In this Tuesday, June 25, 2019 photo, a giant eyeball sits on the second floor of the Children's Museum of Illinois in Decatur, Ill. The exhibit is the idea of Dr. John Lee, a local ophthalmologist. He designed it hoping that if people know more about the eye and eye diseases they will be better equipped to spot those diseases in time to protect their sight. (Clay Jackson/Herald & Review via AP)
The Associated Press
DECATUR, Ill. (AP) - For those kids looking to step inside a 7-foot (2.1-meter) eyeball, the Children's Museum of Illinois is the place to go.
The (Decatur) Herald & Review reports the display called "Peek Inside" that allows visitors to see the eye from the inside out will be open to the public within a few days.
The exhibit is the idea of Dr. John Lee, a local ophthalmologist. He designed it hoping that if people know more about the eye and eye diseases they'll be better equipped to spot those diseases in time to protect their sight.
The giant eyeball is largely the work of welding students at Richland Community College, who built a metal frame, then added 4,000 small squares of Styrofoam, two layers of fiberglass and six coats of paint.
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Information from: Herald & Review, http://www.herald-review.com
In this Tuesday, June 25, 2019 photo, Brooklyn Watson, 9, visited the Children's Museum of Illinois in Decatur, Ill.,with their family and was tempted to look inside a giant, seven-foot tall eyeball placed in the center of the second floor. The exhibit is the idea of Dr. John Lee, a local ophthalmologist. He designed it hoping that if people know more about the eye and eye diseases they will be better equipped to spot those diseases in time to protect their sight. (Clay Jackson/Herald & Review via AP)
The Associated Press
In this Tuesday, June 25, 2019 photo, Dr. John Lee, a local ophthalmologist, poses inside a giant eyeball at the Children's Museum of Illinois in Decatur, Ill. De. Lee designed the exhibit hoping that if people know more about the eye and eye diseases they will be better equipped to spot those diseases in time to protect their sight. (Clay Jackson/Herald & Review via AP)
The Associated Press