by apodman » Sun Jun 07, 2009 2:35 am
orin stepanek wrote:You mean the Lazarus project?
No, actually I mean
this Lazarus (the guy on the left):
In the end, antimatter Lazarus traps his insane regular-matter twin to wrestle him for eternity in the corridor joining the two universes and thereby prevent him from causing what Spock refers to as "annihilation, Jim - total, complete, absolute annihilation". Everyone on the bridge of the Enterprise is happy that both universes have been saved from matter-antimatter annihilation ... leaving Kirk to ask, "But what of Lazarus?" Then they play the theme song and roll the credits.
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On a serious note, I don't know why the dust lanes do what they do.
[quote="orin stepanek"]You mean the Lazarus project?[/quote]
No, actually I mean [b]this Lazarus[/b] (the guy on the left):
[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Alternative_Factor][img]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/14/STAltFactor.jpg[/img][/url]
[quote="[url]http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/T/Trifid_Nebula.html[/url]"]The [b]Trifid Nebula[/b] appears in the Star Trek original series episode "The Alternative Factor". As the character Lazarus jumps between this universe and another, anti-universe, the [b]Trifid[/b] is portrayed as if it were the portal between the two.[/quote]
In the end, antimatter Lazarus traps his insane regular-matter twin to wrestle him for eternity in the corridor joining the two universes and thereby prevent him from causing what Spock refers to as "annihilation, Jim - total, complete, absolute annihilation". Everyone on the bridge of the Enterprise is happy that both universes have been saved from matter-antimatter annihilation ... leaving Kirk to ask, "But what of Lazarus?" Then they play the theme song and roll the credits.
---
On a serious note, I don't know why the dust lanes do what they do.