It was a long night followed by a long day, and it isn't over yet. I chaperoned the Discovery Space Center's Halloween "Dark Caldron" overnight camp last night. A good group of kids for sure; all of them true Space Center fans. One was a sleep talker and walker combined. His conversation with the midnight air woke me. I sat up and watched him walk away from his sleeping bag. He stopped in the center of the room and continued his conversation. I called him over. He came to me and stopped. "What is your name?" I asked. That is my first test to see if someone is truly sleep walking or just scared and looking for a chaperone. He mumbled. "Do you know where you are?" I asked. He looked at me, eye to eye but didn't answer. "Go to your bed," I ordered in my chaperone voice. I was lucky; he obeyed. Well he almost did what I asked. He stopped first to stare at another camper for a minute or so before settling back down on his own bed.
Before going to bed the campers talked about how much they loved the Discovery's new Halloween mission, Dark Caldron.
Visit the Discovery Space Center's web site for information on next week's overnight camp. I'll be chaperoning again, so sign up and join me.
I left the Discovery Space Center a little after 7:00 A.M. so I could get to Renaissance Academy to open the doors for our Farpoint Cadet Programming Department's Saturday morning training. I worked on school stuff in my classroom while the programming class met. Later this afternoon I stopped by the Space Center to meet and interview one of Farpoint's new cadets. Welcome to Farpoint Claire.
While at Central I took a few pictures of some new signage announcing Central School's national recognition as a Blue Ribbon School. Congratulations to Central Elementary, my home for the last 30 years.
Mr. W.
Space and Science News
Several theories have been put forward in an attempt to explain this asymmetry noted in the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation, one of which is the idea that our universe collided with another when it ballooned out to an incredible size at a fantastic speed. In the multiverse hypothesis, our universe could have popped into existence near another universe. When it expanded, it ran into the neighboring universe; the resulting collision would have left a mark (like a bruise) on our universe.
Via From Quarks to Quasars
Read more here: http://
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▶ Ancient Skull: http://is.gd/WfRG8A
▶ New Supernovae: http://is.gd/SgBB7G
▶ Galactic Bulge Exoplanet: http://is.gd/yoRUie
▶ Mosquito Fossil: http://is.gd/8oj7YF
▶ Artificial Limbs: http://is.gd/WcO41w
▶ New Fish Species: http://is.gd/JKVyzD
▶ Blood-powered Computer:http://is.gd/MvR2N0
▶ Asteroid 2032: http://is.gd/oepqFF
The Imaginarium
Ordinary is not good enough. Make it extraordinary
Left behind for the hotel maid |
Great Halloween Decoration |
I wouldn't need an exit. Who would ever want to come out? |
At a London Underground station |
Who would think of putting a "Shuffle" button on an elevator :) |
Oh how times have changed |
Over 100 people volunteered. A match was found. True Love and an imaginative way to tackle the problem |
One cool desk |
Jabba's barge in transit to the next desert |
A sub with fantastic writing |
How to illuminate a tent with one flashlight. Strap it to a gallon of water |
How to loose friends |
Interesting.... What does beginning paper look like? |
Ever feel like this is what your boss or coworkers think you're worth :) |
1 comment:
That really was a spectacular mission. :)
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