "Lilah" in dialog from the "Loyalty" episode of "Angel,"
+("Sahjhan" to "Lilah" in dialog from the "Loyalty" episode of <em>Angel</em>,
 originally aired 2002-02-25)
 </li>
 <li>
 "I thought you said Tulsa was a three-hour flight."
 "Well, you're forgetting about the time difference."
-("Joey" and "Chandler" in dialog from the episode of "Friends"
+("Joey" and "Chandler" in dialog from the episode of <em>Friends</em>
 entitled "The One With Rachel's Phone Number," originally aired 2002-12-05)
 </li>
 <li>
 "Is that a pertinent fact,
 or are you just trying to dazzle me with your command of time zones?"
-(Kelsey Grammer as "Frasier Crane" to "Roz" from the episode of "Frasier"
+(Kelsey Grammer as "Frasier Crane" to "Roz" from the episode of <em>Frasier</em>
 entitled "The Kid," originally aired 1997-11-04)
 </li>
 <li>
-"Don't worry about the world coming to an end today.
-It is already tomorrow in Australia."
-(Charles M. Schulz, provided by Steve Summit)
+Peppermint Patty: "What if the world comes to an end tonight, Marcie?"
+<br>
+Marcie: "I promise there'll be a tomorrow, sir ... in fact,
+it's already tomorrow in Australia!"
+<br>
+(Charles M. Schultz, <em>Peanuts</em>, 1980-06-13)
 </li>
 <li>
 "I put myself and my staff through this crazy, huge ordeal, all because
 I refused to go on at midnight, okay?  And so I work, you know, and
 then I get this job at eleven, supposed to be a big deal.  Then
 yesterday daylight [saving] time ended. Right now it's basically
-midnight." (Conan O'Brien on the 2010-11-08 premiere of "Conan.")
+midnight." (Conan O'Brien on the 2010-11-08 premiere of <em>Conan</em>.)
 </li>
 </ul>
 </body>
-- 
1.9.1



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