PJAS Dress Code

  • Girls must wear dress pants, dress shirt, or a dress/skirt
  • Boys must wear a shirt and tie and dress pants (absolutely no jeans or printed t-shirts!) all shirts must have collars.
  • If a student has a cell phone, to call for a ride when everything is over, it must be turned off during presentations!
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  • Local Weather

    Friday, Sep 3
    Fair
    Currently: 64˚F
    Feels Like: 64˚ F
    Hi: 82˚, Lo: 54˚
    Wind: 3, Gust: N/A MPH
    Wind Direction: SSE (150)
    Fair

    Tonight: 54˚
    Sunset: 7:48 PM
    Moon Phase: Waning Crescent
    Partly Cloudy

    weather feed courtesy of weather.com - thanks!

  • Nasa Facts

    Orbital Sunrise

     
    The Expedition 24 crew on the International Space Station photographed this image of polar mesospheric clouds illuminated by an orbital sunrise. Polar mesospheric, or noctilucent ("night shining"), clouds usually are seen at twilight, following the setting of the sun below the horizon and darkening of Earth's surface. Occasionally the station's orbital track becomes nearly parallel to Earth's day/night terminator for a time, allowing the clouds to be visible to the crew at times other than the usual twilight because of the station's altitude. This photograph shows polar mesospheric clouds illuminated by the rising, rather than setting, sun at center right. Low clouds on the horizon appear yellow and orange, while higher clouds and aerosols are illuminated a brilliant white. Polar mesospheric clouds appear as light blue ribbons extending across the top of the image. The station was located over the Greek island of Kos in the Aegean Sea (near the southwestern coastline of Turkey) when the image was taken at approximately midnight local time. The orbital complex was tracking northeastward, nearly parallel to the terminator, making it possible to observe an apparent "sunrise" located almost due north. A similar unusual alignment of the ISS orbit track, terminator position and seasonal position of Earth's orbit around the sun allowed for this striking imagery of over the Southern Hemisphere. Image Credit: NASA
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