I want to go with you.
May I?
Good luck.
PS: Tried to call the number you gave, but I'm on a phone card and got the message "You are not allowed to call the number with this card". Are you in prison, or on another planet?
2007-03-12 07:47:49
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answer #1
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answered by Croa 6
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You need to get to the airport and purchase a ticket to Fairbanks Alaska. As soon as you get off the plane ask directions to the Howling Dog Saloon. Like you everyone there is from 1973 even though it is 2007. Trust me you will fit right in, you'll be HOME!
2007-03-16 01:43:55
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answer #2
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answered by tonal9nagual 4
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Trust me, you are better off staying here in the future. The styles of clothes back then were nasty. The fact that you were able to get online and write this is one of many examples of how technology has made our world a more interesting place. You can still get your music on cd or online. Your movies are available on DVD. No Nixon. Why would you want to go back? :-)
2007-03-12 10:21:17
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answer #3
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answered by Mr. Taco 7
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While the idea of time travel makes for great fiction, some physicists think taking a voyage into to the past is impossible.
In physics, time is described as a dimension much like length, width, and height. When you travel from your house to the grocery store, you’re traveling through a direction in space, making headway in all the spatial dimensions—length, width and height. But you’re also traveling forward in time, the fourth dimension.
“Space and time are tangled together in a sort of a four-dimensional fabric called space-time,” said Charles Liu, an astrophysicist with the City University of New York, College of Staten Island and co-author of the book “One Universe: At Home In The Cosmos.”
Space-time, Liu explains, can be thought of as a piece of spandex with four dimensions. “When something that has mass—you and I, an object, a planet, or any star—sits in that piece of four-dimensional spandex, it causes it to create a dimple,” he said. “That dimple is a manifestation of space-time bending to accommodate this mass.”
The bending of space-time causes objects to move on a curved path and that curvature of space is what we know as gravity.
Mathematically one can go backwards or forwards in the three spatial dimensions. But time doesn’t share this multi-directional freedom.
“In this four-dimensional space-time, you’re only able to move forward in time,” Liu told LiveScience.
2007-03-12 10:23:59
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answer #4
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answered by pwrgrlmanda 5
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Oooh! an International Man of Mystery!
Yeah, Baby! Groovy!
2007-03-12 10:21:14
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answer #5
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answered by Erin 3
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I can help you, but i have just one question:
The Blue Pill or the Red Pill?
xxooxxoo
2007-03-12 10:23:27
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answer #6
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answered by leavemealonestalker 6
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Have some more medication.
2007-03-16 04:47:05
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answer #7
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answered by holly 7
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