Enjoyed watching the Delta IV/Orion launch...
Same here.
...and have a question. or 2...
The craft makes a very slow 90 degree roll during the climb...is there any particular reason for this?
I'm not sure, but I assume it's the rocket rolling from its launch facing to the direction it needs to face to climb to its orbit, given its orbital inclination. Presumably the rocket was aligned N-S or E-W on the launch pad, while its orbit headed off to the south-east. For both Apollo and the Space Shuttle (and I assume Mercury and Gemini) the spacecraft climbed to orbit with the astronauts in a head-down position. That way the astronauts could see the horizon when looking out the window, and it presumably helped blood flow to the head rather than away from it.
Also, as it leaves the pad, I noticed a LOT of small wires/lines being broken/pulled out as it climbed past the gantry...telemetry/data lines or something?
Some of the lines would have been fuel lines, topping up the cryogenic propellants as they boiled off prior to launch. Other lines would have been providing power from the ground, so that if the launch was aborted Mission Control could control the spacecraft.
However, in each of these cases I'm happy for the experts to correct or add to my answer.
It was also interesting being able to visually see the throttling of the center engine vs the outboards...
Yes, I noticed that too, although I wasn't sure whether that was actually what I was seeing.
...great show, and hopefully the beginning of a strong (funded) program.
Agreed.
I have to say I'm ambivalent about the whole thing - what can Orion do that Dragon and the Boeing spacecraft can't? (Apart from keeping a lot of NASA engineers happily employed...?) And I've read a fair bit of criticism of the Space Launch System, although I'll watch it launch as avidly as any Saturn V, Shuttle, Falcon Heavy or Delta IV Heavy launch!