Have you bought your favorite CWU graduate a graduation gift yet? Why not get her or him a star? I don’t mean from one of those organizations that offers to “register the name of YOUR star with the U.S. Patent Office”. No company owns the right to name stars after people. Besides, the stars those companies “name” are so dim you can’t find them. In this column, I’ll pick a constellation and representative star for each of the four colleges at CWU. Then, I’ll briefly tell the story of the constellation and relate that story to the aspect of public service CWU graduates from that college are uniquely qualified to engage in based on my version of sky interpretation. If different couples can have “their” song, then your favorite college graduate can have her or his star
Saturday: Jupiter
is a half a fist to the right of the Moon at 10 p.m.
Sunday: College
of Arts and Humanities: You are the people who interpret the world in unique
ways. Then, you share those ways with others. According to Greek mythology,
Orpheus charmed everyone he met when he played the lyre or harp. After his wife
died tragically, he journeyed to the underworld to charm its inhabitants in an
effort to win his wife back to the living world. Your service reminder: use
your talent to bring joy to others. The constellation Lyra and its bright star
Vega should remind you of the power of the arts. Vega is five and a half fists
held upright and at arm’s length above the east horizon at 11 p.m.
Monday:
College of Business. You are the future movers and shakers. The future CEOs.
The future big donors to Central. Auriga represented a king of Athens who
happened to be mobility impaired. Instead of sitting around waiting for others
to transport him, he took the initiative to invent the four-wheeled chariot. He
solved a problem for a special need. Your service reminder: address the
problems of those in the most need. To remind you of that, look to the
constellation Auriga. Its bright star Capella is about a half a fist above the
north-northwest horizon at 11 p.m.
Tuesday: Constellation light, constellation bright. The first constellation
I see tonight. I wish I may, I wish I might, recognize these stars in ten
million nights. The orientations of the stars provide an effective backdrop to
help us remember stories because these orientations are relatively unchanging.
Stars are so far away that their positions do not change over thousands or, in
some cases, millions of years. But a few bright stars are close enough or do
move fast enough to change the shapes. For example, in about 30,000 years, the
Little Dipper will no longer hold very much water. (Luckily, it comes with a
lifetime warranty.) For more information about the future of some of your
favorite constellations, go to http://goo.gl/qP2BR3.
Wednesday:
College of Education and Professional Studies. You are the teachers. The
craftspeople. The facilitators of learning in a diverse world. Bootes, the
herdsman, was such a person. Bootes’ job was to guide the northern
constellations to the feeding place and the watering hole. He and his dogs were
especially in charge of Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, the greater and lesser
bears. Your service reminder: guide others to a better place in life. Look to
the constellation Bootes and its bright star Arcturus to remind you of this.
Arcturus is five and a half fists above the southwest horizon at 11 p.m.
Thursday:
College of the Sciences. You are the people who will systematically study how
the world works. Agriculture is an important scientific application. Each year,
farmers must use the findings of science to be successful. Who better to
represent the College of the Sciences than Virgo, the goddess of the harvest?
Virgo looms large in the sky holding an ear of wheat in her hand. Your service
reminder: study the practical aspects of the scientific world. The ear of
wheat, and your service reminder, is represented by the bright star Spica.
Spica is two and a half fists above the southwest horizon at 11 p.m. Tonight;
you’ve got a warrior’s spirit, as well, because the planet Mars, which
represents the Roman god of war, is one fist to the right of Spica.
Friday: The
Moon, Mars, and Saturn make a large triangle low in the southern sky tonight.
At 10 p.m., Saturn is a fist to the lower left of the Moon and Mars is a fist
to the lower right.
The
positional information in this column about stars and planets is typically
accurate for the entire week. For up to date information about the night sky,
go to http://nightsky.jpl.nasa.gov/planner.cfm.
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