The Sun rises in the East. Depending on your location, the precise direction of sunrise may be a little north of east.
15 May 2010, for downtown Ottawa: Sun rises . . . 5:32 AM Sun sets . . . 8:26 PM
Sunrise at Chehalis WA on 15 May 2010 was at 5:38 AM PDT (12:38 UTC).
the time now is 8:15
High Rise - 2009 1-15 was released on: USA: 19 May 2009
On April 15, 2012, the sun rose in Tampa, FL at 7:04 AM and set at 7:55 PM.
Sunset at Savanna IL on 15 May 2009 was at 8:15 PM CDT (16 May @ 01:15 UTC).
The time of sunrise is very dependent on the place, and a difference of 15 miles will change the sunrise/sunset times by 1 minute. You can run the Sunrise/Sunset calculator from the U.S. Naval Observatory.
Not on earth. At the moment of New Moon on May 15, the sun and moon are about 6 degrees apart in the sky.
Sunrise at Junagadh on 17 Oct 1994 was at 06:45 INST (01:15 UTC).
Dirigible Days - 2012 What Has Sunk May Rise 1-5 was released on: USA: 15 January 2013
rise/run = tangent 15 degrees rise = tan(15) x 48 = 12.86 inches
The moon rises in the east. The Moon revolves around the Earth and therefore its position as we see it is relative to the Sun and it changes quickly. Within a timespan of 24 hours the Moon's horizontal position changes by approximately 12 degrees in a counter-clockwise direction relative to the Sun. This is the main reason that moonrise and moonset occur later than the day before, and so the Moon does not always rise in the same place in the sky. On some days the Moon does not rise at all so the event will not occur until the day after, this is because the time between moonrises is a bit more than 24 hours. From the South and North Poles of the Earth, they Moon can be seen all around the clock at times.