"It's not low in the sky at all (unless you look really early in the evening)
by 10:00PM it is almost straight up in the northeast sky."
Yes, that's true that it should rise from the NE higher up into the sky. However, when my brother first told me about this, the moon was brighter (larger) then it is now, and rose later, making the optimal viewing time early in the evening, within the first several hours after sunset. Last night it was cloudy in southern NY, and I couldn't find it.
"Are we ready to launch DEEP IMPACT?"
That's funny!
Yesterday in school, I couldn't help but tell several of the students about the comet; perhaps it would provide some safe entertainment on a Friday night. One kid, who seemed to be napping on the radiator (he had finished all his work) looked up like a startled rabbit, and asked, "Is it going to crash into Earth?" I reassured him that comets are nothing more than icey dust balls, the same sort that were probably all over the floor beneath the radiator.