[LEAD PHOTOS]
[LEAD PHOTOS]
Braille Monitor
November
2004
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Steven
Max Faults digs for fossils at the Maryland Science Center. In the background
is Bryce Gitzen.
Circle
of Life campers tour Goddard Space Flight Center. Left to right: Bryce
Gitzen (back), Andrew Wai, and Paul Howard.
The
Rocket On! science campers actually launched a rocket with the guidance
of NASA volunteers. Here the NFB/NASA rocket sits waiting to be transported
to the launch pad. The rocket was about ten-and-a-half feet tall and weighed
about seventy-five pounds.
During two weeks last summer,
one in July and one in August, the National Federation of the Blind Science
Academy conducted science camps for a total of twenty-four middle and high school
students. From all indications they were life-changing events for the students.
Read the first two articles in this issue for a full report.
The NFB/NASA
rocket lifted off at 8:33 a.m. on August 19, 2004, with a full-color Whozit
decal affixed to its outer skin. Whozit soared to a height of 4,902 feet, and
all the experiments worked flawlessly. Unfortunately one of the rocket's parachutes
did not open as planned, so the rocket broke apart when it hit the water. Everything
was recovered except the payload section of the rocket. The recovered sections
will be put on display at the NFB Jernigan Institute along with a model of the
original rocket
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