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Keyword: museums

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  • NEH to fund restoration of Iraqi cultural heritage

    07/15/2003 11:49:16 PM PDT · by JohnHuang2 · 1 replies · 231+ views
    Washington Times ^ | Wednesday, July 16, 2003 | By Julia Duin
    <p>The National Endowment for the Humanities will be doling out $500,000 in grants to restore Iraq's cultural heritage, the federal agency announced yesterday.</p> <p>Beginning Aug. 1, the agency will receive proposals for projects that can last for up to two years. Known as "Recovering Iraq's Past," the initiative is geared toward shoring up collections in Iraq's archives, libraries and museums. Projects may start as soon as Jan. 1.</p>
  • Professor calls for looters to be shot

    07/08/2003 4:46:36 PM PDT · by Pokey78 · 20 replies · 369+ views
    The Telegraph (U.K.) ^ | 07/09/03 | Will Bennett
    Looters are systematically stripping many of Iraq's 10,000 archaeological sites and should be shot on sight by coalition forces, an expert said yesterday. Gangs of up to 400 people are stealing antiquities for the international market and some sites have been largely destroyed, said Elizabeth Stone, an American archaeology professor. "I would like to see helicopters flying over there shooting bullets so that people know there is a real price to looting this stuff," said Prof Stone, of Stony Brook University, New York. "You have got to kill some people to stop this." Prof Stone, who has been at the...
  • Mysteries of the Amber Chamber - restoration of the 8th wonder of the world

    07/08/2003 11:14:34 AM PDT · by bedolido · 21 replies · 396+ views
    Pravda ^ | 07/08/03 | Staff Writer
    In the old times there were two suns above the Earth. Unfortunately one got broken to pieces; the pieces dropped into the ocean that now casts bits of "the solar stone" ashore. People call these pieces amber. It is a nice legend about amber; it slightly reminds of the story of creation, loss and restoration of the famous amber chamber in Tsarskoye Selo. One woman from the Russian city of Rostov was one of the first people who believed that the amber chamber could be restored. What is more, she made first considerable contribution into the reconstruction process. In 1976,...
  • Egypt to Put Ancient Mummified Pets on Show

    07/07/2003 11:37:24 PM PDT · by Pro-Bush · 10 replies · 337+ views
    Reuters ^ | 7/7/03 | Reuters Staff
    Egypt to Put Ancient Mummified Pets on Show CAIRO (Reuters) - Ancient Egyptians loved their pets so much they even wanted to take them into the after life. Mummified cats, dogs, monkeys and even crocodiles -- lovingly preserved in the same way as the pharaohs -- will be on display later this month in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Egyptian antiquities chief Zahi Hawass told Reuters Television that ancient Egyptians were not only pet lovers who wanted to preserve animals for life after death, but also held some animal forms as sacred. "The ancient Egyptians worshipped the god Thoth, the...
  • Stealth Fighter that was shot down over Serbia in 1999?

    07/07/2003 5:24:43 PM PDT · by The Magical Mischief Tour · 25 replies · 924+ views
    07/07/2003 | TMMT
    Ever wanted to know what happened to that Stealth Fighter that was shot down over Serbia in 1999? Well, here ya go... http://airliners.net/open.file?id=378442
  • Donate To Museum - Airmen give Iraq war memorabilia

    06/05/2003 8:39:34 AM PDT · by Stand Watch Listen · 3 replies · 318+ views
    Dayton Daily News | June 4, 2003 | Timothy R. Gaffney
    WRIGHT-PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE-- The scene was like a midnight ceremony on the tarmac of some distant military air base: Surrounded by floodlit fighter jets, 16 Air Force crewmembers clad in desert camouflage stood on a temporary stage and presented symbols of war to Air Force officials. In fact, the ceremony took place Tuesday afternoon inside the new addition of the Air Force Museum. Painted flat black, the high, hangar-like ceiling of the Kettering Cold War Gallery gave a sense of infinite space above suspended spotlights that illuminated museum aircraft. Under one pool of light was the stage, with a...
  • Flags displayed at museum give a look at area's history, pride

    05/13/2003 6:34:39 AM PDT · by stainlessbanner · 1 replies · 231+ views
    Star News Online ^ | May 13, 2003
    One of the highlights of the Cape Fear Museum's exhibit, "What So Proudly We Hailed," is the Second National Confederate Flag, mostly white with a rebel battle flag in reversed colors stitched into the canton, or field. The flag was made by Wilmington women and given to Col. William Lamb, commander of Fort Fisher, after his men rebuffed a Union attack on the fort around Christmas 1864. It was waving over Fort Fisher on Jan. 15, 1865, when the Yankees made their final, decisive assault on the fort, combining a "shock and awe" naval bombardment &#8211; the largest ever at...
  • The Real Museum Looters

    05/12/2003 10:07:12 PM PDT · by JohnHuang2 · 3 replies · 201+ views
    FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | Tuesday, May 13, 2003 | By Keith Lockitch
    The Real Museum LootersBy Keith LockitchAynRand.org | May 13, 2003 Initial reports of the looting of the Iraqi National Museum sparked a frenzy of outrage. Denied their desert quagmire, their civilian massacres, their oil-fire eco-disaster, and their inflamed "Arab street," leftists all but leaped at the opportunity to denounce our armed forces—with some even urging that our soldiers be prosecuted for war crimes for their alleged failure to prevent the looting.It turns out, though, that our troops were not standing "idly by" but were being fired at from the museum complex. And the number of missing artifacts—initially assumed to be...
  • The Non-Pillage of Baghdad: It turns out the "looted museum" story was way overblown.

