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Moore the merrier as The Sky at Night heads for its half-cen

Started by Rick, Dec 18, 2006, 15:00:44

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Rick

The sky at night over Sir Patrick Moore's Sussex garden was a pinkish-grey slab of damp blotting paper. The promised meteor shower may well have been streaking across the heavens, thick as hailstones, but once again the main event had evaded the cameras of the oldest television science series in the world.

Instead, Chris Lintott, out in the cold garden, and Sir Patrick, snug in his warm study, talked imperturbably about what they would have seen if they could see anything.

In 1957, a writer, fine musician, useful cricketer and amateur astronomer was invited by producer Paul Johnstone - his other spectacular recruit was David Attenborough - to present one live astronomy show a month, for three months. A star was born.

More: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/story/0,,1974206,00.html

Mike

We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology. Carl Sagan