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Due to my not living any closer than 4 hours from Hickory, I have temporarily suspended keeping this
portion of the websie current (February 2005)
Some Clubs Central to Charlotte, NC
(1) Carolina Amateur
Astronomers Club 3rd Friday (7:30 PM; Sonny’s BBQ 5:30 PM)
Gayle & Joyce 704 846-3136
Fire Fighter’s Union Hall
4419 Monroe Rd, Charlotte, NC
CAAC
(2)Carolina Sky Gazers
3rd Tuesday (7:00 PM)
Eric Newell (ewnewell at rhtc.net)
Settlemeyer Museum/Planetarium
Glen Dantzler (dantzler at rhtc.net)
4621 Mt. Gallant Rd. Rock Hill, SC
(3) Catawba Valley Astronomy Club
2nd Thursday (7:30 PM)
Eric Robinson (ericrobinson at charter.net)
Joe Heafner (heafnerj at charter.net)
CVCC
Paap Building Hickory, NC
(or Lucile Miller Observatory, Maiden, NC)
CAC
(4) Gaston County Sky
Watchers
1st Thursday
Frank Barrett (frankb at celestialwonders.com)
Schiele
Museum, Gastonia, NC
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"SHEDDING LIGHT"
by Professor John C. Mannone
Thursday June 10, 2004 CVCC
Hickory, NC
ABSTRACT:
A light lecture on light concerning
its nature, origination, detection and disclosure of insights to the universe will be presented. Radio astronomy will be addressed
in the context of other spectral tools and as a door-opener for amateurs.
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MIDATLANTIC STAR PARTY October 2004

"THE FINAL ODYSSEY”
by Professor John C. Mannone
MidAtlantic Star Party Lecture
(3
PM Friday October 15, 2004)
Robbins,
NC
(Formerly
presented at
Catawba
Valley Astronomy Club
Friday March 5, 2004 Lucile
Miller Observatory
Maiden, NC)
ABSTACT:
Astronomy in literature is
not always metaphorical. For example, celestial navigation, without the benefit of a pole star, is addressed in Homer’s
Classic Greek epic, “The Odyssey.” After the Trojan War, the hero, Ulysses, embarks on some great exploration
but is shipwrecked and imprisoned before he gets home 20 years later. Eventually, the sympathetic goddess, Calypso, releases
him and prescribes sailing directions from Malta, just south
of Italy, to his beloved Ithaca,
Greece across the Mediterranean Sea. The
focus of the talk will be on this final odyssey. The PowerPoint presentation is geared for the general public interested
in astronomy.
Though a mythological
story, it is based on some historical and geographical facts. The night sky, the climate, the ocean currents, the wind and
the weather are all examined in context which reveal the challenges faced by Ulysses during his final voyage home.
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