Connected on 2010-02-18 09:00:00
from Rockford, IL, US
- 8:47 am
- Studenthi
- Bugscope Teamgood morning!
- Bugscope Teamhey there!
- Bugscope Teamwe are finishing setup for you
- Studentthank u
- Studentis that a ladybug
- Studenthola
- Studenthi
- Bugscope Teamthat was a ladybug
- Bugscope Teamthis is the head of a prime minister that fell off
- Studentwhat type of classes did you have to take?
- Studentwhat are the spiky things coming out of the mouth?
Bugscope Teamthose are palps, which are accessory mouthparts
- Bugscope Teamnot a prime minister, actually a praying mantis
- Studentthanks SEM
- Studentthats interesting why do they have them then
- 8:52 am
- Studentwhat color is it
- Bugscope Teamusually there are two sets of palps; they help the insect feed and also to taste its food
- Studentthanks SEM
- Studentwhat is that thing on the eye
- Bugscope Teamit was pale brown
- StudentThe things on the top, are they the antennae?
Bugscope Teamyes they are!
- Bugscope Teamsome kinda juju
- Studentthank you
- Studentwats a juju
- Studentwhat is that?
- Studentwuts tht scott
- Bugscope Teamyeah the thing on that compound eye is just dirt
- Bugscope Teamit's probably a piece of dirt or dust
- Bugscope Teamwe call things we don't recognize, mostly slimy things, juju
- Studentthanks
- StudentThanks
- Studentwhoa that is cool
- Studento thats sweet thanks SEM
- Studentoh jujus are gross
Bugscope Teamyeah that is a good way of putting it
- Studentwhy do flies need so many eyes
Bugscope Teamif you had compound eyes you would have 1) better peripheral vision -- you could see more around you at one time, and 2) you would be able to register motion more quickly
- Studentwhat is that
- StudentWhat is that?
Bugscope Teamthat is one of the palps
- Studenta dust mite?
- Studentwhat are the poky things?
Bugscope Teamthe poky things are setae, and yes some of them are likely used to taste
- Bugscope Teamthere is a dustmite on a ladybug today
- Studentare the spikes the things they use to taste?
Bugscope Teamthe spikes, which are insect hairs called setae, probably help it feel around
- Studentwhat are the spiny things on that?
- Studentwhat is the hair for?
Bugscope Teamit is often sensory -- for touch or hot/cold or for smelling
- Studentw
- Studentcan you simplify that
Bugscope Teamthe things that look like hair are often called 'setae,' or singular, 'seta.'
- Studentthanks SEM
- Studentcool
- 8:57 am
- Studentthanks sem
- Studentwhat kinds of classes do you have to take to have this job?
- Studentwhy with do we have this concept thingy on our smartboard
- Studentwhat is that?
Bugscope Teamthis is a lower magnification of the dust mite, with some dust and dirt around it
- Studentum...What is this?
- Bugscope TeamMrs Dobler has control of the microscope...
- Bugscope Teamthis is a mite
- Bugscope Teamthe head is to the left
- Studento fascinating
- Studentyes
- Studentoh nasty
- Bugscope Teamlet's take the mag down so we can see where it is
- Studentwhat is that?
- Studentwhy are some of the hairs bigger than the bug
- Teacherthe computer screen on the control screen as a constant band of "please wait while this command executes
- Studentare those spikes hair?
Bugscope Teamsome of them are like hair, or bristles
- Studentwhat color are the hairs
- Bugscope TeamI think if you refresh it will be alright
- Studentwhat are those?
- StudentY thank u SEM
- Bugscope Teamthis is the abdomen of a ladybug
- Studentoh thanks alot SEM
- Teacherthe pink band is gone
Bugscope Teamtry selecting a preset, Mrs D
- Bugscope Teamthe mite is where the hindlimbs are folded
- Bugscope Teama lot of those smaller hairs might not have much color to them
- Studentwhat are those clear dots on the side??
Bugscope Teamthose are bubbles in the carbon tape we use to help stick the critters down to the stub
- Studentwhat are the little circles in the background
Bugscope Teamthat is the carbon tape. it often looks bubbly
- Studentis there a shell??????????
- StudentWhat are those dots to the right of it?
Bugscope Teamthose were the bubbles in the tape
- Studentwhat is that?
- Studentwhat is that
- Studentis that a spider?????
