T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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417.1 | n america, in its original beauty | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | I donwanna wearatie | Wed Oct 03 1990 12:20 | 14 |
| north america, 500 to 600 years ago. I want to see the forest, and the
prarie, before WE got here and changed it all.
I'd enjoy bringing a horse, but horses caused a lot of disruption to
the people living here, so I'm not sure. I do want to bring a couple
of well-trained dogs, of various sizes.
I want to keep all my vaccinations, and to bring along a good supply of
antibiotics. Is that cheating?
Star Trek did an episode like this once y'know. The one where the
planet was gonna be destroyed (nova? earthquake? I forget) and the
people had time travel, everybody got to pick a past epoch to relocate
in. Kirk tried to rescue some screamer and got stuck in a witch-hunt.
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417.2 | JOUSTING, ANYONE? | AUNTB::DILLON | | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:07 | 1 |
| King Arthur's court...I'd be Lady Guenevere (sp?)...
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417.4 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Wed Oct 03 1990 14:52 | 11 |
| A Shaolin monk in old China - Kwai-Chang Charbonneau has a nice ring,
doesn't it ? :-)
A tribesman of the Seneca back 300 years ago. (Joke seen in a
bar - "When white men came to this land, women did all the work,
men hunted and fished all day. There were no taxes and no debts.
White man thought he could improve on a system like that!")
Able bodied spacer on a Federation starship, ca. 2300 AD.
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417.5 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | water, wind, and stone | Wed Oct 03 1990 15:31 | 5 |
| An amazon, skilled in swordplay and with the use of a bow. I'd hunt
for myself, take care of myself, fight well, live well, rest well,
write my own battle chants, worshipthe goddess, and die honorably.
-Jody
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417.6 | | EDIT::CRITZ | LeMond Wins '86,'89,'90 TdF | Wed Oct 03 1990 16:17 | 10 |
| I'd like to go back to the early 1900s to talk to Major
Taylor. Of course, I'd wanna go back knowing what I know
now about race relations. I'll bet he'd have some stories
to tell.
In the late 1800s/early 1900s, Major Taylor was the finest
cyclist in the world. He raced all over the world. He was
also black, hence my interest in how he was treated.
Scott (neither a famous cyclist nor black)
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417.7 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Note instead of sleeping. | Wed Oct 03 1990 16:24 | 4 |
| Oh, so *that's* who Major Taylor was! I always wondered. They named a
velodrome after him in the city where I used to live, Indianapolis.
-- Mike
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417.8 | (*8 | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Leave the poor nits in peace! | Wed Oct 03 1990 16:45 | 3 |
| I'm not sure, but I *think* I already _am_!
E Grace
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417.9 | I like it here. | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Wed Oct 03 1990 18:00 | 19 |
| Re: .8
> I'm not sure, but I *think* I already _am_!
I'm sure. I am. I might like to *visit* some historical times, but I'm way too
wedded to my modern creature comforts to want to LIVE there. I get twitchy when
I'm too long away from e-mail... :-) I can't abide the notion of body lice, and
I'm quite fond of modern dentistry (people used to DIE of tooth decay!) Now I'd
like to go back to my fantasies of what the past was like, but I'm too hard
headed to want to really do it. Hell, I get depressed visiting third world
countries in the 20th century. I can't believe the past was any better...
I'd like to see the future, both near and far, but I'm certain I wouldn't have
enough context to understand the far future, and seeing the near future would
be too much like peeking at the back of a mystery novel. Getting there is
half the fun!
-- Charles
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417.10 | | AIRPRT::VAILLAN_D | | Thu Oct 04 1990 02:06 | 13 |
| I would like to try the 50's. I would like to had been there when the
Beatles were 'in' also when Elvis was big. The 50's to me seemed like
a very exciting time. Soc hops, drive-in movies...etc
I'm not sure if I would bring any knowledge of what I know now or if I
did I wouldn't try and alter time.
I would also like to see what it was like in the old west! When
cowboys and indians settled on our land. I love history! Although, I
think that it should never repeat itself...... There were too many
mistakes made and ones that should never happen again.
Deb
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417.11 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Danger! Do Not Reverse Polarity! | Thu Oct 04 1990 05:07 | 6 |
| Early 19th Century Spanish California. I'd be Zorro. :-)
But seriously...well, a little bit seriously...I always wanted to
be a cowboy, so I guess I'd pick post-Civil War western US.
--- jerry
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417.12 | Or an Amazon... | YUPPY::DAVIESA | B303 Airborne | Thu Oct 04 1990 05:33 | 6 |
|
Minoan Crete - "The Chalice and the Blade" sold me on it! ;-)
I'd be a musician by profession, maybe a harpist....
