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Sunday August 22nd, 2004

Host

Art Bell

Guest

Open Lines

Clip Streams

 
Vegas 'Time Traveler'
 
Time Traveler from the 70's

Recap

Time Travel Open Lines

Art dedicated this Sunday night for Open Lines and reserved one line for 'Time Travelers.' One such caller said he came from the 1970's where through his experimentation with "electromagnetic frequencies" he stumbled upon the ability to travel into the future. He said his travels are bound by a set of rules overseen by an elite group and that occasionally problems arise when he gets "stuck in a magnetic stream."

Another caller to this line said he had been involved in time travel experiments as a government employee and that he suffered from medical problems because of it. "Accelerated time," in which, for instance a 3-hour experience could be felt as one hour, is a related area the government is studying he said.

A third caller related a curious tale of meeting a 'time traveler' in Las Vegas who told him to gamble at the Flamingo "at the table right in front of me." When he got to the casino, he saw a life size cardboard cut-out of Bugsy Siegel (which resembled the man) and he said he ended up winning $7,000 at that table.

Related Articles

The God Particle?

An ambitious new science project is being planned that may uncover a sub-atomic fragment that some call the "God particle," which is thought to have been present in the first few billionths of a second after the Big Bang. The experiment would involve building a gigantic underground atom smasher that would collide particles from the opposite ends of a 20-mile tunnel.

Countries such as the US, Britain, Japan and Germany are being asked to share the estimated five and a half billion dollar expense in launching the project. "It will hopefully reveal new and exciting physics, addressing the 21st century agenda of compelling questions about dark matter and dark energy, the existence of extra dimensions and the fundamental nature of matter, energy, space and time," Brian Foster of Oxford University said in an article for the Guardian U.K.
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