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The One And Only... "STARCHILD" Greetings From Southern Illinois, Fellow Humans! Welcome To My Website! Enjoy! SIGN THE MELLOW GUESTBOOK! "MAY YOU BE FILLED WITH LOVING KINDNESS, MAY YOU BE WELL, MAY YOU BE PEACEFUL AND AT EASE, MAY YOU BE HAPPY."
Hey, That's A Quote. Here's A StarChild Quote:
"HUMANS ARE INSANE!"
SIGN THE MELLOW GUEST BOOK DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY? Or Do You Just Want To RELAX? SEE THE UNIVERSE LISTEN TO STARCHILD LIVE ON THE RADIO EVERY SATURDAY 4PM to 6PM 
"Community Radio for Southern Illinois" www.WDBX.org
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MellowStarGuys@aol.com
LOCAL MELLOW WEATHER INFORMATION
Carbondale, IL Get the 10 day forecast
ASK THE UNIVERSE
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"Just what do you think you're doing , Dave?"
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www.HowManyWounded.com
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www.5YearsTooMany.org www.5YearsTooMany.org MUST WE HAVE WAR? Over 4000 US dead...and over 30,000 wounded. Between 100,000 and 1,000,000 Iraquis dead...and 4,000,000 displaced. Almost $1,000,000,000,000 spent. PEACE? www.BORED.com
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(O: LETS ALL BE IN PEACE :O)
LAST FULL MOON August 16th at 4:21PM UT "The Full Sturgeon Moon" The fishing tribes are given credit for the naming of this Moon, since sturgeon, a large fish of the Great Lakes and other major bodies of water, were most readily caught during this month. A few tribes knew it as the Full Red Moon because, as the Moon rises, it appears reddish through any sultry haze. It was also called the Green Corn Moon or Grain Moon.
THE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER Like a retail business, skywatching has three keys to success: location, location, and location. This month is a prime example. Venus, Mars, and Mercury huddle close together for most of the month. They are so low in the sky, though, that they are difficult to see. The best views come from south of about Dallas or Albuquerque, where the planets stand a little higher above the horizon at sunset. Even so, the viewing window is limited to a few minutes, and a clear western horizon is a must. Skywatchers in the northern states will have little chance to see them without optical aid.
TUESDAY THE 2ND Moon shortly after sunset. Binoculars will help you find it. Three planets congregate to their lower right: brilliant Venus, plus Mars and Mercury. From far-southern latitudes, they are visible to the naked eye, but just barely, very low in the west. SATURDAY THE 6TH The Moon swings just below Antares, the brightest star of Scorpius. At their closest, they will be separated by about the width of a finger held at arm’s length. MONDAY THE 8/9TH Juptiter, which looks like a brilliant star, stands to the left of the Moon on the 8th, and just above it on the 9th. WEDNESDAY THE 10TH Mercury stands farthest from the Sun for its current evening appearance, but is difficult to find, low in the west shortly after sunset. FRIDAY THE 12TH The planet Uranus is at opposition. It rises at sunset, sets at sunrise, and is brightest for the year. Through binoculars, it looks like a faint blue-green star. The Moon will just miss Uranus on the 14th.
MONDAY THE 22ND The autumnal equinox occurs at 10:44 a.m., marking the beginning of fall in the northern hemisphere. FRIDAY THE 26TH Regulus, in Leo, the lion, is within about one degree of the Moon. They rise almost two hours before sunrise. SATURDAY THE 27TH Saturn stands to the left of the Moon at first light and looks like a golden star. "Keep looking up!"
"Being and acting crazy is what keeps me from going crazy." -StarChild "Me want cookie." -Cookie Monster StarChild LOVES RoseMarie Hey, RosiePants? You know what? "You are my sunshine, my only sunshine. You make me happy whe skies are gray. Knowbody knows dear, how much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away." @--)--- PLANETS VISIBLE FOR SEPTEMBER 2008
VENUS, MARS, JUPITER SATURN AND URANUS LEO AND BULLWINKLE The zodiacal constellation Leo, the lion, is one of a handful of constellations that really does look like its namesake. Look for Leo high in south in April and May. Leo's brightest star is blue-white Regulus, one of the brightest stars in the night sky. Regulus rises almost due east, with the body of the lion following it into the sky over the next couple of hours. Once Regulus climbs into the sky, look to its left — toward the north — for a group of stars forming a backward question mark. These stars outline Leo's head and mane. About two hours later, look low in the east for Leo's tail — a white star named Denebola — an Arabic name that, appropriately enough, means "tail of the lion."
ROCKY AND BULLWINKLE FOREVER!
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