Museum of Science Fiction Project Status Update No. 8, Q4 2015

Posted on December 30, 2015

museum of science fiction

These guys have sure kept themselves busy!

  • Announced the CubeSat Competition
  • Announced the Journal of Science Fiction
  • Received three CarMax matching grant awards
  • Installed the Future of Travel exhibit at National Airport
  • Released the iOS Mobile App
  • Signed a NASA Space Act Agreement
  • Announced Escape Velocity for 2016
  • Exhibited at Awesome Con 2015
  • Ben Bova joined our advisory board
  • Supported Disney’s Tomorrowland opening
  • Built the Virtual Museum of Science Fiction
  • Morgan Gendel came to Brooklyn for Lectures
  • Installed the Architectural Designs exhibit in Brooklyn
  • Opened the Minecraft Server for Informal Learning
  • Supported NASA with Comet Hitchhiker Concept
Read their full list Here!
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Monkey Hammock!

Posted on December 28, 2015

Once again proving our cousins are much smarter than we give them credit:

Monkey Hammock
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THE CINEMA BEHIND STAR WARS: JOHN CARTER

Posted on December 21, 2015

CBSW_Geonosis
John Carter is a film directed by Pixar alum Andrew Stanton that follows Civil War veteran John Carter on his astounding trip to the planet Barsoom, which we know as Mars. There he meets a princess leading a rebellion, fights against an evil empire, and meets a variety of strange aliens on a desert wasteland of a planet, gets powers far beyond the abilities of normal men, and encounters a strange religion. There are times where he’s captured, thrown into an arena to fight bizarre monsters, and other times where he’s forced to rescue a princess.
Source: StarWars.com
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‘Tarzan’ Ron Ely puts Santa Barbara hangout up for sale

Posted on December 7, 2015

'Tarzan' Ron Ely puts Santa Barbara hangout up for saleA real Steal!

Ron Ely of TV “Tarzan” fame has listed his own little piece of the jungle for sale in Santa Barbara at $5.195 million.

Secreted behind two sets of gates, the 1.5-acre estate has been the actor’s home for nearly three decades. The flat lot is studded with mature trees and palms and contains the main house, a one-bedroom guesthouse, a blue-surface tennis court and a 20-foot-by-50-foot tiled swimming pool.

Read the full article at LA Times.

Photo Courtesy of Thomas Ploch | Inset: Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images

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PAPERBACK PARADE: The Magazine For Paperback Readers And Collectors!

Posted on December 2, 2015

Richard Greene PAPERBACK PARADE: The Magazine For Paperback Readers And Collectors! As posted by Richard Greene on Facebook:

Great tribute to Frazetta paperback covers including many Burroughs covers in Issue #91, The latest issue of PAPERBACK PARADE: The Magazine For Paperback Readers And Collectors! Hot off the press!

Edited by Gary Lovisi. Designed by Richard Greene. Published by Gryphon Books, Post Office Box 208209, Brooklyn, New York, 11228-0209, U.S.A., at $15 per copy. Subscriptions: 3 issues for $40 First Class Mail; All other International: 3 issues for $65 First Class Mail. Limited copies of back issues are available at $15 each + postage, please email Gary Lovisi at: gryphonbooks@att.net. Ad rates & specs available on request.

 

 

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An Intern Saved a Museum by Finding This Revolutionary War Treasure in the Attic

Posted on December 2, 2015

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Interesting!

Once in a very long while, a rare book or manuscript discovery is so remarkable that it makes national headlines.  In 1988, for instance, an anonymous Massachusetts collector recovered an 1827 first edition of Edgar Allan Poe’s Tamerlane from a roadside barn. Many will also recall the 1989 story of the man who found an original broadside copy of the Declaration of Independence hidden inside a picture frame that he bought at a Pennsylvania flea market for $4 (and later sold at Sotheby’s for $2.4 million). Or the discovery of the manuscript of Lincoln’s last address found in a secret compartment of an antique table in 1984 (and later purchased by Malcolm Forbes for $231,000). Yet another “believe it or not” tale is that of the Nashville man who paid $2.50 at a thrift store in 2006 for what he thought was a worthless facsimile of the Declaration of Independence that turned out to be a rare, unrecorded copy of an 1820 print. He sold it for nearly $500,000.

Read the full story Right Here!

(Manuscript Courtesy of Morris-Jumel Mansion)

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