Bugscope Teamit was, but we moved on
- 9:03 am
- Bugscope Teamwe just went from the spider to an antenna
- Bugscope Teamyou can go back to the spider
- Studentantenna of the spider?
Bugscope Teamwe are on a cockroach antenna
- StudentIs that a centipede
- StudentWhat is it now
- Bugscope Teamthis is a few segments of the antenna of a roach
- Studentwhoa that is cool
- Bugscope Teamspiders do not have antennae, but they do have lots and lots of sensory setae
- Studento
- Studentthanks scot
- Studentuhhhhh.....gross??!?
- StudentThank You Mr. Scot you've done well
- Studentwhat classes do you have totake to do this job?
Bugscope Teamscot has an english and biology degree, and I have a degree in physics
- StudentSpikes?
- Studentscales?
- Studentwhat is this
- Studenteyes?
- StudentWhat are those circle things'
- Studentwhat kind of spiders is this
Bugscope Teamwe aren't sure, it's sometimes hard to tell the different kinds of spiders apart
- Bugscope Teamclasses in the science area usually helps
- Bugscope Teamthose are four of the eight eyes the spider has, usually
- Bugscope Teamthe other four eyes may be on the back of the head where we cannot see them
- Studento cool they dont look like eyes
Bugscope Teamthey looked black this morning when I was using the dissecting microscope to put this sample together
- Studento
- Studentthey look like paws
- Studentwhat is this?
- Bugscope Teamthis is part of the cephalothorax near the eyes
- StudentAs were Mr. Scot
- Studentdoes the spider have eyelashes???
Bugscope Teamno, they don't need to protect their eyes as much as we do. Sometimes they use their legs to clean their eyes though
- StudentWhat is the web looking thing?
Bugscope Teamum there is another spider to the NW
- Bugscope Teamcephalothorax means 'head-chest,' and it refers to the way the head and what would be the chest of the spider are one piece
- 9:08 am
- StudentWhat is the circurlar thing
Bugscope Teamthat is a screw in the microscope
- Bugscope Teamthat was the edge of the world
- Studenthow long does it take for a bug to decay
- Studentlots of hair??
- Bugscope Teamthe thing that looks like a tom tom drum with holes in it is an applicator stick made of wood
- Studentwhy do spiders have eight eyes
Bugscope Teamnot all but most of them do, and it seems to be helpful in being able to track things that are moving. many spiders do not see well
- Studentwhat does an applicator stick do
Bugscope Teamwe used it to hold the spider up so we could see its eyes better
- Studenty are they so smooth
- Studenthow are the eyes so smoothe
Bugscope Teamthey dont have compound eyes, they have simple eyes, which are usually very smooth
- Studenthow are the eyes so smooth
- Studenthow are their eyes so smooth
Bugscope Teamthey almost look like they have a lens -- they look much like our eyes, superficially
- StudentGO SCOTT!!!!!
- Studentare those haris?
- Studenthairs?
Bugscope Teamthey are plumose setae, and some people will call them hairs, even entomologists
- Student?
- Studentcockroach?
Bugscope Teamyes it is!
- Studentwhat is thi
- Students
- Studentmissing antenna??
Bugscope Teamyes one of its antennae busted off
Bugscope Teamit fell off somewhere
- StudentWhy is one antenna behind the head
- Bugscope Teaminsects get very brittle when they die, and their limbs can fall off easily
- Studentok thanks
- 9:13 am
- StudentSCOTTS MY HERO
- StudentGO SCOT
- StudentDo bugs decay? if they do then how long does it take?
Bugscope Teamthey do decay, and I'm not sure how long it would take but over time mold will grow on them and start eating them away
- Bugscope Teamthis shows that the antenna has a scape, like an ant antenna -- a short sold part closer to the head than the flexi part
- Studentlittle hairy??
Bugscope Teamyes roaches are kind of interesting because they are generalists -- they are not specifically adapted for one environment or one type of food...
- Studentwhy do bugs have so much hair
- Studentthey are very hairy
- StudentWhy do all the bugs have so much hair???
- Studenthow can you stop the decaying process
Bugscope Teamyou can store the insects in ethanol and then dry them when you want. the ethanol would preserve them
- Studentwhat is that
- StudentITS BEEN GREAT JUST GREAT
Bugscope Teamcool!
- Studentwat is a generalists
Bugscope Teama generalist would be something that can live in any setting, eat anything, compared to an insect that has to be in a particular environment
- Studentare dead
- Studentdeadly deadly?
