Last day of Spring

Hello again everyone! I trust you’re enjoying the first days of your summer vacation… even though it’s not officially summer until tomorrow. As I was lovingly informed last week, June 21st is usually the summer solstice. Most of us know that we have the most hours of sunlight on this day and it has traditionally marked the birth of summer. However, I bet you didn’t know that THIS year the solstice lands on June 20th… TODAY! Here are nine more things you probably didn’t know about the summer solstice.

  • Summertime, and the tiltin’ is easy. Summers are hot, not because Earth is closer to the sun, but because the tilt of the Earth’s axis lets rays of sunlight hit one hemisphere more directly.
  • During the Northern Hemisphere’s summer, we’re actually farthest from the sun, receiving 7 percent less sunlight than the Southern Hemisphere does during its summer
  • Supporters of Seattle’s Solstice Parade, an annual fixture of the city’s artsy Fremont neighborhood, proclaim that it will “cast a spell of joy, hope, and rebirth that spreads from Fremont to the entire universe.” Helping cast the spell are the Painted Cyclists, a clothing-optional group of bike riders who wear intense body makeup. The Painted Cyclists’ organizers instruct participants to slather on the sunscreen, encouraging newbies to “ask Rob about his plaid sunburn from Solstice 2002.”
  • Modern-day druids, taking a more traditional approach, gather at England’s Stonehenge to mark the summer solstice. Many still don Celtic attire, even though a civilization known as the Beaker People finished Stonehenge a millennium before the Celts turned up.
  • The Tropic of Cancer—the latitude on Earth where the sun is directly overhead at noon on the summer solstice—got its name because when the ancients established it, the sun appeared in the constellation Cancer. However, due to subsequent shifting of Earth’s axis, the Tropic of Cancer is now misnamed. On the current June solstice, the sun actually appears in the constellation Taurus.
  • Galileo was forced to recant his theory that Earth revolves around the sun on the summer solstice of 1633.
  • Other planets have solstices too. By cosmic coincidence, this year Mars and Earth have solstices that fall within a few days of each other, with the Martian solstice occurring on June 25. Uranus’s axis of rotation is nearly aligned with the plane of its orbit, meaning that each pole on Uranus experiences a 42-year-long summer of steady sunshine—followed by a depressing 42 years of winter darkness. At the other extreme, Venus’s and Jupiter’s poles are almost exactly perpendicular to their orbits. Because of that, their solstices—hence their seasons—are barely noticeable. Then again, you would have difficulty noticing any kind of season on Venus because you would be simultaneously suffocated, crushed, and cooked at 870 degrees Fahrenheit. On Jupiter it would be worse: You would be killed by radiation long before you got close.
  • Even without seasons, changes in the sun affect the planets. Sunspots wax and wane on an 11-year cycle; at times of peak sunspot activity, such as the year 2000, the sun is 0.07 percent brighter than during periods of low activity.

The Lost Sheep (1979)

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There is no way I can effectively describe this musical performance. You will just have to experience it for yourself. This man is either ahead of his time or completely insane.

Musical Memory Game

As you can see there have been some big changes around here. First of all the AMAZING new banner was made by Joel Arnone and I think he did a fantastic job. Also, above the banner you’ll see a link that says Les Miserables Videos. If you click it, you should be taken to a little movie viewer with all of our rehearsal videos at your fingertips. I’ll update that page as things develop.

EduBlogs also just enabled a new flash embedding feature, which basically means I’m going to post a game to test out this new ability:

I played this twice and my best score was 22 clicks. See if you can beat me 🙂

Proof of 22