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VOLUME 2, ISSUE 1 FEBRUARY 2016 LIGHTNING GAZETTE JERRY ZUCKER MIDDLE SCHOOL OF SCIENCE Say Hooray to Mr. Fast’s Classes! By Ne’Vyia Dews Say hooray, to Mr. Fast’s classes! This semester, his classes are doing building and design. They are creating stuff for school. Is this your average engineering teacher under a mask?! In each grade, Mr. Fast’s students are doing an engineering project. They are designing race car robots. Pretty cool, right?! Mr. Fast even has a 3D printer. What’s a 3D printer, you ask? Well, a 3-D printer prints models that Mr. Fast’s classes design. Cool, yes it is! 3-D printing is a process of making threedimensional solid objects from a digital file. The creation of a 3-D printed object is achieved using additive processes. In an additive process an object is created by laying down successive layers of material until the entire object is created. Now, here is a little bit more information about the 3-D printer. It makes 3-D copies of digital images, makes food, can make tools, pictures, and even dionsaurs (yes, dinosaurs!). Full S.T.E.A.M. Ahead! This is a S.T.E.A.M. issue of The Lightning Gazette, showcasing all things related to Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math, including some of the wonderful S.T.E.A.M.-related activities going on at JZMS. There you have it. But wait! I have one more thing to say to you: Thank you, and good day!! Inside this issue: Art Class 2 Science Facts 2 Why Math is Important 2 Top 5 Weird Diseases 3 Earth’s Layers 3 Food Fun Facts 3 Ms. Bell’s Science Class 4 LIGHTNING GAZETTE Page 2 Art Class by Fabian Peña, Angela Ramirez-Arreola, and Jessica Sanchez In art class they have been doing so many different things the past few weeks. The other day they were creating with paper maché. Now they are doing something called Beautiful Charleston, and they have been drawing things with no trash on the ground in it and a whole lot more. “The important thing is to never stop questioning.” -Albert Einstein Science Facts by Karen Bañuelos The world’s largest amphibian is the great salamander. There are no poisonous snakes in Maine. telephone line was established in 1914. Sound travels about four times faster in water than in air. “Think like a proton, always positive.” The largest man-made lake in the United States is Lake Mead in Nevada. The first coast-to-coast Why Math is Important By Avery May There are many reasons why math is important. Here are some of them. Math helps with cooking food because you need to know how to measure ingredients. Math helps you see if you have enough money to buy something. Math helps when driving and you need to know how many miles you’ve gone or how far something is. Math helps when playing sports so you know the score. Math helps when you are at a restaurant and need to calculate the tip. VOLUME 2, ISSUE 1 Page 3 Top Five Weird Diseases by Cameron Steinbacher No.1 Jumping Canadian Frenchmen of Maine. This disease was found when French Canadian lumberjacks were in a forest. Whatever command was shouted at them, they followed it. There has been no cure found for it. Personally, I do not have a problem with it, but just who decided to call it Jumping Canadian Frenchman of Maine? No.2 Kuru Kuru is kind of like Alzheimer’s and rabies combined. Kuru Kuru slowly eats away at some of the matter in your brain. Meanwhile, it causes paranoia and can make you have memory loss. No.3 Elephantitis. This disease causes inflammation after being bitten by an infected mosquito. The larvae of the worm rests inside your body for many years getting bigger so it looks like you have tons of fat in your legs. No.4 Sweating Sickness. This disease is 100% fatal in all of its victims. The symptoms include sweating, vomiting, giddy laughs, and flulike symptoms. So you will not know you have it until it is too late unless you’re a full grown man and you laugh like a little Earth’s Layers by Fabiola Peña We have been learning about the earth’s layers in Ms. Whitten’s science class. The first layer of the Earth is the crust. It makes up only 1% of the Earth’s mass. The crust and upper mantle is the lithosphere. It is about 65 to 100 km thick. The crust is the least dense layer. The next layer is the mantle. It makes up 2/3 of the Earth’s mass and is 2900 km thick. The upper section of the mantle is the asthenosphere. Heat and pressure cause a small amount of melting to occur in the as- thenosphere. The Inner core is the final layer of the Earth. It is 1.7% of the Earth’s mass. The inner crust has hot spinning metal and is the most dense layer. school girl. There is no cure for it because the disease disappears from the body before they can get to it. No.5 Dancing Mania. This disease happened in 1816 when people found themselvedancing until they dropped. This was a one time event. People danced until they dropped or dropped dead. This event was well documented in Europe. The outer core is 2200 km thick and is made entirely of magma. It also has some iron and nickel. The outer core is 30.8% of the Earth’s mass. It is 4000-5000 degrees hot!! Food Fun Facts by Zamani Lyde Most wasabi consumed is not real wasabi, but colored horseradish. Central Appalachia’s tooth decay problem is referred to as Mountain Dew mouth, due to the beverage’s popularity in the region. Apples belong to the rose family, as do pears and plums. Oklahoma’s state vegetable is the watermelon. One of the most popular pizza toppings in Brazil is green peas. Chocolate was once used as currency. There is an amusement park in Tokyo that offers Raw Horse Fleshflavored ice cream. The tea bag was created by accident, as tea bags were originally sent as samples. A Cinnabon Classic has less sugar than a 20-oz. bottle of Pepsi. JERRY ZUCKER MIDDLE SCHOOL OF SCIENCE W E’RE ON THE WEB! Z UCKER. CCSDSCHOOLS. COM Lightning Gazette staff: Avery May Ms. Cary editor Fabian Peña Karen Bañuelos Fabiola Peña Leslie Coronado Hernandez Angela Ramirez-Arreola Ne’Vyia Dews Jessica Sanchez Zamani Lyde Cameron Steinbacher Ms. Bell’s Science Classes Collage by Leslie Coronado Hernandez