Speaking of 116...
How about the Clock Tower? It never did get repaired (What did the Hill Valley Preservation Society do with all of the donations, hmmm??)
It's been stuck on 10-4, 10:04 p.m. for 70 years, since November 12, 1955.
116 "Yinon" minutes to midnight.
And like Daniel in Babylon, Bill and Ted knew their history. That's how they found the keys to the jail, to free all of the historical figures:

I shouldn't be trying to multi-task.
Otherwise I would have included the relevant link up:
Nun also means “kingship.” There is a verse in Psalms regarding Moshiach that states:16 “May his name (Yinon) endure forever, as long as the sun.” According to Rashi, Yinon refers to kingship. If we break the word “Yinon” into two—yud and nun—nun means kingship, and putting a yud before a word denotes continuity.17 Therefore, the name Yinon implies that the kingship of Moshiach will endure forever.
ינון yud prefix "denotes continuity": masc. singular future form
נוני yud suffix: possessive "my"
It was the Enchantment Under the Sea Dance, after all.
In Aramaic, nun means "fish." The mem, the waters of the sea, is the natural medium of the nun, fish. The nun "swims" in the mem, covered by the waters of the "hidden world." Creatures of the "hidden world" lack self-consciousness.>>>
In Hebrew, nunmeans "kingdom," and in particular, the "heir to the throne."
The "nun" is the fourteenth letter of the alef-beit, which equals "David," the progenitor of the eternal Kingdom of Israel. The heir to David is Mashiach ben David, of whom is said: "As long as the duration of the sun his name shall rule." Our Sages teach us that one of the names of Mashiach is Yinon ("shall rule"), cognate to nun.
Search Google simply for
what is the birthday of Heir to the Throne
>>>
AI Overview
Prince William, the current heir apparent to the British throne, was born on June 21, 1982...
***
That who the result went to. Look for the matching ID tag M/D/Y; c.f. Osnat's "tzitz" -- some kind of small, rectangular plate of gold.
(Scientists have uncovered a way to send messages into the past)