- The DC Dental Spa has advertisements all over the Metro stations. Click through to that and look in the upper left. Look familiar?
- Further down the same platform, I saw ads for the Spy Museum sporting photos of the Very Large Array. I wasn't able to Google a picture of their actual ad, nor snap one in the Metro (anti-terrorism security and all that), but the ad had a shot much like this one with the colors altered to yellow and red tones, and the very strong implication that the dishes were intended for communications with spy satellites. (And yes I'm sure it was the VLA - I always examine the pedestals for the three feet since when I visited Socorro, NM, that was the easiest part for us to see other than when I got to walk out on the face of one.)
- And the last interesting sighting: in the Vendor Exhibition Hall of the NEA convention I saw a giant model T-Rex head. Delighted at the prospect of literature saying how evolution is a great tool to teach about the Scientific Method and critical thinking, I instead discovered that it was a booth by the Creation Museum. (No I'm not linking to them to drive up their traffic - if you really care, they're the first Google hit.) I am planning to tomorrow bring my camera and get a picture in front of the booth, just because I have to. It'll be funnier than my Segway shot.
02 July 2008
Science in DC
This week I'm in Washington DC for the annual meeting of my teacher's union - yes higher ed professionals are unionized too, especially the ones in public higher ed. I've had three interesting science sightings.
Hi there....That segway shot is funny, haha.
ReplyDeleteI left a comment on your site a couple of years ago....Could you please remove my name from the comment?
The link is: http://modern-science.blogspot.com/2006/08/stardusthome.html
I would have contacted you another way, but I could find no way to contact...so I left a comment here for you to discover.
Thank you! :)
There isn't any easy way to do what you asked, so instead I copied the text of the comments (minus identifying information) into the text of the post, and hid the previous comments (which also disallows future comments).
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