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| subject: | NYC Events May 2004 9/11 |
Continued from previous message.
with about 300 copies flowing into hands of visitors. The feedback was
overwhelmingly praiseful. Plus. I got leads for several unrecognized
astronomy activities within NYSkies territory. I welcome onboard two
new astronomy clubs. I do mean 'new' being that they were only
recently formed.
Say 'hello!' to Orange County Astronomical Association, Chester
NY, and Buehler-Columbia Amateur Astronomers Association, Paramus
(yes, THAT Paramus) NJ. Orange County already put up a slate of
stargazings for 2004. Buehler-Columbia has informal meetings until its
observatory at Bergen Community College is complete this summer.
Two newcomers to NYC Event collaborate for astronomy day on May
15th. First is the Wilder Observatory at Amherst College for evening
starviewing. The other is A-Z Science, a museum in Northampton MA for
daytime exhibits and sunviewing. These two carry on a regular program
of public astronomy, so they'll be included in future NYC Events.
Science, altho not strictly astronomy, is featured at some rather
odd places! Try the science-&-art play at Cornelia Street Cafe', smack
in Greenwich Village, on May 2nd. Before or after, you can cruise the
bookshops in the area for those astrobooks you always hoped to own.
I tossed in a couple events on climate and global warming/cooling
from the interest raised by current planet explorations and studies.
And thee are a couple on the new York subway system for historical
context and importance as a major weapon against luminous graffiti.
I showed mockups of a simplified NYC Events at NEAF. The one with
repetitive events listed only for the first date was a disaster. Not
only did the events bunch up at the front of the month, but when you
looked at dates near the end of the month, there was no way to realize
that there were in fact events for them. You would miss a LOT of
chances for your astronomy fix!
It also turns out that many clubs pass along NYC Events to their
own members, at times with some editing out of 'remote' items. They
WANT to see each instance of their activity in the list.
On the other hand, you really liked the starred items in the list
of places for those within the City.
What's with Northeast Astronomical Society and Rockland Astronomy
Club? See 'Astropolitics' below.
Major Events
----------
NYSkies was a hit at both the Northeast Astronomy Forum on April
17-18 and Earth Day on the 24-25!At the former, it hosted about 200
visitors; the latter, some 2.000! The percent of visitors was vastly
higher at NEAF because the attendees were already home astronomers. At
Earth Day they came from all sectors of society, including many who,
after sniffing at our table, fessed up that they were not interested
in astronomy.
Earth Day was the more spectacular of the two for its setting and
thousands of out-of-town visitors, Many were tourists from overseas,
who took NYSkies litterature to illustrate home astronomy in the City
for their friends back home. Others were suburban folk arriving at
Grand Central for a daytrip or to take in the whole earth Day show.
For them, NYSkies was a welcome source of astro activity in their
districts around the City.
The big upcoming event in May is the fifth and last of the public
hearings of the space commission set up in January by US president
Bush. It got a long bureaucratic name but everyone knows it as
'President's Commission on Moon, Mars, and beyond'. It even says that
right in the title on its own website.
Anyway, come to Asia House on Monday the 3rd and Tuesday the 4th
to hear the commissioners explain their work and answer questions. Who
knows? Maybe we will see astronauts tramping and hopping around on the
Moon again. Maybe even before the Second Avenue subway is finished.
The annual Tour de Sol alternate energy vehicle show rolls into
town on the 25th at Battery Park. This is a tentative location, but
definitely you'll see the cars and get free rides in them somewhere in
Lower Manhattan. If you can't wait, you can catch the show in
Burlington on the 22nd and Trenton on the 24th, both in New Jersey.
Skywatching
---------
After the five-planet parade of March, April was quiet. We had
lots of routine viewing of the planets, just that there ws no extra
special activity. The weather hasn't been that clear. Clouds and rain
were common all during the month.
May is an other story. Venus starts her run toward the Sun. Slowly
she arcs lower in the west at first, then by mid month she's in
freefall. You;ll lose her by month end in the sunset.
May and June are the spring season for spotting the Milky Way from
New York. I mean the summer reach only, which is up during the owl
hours to dawn. The winter Milky Way, rapidly sinking in the west at
dusk, so far has not been seen within the City for many decades. Late
spring and early summer typicly has haze moist skies, smothering any
hope of a Milky Way sighting. At times, once in a while, the sky gets
really, like really, clear and dark. On such nights the Milky Way can
show thru in its brighter parts.
The end of May is the first of New York's two Stonehenge sunset
windows. The Manhattan street grid allows the Sun to set in line with
an east-west street on May 29-31 and again on July 10-12. You need a
clear view down the whole street, with no obstructions, to Hudson
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