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JUNE BEGINS WITH A FULL MOON AND ENDS WITH A `BLUE MOON'.


Byline: Will Lester Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency.
Associated Press (AP)

Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world.
 

Sky watchers across this country will see an event tonight that is notable because of the quirks of the man-made calendar and happens, well, just once in a blue moon very rarely; - from the observation that the moon rarely has a bluish tint.

See also: blue moon
.

Few experts agree on why a blue moon - a second full moon in one month - is called a ``blue moon.'' It has nothing to do with its color.

``Blue moons are the Hula Hoops hula hoops

large plastic hoops revolved around body by hip action (1950s). [Am. Hist.: Sann, 145–149]

See : Fads
 of the heavens,'' says Jack Horkheimer, director of the Miami planetarium planetarium, optical device used to project a representation of the heavens onto a domed ceiling; the term also designates the building that houses such a device. A modern planetarium consists of as many as 150 motor-driven projectors mounted on an axis.  and host of the PBS PBS
 in full Public Broadcasting Service

Private, nonprofit U.S. corporation of public television stations. PBS provides its member stations, which are supported by public funds and private contributions rather than by commercials, with educational, cultural,
 astronomy show ``Star Hustler.'' ``They're kind of silly, but they're a lot of fun.''

Blue moons have become part of our culture, largely remembered from the popular Rodgers and Hart standard: ``Blue Moon, you saw me standing alone, without a dream in my heart, without a love of my own.''

That song was recently encored by the singing mice in the movie ``Babe.''

Blue moons occur once every 2.7 years, and they come about because the modern calendar's 12 months do not coincide with the moon's 29-day cycles. The last full moon was June 1.

The origin of the term itself is obscure.

``It's interesting tracking it down. We'll never know for sure,'' said Terence Dickinson Terence Dickinson (born 1943) is a leading amateur astronomer and science writer who lives near the rural town of Yarker, Ontario, Canada. He is the editor of SkyNews magazine and an astronomy commentator for Discovery Channel Canada. , editor of the Canadian astronomy magazine This article reads like a news release, or is otherwise written in an overly promotional tone.
Please help [ rewrite this article] from a to be less promotional, per Wikipedia .
 Sky News.

Dickinson, by the way, prefers actual events like the even rarer occurrence of a moon that really is tinted blue, when something in the atmosphere blocks the red component of sunlight.

A blue-tinted moon was seen over much of the world after the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo Noun 1. Mount Pinatubo - a volcano on Luzon to the northwest of Manila; erupted in 1991 after 600 years of dormancy
Pinatubo
 in the Philippines, Horkheimer noted.

When the last two-in-a-month, untinted blue moon was visible in this country, in September 1993, Horkheimer had a contest to find the origin of the term.

``Several thousand sent in responses,'' he recalled. ``Some did phenomenal amounts of research.''

Horkheimer particularly liked one explanation that linked ``blue moon'' to the old English word ``belewe'' which meant ``to betray.'' According to that theory, the second moon in one month betrays the count of one full moon in one month.

Another said it may have come from the French word for double. Others argue it came from ancient cultures in Egypt or Crete and was a symbol of good fortune.

Alan McRoberts, editor of Sky & Telescope magazine of Cambridge, Mass., said it may have sprung from agricultural traditions of Colonial America along with derivations such as harvest moon and hunter's moon.

``This is something that seems to be lost in the mists of history,'' McRoberts said.

Horkheimer sees it as part of a larger issue.

``Things like the blue moon and lunar eclipses are important for this reason: They get you to go outside and consider Mother Nature and the heavens,'' he said.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jun 30, 1996
Words:454
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