    05/07/2003 2:54:42 AM PDT · by JohnHuang2 · 11 replies · 301+ views
    FrontPageMagazine.com ^ | Wednesday, May 7, 2003 | Wall Street Journal Editorial
    The Non-Pillage of BaghdadBy Wall Street Journal EditorialThe Wall Street Journal | May 7, 2003 "It is very common for the first information following a crisis to be wrong, and when I say wrong, I mean wrong."So spoke Ronald Noble, the Secretary General of Interpol, at a conference yesterday in Lyon, France, devoted to the recovery of stolen Iraqi artifacts. The context for Mr. Noble's remarks is the incredible reduction in the estimate of the number of artworks lost in the ransacking of Baghdad's National Museum.The claims have gone from 170,000 items first reported to the 30 to 40 that...
  • In Victory for Powell, Bush Names Civilian Overseer for Iraq

    05/06/2003 6:11:44 PM PDT · by Brian S · 30 replies · 183+ views
    New York Times ^ | 05-06-03
    WASHINGTON, May 6 — President Bush appointed a new civilian administrator for Iraq today, settling a sharp disagreement between the State and Defense Departments over how best to manage that country during its recovery and reconstruction. The new administrator, L. Paul Bremer, who served as an ambassador at large for counterterrorism in the Reagan administration, will outrank Jay Garner, the retired Army lieutenant general who has been in charge of postwar administration since the government of Saddam Hussein was ousted by American-led military forces last month. The Pentagon had hoped to retain control of the postwar effort, so the decision...
  • Most antiquities found, unharmed

    05/05/2003 7:41:04 AM PDT · by sjersey · 81 replies · 499+ views
    Philadelphia Inquirer ^ | 5/5/2003 | Christine Spolar (CHICAGO TRIBUNE)
    <p>BAGHDAD - The vast majority of the Iraqi trove of antiquities feared stolen or broken have been found inside the National Museum in Baghdad, according to American investigators who compiled an inventory over the weekend of the ransacked galleries.</p> <p>A total of 38 antiquities, not tens of thousands, are now believed to be missing. Among them is a single display of Babylonian cuneiform tablets that accounts for nine missing items.</p> <p>The single most valuable missing piece is the Vase of Warka, a white limestone bowl dating from 3000 B.C.</p>
  • Missing artifacts trickle back to Baghdad museum

    05/02/2003 5:42:50 AM PDT · by Fifth Business · 12 replies · 168+ views
    Chicago Tribune ^ | May 2, 2003 | Bill Glauber
    --snip-- Slowly but surely, military officers and U.S. Customs agents are beginning to account for the disparate pieces of a vast museum collection from a land rich in history and artifacts thousands of years old. And what they have discovered is that far fewer pieces were looted from the museum's collection than initial reports indicated. --snip-- "Some of the original reports indicated close to 170,000 items were either stolen or destroyed," said Marine Col. Matthew Bogdanos, who heads the investigation. "What we're finding is that the number is significantly smaller, by a factor of at least 100.
  • Loss Estimates Are Cut on Iraqi Artifacts

    05/01/2003 3:55:38 AM PDT · by windchime · 54 replies · 268+ views
    The New York Times ^ | 5/1/03 | Alan Riding
    MISSING ANTIQUITIES Loss Estimates Are Cut on Iraqi Artifacts, but Questions Remain By ALAN RIDING BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 30 — Even though many irreplaceable antiquities were looted from the National Museum of Iraq during the chaotic fall of Baghdad last month, museum officials and American investigators now say the losses seem to be less severe than originally thought. Col. Matthew F. Bogdanos, a Marine reservist who is investigating the looting and is stationed at the museum, said museum officials had given him a list of 29 artifacts that were definitely missing. But since then, 4 items — ivory objects from...
  • Confederate Ironclad May Have Been Found (CSS Virginia aka Merrimac)

    04/30/2003 4:53:48 PM PDT · by SpringheelJack · 46 replies · 6,481+ views
    Associated Press ^ | April 30, 2003 | AP
    PORTSMOUTH, Va. -- An underwater survey found what might be remnants of the Confederate ironclad warship Virginia, the former USS Merrimack that fought the Union's ironclad Monitor in the 1862 battle that redefined naval warfare. "It would be a stroke of incredible luck to discover it after all these years," said Dick Hoffeditz, curator of the Virginia War Museum in Newport News. The underwater survey, for the proposed construction of a marine terminal on the Elizabeth River, describes two shipwrecks in the area and says there is "a distinct possibility" that they might be parts of the Virginia and of...
  • Atlanta Sends Mummy Home

