| TIP: Click on subject to list as thread! | ANSI |
| echo: | |
|---|---|
| to: | |
| from: | |
| date: | |
| subject: | NYC Events 2/2 Jun0 4/ 5 |
Continued from previous message.
Fri - 29 Jun
19:30 - Cranford - NJ - Amat Astro Inc meeting - see Jun 1
20:00 - Stamford - CT - clearsky starviewing - see Jun 1/
20:00 - Wash'n Xing S P - NJ - clearsky starviewing - see Jun 1
Sat - 30 Jun
20:00 - Southold - LI - Custer Inst meeting - see Jun 2
20:45 - Paramus - NJ - Buehler-Columbia A A A lecture - see Jun 2
General news
----------
June will complete the seasonal transition from 'winter' events to
'summer' ones. Mostly lectures drop off with the close of the school
year and starparties crank up with the coming of warm weather.
Several exhibits that were previously noted as 'indefinite
duration' became more or less permanent features. They no longer are
'events' but are now part of the routine offerings of each venue.
Two new members come to NYC Events this month, but they are idle
for the summer. Physics Club of NY ended its 2006-2007 season in May.
Its lecture series resumes in the fall. NYC Center for Space Science
Education didn't gear up yet for general public programs. So far it
was serving school groups.
Orange County Astronomical Association apparently went into
inactive state in April or May. It lost its starviewing site several
months ago and so far haven't resumed public sessions. If in the
future the club revives, NYC Events will welcome it back.
The video lectures at Brooklyn College are finished for this
semester. They are expected to resume in the fall. They were widely
acclaimed as a means of hearing good talks without the trouble and
expense of traveling.
Event news
--------
Whew! We survived the shutdown of the IND Fulton Street line, just
barely. The loss of this transit corridor thru Brooklyn and
curtailment of service on its Manhattan and Queens reaches caused no
end of aggravation, missed connections, round-about detours. Most
readers made substantial alterations to their daily goings about to
avoid this line!
Governors Island opens its 2007 season on Saturday, June 2nd, with
bout the same program as in previous years. Weekends are for casual
visits while weekdays have guided tours at specific hours. You'll see
renovations on the Island to expand visitor services, but there are
still only limited conveniences. Visit a restroom and pack a picnic.
The ferry ride is again free, but you have to pick up a timed-
ticket at the depot. They are issued for the seating capacity of the
boat to avoid overcrowding. The Island on weekends is treated like an
extension of Batery Park by residents and tourists, so expect a large
volume of visitors.
Amateur Observers Society runs StarFest2007 in Roxbury NY in the
upper Catskills, on June 17-19. It's the club's first real starparty,
in the style of the rural ones.
The Ripley's Believe It Or Not museum returns to New York after a
couple decades absence! Oh, it's actually called the 'Odditorium'
[groan]. It opens on the 21st right on 40-Deuce. And it got some
ASTRONOMY, the largest privately-owned meteorite on public display!!
I tossed in a couple funky events. There's a flying saucer
convention in East Village MH on June 22-24 and a walking tour of
midtown spy cameras on June 24. I'M NOT MAKING UP THIS CRAP!
I have one transit tour for you, a romp in New Jersey and Staten
Island, on June 24. With NYC mayor Bloomberg's manifesto for greening
the City, you as a home astronomer should bone up on some of the
transit projects that can help meet the green goals.
The major astronomy event is the 'New trends in astrodynamics'
conference on June 27-29 at Princeton University. In spite of its
proximity to the City and ease of getting there by train, it can be a
bit costly when all costs are accounted for. On the other hand, this
is the #1 meeting to learn about space flight planning, space mission
design, celestial mechanics from the real experts. The conference
include good entertainment and noshing.
Sky news
------
Weather in May 2007 was erratic. It whacked between thunderstorms
and cool sunny days! Near the end of May, the temperature shot into
the mid 30Cs with nasty humidity. I sort of take the hint: summer is
arrived in the Big Apple.
In late May we got a series of lunar conjunctions in the western
evening sky. Rain and cloud knocked out the Venus and Castor-Pollux
conjunctions. The others were enjoyed in clear skies.
NYC Events is issuing just when the Stonehenge sunset occurs at
end May. I'll have a report on it in the July NYC Events.
gamma Virginis, now in south, is just barely separated in the
larger home telescopes. Recall that it was closed up during its
periastron in 2005-2006. If you can't get the two stars apart during
this year's apparition, you surely will in next year's.
Jupiter returns to the evening sky by month end and stays with us
all thru the summer and into early fall. It 'pushes' Saturn off into
Continued in next message.
---
þ RoseReader 2.52á P005004
* Origin: MoonDog BBS, Brooklyn,NY, 718 692-2498, 1:278/230 (1:278/230)SEEN-BY: 633/267 @PATH: 278/230 10/345 106/1 261/38 123/500 379/1 633/267 |
|
| SOURCE: echomail via fidonet.ozzmosis.com | |
Email questions or comments to sysop@ipingthereforeiam.com
All parts of this website painstakingly hand-crafted in the U.S.A.!
IPTIA BBS/MUD/Terminal/Game Server List, © 2025 IPTIA Consulting™.