The Glass Bottom Boat
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:17:01
...that would be different.
- There you go again. Nag, nag, nag.

:17:05
Okay. Talk to you tomorrow.
:17:09
Oh, okay, Pop.
So long, Nina, no hard feelings.

:17:13
What do you mean, "whale-maid"?
:17:17
Let's face it, baby doll.
You ain't no guppy.

:17:29
- He's kidding.
- Oh, no.

:17:36
Okay, try RP minus 27 over Y-squared.
:17:42
- Okay?
- Right.

:17:44
Sir, I happen to have a dossier
on the girl, if you care to hear it.

:17:48
What? Oh, yeah. Go, Homer.
:17:50
"Dossier. Jennifer Nelson:
married, widowed.

:17:54
Husband, Randolph Nelson:
oceanographer."

:17:56
- Oceanographer.
- Thank you, sir.

:17:58
"He went down in a diving bell
off the Bahamas. End of husband.

:18:01
Father, Axel Nordstrom,
operates glass-bottom boat in Catalina.

:18:05
Girl lives alone with dog, two mynah birds
and tropical fish.

:18:11
Hobbies: boating and cooking.
:18:13
Won first prize in baking contest
for banana-cream cake.

:18:18
Holds navigator's license number 7256.
:18:21
Currently taking night courses in..."
:18:23
Now are you ready for this?
"Dramatic writing, ballet, sculpture...

:18:28
...music appreciation, radio telegraphy,
ceramics and mapmaking."

:18:32
- Mapmaking. And I thought I was busy.
- You got some problem with this girl, sir?

:18:37
Yeah, the toughest kind, Homer.
Two bodies moving in different orbits.

:18:44
There's an equation for everything.
:18:46
You were quoted on that
in one of the magazines.

:18:49
Yeah, you take Mars
and you take Venus.

:18:52
- Yes, sir.
- Well, Mars is locked in his orbit...

:18:54
...because of extreme pressure.
- Pressure? Oh, right, right.

:18:58
But if we can induce Venus to move out
of her orbit with the added factors...


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