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A collection of news and information related to Museum of Science and Industry published by this site and its partners.

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    May 1, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  1. Rosenthal: Rejuvenation of South Side the fair thing to do

    President Grover Cleveland pressed an electric switch, powering the pumps for massive fountains. The jets of water in turn cued the unfurling of flags. What was described as "profound silence" gave way to a cacophony, and the World's Columbian Exposition officially opened a few minutes past noon on May 1, 1893.
    President Grover Cleveland pressed an electric switch, powering the pumps for massive fountains. The jets of water in turn cued the unfurling of flags. What was described as "profound silence" gave way to a cacophony, and the World's Columbian...

    Tags: McCormick Place, Daniel Burnham, DuSable Museum of African-American History, Chicago Loop, Museums

  2. Apr 18, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  3. Breakfast standards and so much more

    For Spiros Argiris and Gus Sellis, the story of their lives is written on the walls.
    For Spiros Argiris and Gus Sellis, the story of their lives is written on the walls. Argiris points around the room at the Valois Cafeteria's murals: the Museum of Science and Industry, Hyde Park Bank, the South Side lakeshore. Then he points to the...

    Tags: Hyde Park, Steak and Eggs, Foods and Beverages, Steaks, University of Chicago

  4. Apr 12, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  5. Culture clash: New history of Chicago taps into our malaise

    "The Third Coast: When Chicago Built the American Dream" has an elegant, unflinching, non-nostalgic clarity about Chicago that you rarely see in books about Chicago.
    Thomas Dyja looked at me with abject horror, then humor, then, as his face crumbled in defeat, resignation. A face that said, "See? This is why I wrote a 412-page cultural history of Chicago at midcentury that — as much as it pulls together...

    Tags: Upper West Side, New York City, Kanye West, Elizabeth II, Northwestern University

  6. Mar 13, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Chicago museums reeling after building sprees

    The turn of the millennium was a heady time for many Chicago cultural institutions. Cheap loans, high investment returns and swelling endowments spawned a slew of new attractions along the lakefront and around downtown.
    The turn of the millennium was a heady time for many Chicago cultural institutions. Cheap loans, high investment returns and swelling endowments spawned a slew of new attractions along the lakefront and around downtown. The Art Institute built its Modern...

    Tags: Goodman Theatre, Layoffs and Downsizing, Pension and Welfare, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Michigan Avenue

  8. Mar 27, 2013 |Column| Orlando Sentinel
  9. Brace yourself for the invasion of the giant mosquitoes

    We've got it all here in Florida, and this isn't even a horror flick — car-eating sinkholes, monster storms, pythons in the wild, sharks in the water, alligators in back yards and pit bulls in trailers.
    We've got it all here in Florida, and this isn't even a horror flick — car-eating sinkholes, monster storms, pythons in the wild, sharks in the water, alligators in back yards and pit bulls in trailers. Now, Mother Nature is about to whack us with...

    Tags: Tampa, Tropical Storms, Holidays, Halloween, Mother's Day

  10. Mar 14, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  11. Opera in Focus: Puppets and opera come together

    It's the damnedest thing:
    It's the damnedest thing: Justin Snyder, his long hair parted down the middle, his head thrown back as though communing with a higher power, the hood of his hoodie grazing the floor, his mouth working silently in time with the strains and surges of an...

    Tags: Music, Entertainment Events, Boris (music group), Chicago Tonight (tv program), Faust (movie)

  12. Mar 13, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  13. 'Animal Inside Out' is Body Worlds' take on beasts and birds

    The last time the Body Worlds people displayed at the Museum of Science and Industry, in a 2011 exhibition showing the development and decline of the human corpus, they included, with seeming incongruity, an ostrich.
    The last time the Body Worlds people displayed at the Museum of Science and Industry, in a 2011 exhibition showing the development and decline of the human corpus, they included, with seeming incongruity, an ostrich. The flightless — and, in...

    Tags: Endangered Species, Science and Technology, The Godfather (movie), James Bond (fictional character), Museums

  14. Feb 27, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  15. Surgical science museum features tools alongside an artist in residence

    Take a stroll through the exhibits of antique medical devices in the International Museum of Surgical Science on Lake Shore Drive, and your mind might conjure forth images worthy of the 1988 movie “Dead Ringers,” in which Jeremy Irons plays twin gynecologists with a creepy obsession with creating new and disturbing tools for their trade. At the very least, you may find your latent steampunker fascinated by the array of early X-ray machines, prosthetic devices, and I-can't-believe-these-were-ever-legal drugs and potions. (belladonna cigarettes, anyone?) You can even see a real iron lung — and explain to the post-polio generation why it ever existed.
    Take a stroll through the exhibits of antique medical devices in the International Museum of Surgical Science on Lake Shore Drive, and your mind might conjure forth images worthy of the 1988 movie “Dead Ringers,” in which Jeremy Irons plays...

    Tags: Science and Technology, Polio, Arts, Jeremy Irons, Museums

  16. Feb 11, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  17. Checking out Paris with Carla Hayden

    Few people can recognize the yearning to escape better than Carla Hayden, chief executive officer of the Enoch Pratt Library. As a librarian, she has spent many years helping her curious clientele explore new realms and journey to wondrous places through books.
    Few people can recognize the yearning to escape better than Carla Hayden, chief executive officer of the Enoch Pratt Library. As a librarian, she has spent many years helping her curious clientele explore new realms and journey to wondrous places...

    Tags: Travel, Souffle, Science and Technology, Hot Cocoa, Libraries

  18. Feb 21, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  19. Jacksons' guilt a tale of excess

    — It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. admitted Wednesday that he conspired with his then-Chicago alderman wife to pay for it all with campaign money and cover it up.
    — It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse...

    Tags: Chicago Mayor, Primaries, Michael Jackson, Jesse Jackson, U.S. Congress

  20. Feb 21, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Jacksons' case a tale of runaway spending

    It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr. admitted he conspired with his then-Chicago alderman wife to pay for it all with campaign money and cover it up.
    Tribune reporters
    It was the kind of runaway spending usually reserved for someone with newfound riches — a holistic retreat, a cruise, pricey restaurant tabs, flat-screen televisions and even a pair of stuffed elk heads —and former Congressman Jesse Jackson...

    Tags: Chicago Mayor, Primaries, Michael Jackson, U.S. Senate, U.S. Congress

  22. Feb 6, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  23. Signing up for summer camp

    Frigid February temperatures notwithstanding, it's not too early to plan where to send the kids to camp this summer. Throughout the city and the suburbs, a number of museums, botanical gardens and zoos offer hands-on learning experiences built around scientific and environmental principles. Here are just a few to consider, and if you're interested, don't wait — some fill up before the temperatures rise.
    Frigid February temperatures notwithstanding, it's not too early to plan where to send the kids to camp this summer. Throughout the city and the suburbs, a number of museums, botanical gardens and zoos offer hands-on learning experiences built around...

    Tags: Science and Technology, Morton Arboretum, Museums, Lincoln Park Zoo, Arts and Culture

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Museum of Science and Industry Photos
Friends Rick Otty, of New York, and Marcia Smith-Wood,...
(April 30, 2013)
Afternoon chat
Internal circuit of the nervous system of a dog, with c...
(March 13, 2013)
 A dog's nervous system
Oryx skeleton on display, part of the "Animal Inside Ou...
(March 13, 2013)
 Oryx skeleton