    04/30/2003 1:59:07 PM PDT · by Chipata · 11 replies · 634+ views
    National Geographic ^ | April 30, 2003 | Hillary Mayell
    U.S. Museum to Return Ramses I Mummy to Egypt Hillary Mayell for National Geographic News April 30, 2003 A 3,000-year-old mummy that many scholars believe is ancient Egypt's King Ramses I is the star attraction of an exhibit at the Michael C. Carlos Museum in Atlanta that will run from April 26 to September 14. How the mummy came to reside in North America for 140 years, and wound up in Atlanta, is a tale that includes the collapse of law and order in ancient Egypt, grave robbers, stolen antiquities, a two-headed calf and a five-legged pig, the wonders of...
  • Mark Steyn: Looting Iraq's 'heritage'

    04/29/2003 4:39:16 AM PDT · by SJackson · 44 replies · 1,029+ views
    Jerusalem Post ^ | 4-29-03 | Mark Steyn
    Douglas Anthony Cooper of Montreal chides me for a throwaway line in last week's column about the antiwar crowd's sudden interest in property crime: "Steal the photocopier from Baghdad's Ministry of Genital Clamping and they're pining for the smack of firm government." "Some matters reside beyond the domain of comedy," writes Cooper. "The rape of the National Museum of Iraq and the torching of the National Library will be lamented by historians for centuries." He concludes, "A man of Steyn's sensibilities beneath the sneer I detect a partisan of Western civilization ought to find this an occasion of immense sorrow."...
  • The Real Story Behind Museum Looting,WMD, and Little Ali

    04/24/2003 10:14:55 PM PDT · by Chirodoc · 3 replies · 197+ views
    TooGood Reports ^ | April 22, 2003 | Allan C. Stover
    Tuesday, April 22, 2003; 12:01 a.m. EST] We Americans must face two realities since Operation Iraqi Freedom has proved so successful. Reality #1: The world's leftists and America-haters (many of them fellow Americans) want to see us fail in Iraq. Reality #2: They have plenty of time to make sure we fail or at least give the mentally challenged worldwide the impression that we did. They will conduct a campaign against America until long after an Iraqi government takes over and Iraqi oil is lubricating the Iraqi and world economies. The campaign began with the fall of Baghdad. The hullabaloo...
  • Slowly, Loot Is Being Returned to Museum

    04/24/2003 6:30:57 PM PDT · by Utah Girl · 3 replies · 165+ views
    The Washington Post ^ | 4/24/2003 | Monte Reel
    The blue Kia minivan rolled through the guarded gates of the National Museum of Antiquities early this afternoon, loaded with a precious cargo of metals and minerals: a bronze relief from the 4th century B.C. swathed in yellow foam padding, antique farm implements, an elaborately engraved marble slab wrapped in plastic, a decapitated statue of an Assyrian king. Also inside the van was Namir Ibrahim Jamil, a 33-year-old Iraqi pianist who said that 11 days ago he watched in horror as looters ransacked the museum, hauling away as much of Iraq's tangible legacy as they could carry. He said he...
  • Loony conspiracy theories of looting

    04/23/2003 11:38:21 PM PDT · by JohnHuang2 · 163+ views
    TownHall.com ^ | Thursday, April 24, 2003 | Suzanne Fields
    If Iraq's National Museum had not been looted, the conspiracy theorists - the antiwar, anti-Bush commentators and protestors - would have had to invent the story. Instead, they merely invented the story of how it happened. Here are some of the interpretations racing across the Internet from loony to loony. George W. Bush is a cultural dunce, who wouldn't know a 5,000 year-old Warka Vase from a Mexican flower pot from Wal-Mart. He didn't care about the artifacts. (It's not like they're Rembrandts or Leonardos or even Elvises on velvet, he said to himself.) Besides, his cronies who are rich...
  • Dumb and dumber

    04/23/2003 10:25:34 PM PDT · by kattracks · 8 replies · 229+ views
    Washingon Times ^ | 4/24/03 | Suzanne Fields
    <p>If thieves hadn't looted Iraq's National Museum, the conspiracy theorists — the anti-war, anti-Bush pundits and protesters — would have had to invent the story. Instead, they merely invented the story of how it happened.</p> <p>Here are some of the interpretations racing across the Internet, from looney to loonier. George W. Bush is a cultural dunce who wouldn't know a 5,000-year-old Warka vase from a Mexican flower pot at Wal-Mart. He didn't care about the artifacts. (It's not like they're Rembrandts or Leonardos or even Elvises on velvet, George W. said to himself.) Besides, his cronies, who are rich collectors, now get a chance to buy the real stuff on the open black market: They can bid on that cuneiform accounting table (1980 B.C.) when it turns up for auction at Christie's. The Web site of the World Socialists describes "the politics of plunder" as a preface to stealing the oil wells.</p>