"Previously on the West Wing" spoken by Sam 100,000 Airplanes was the 11th episode of Season 3. A State of the Union episode, it also introduces Sam's ex-fiancée, Lisa Sherborne. On the night of the State of the Union, Sam has to explain the process of writing the speech and grading reaction to it to a magazine reporter throughout the evening; C.J. arranged the coverage knowing that the reporter, Lisa Sherborne, is Sam's ex-fiancée; flashing back to the speechwriting process, we see the President dining with several of Abbey's medical colleagues, and they ponder the future of cancer research, motivating Bartlet to ask that a section be added to the State of the Union in which he calls for U.S. scientists to find a cancer cure by 2013; the staff, convinced that the congressional censure is
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| - "Previously on the West Wing" spoken by Sam 100,000 Airplanes was the 11th episode of Season 3. A State of the Union episode, it also introduces Sam's ex-fiancée, Lisa Sherborne. On the night of the State of the Union, Sam has to explain the process of writing the speech and grading reaction to it to a magazine reporter throughout the evening; C.J. arranged the coverage knowing that the reporter, Lisa Sherborne, is Sam's ex-fiancée; flashing back to the speechwriting process, we see the President dining with several of Abbey's medical colleagues, and they ponder the future of cancer research, motivating Bartlet to ask that a section be added to the State of the Union in which he calls for U.S. scientists to find a cancer cure by 2013; the staff, convinced that the congressional censure is
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| - "Previously on the West Wing" spoken by Sam 100,000 Airplanes was the 11th episode of Season 3. A State of the Union episode, it also introduces Sam's ex-fiancée, Lisa Sherborne. On the night of the State of the Union, Sam has to explain the process of writing the speech and grading reaction to it to a magazine reporter throughout the evening; C.J. arranged the coverage knowing that the reporter, Lisa Sherborne, is Sam's ex-fiancée; flashing back to the speechwriting process, we see the President dining with several of Abbey's medical colleagues, and they ponder the future of cancer research, motivating Bartlet to ask that a section be added to the State of the Union in which he calls for U.S. scientists to find a cancer cure by 2013; the staff, convinced that the congressional censure is weighing heavily on the president, tries to talk him out of this bold but risky proposal.
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