A rather obscure Tom Lehrer song. The following is taken from rec.music.dementia's unofficial Dr. Demento webpage (http://php.indiana.edu/~jbmorris/), where I read about this song for the first time.

Tom wrote this song for the 1963 Universal-International film "A Gathering Of Eagles". It is used about an hour and fifteen minutes into that film. It is sung by the character Hollis Farr (played by Rod Taylor, Rock Hudson's co-star in the film), who accompanies himself on the piano. About 45 seconds are used in the film, though about a minute and a half was written. This is the part used in the film.

An officer named Jackson at Beale Air Force Base in Marysville, CA (where the film was done) made a recording of Tom singing the full version of the song, but these lyrics have not yet surfaced. One known expurgated couplet is:


  Every time we hear that Klaxon,
  We say a few words in Anglo-Saxon.
This refers to cursing whenever the alarm bell would sound. The song is best understood in the context of the film. An O.R.I. is a no-notice Operational Readiness Inspection. S.A.C. is the Strategic Air Command.

Here at S.A.C. we're filled with pride.
There's just one thing we can't decide:
Which we'd rather get clobbered by,
An enemy attack or an O.R.I.

Our wing commander's got a racket,
Though sometimes it's hard to hack it.
Whenever he gets his wife alone,
Ding-a-ling-a-ling goes the little red phone.

Oh, we love the seven-day alert.
For a week we will not see a skirt.
But we know it's part of S.A.C.'s main goal:
To test our positive control.

Absence makes the heart grow fonder.
Whatever became of the wild blue yonder?
How we wish the good ol' days were back
In S.A.C.!

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