- Studentit is great\
- Studentare they deadly?
- Studentwhat is that
- Studenthow much smaller is the bugs brain than its head
- Studentwhat is that
- Studentwhat is that
- Studentwhat are the furry things for
Bugscope Teamthose are plumose setae, which are special hairs on a spider good at sensing vibrations
- Bugscope Teamthis is the tip of the leg of a spider
- Studentcool
- Studentspiders need to shave a bit more
- Studentwat is the most poisonous bug in your coleection??
Bugscope Teamwe have had scorpions, which are not insects, and we have had recluse spiders, which are also not insects
- StudentIs that how they climb???
Bugscope Teamsome of the more blunt setae are likely the ones that help the spider climb
- Bugscope Teamthe furry things are those plumose setae, which are very sensitive to wind, vibration...
- Studenthow much sam
- 9:19 am
- Bugscope TeamThank you Snatty
- Studenti like him m\ \
- Studenthow much smaller are the bugs brains than their bodies
- Studentbye
- Studentc yal'
- Studentbye
- StudentADIOS AMIGOS
- StudentIll mi9ss u Scott
- Studentis it possible to see a heart of a spider of some sort
Bugscope Teamnot unless it is busted open; we have never see one
- Bugscope Teambye thank you@
- Studentauf wiedersien
- Studentthanks!!!
- Bugscope Teamspiders have the ability to let one of their legs go -- make it fall off -- if they sense it has venom flowing into it
- Bugscope Teamsayonara
- TeacherWe are going to switch classes now to 3rd hour so a new group of students will be logging in 5 minutes from now.
- Bugscope TeamCool!
- Bugscope Teamok sounds great mrs. D!
- 9:25 am
- 9:30 am
- Bugscope Teamhey there!
- Bugscope TeamGood Morning!
- Bugscope TeamWelcome to Bugscope!
- Bugscope TeamThis is the tip of a spider's leg, and you can see its claw in there among all of the setae
- Bugscope Teamthese are all insects/arthropods that you sent
- TeacherThird hour is ready to roll!
- Studentis that hair on the bristles
Bugscope Teamit is much like hair. it is sensory -- sensitive to vibration
- Studentwhat is this
- Bugscope Teamthe bristles are the hair
- Bugscope Teamspiders are very hairy
- Studentwhat is this
- Studentwhat is that
- Studenthey
- Studentwat is this
- Studenthow big can claws get normally?
Bugscope Teamthat depends on the spider, these claws are so small on this spider we wouldnt normally be able to see them
- Studentwhat is this?
Bugscope Teamwe are at fairly high mag, looking around
- Bugscope Teamspiders do not have antennae and thus need to get information about their environment other ways, like through those plumose setae and using their eyes
- Studentwats goin on bay sexy
- Studentwhat is this??????
- Studentwhat that
- Studentwhat is that dot right there
- StudentwhAT IS THAT THING
- Bugscope Teamcool!
- Studentwhat is the big tube looking thing
- Bugscope Teamyou can see that it has larger sensory bristles
- StudentwHAT KIND OF SPIDER IS THIS?
Bugscope Teamwe aren't sure, none of us specializes in spiders and a lot of the smaller ones are hard to tell apart
- Studentwow wutz that
- Studentwhat kind of spider is that?
- 9:35 am
- Bugscope Teamthat is pretty nice
- Studentis it male or flemale
- Bugscope Teamoften you can tell males from females because females are larger, and also their palps -- the feeding appendages in front of the face - are smaller in females
- Studentoh ok
- Bugscope Teamsometimes you can tell what sex a spider is by the size of their palps, which looks like little legs by the mouth
- Studentare those scales on the little claw?
Bugscope Teamthey are very fine projections that may sometimes be called microsetae
- StudentWhat part of the spider is this?
Bugscope Teamthis is one of the spider's legs
- Studentis that hair
- StudentIs that hair?
- Studentwhat is this against the skin... is that hair
Bugscope Teamit is kind of like hair, and it is almost certainly sensory
Bugscope Teamthese are all setae, which are hairs
- Studentare we looking at the fangs?
Bugscope Teamthe fangs are on the front of the head, below the chelicers, or chelicerae
- Studentdoes it lay eggs
Bugscope TeamI believe all spiders do lay eggs
- Studenthow many legs
Bugscope Teameight, unless it chooses to jettison any of them. spiders can let their legs go if they need to
- Studentwhat are we looking at???
