Posted on 04/15/2014 2:09:42 PM PDT by Timber Rattler
confiscated as evidence, TO PROSECUTE! Parents if you dont step up who will?
Sounds like the science there has settled.
Any more reason to wonder why our country lags the world in student knowledge of science?
Your comment = exactly what I was thinking.
My college chemistry prof built a cannon that used a hydrogen and oxygen mixture to shoot a tennis ball across our lab. Obviously different times when today school officials have a fit if some grade school kid uses their fingers in a gun like gesture.
Wait till she sees what a rubber band held between two fingers can do!
And the story continues on (adding my little bit):
“...and they went on to become one of the largest distillery companies in the United States?”
Funny how those home grown science projects can turn into a major business.
The project should be reconfigured to accommodate a credit card sized/shaped object and be renamed a ‘rapid EBT card delivery device’ and then it will receive accolades.
My chemistry teacher did something similar with O2 and H and soap bubbles. I thought that the explosion was going to blow the windows out. Lol.
The rubber band is okay, just don’t point your finger and thumb like a gun.
As silly as it sounds, students can get in trouble for doing this.
They must really freak out when they watch Mythbusters.
A good rubber band and a hair pin or re-bent paper clip could kill if it hit the right area.
I (in school - early fifties) put them through comic books 1/4” to 3/8” thick. A hair pin could be imbedded into a plank of pine wood a good 1/8” deep.
My brother did that for a science project. He got an A and then drank the beer he made.
So now any hysterical airhead can have a hissifit and get someone fired for some wacko notion that flits through the empty space in her brain.
Yup, those big 3/8 inch wide suckers were the magnums, LOL!
Wish I had a kid doing one of these science fair projects - I’d suggest a trebuchet.
By the time the pinheads in the administration figured out what it was (if ever), it’d be too late.
I took a special night chemistry class in high school with my brother. The teacher (who was one of the school’s vice-principals) taught us how to make a combustible concoction of “rocket fuel.” My brother and his friend were intent on building a rocket with this stuff as fuel.
One night, they decided they’d test the thrust by stuffing the concoction in a flask, inverted the flask (holding the stuff in initially with wax), and ignited it. The expectation was that the fuel would burn and produce thrust that would keep the rest of the fuel in the flask.
It didn’t work. With a whoosh, the wax was gone, and fuel fell on the asbestos pads on the floor and ignited. The resulting burn left a foot of smoke at the ceiling.
The year after they graduated, they came back to try a rocket they built. It was not so much a rocket as a pipe bomb with fins—because it just exploded on the ground.
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