Over the Hedge by T Lewis and Michael Fry for September 27, 2020

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    rekam Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Thanks for the laugh.

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      over 3 years ago

    What a gorgeous star!

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    Liverlips McCracken Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I guess she stuck the landing.

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    FassEddie  over 3 years ago

    I saw a falling star once. She was doing Manilow hits in the piano bar at the Jersey City Ramada. The fish was bad too.

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    Breadboard  over 3 years ago

    RJ where is the pool the star is diving into ? Yes it does look like a dive .

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    MS72  over 3 years ago

    Looks somewhat like a bunch of Klansmen…

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    Ellis97  over 3 years ago

    It’s Oogie Boogie.

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    P51Strega  over 3 years ago

    Greg Louganis? (a diving star)

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    Prey  over 3 years ago

    Any professional soccer player!

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    Csaw Backnforth  over 3 years ago

    ♫ Catch a falling star an’ put it in your pocket, Never let it fade away! Catch a falling star an’ put it in your pocket, Save it for a rainy day! ♫

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    mi_sbs  over 3 years ago

    That star went out on a limb for that.

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    sandflea  over 3 years ago

    I always thought they were called shooting stars.

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    Thinkingblade  over 3 years ago

    … and the star STICKS the landing!

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    MarkSeibold  over 3 years ago

    As I was sidewalk dining last night at a local restaurant in Portland Oregon, my hometown for 66 years now, the waitress handed me this comic cut out from the local newspaper. [She knows that I provide a public service of sidewalk astronomy here with large telescopes for more than a couple decades. I really appreciated seeing this, because I constantly get this [poetic and sometimes humorous vernacular,] while out at the telescope with the general public. I’ve never seen this comic before but it reminds me of the past famous Bloom County by Burke Brethed, or a little bit like Pogo, from a generation ago when I was a child. As I was hired to teach astronomy at a local University about 16 years ago, I had a Calvin and Hobbes comic cut out from our daily newspaper and pinned to my office door. It was in a similar vein about why all humans love to look up at the stars and how this increases ones philosophy of worldly outlook, even if many of us speak in a varied vernacular, whether common language or scientific idiom. I’m surprised that this column allows me to speak/write this long here. I thought it would cut off with a word limit. But just to add to my recent research about the public, possibly lacking in scientific learning, I would strongly recommend that others see the last interview that Charlie Rose conducted with Carl Sagan in 1996. Also see a short 9 Minute excerpt as an interview that Tom Snyder conducted in 1976 on his Tomorrow Show, with the media expert, Marshall McLuhan. It’s great to see the old classic mediums of printed comics still in hard-copy out of a newspaper today. Thanks for publishing this and I hope that we can keep the younger generation still reading real hard-copy print books.

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