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Follow on Google News | For Astronomy Day (5/14/16): A poem called "Cosmolo..Gee" by Robert Barrows, from the Planet EarthThis is about a poem about the origin of the universe. The poem is called "Cosmolo...Gee." It's by Robert Barrows, a humanoid living on the third planet from the Sun in a galaxy commonly known as The Milky Way. How did it all begin? Read on...
LOOK…UP IN THE SKY…IT'S ASTRONOMY DAY! And…who knows what we may discover when we look up at the night sky and try to figure out all those things that we'll never know the answers to… So along those lines…here is a great way to celebrate our cosmic history and our cosmic destiny. You can celebrate Astronomy Day every day of the year with a poem called "Cosmolo...Gee" And you can think about the poem every time you look up at the night sky... Here is the poem: "COSMOLO...GEE" Copyright 2006 by Robert Barrows The universe began a long time ago. How and when, we'll never know. Did it begin with a great big bang? Will it end in a tiny black hole? Is it one continuous loop? Again, we'll never know. How does matter begin in a world without anything in it? How does life begin and does it begin the first minute? Do you think we will ever be able to go back to the beginning of time? And will we find out the future there, too? Is there reincarnation and déjà vu? Is the speed of light the ultimate limit? Does E=mc² hold true for antimatter, too? And in the building blocks of the universe, is E=mc² just one plus one equals two? The answers to these might keep you up at night. And how do you prove if you're wrong or right? And imagine our surprise if we can someday go back to the beginning of time, and we hear someone say..."Let there be Light!" ### Also, for safety's sake...If you look up in the sky and it looks like a meteor or an asteroid is coming right at you, what should you do? An Astronomy professor I had in college said, "If it looks like a meteor is coming right at you...it is...so run away fast and duck and cover!" People can see the poem "Cosmolo...Gee" For more information, contact Robert Barrows at R.M. Barrows, Inc. Advertising & Public Relations on the planet Earth at 650-344-4405, http://www.barrows.com. And of course…Happy Astronomy Day! End
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