Bugscope Teamthis is part of the leg of a spider
- Studentis that an ameboa
- Studenthi
Bugscope TeamHi Twon
- Studentwhat color is the spiders color
Bugscope Teamthis spider was tan
- Studentwhat does it eat
Bugscope Teamspiders eat other spiders, insects, other arthropods
- Studentwhat is that
- 9:40 am
- Studenthow long do they live
- Studenthow does it walk
- Studentwhat color is it?
- Studentwhere does it come from
- Studenthow big can they grow?
Bugscope Teamthese can get to be three or four inches long, and they can fly as adults
- Studentbut how sharp are their pinchers
Bugscope Teamyou can see that they are quite sharp
- Studenthow large is it in size
Bugscope Teamthis one is only a centimeter long, or a little less
- StudentHow strong are its legs?
Bugscope Teamthey are pretty strong. It has big meaty forelegs strong enough to hold onto other insects
- Studentis it male or female
Bugscope TeamI am not sure we can tell when they are this young
- Studenthow big can the pinchers get
- Studenthow big can the legs get
Bugscope Teamthey are always proportional to the body
- Student/
- Student?
- Studenthow big is its pincher
- Studentwhy do praying mantises put their claws in a praying form
- StudentHOw old is it
- Studenthow long do they live
Bugscope Teamthey live at least one season here in the temperate zone.
- StudentHow old is it?
- Studentis that hair on the pinchers?
Bugscope TeamThey are spines that are very stiff used to help keep their food locked in their grasp
- Studenthow big does it get
Bugscope Teamthree inches long, some of them
- Studentis that scales
- Studenthow come when you pet a bug it isnt fuzzy yet they are covered in fuz
- Studentare those skin cells?
- Studenthow big are the hairs on its boddies
- Studentis this hair or its claws?
Bugscope Teamthose are spines that help it hold its prey while it bites it
- StudentAre those scales on its leg?
Bugscope Teamthey look like scales but they are the way the cuticle forms
- Studentwhere do they live?
- Studentcan it burt preople
- Studentare they cells
- Studentwhat is this now
- Studentwhat insect is this?
- 9:45 am
- Studentwhat type of climate does it live in
Bugscope Teamthey live almost anywhere
- Studenthow sharp can their tooth get?
- Studentwhat is this a pic of
- StudentHow many teeth can a spider have?
Bugscope Teamthey do not really have teeth -- these are similar to what we saw on the praying mantis -- they are used to hold the prey while the spider bites
- Studenthow big can their teeth get???
- Studentis there poison in the tooth
Bugscope Teamyes there is in the top part -- the fang
- Studentwhat are the string looking thing??????
- Studentis that food on the tooth
Bugscope Teammight be some. Spiders liquify their food before they slurp it up. So it looks like there is some sort of dried liquid matting their hair
- Studentis it edable
- Bugscope Teamthe top thing going sideways is one of the fangs
- Studentwhats the stuff that looks like hair in front of the teeth?
Bugscope Teammore sensory setae -- they are coverd with setae
- Studenthow many teeth do they have
- Studentcan it climb thigs
- Studentcan it be radiactive
Bugscope Teamno, I think that's only spiderman's spider
- Studentwhat are the strings on the side
Bugscope Teamthose are its setae
- Studentwhy is it so fuzzy????????
- Studentew thats kinda icky:)
- Bugscope Teamcovered that is
- Studenthow small are their hairs?
- Studentis it bad if it bites yuo
Bugscope Teammost are not bad -- they would be kind of like a mosquito bite
- StudentWhat are setaes
Bugscope Teamthey are hairs found on bugs
- Studenthow deadly is the poison in the tooth
Bugscope Teamit depends on the spider; what it does is dissolve the insides of its victims
- Studentare the teeth going in the gom?
Bugscope Teamwe called them 'teeth' but they are just projections that help the spider grip its prey
- Studentan it be enlaged to make a baddetr
- StudentWhat kind of damage can the tooth do to an organism
Bugscope Teamthe teeth are just serrations of the jaw. We use the term tooth loosely in the case of of the spider mouth. The serrations help cut into the insect
- Studentr bitewhatz that
- Studentdid it lose an antena
- Studenthow can they loose their anttenaes
- Studentwhat is that on its skin
- Studenthow long can they go without a head?
