What’s your favorite holiday?

December 4, 2006
Christmas?
Thanksgiving?
Chanukah?
 New years?
 Halloween?
Easter?
Your Birthday?

Did You Know?

December 4, 2006

Did you know that there is no animal called the black panther.But is really a Leopard  or a Jaguar with Melanistic coloration. Melanistic coloration means a very dark skin coloring.If you look close at the “black panther” you can see the brown-spots. Info from http://www.agarman.dial.pipex.com/bco/fact2.htm go here to learn more


Quiz…

December 4, 2006
  
What climate does a black panther need?
Where can you find a Black “panther?”
Where can’t you find a “black panther?”

December 3, 2006

 The Planet Saturn is the second largest planet. It is the next planet after Jupiter. Saturn is named after a Roman God and is famous for its beautiful rings.

 

 

It has at least 31 moons. These include Titan, Hyperion, Mimas, Enceladus, Rhea, and Phoebe.

Facts about Planet Saturn

* Diameter: 120,660 km. It is about 10 times larger than our Earth* Temperature: –178°C* Distance from Earth: At its closest, Saturn is 1190.4 million km* Atmosphere: Hydrogen and helium * Surface: consists of liquid and gas.* Rotation of its axis: 10 hours, 40 min, 24 sec* Rotation around the Sun: 29.5 Earth years


Saturn Space Probes:Saturn has been visited in flybys in the 1970s by NASA’s Pioneer 11 and in 1980-81 by the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. The Cassini spacecraft, launched in 1997 arrived at Saturn in July 2004. The Hugens probe will explore the moon -Titan.

 

Did you know?

  • Saturn’s rings are made of billions of ice particles.
  • Its surface consists of liquid and gas.


December 3, 2006

 

Crayola brand crayons (compare prices) were the first kids crayons ever made, invented by cousins, Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith. The brand’s first box of eight Crayola crayons made its debut in 1903. The crayons were sold for a nickel and the colors were black, brown, blue, red, purple, orange, yellow, and green. The word Crayola was created by Alice Stead Binney (wife of Edwin Binney) who took the French words for chalk (craie) and oily (oleaginous) and combined them.

Today, there over one hundred different types of crayons being made by Crayola including crayons that: sparkle with glitter, glow in the dark, smell like flowers, change colors, and wash off walls and other surfaces and materials.

According to Crayola’s “History of Crayons”

Europe was the birthplace of the “modern” crayon, a man-made cylinder that resembled contemporary sticks.  The first such crayons are purported to have consisted of a mixture of charcoal and oil. Later, powdered pigments of various hues replaced the charcoal. It was subsequently discovered that substituting wax for the oil in the mixture made the resulting sticks sturdier and easier to handle.

The Birth of Crayola
In 1864, Joseph W. Binney founded the Peekskill Chemical Company in Peekskill, N.Y. This company was responsible for products in the black and red color range, such as lampblack, charcoal and a paint containing red iron oxide which was often used to coat the barns dotting America’s rural landscape.

Peekskill Chemical was also instrumental in creating an improved and black colored automobile tire by adding carbon black that was found to increase the tire tread life by four or five times.

Around 1885, Joseph’s son, Edwin Binney, and nephew, C. Harold Smith, formed the partnership of Binney & Smith. The cousins expanded the company’s product line to include shoe polish and printing ink. In 1900, the company purchased a stone mill in Easton, PA, and began producing slate pencils for schools. This started Binney’s and Smith’s research into nontoxic and colorful drawing mediums for kids. They had already invented a new wax crayon used to mark crates and barrels, however, it was loaded with carbon black and too toxic for children. They were confident that the pigment and wax mixing techniques they had developed could be adapted for a variety of safe colors.

In 1903, a new brand of crayons with superior working qualities was introduced - Crayola Crayons.”

By Mary Bellis