10RepLearning #PeaceSchema (@tweetteague) 's Twitter Profile
10RepLearning #PeaceSchema

@tweetteague

Learner/TennisPlayer/Faculty/ID/Undercovers Reader-"The Elasticity of imagination & compassion is what writing & reading promote"~Julia Alvarez

ID: 1505403284

linkhttp://4oops.edublogs.org/ calendar_today11-06-2013 17:37:41

5,5K Tweet

467 Followers

1,1K Following

Traces of Texas (@tracesoftexas) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Texas Quote of the Day, by an old trail cowboy, is so wonderfully written. PLEASE read this: "Things rocked on very well until we reached the Arkansaw River between La Junta and Pueblo, Colorado. It got so stormy up there in the breaks of the Rocky Mountains that we had

The Texas Quote of the Day, by an old trail cowboy, is so wonderfully written. PLEASE read this:

"Things rocked on very well until we reached the Arkansaw River between La Junta and Pueblo, Colorado. It got so stormy up there in the breaks of the Rocky Mountains that we had
Traces of Texas (@tracesoftexas) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Back in 2003, Jack White of the White Stripes announced on the Stubb's Austin stage "It's good to be in Texas, the home of Blind Willie Johnson." I'd be willing to bet that not many in the crowd understood the reference or knew who Blind Willie Johnson was. I'll tell you: he was

Back in 2003, Jack White of the White Stripes announced on the Stubb's Austin stage "It's good to be in Texas, the home of Blind Willie Johnson."  I'd be willing to bet that not many in the crowd understood the reference or knew who Blind Willie Johnson was. I'll tell you: he was
Physics & Astronomy Zone (@zone_astronomy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Captured over Fairbanks, Alaska, this is one of those rare moments where science and imagination collide. What looks like a glowing, winged figure in the sky is actually an intense auroral display - shaped entirely by the invisible forces of Earth's magnetic field. Auroras form

Peter H. Diamandis, MD (@peterdiamandis) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The human brain processes visual information 60,000x faster than text. Humans are visual processors, not text processors. Images hit the brain instantly. Words take work. That's why a single SpaceX launch video communicates more than a thousand-word essay—and why your slide decks

Black Hole (@konstructivizm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

:We are now entering the most thrilling phase of Artemis II — humanity’s bold return to deep space. Day 3 — April 3 Orion has successfully left Earth’s embrace and is now speeding toward the Moon. The crew begins critical deep space operations, testing systems far beyond any

:We are now entering the most thrilling phase of Artemis II — humanity’s bold return to deep space. Day 3 — April 3
Orion has successfully left Earth’s embrace and is now speeding toward the Moon. The crew begins critical deep space operations, testing systems far beyond any
The Bull Moose Project (@bullmooseproj) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Theodore Roosevelt called Micah 6:8 his favorite verse, the one he inscribed on copies of the New Testaments handed to American soldiers shipping off to Europe during WWI. The verse reads "What does the Lord require of you but to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with

Theodore Roosevelt called Micah 6:8 his favorite verse, the one he inscribed on copies of the New Testaments handed to American soldiers shipping off to Europe during WWI.

The verse reads "What does the Lord require of you but to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with
Anish Moonka (@anisha_moonka) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Victor Glover failed an engineering class his sophomore year of college. His dad talked him out of joining the Navy SEALs and told him an engineering degree and pilot wings might make him an astronaut someday. Right now Glover is somewhere between the Earth and the Moon. He grew

The Biblical Man (@the_biblicalman) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Joseph of Arimathea pulled a corpse off a cross with his bare hands. Blood under his fingernails. The weight of a dead man sagging into his arms. He wrapped God in linen, pressed the fabric into wounds that were still wet. Nicodemus brought seventy-five pounds of burial

Chad Prather (@watchchad) 's Twitter Profile Photo

WOW! A drone show put on by a church in Manvel, Texas depicts our Savior Jesus on the cross. One of the coolest things I’ve ever seen. Tomorrow, HE IS RISEN.

Collin Rugg (@collinrugg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Astronaut Victor Glover delivers beautiful Easter message from space, praises God’s creation. “When I read the Bible and I look at all of the amazing things that were done for us…” “You're on a spaceship called Earth that was created to give us a place to live in the universe,

Anish Moonka (@anisha_moonka) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Reid Wiseman told his two teenage daughters where to find his will before he got on this rocket. He’s raised them alone since their mom died of cancer six years ago. Right now, he is 252,757 miles from home, farther from Earth than any human being has ever been. Wiseman grew up

Physics & Astronomy Zone (@zone_astronomy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"We aren't going to the Moon, but rather meeting it at an exact point in space. ​And it isn't necessary to spend fuel, either; the calculations are made so that everything works through pure physics and gravity. ​It is flawless."

Texas A&M System (@tamusystem) 's Twitter Profile Photo

When Artemis II flies by the moon, it'll be the closest humans have been to the lunar surface in more than 50 years. The last time we were this close, an Aggie was running Mission Control. On December 13, 1972, flight director Gerry Griffin '56 played a Singing Cadets recording

When Artemis II flies by the moon, it'll be the closest humans have been to the lunar surface in more than 50 years.

The last time we were this close, an Aggie was running Mission Control. On December 13, 1972, flight director Gerry Griffin '56 played a Singing Cadets recording
Anish Moonka (@anisha_moonka) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NASA has 32 cameras on the Artemis II spacecraft. The top science priority during the Moon flyby was the four astronauts looking out the window and talking about what they saw. NASA's lunar science lead confirmed it. What the crew says out loud about the Moon's surface matters