'gail
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417.13 | I'll take Russia, when Rachmaninoff was touring | SA1794::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Thu Oct 04 1990 07:27 | 7 |
| re .10 umm, Deb, how _young_ are you ? The Beatles were a
*60's* phenom.
The bad thing about the young is they make the middle-aged feel
old :-)
Dana
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417.14 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Danger! Do Not Reverse Polarity! | Thu Oct 04 1990 08:20 | 4 |
| The Beatles...The Beatles...hey, wasn't that the band that had
Julian Lennon's father in it?
--- jerry
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417.15 | | WMOIS::SMITH_S | | Thu Oct 04 1990 08:43 | 6 |
|
I think I would like to live in the year 3000. That is if the earth
has'nt been destroyed. I would love to be a part of the expected
changes in technology maybe even traveling to another planet. Kind
of like the movie "Total Recall".z
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417.16 | Live among great minds | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | Take a Hike...join the AMC | Thu Oct 04 1990 08:59 | 13 |
| re .10 I am trying to decide if your reply was cruel or not. I was
a teenager in the '50's. I wish I had saved the Elvis memorabilia of
the time...
For me Concord I would like to live in Concord during the time of
Alcott, Thoreau and other great artists. Many of the old homes
remain and you can feel the history as you walk a two mile radius
of the center.
In fact I wouldn't mind living in Concord right now! The only
affordable housing is the housing for the elderly. Mother lives
there, but I don't qualify yet. So the '50's weren't that long
ago. ;-)
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417.17 | {*8 | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Leave the poor nits in peace! | Thu Oct 04 1990 10:07 | 15 |
| > <<< Note 417.9 by OXNARD::HAYNES "Charles Haynes" >>>
> -< I like it here. >-
>
>Re: .8
>
>> I'm not sure, but I *think* I already _am_!
>
>
>I'm sure. I am. I might like to *visit* some historical times, but I'm way too
Er, I think you misunderstood. I meant I think I'm already living in
some other time and/or place. It's that time warp existence, don't ya
know.
E Grace
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417.18 | | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Thu Oct 04 1990 10:38 | 11 |
| I follow a bit answer .15, year 3000 but... I read the novel "Creed for
the Third Milleniun and... they were getting into another ice age,
children were limited to the point of use of government sponsored
lotery for the "right" of having a second child...(so limited the Earth
resources were at the time...) of course the book is science fiction,
but...it is such a big possibility that THAT might happen to our Earth
that... I wouldn't want to see it!
I will stick with MY time and do the best of it! (old times were not
any better and, I hate lice and vermin, those were rampant in Middle
Ages anywhere, with the exception of Japan but I wouldn't live among
samurais and spartan boiled rice either...)
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417.19 | | FRAGLE::WASKOM | | Thu Oct 04 1990 11:15 | 16 |
| Like Charles, I'm happy right now. Visit other eras, for short
periods, maybe. Hear the Sermon on the Mount 'live'. See the opening
of the Sistine Chapel. Visit the Rockies with the first US mountain
men. But the reality of the living conditions - no central heating, no
indoor plumbing (imagine life with no hot showers), limited (and
frequently poor) diet, the crowding, those things are not for me.
The other thing I often consider - if going backwards or to another
time meant living one's *full* lifetime in the past, I can't think of a
period or era that didn't include at least one major natural or
economic disaster. Truly, I don't believe that there was ever a time
significantly different in terms of how it felt to live emotionally, in
the day-to-day cares and concerns, than what we have now. (And I use
that as a way of looking at today *positively*.)
Alison
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417.20 | a few | ASABET::RAINEY | | Thu Oct 04 1990 12:17 | 22 |
| The 60's and to be the first person on the moon
or
pre-civil war-to be a rich Southern Belle on a big plantation, however,
without slavery
or
I can't remember the time period, but to be in Ireland at the same time
as chronicled by Leon Uris in Trinity (and be a Catholic subversive)
or
there are just too many other times I would love to visit, some
serious, and some not.
Oh, yeah, if I could go back to the mid-thirties, armed with my
knowledge of today, and get rid of Hitler prior to the atrocities
he perpetuated.
Christine
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417.21 | | GLITER::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu Oct 04 1990 12:21 | 44 |
| I wouldn't want to go back to another time period if I had to *stay*
there, but there are a few eras I'd like to be able to visit for awhile.
I wouldn't want to stay away permanently mostly because of modern
medical advances, and I'd also miss rock music and wearing jeans
*a lot*.
I would most like to be able to take a shopping trip back to the jewelry,
clothing and furniture stores of the 1880's and 1890's in London, Paris,
NY and Boston, and be able to bring everything I bought back with me.
