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Our teacher assigned us a "Spy report" to give out in history class forWorld war one & we have to think of a creative way to give her the report, for example,a hollowed out book, hidden in a map of Germany...& so forth. I wanted an extra creative way to give the report to her...any ideas?

2007-01-30 05:36:03 · 6 answers · asked by Louee 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

6 answers

Your report can be...
..tucked inside a statue or stuffed toy.
..tucked inside a loaf of unsliced bread which is then placed back in its original wrapper and sealed up as if unopened.
..coded into a book by marking each letter contained in the report in a substitution code. Your teacher will then need a sheet of instructions to decode your report.
..hidden inside a ring box like you get from a jeweler underneath the ring holder.
..hidden in a box of cracker jacks. hmm..not sure how to reseal the box though so it looks unopened.
..hidden between the lining and the outer shell of a ladies purse...a small coin purse might work. You'll have to rip a seam, tuck in the report and restitch with matching thread.

2007-01-30 06:57:03 · answer #1 · answered by ModelFlyerChick 6 · 0 0

Darn:

Now that is a question! I am gonna have to think about this one. Good question!!!!

-db

How about in a cryptex?

Use just a regular box, with a bike lock on it, similar to the one that Dan Brown describes in his book. Leave riddles or math problems that the professor would have to solve in order to get the combination to the lock. Then she would be able to open it and see your report?

That is all I got...good luck!

The (first) cryptex featured in the novel is described as a stone cylinder made up of "five doughnut-sized disks of marble [that] had been stacked and affixed to one another within a delicate brass framework"; end caps make it impossible to see inside the hollow cylinder. Each of the disks is carved with the entire alphabet, and since they can be rotated individually, the disks can be aligned to spell different five-letter words.

The cryptex works "much like a bicycle's combination lock", and if one arranges the disks to spell out the correct password, "the tumblers inside align, and the entire cylinder slides apart" (p. 200). In the inner compartment of the cryptex, secret information can be hidden, written on a scroll of thin papyrus wrapped around a fragile vial of vinegar as a security measure: if one does not know the password but tries to pry the cryptex open by force, the vial will break and the vinegar will dissolve the papyrus before it can be read...

YOu know what - do the lemon juice and cryptex!! or write the clues in lemon juice to the cryptex, that was in the book as well if I remember. It would make it that much harder to open.....and solve the clues to the lock.

2007-01-30 05:40:04 · answer #2 · answered by EUPKid 4 · 0 0

you could dress up as a spy and use sounds like the siren and bombs. you could use tea packets to give a paper effect on "evidence" u find

2007-01-30 05:44:04 · answer #3 · answered by SmileeSuzyy 3 · 0 0

maybe reverse it so it has to be read in the mirror, or write it all in code, and give the key to the teacher.

2007-01-30 05:44:20 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Write it in lemon juice (invisible ink). Of course you better be able to show her how to read it.

2007-01-30 05:41:27 · answer #5 · answered by fancyname 6 · 0 0

How about you mail it to her without a return address.

2007-01-30 06:48:37 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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