Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Sunday, February 2, 2014

The Weekend at the Space Education Centers. The Imaginarium.

Hello Troops,
     Discovery Space Center new commercial premiers today at the Water Garden 6 Cinemas in Pleasant Grove.  Watch and enjoy.  Casey and the entire DSC production gang did a bang up job.  



It was back to the old times for me Friday night.  I chaperoned my 100,000,000th overnight camp (counting all the nights spent at the CMSEC chaperoning the camps for the last 22 years, and my time chaperoning at the DSC).  OK, I exaggerate, but when you stop and add up all the nights I've spent chaperoning space camps, sleeping on a pad on the floor, consoling the home sick, caring for the real sick, cleaning up oceans of vomit and pee soaked clothes and mattresses, it adds up to around 3 and 1/2 years of days end to end.  Taking all of that into account, I wouldn't have changed a thing.  I'm grateful we were able to do it for as long as we did because I know the program enriched thousands of lives on both sides of the simulator's walls.  There's also many nights still to come as our Farpoint Space Education Center takes shape at Renaissance Academy in Lehi.   
     I slept like a baby and the boys were great.  Not a peep out of them all night long - which is awesome when I have a busy Saturday and need to be somewhat alert and functioning.

     The DSC's Endeavor simulator has its new white panel lighting installed.  The color changes in a cycle.  It adds a nice touch to this newly remodeled simulator.      





Summer Mission Writing Gets Intense at the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center
     
     Of course I stopped at my old stomping grounds for my weekly update from CMSEC's director, Megan Warner, and her trusted lieutenant, Jon Parker.  They report this last week was very uneventful; there was a full slate of field trips and a healthy dose of private missions.
     As I entered the school, my ear was drawn to a ruckus coming from the CMSEC's Discovery Room.  I found Josh A., Connor L., Christine G., and Sara G., sitting around a table and admiring something Connor had created on his laptop.  Some kind of role playing player cards were spread out in front of them.  Connor wore his Minion stocking cap - he claims it magnifies his creative abilities.   
     It didn't take long for me to surmise how they were 'writing' the Magellan's new summer mission.  I believe, from the evidence on the table, that the Magellan staff play the role playing game.  One of them records their actions and the game's outcome.  Afterwords, they take the notes and turn their game into a mission.  Mind you, this is only a theory - I have no direct evidence, but it would seem entirely possible based on the evidence.  Wouldn't you agree?      


     Of course the Space Center wouldn't be the cool place it is without the help of our Farpoint Cadets like Nolan and Isaac, pictured here working the afternoon Phoenix mission.  Our cadets are awesome.  


     Before leaving, I stopped to take a look around the quiet cafeteria.  I stood them remembering the good old days of the Space Center's Golden Age.  I could see the campers sitting at the tables waiting for their Saturday morning Overnight Camp feast of donuts, Gogurts, fruit, Sunny Delight, Milk and Chocolate Milk.  I heard the excitement in their voices as the time drew near for them to start the last few hours of their mission before going home.  


     I half expected Flight Director Ben to appear from behind the Galileo's Control Room to pick up his crew.  Ben is serving an LDS mission to Russia and doing well, despite the frigid temperatures and reckless drivers. 
     Do you old time campers remember the cafeteria?  What kind of memories does seeing it again bring back to you?  

Mr. W.  


The Imaginarium
The Ordinary, made Extraordinary
























































2 comments:

Benji.man.vogeler said...

I do believe it is exaggerating,8030 is the number of days (or nights) in 22 years. 24090 Is 3 hours every day for 22 ears.

I don't think that even comes close to 100,000,000 nights chaperoning. Being that it's 12453 times the possible times able to do it in our time stream.

Unless... MR. WILLIAMSON HAS A TIME MACHINE!

Isaac O. said...

Benjamin, Please note, that Mr. Williamson would have to chaperon every SINGLE night for 22 years, so even if Mr. Williamson only chaperoned half the days in a year (182.5), that means that he would have only chaperoned 547.5 hours, which is about 182648.4 times short of the time he claimed, so the only logical choice has to be that he has a time machine, but if he had at time machine he would still have to go back in time 182,648 times, 182648 * 22 years = 4018264, so that means that if you went back in time 4018264 times you would have to be at least 401864 years old, and since that Mr. Williamson is not nearly that old, means that his time machine would also have to have the power to prevent aging. :P