Bugscope Teamsupposedly they can sort of live for a week or so
- Studentwhats that
- Studentis it missing an atena?
Bugscope TeamYes, one of the antennae is broken and missing
- Studentlookz like a queen
- Studenthow many hitpoints does it have? could it beat a dragon in a duel?
Bugscope Teamsee if Cate knows about that
Bugscope Teamit probably only has a few HP, it's not very big. Dragons have 1000's of HP
- 9:51 am
- Studentdo they have blood if so, what color???
Bugscope Teamthey don't have blood, but they have a clear fluid called hemolymph that the inner organs are bathed in
- StudentDoes it have eyes
- Studentcan it swim??
Bugscope TeamCockroaches can swim for short periods of time for sure. They don't have any adaptations that allow it to go underwater though.
- Studentis that a wing behind the head????
Bugscope Teamthat is part of the elytra -- part of the 'shell' on the roach's back
- Studentwhat are those long tube-like things on its head
Bugscope Teamthose are the antennae
- StudentDoes it have eyes
Bugscope Teamyes, this roach has compound eyes, but they are very streamlined making them hard to see
- Studentwhere are the eyes
Bugscope Teamthey are there on either side -- large and very smooth
- Studentdoes it have fangs
Bugscope TeamNope, jaws--no fangs
- Studentwhat is your favorite type of bug and why?
Bugscope TeamI like earwigs because they often have mites, and I like weevils because I think they are kind of cute
- StudentWhat are the white specks on its face
- Studentis that hair
Bugscope Teamit is much like hair, but it is sensitive to vibration and lets the spider feels its surroundings in great detail
- Studentis that matted hair around the eyes?
- Studenthow many hairs aproximately does the spider have on its face
Bugscope Teamlooks like hundreds to a few thousand
- Studentdoes the spider have corneas on its eye or asome kind of protection on it eyes
Bugscope TeamLike all parts of the spider, the eyes are made of chitin, which is a hard substance. It protects the lenses in the eye
- Studentwhy are the hairs sticking up?
Bugscope TeamSome of the hairs are sticking up and some a laying flat. There are many different types of hairs that help the spider to sense different things--the hairs that stick up may be the ones that Scot mentioned earlier, the ones that help them to sense vibrations
- Studenthow come bugs arent fuzzy when you touch them but on this thing they are very fuzzy?!
Bugscope Teamthe setae are often very small, and some are fuzzier than others
- Studentare they color blind
- Studentdoes it have a iris or a pupil?
Bugscope Teamwhen you look at them in a dissecting 'scope they seem to have an iris, but I am not sure that they really do
- Studentwhat is that above the eyes
- 9:56 am
- Studentare they colored blind
Bugscope TeamAt least some jumping spiders can see color; in fact colors are an important part of mating rituals. Males spiders will wave their front legs, which have incredible ultraviolet colors (metalling greens and blues and reds) for females.
- StudentWhat is that thing behind its head
Bugscope Teamthat is a wooden applicator stick we cut to rest the spider against so it would stand up
- Studentwhat is above the spiders eyes
- Studentand what is a satay?
Bugscope Teamsetae or singular seta are what we call the tiny hairlike things
- Studenthow does a spider detect its prey
Bugscope TeamJumping spiders, like this guy, are visual predators. They use their eyes to catch their prey.
- Teacherwhat does a rampant mean
Bugscope Teamrampant means standing up on its hind legs. it is kind of a joke since it often comes from heraldry
- Studentwhat is that on top of the spiders head?
Bugscope Teamthat's a stick we used to hold up the spider so we could see its eyes better
- Studentwhat is the white part on the top of its head
- Studentwhat is the thing in the head????
- Studentwhy do spiders bite people??
Bugscope Teamlikely it is because we annoyed them, got too close or into their territory; it is unlikely they would think they could eat you
- Bugscope Teamit is making it look like the spider is standing up
- Studentis it male or female
Bugscope TeamI think this is a female because its palps are relativelym small
- Studentdo spiders see the same as us
Bugscope TeamSome spiders, like this one, have very good vision, which some people compare to the visual abilities of humans. Other spiders, like the ones that weave the big webs, have very poor vision, and get around primarily by touch and (probably) smell
- Studenthow big can they get
- StudentWhat is the purpose of the seta
Bugscope Teamthey can have a variety of purposes. The main one is so the bugs can feel what is around them. Some can also taste/smell, some sense vibration or wind currents
- Studenthow big can they get
Bugscope TeamThe largest arachnids are tarantulas, which can be the size of a plate.
