Kids, don’t try this at home
Danette Goulet
They wiggled, squiggled and jiggled all over the place.
They were molecules.
When the temperature rose, they wiggled apart. But when it dropped,
they huddled close together.
One volunteer molecule, 12-year-old Elizabeth Webber from the audience
in the Mad Science Theater at the Orange County Fair, looked like she was
doing the Charleston up there.
It was the introduction skit of the “Don’t Try This at Home” show in
the Mad Science theater.
The skit caught children’s attention by letting them know there would
be plenty of chances to get up on stage and have fun with science.
“It was cool,” said Riley Scales, 7. “ I did a dance. I was a
molecule.”
The first experiment conducted by the “Professor,” Inessa Frantouski,
21, and her wacky sidekick “Crash,” Brian Froud, 27, had the duo dipping
both a carrot and a balloon into liquid nitrogen.
This was a continued demonstration of the property of molecules.
Next was a real showstopper: Lying on a bed of nails. This trick was
used to explain surface area. Crash’s weight, distributed over a bed of
nails, didn’t hurt. But if he had laid down on one nail, he would have
yelped for sure.
The off-the-wall duo also demonstrated air pressure with the help of
an assistant Brad Brandenburg, 8.
“We put this pencil in a tube and the air pressure pushed it through
this wood,” Brad said, holding up the pencil embedded in a piece of
plywood.
The Professor explained that the air pressure in tornadoes made its
little experiment pale in comparison.
“A tornado is strong enough to put a simple drinking straw through the
side of a house,” she said.
An exploding beaker concluded the experiments, along with a Mad
Science oath taken by all the children, who promised to look at
everything with wonder and test everything.
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