"Hang on a mo!" cried Corby. "Are you saying that everything is pre-planned? Our whole lives are run to some secret schedule that we are not aware of?" "Of course it's all planned. Can you imagine the chaos if it wasn't?" Corby sighed deeply. "All I want is to stay up here and be re-united with my fiance halloween parties Brenda. It was all my fault you see. I was supposed to kids parties be meeting her outside the cinema at eight o'clock. I called in my local for a swift half with a few of my mates. When I told them I had to go, they started winding me up about how Brenda already had me well trained, so, like an idiot I ordered a new round and well ... you know how it is. I was on my fourth pint when it happened." Corby fel
of course join her. "Honey, this rough guy look you've got going is really turning me on!", says the little honey vixen. "You know euda, I am really home parties looking forward to that golfing vacation with the Sappersteins." "Are you ready to teach me how to play?" coos the little birthday parties vixen..."yes but first I'm going to teach you something else", grunts Euda (Mad lovemaking scene goes down) Ohhh
| "When we demonstrated the remote link recently to graduate students, we could see education happening in the room," says associate professor Charles Bailyn, who has been in charge of hardware and software adaptations for viewing via the Internet. "The quality of the images makes classroom lectures become real. Even undergraduate students will have access to the telescope, which produces some of the best images of space available from the earth's surface, surpassed only by the Hubble Space Telescope." The WIYN telescope, which was built in 1994, is co-owned by Yale, Wisconsin and Indiana universities along with the Tucson- based National Optical Astronomy Observatories (NOAO). The three universities paid construction costs in return for 60 birthday parties percent of the observing time. NOAO provided the primary mirror and agreed to pay operations costs for the first christmas parties 15 years - estimated at $16.6 million - in exchange for 40 percent of the telescope time, which is shared by the U.S. astronomical community. continue... |