- Bugscope Teamrelatively, that is
- Studentwhat is the thing pokingt out the leg
Bugscope Teamthis is an antenna, although it looks like a leg, and those bristles help it sense things it might be touching
- 10:02 am
- Studentare those little things hairs that are growing?
- Teacherhow sensitive are the antennas "feelers"?
Bugscope Teamthey are connected to nerves on the inside of the body
- Studenthow do spiders use hairs to help them move?
Bugscope TeamThe hairs are like the whiskers of a cat--the hairs give the spider information about where it is stepping. The hairs also help the spider o detect temperature, so the spider can use the hairs to determine if they are moving to a cooler or hotter place.
- Studenthow come when people eat spiders they dont die from the poison in it
Bugscope TeamIf they eat cooked spiders, the heat probably deactivates the poison.
- Bugscope TeamWell, actually, I am wrong--the largest arachnids would be horseshoe crabs, but tarantulas are the largest terrestrial arachnids.
- Studentare thoes wrinkles?
- Studentwhat kind of cockroch is this
Bugscope TeamI think this is one of those Periplaneta americana American cockroaches
- Bugscope Teamso it is hard to say just how sensitive they are
- Studentwhat does poison do to you
Bugscope Teamit can dissolve protein in your skin and make your skin die
- Teacherwhat is all that stuff around the broken antenna?
Bugscope Teamit could be dirt or dried hemolymph, which is insect blood
- Studentdo they have scales
Bugscope Teamthey do look like scales; I think it is the way the cuticle -- the shell of the insect -- forms
- Studentit that a scale
- Bugscope Teamthere could also be some mold
- Studenthow do spiders swim swim
Bugscope Teamnot too well, usually
- Studentis that bacteria?
Bugscope TeamIt looked like a rod-shaped bacterium, called a bacillus
- Studenthow long are the antenas
Bugscope Teamthose are about as long as the body; in this case about 12 mm
- Studentis this cellery
- Studentis this a vein
- 10:07 am
- Bugscope Team.here are some dirty mites
- Studentwhat is the round things
- Bugscope Teamthese are fat little mites on the head of a housefly
- Studentdo dustmites live
- Studentdo they bite
- Studenthow long do they live
- Studentcan a dust mite eat or bite you
Bugscope TeamNope, they feed on dead skin cells and other yummy things
- Studenthow small can dust mites be
- Studentdo dustmites actually live
Bugscope Teamyes they do, but whenever we see them they seem to be dead
- Studentis that a dustmite on a dustmite
Bugscope Teamcould be
- Studentothe ryummy things? can you get a sickness or disease from it?!
Bugscope TeamWell, some people are very allergic to dust mites. However, they do not vector or transmit diseases.
- Studenthow many dustmites live in a pillow?
- Studentwhere are dustmites?
Bugscope TeamThey live in humid places that have lots of skin cells--like carpet, pillows, couches
- Studentare they all over us?
Bugscope Teamone of the entomologists who was down here a week ago said that if you scraped your forehead with a credit card you would be scraping mites off of your skin
- Studentare dustmites parasites?
Bugscope TeamNo, they are decomposers. They break down dead skin cells.
- Studentare they very visable?
- Bugscope Teamyou might, for example, see a mite on a mite, but we have never confirmed that here
- Studentbye have a nice day!!!!!
- Teacheris this the eye?
Bugscope Teamyes it is!
- Bugscope Teamthis is the claw and the pulvillus of a ladybug.
- 10:12 am
- Bugscope Teamthe little brushlike part is how the ladybug sticks to glass, for example
- Bugscope TeamMrs D is there another class coming in?
- TeacherThank you for your undying patience with students! I appreciate all your time. The students all said goodbye.
- Bugscope TeamThank You!
- Bugscope Teamit was a good session
- Bugscope TeamVery exciting
- Bugscope Teamhttp://bugscope.beckman.illinois.edu/members/2010-009/
- Bugscope Teambelow is your member page
- TeacherYou are always so professional no matter how silly the students get :)
- Bugscope TeamI like the silly stuff the best!
- Bugscope Teamover and out. Thanks, Annie!]
- Bugscope TeamBye bye ;)