PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact: Stephanie R. Zeluck
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 13, 1997
BOY SCOUT DAY TO BE HELD AT JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
More than 1,200 boy scouts from Southern California packs
will be participating in JPL's first Boy Scout Day on Sunday,
March 16, from 1 to 5pm.
Sponsored by the JPL Public Services Office, Boy Scout Day
will give scouts a firsthand opportunity to interact with male
JPL scientists and engineers. The event is designed to introduce
different applications of scientific principles into the scouts'
academic regimen, and to give them role models with careers they
may someday choose to follow themselves.
Activities for younger cub scouts include building and
launching air-propelled bottle rockets and sodium bicarbonate-
propelled paper rockets to help demonstrate the principles of
propulsion and physics. Completion of these and other activities
will go toward the Cubs' earning their "scientist" badge or belt
loop and "arrow points."
Older boy scouts will be building model rockets, which will
later be equipped with functioning solid propellant-fueled model
rocket engines and launched independently by participating
scouts. The scouts will also construct a model Earth orbiting
space station which,
in conjunction with the construction of a model rocket, will go
toward earning their space exploration merit badge.
"This is going to be a fantastic opportunity to raise the
scouts' enthusiasm for space exploration and science," said
Phillip Harley, Cub Scout leader of Pack 304. "These kids will be
in high school six or seven years from now, and the exposure
they'll get on Boy Scout Day will help them discover career
opportunities they may never have known of before." Forty of the
72 scouts in Harley's pack will be participating in Boy Scout Day
at JPL.
Other activities include interactive discussions with JPL
astronomers covering topics in aeronautics, astronomy and
planetary sciences. Scouts will be introduced to the many careers
in aerospace and related sciences open to them at places like
JPL.
This event follows the highly successful Girl Scout Day,
held at JPL in February. More than 400 girls attended the event,
each successfully building their own sodium-bicarbonate powered
rocket and learning more about careers in aeronautics and
astronomy.
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3/13/97 SRZ
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