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From YouTube: BHS 2020 Spirit Thursday
Description
Episode 3 in BHS Virtual Spirit Week
A
Morning,
see
versus
this
is
Julius
Dawson,
with
your
latest
seahorse
news.
It
is
Thursday,
May,
28th
and
today
is
blue
and
white
there.
We
challenge
you
to
dress
up
in
your
BHS
gear
and
send
us
your
photos,
show
us
your
save
our
spirit.
Each
day,
you'll
receive
an
email
with
this
broadcast
link
and
a
form
you
can
use
to
submit
your
fun
images.
There's
our
hope
to
bring
you
fun
spirit
information
each
day
with
some
familiar
faces.
Well,
to
kick
things
off
to
them.
Here's
mr.
C
D
Bhs,
today's
word
of
the
day
is
hippocampus
in
classical
mythology.
Hippocampus
is
a
seahorse
with
two
four
feet
and
a
body
ending
in
the
tail
of
a
dolphin
or
a
fish.
However,
we
all
know
that
the
true
definition
of
a
seahorse
is
a
group
of
the
most
outstanding
students
and
staff
in
the
state
of
Vermont
and
the
world.
E
F
But
did
you
know
that
the
spring-loaded
clothespin
design
was
invented
by
David
M
Smith's
of
Springfield
Vermont
in
1853
a
few
years
earlier
in
1834,
Isaac
Fisher
jr.,
also
of
Springfield
Vermont,
was
issued
a
patent
for
his
process
of
making
sandpaper,
although
the
first
recorded
use
of
sandpaper
was
in
first
century
China,
when
crushed
shells,
seeds
and
sand
were
bonded
to
parchment
papers
using
natural
gum,
Fisher's
method
called
for
using
a
sizing
board,
as
well
as
the
movement
of
paper
under
the
sieve
for
applying
the
abrasive.
And.
F
Lastly,
let's
talk
about
Wilson
Bentley
of
Jericho
Vermont
in
1885,
equipped
with
both
his
microscope
and
a
camera.
Bentley
made
his
first
successful
photograph
of
a
snow.
Crystal
Bentley
was
the
pioneer
of
photomicrograph
II,
the
photographing
of
very
small
objects.
It
was
especially
difficult
given
the
melting
rate
of
his
often
chosen
subject
of
a
snowflake.
G
I
Alright,
so
some
of
you
know
I
used
to
live
and
work
in
the
French
Caribbean,
and
it
just
so
happens
that
May
28
is
a
huge
day
in
French,
Caribbean
history,
so
leading
up
to
1802
slaves
in
the
French
Caribbean
have
actually
been
freed,
but
in
comes
Napoleon
a
couple
years
earlier
and
where's
Napoleon
say
no
we're
gonna
reinstitute
slavery,
so
you
can
imagine
the
revolutionary
resistance
that
that
spawns
clearly
you're
familiar
with
the
Haitian
Revolution.
Well,
that
ends
up
going
a
slightly
different
way
where
Haiti
ends
up
with
as
a
free
nation.
I
Guadeloupe
does
not
end
up
as
a
free
nation.
In
fact,
Guadeloupe
is
still
part
of
France,
but
it
ends
in
this
way.
That
is
I,
don't
know
it's
either
heroic
or
it's
insane
depending
on
your
perspective,
so
Louis
Douglas,
who
has
been
leading
the
resistance
against
Napoleon
realizes
in
1802
that
he
cannot
win
so
in
the
Battle
of
mokuba.
He
has
basically
four
or
five
hundred
of
his
ardent
followers.
That's
the
only
people
he
has
remaining,
so
he
gathers
those
400
people
together,
men,
women.
I
You
know
the
people
fighting
with
him
and
he
also
gathers
the
largest
stockpile
of
munitions
and
gunpowder
that
he
can
possibly
find
he
Huddle's
both
of
those
together
his
people
and
the
stockpile
of
explosives
and
draws
the
French
closer
and
closer
and
closer
really
until
you
can
see
the
whites
of
their
eyes.
This
is
a
suicide
mission.
Everyone
knows
it
and,
as
it
turns
out
all
400
died.
We
don't
exactly
know
exactly
how
many
maybe
four
hundred,
maybe
four
or
fifty,
but
it
is
a
massive
explosion.
I
H
H
H
L
G
Attention
seniors,
Monday,
June
1st
the
decision
day
where
they
plan
to
attend
college,
take
a
gap
year,
participate
in
an
apprenticeship,
join
our
military
service
branches
or
enter
the
workforce.
We
want
to
hear
from
you
send
us
a
photo
showing
us
your
plans
over
the
next
several
days.
All
right
so
grant
page
will
also
be
highlighting
where
many
of
our
faculty
and
staff
went
after
high
school
and
on
Monday.