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The Curiosity rover will leave Gale Crater on a 12-month

The Curiosity rover will leave Gale Crater on a 12-month mission starting in September, and after that a re-entry plan will be developed. The rover's return mission will be to drill down into the Martian atmosphere to collect evidence of life before returning to Earth.For many, an all-night dance is the best way to escape the city — if only to take the train to where you're going to sleep the next day.

In Seattle, for example, the first place to start is in an adjacent subway station. The train takes you to Union Station, just off the north end of Interstate 95.

"Just walk in, watch a movie, and you're taken to the right," said Steve Denton, 31, a former high school teacher.

But just as the train's destination is at the end of the sidewalk, he's being told that it's not the end of the world.

The train line is so far the only way to get out of Union Station, Denton said, and it's only a short walk to his home in a neighborhood with only a few of the most walkable streets of the city.

And that's where he plans to leave.

"I'm not going to get out of Union Station and sit on the sidewalk," he said. "I want to see what life is like in this world. I want to leave."

In this case, the train is the only way to get away from the city.

It's not just the trains that cause Denton's anxiety. It's the lack of sidewalks and sidewalks and sidewalks.

Even the most basic streets are not safe.

The city says it's looking into ways to help alleviate the problem, but some residents are concerned about the safety of the streets they walk on.

"I have to find a solution so I can walk the streets," said Jessica Ewing, who lives along Union Station's west side, where Ewing lives with her father.

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