For more information: Yvonne Morris,
Office: 520-54-0462 or Email: ymorris@pimaair.org
(Editor’s Note: Paper Airplane folding instructions are at the end of the release.)
Let Children’s Imaginations Soar with Pima Air & Space Museum’s Great Paper Airplane Fly Off
TUCSON (Dec. 16, 2011) –Hundreds of Tucson area school children will get a chance to let their lessons take flight and their imaginations soar over the next month as they participate in the Great Paper Airplane Project through an innovative competition hosted by the Pima Air & Space Museum.
The inspirational science project is part of a greater campaign to interest kids in aviation and engineering, explained Yvonne C. Morris, Executive Director of the Arizona Aerospace Foundation and Pima Air & Space Museum.
“Museums today are not just repositories of our past,” she said. “They must inspire the future. Having kids help us create aviation history is what this project is all about.”
At the end of a month of paper airplane construction and practice sessions, the first 300 children between the ages of 6 and 14 who sign up on the www.GreatPaperAirplane.org website will be eligible to compete to see whose paper airplane can fly the furthest. The competition begins at 11 a.m., Saturday, January 14, 2012, at the Pima Air and Space Museum, 6000 E. Valencia Rd.
The young paper airplane flier whose plane flies the furthest will win a spot as Guest Engineer on the team challenging the Guinness Book of World Record’s largest paper airplane honors. This massive paper airplane – with the young Guest Engineer’s name on the tail or nose — will eventually soar from a height of 5,000 feet over the Arizona desert. It may fly for miles or crash and burn, but that’s all part of the fun of scientific experimentation.
“We know that an early interest in science can lead to a lifetime of discovery, Morris said. “We want to help inspire the next great scientific minds in our country and this contest will be a fun way to engage students and get them thinking about the science of flight.”
A short film is being made about the entire project and will become part of a permanent exhibit along with the large paper airplane and other historical artifacts from The Great Paper Airplane Fly Off. More details related to the construction of the large paper plane and how and where the launch will take place will be available in the upcoming weeks on www.GreatPaperAirplane.org.
The project and associated advertising, created by BBDO SF, began rolling out Wednesday, December 14.
The Pima Air & Space Museum is one of the largest aviation Museums in the world, and the largest non-government funded aviation Museum in the United States. The Museum, which opened in 1976, maintains a collection of more than 300 aircraft and spacecraft from around the globe, including many rare and one-of-a-kind, and more than 125,000 artifacts. Exhibits at the Museum include some of the world’s greatest aviation heritage, including military, commercial, and civil aviation. Among them are a B-29 Superfortress, the SR-71 Blackbird, and a rare World War II German V-1 “buzz bomb.” The Museum has five large hangars totaling more than 177,000 indoor feet of exhibit space. In addition, the 390th Bombardment Group (Heavy) Memorial Museum is located on the Museum grounds. Pima Air & Space maintains its own aircraft restoration center, and also offers exclusive tours of the Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG), also known as the “Boneyard,” located across the street at Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. Located at 6000 E. Valencia Rd. in Tucson, more information about the Museum can be found at www.pimaair.org, on Facebook, or contact them at 520-574-0462.










It is double pleasing to trick the trickster….
Friendship is the shadow of the evening, which increases with the setting sun of life….