Of course, one condition of the trip would be that I would have to have
a lot of the currency of the day to spend. :-)
I have also always been intrigued with civilian life in the U.S.
and England during the 1940's because I have the feeling that
it was the last of an era. I think the world and the way people
think and live changed radically after WWII (some for the better,
some for the worse) and I'd like to be able to go back and
visit that time and see what it was like.
I would also like to visit the Left Bank in Paris during the
1920's and hang out with the American writers like Hemingway, etc.,
for awhile.
And, my another trip back I'd like to take would be to visit
North America (very briefly) in the 1600's. I'd like to be
able to fly over it invisibly in a bubble :-) so I could see
what it looked like before civilization took over. It must
have been breathtakingly beautiful compared to anything that's
around today.
re Joyce, I would also have liked to meet Thoreau. Sorry Dorian,
:-), but despite his supposed sexism, he's always been one of
my heroes and I think he would have been so interesting to
talk to and get to know.
re Dana, what makes *me* feel old is having people younger than
*myself* refer to themselves as middleaged! Give me a break!
You aren't even 40 yet! How can you be middleaged? I'm 41 and
*I'm* not middleaged! I was 14 when the Beatles first became
famous and,yes, it was very exciting - (they were more different
from any singers I had ever seen before than anybody else has
ever been, if that makes any sense.)
Lorna
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417.22 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:15 | 7 |
| re .21 Sorry, Lorna. However, I've never thought of you as
'middle-aged'. (Maybe I'm just jealous of people who've never gone
through metabolic downshift :-) )
Dana (who'd also like to tip a few with Henry David)
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417.23 | the sixties? bah...that was too long ago... | MILKWY::JLUDGATE | Just a dead friend | Thu Oct 04 1990 13:27 | 7 |
| either london or new york during the late seventies and early
eighties..... or both.... try to meet johnny rotten, sid, ian
curtis, ian mac, robert smith, morrissey when they were all just
starting out.......
and maybe throw a brick through a window while i was at it.
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417.24 | try standing under stage lights with one on! | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Leave the poor nits in peace! | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:50 | 7 |
| Non_gender_specific_small_child! I guess I'm lucky. All *I* have
to do is be in a play to visit all these other places.
Though, I gotta tell ya, the gowns of the late 1700s, early 1800s are
*not* all they are cracked up to be!
E Grace
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417.25 | | HOO78C::VISSERS | Dutch Comfort | Fri Oct 05 1990 06:53 | 6 |
| Guess I'm not really in for "another time, another place". I feel about
my current one as "it ain't beautiful, but it's home".
Then again, to be 16 and know what I know now!! :-)
Ad
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417.26 | the big bang...or whatever it was.... | MARLIN::RYAN | Make sure your calling is true | Fri Oct 05 1990 12:59 | 7 |
| I want to go back to the beginning of time. I mean *the* beginning.
Day 1, minute 1, second 1. Write down what I see. Answer all the
questions, dispute all of the myths and legends. Of course people
would continue to believe what they want to, but at least I would
know what happened.
Dee (who is failing Philosophy 1, and probably for a very good reason.)
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417.27 | Sail on! And on! | XCUSME::QUAYLE | i.e. Ann | Sun Oct 07 1990 12:36 | 13 |
| Coincidence; the instructor of Amer. Lit. asked that. He seemed
disappointed that I chose to go forward. The past appeals to me,
romantic that I am, but I think it is the *imagined* past. A fan of
flush toilets and easy access to books (from the ridiculous to the
sublime) such as I would probably find the advantages outweighed
considerably by the drawbacks.
The future! More books! Masterpieces, as yet unwritten! Good that my
predilections lie in that direction, since that's the direction in
which I'm living...
aq
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417.28 | or maybe this qualifies for the musical quotes note? | MILKWY::JLUDGATE | purple horseshoes | Mon Oct 08 1990 15:32 | 6 |
| re: .27
"The future is unwritten, the heroes unknown"
don't know who said it, but saw it on a Clash album cover....
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417.29 | | DEVIL1::PILOTTE | | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:40 | 10 |
| A crew member of the Starship Enterprise:The Next Generation
A member of the Iroquis Nation during the time of the settlement of the
USA
A male, to see what it was like...no particular time or place
Regards, Judy
|
417.30 | my kinda gal :-) | HEFTY::CHARBONND | scorn to trade my place | Tue Oct 09 1990 14:57 | 1 |
| re .29 See .4
|
417.31 | too much work to let it go to waste | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Oct 12 1990 12:23 | 3 |
| I think I'd move into the future world I've created for my novels.
--bonnie
|