Dr. Emery Bronson:
[handing him money] You will require this for expenses.
David Randall: [counting the money and finding it short] I'm supposed to get paid $1500 plus the expenses.
Dr. Emery Bronson: Hendron will pay you on delivery. Time is all that counts. The money doesn't matter at all.
David Randall: With me, doctor, money always matters.
Dr. Emery Bronson: Perhaps the day may arrive when money won't mean anything, not to you... nor anyone.
David Randall: When that happens to me, I'll be six feet under.
[Randall is taken aback when Bronson just stares at him intently puffing on his pipe]
David Randall: [counting the money and finding it short] I'm supposed to get paid $1500 plus the expenses.
Dr. Emery Bronson: Hendron will pay you on delivery. Time is all that counts. The money doesn't matter at all.
David Randall: With me, doctor, money always matters.
Dr. Emery Bronson: Perhaps the day may arrive when money won't mean anything, not to you... nor anyone.
David Randall: When that happens to me, I'll be six feet under.
[Randall is taken aback when Bronson just stares at him intently puffing on his pipe]
David Randall:
Dr. Frye, how's your heart?
Dr. George Frye, Dean of Eastern School of Technology: [puzzled] Fine.
David Randall: [to Dr. Tony Drake] You invented those electrocardiograms for my benefit!
Dr. George Frye, Dean of Eastern School of Technology: [puzzled] Fine.
David Randall: [to Dr. Tony Drake] You invented those electrocardiograms for my benefit!
[first lines]
Narrator: [spoken over a shot of outer space] Needles in a heavenly haystack. There are more stars in the heavens than there are human beings on Earth. Through telescopes men of science constantly search the infinitesimal corners of our solar system seeking new discoveries, hoping to better understand the laws of the Universe. Observatories dedicated to the study of astronomy are set in high and remote places, but there is none more remote than Mt. Kenna Observatory in this part of South Africa.
Narrator: [spoken over a shot of outer space] Needles in a heavenly haystack. There are more stars in the heavens than there are human beings on Earth. Through telescopes men of science constantly search the infinitesimal corners of our solar system seeking new discoveries, hoping to better understand the laws of the Universe. Observatories dedicated to the study of astronomy are set in high and remote places, but there is none more remote than Mt. Kenna Observatory in this part of South Africa.