Indiana Jones' Journal Mystery Disappointingly Solved
Abner Ravenwood had nothing to do with the journal delivered at the University of Chicago.
Just to get you up to speed, one of his Ebay transactions [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/121109-Indiana-Jones-Mail-Mystifies-University] lost in the mail on its way to a buyer in Italy.
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The package had an exterior box, but the shell was damaged and removed. Inside was the manila envelope with the fake Egyptian postage and the incomplete address of the University of Chicago on it. "Somewhere between Guam and Italy the replica fell out of its original external package and was lost in Honolulu, Hawaii," reported Garrett Brinker, director of undergraduate outreach at the University of Chicago. "Then for some reason, with fake postage, no tracking, not even a zip code - it looks like the Postal Service had to manually write in a zip code on the package - somehow without all of that, the package landed in our laps in Chicago, Illinois."
Paul Charfauros received a letter from the Post Office in Hawaii which informed him that one of his packages had been damaged. Around the same time, Brinker contacted him to ask whether the journal was his. So it wasn't a massive ARG or a publicity stunt by the new LucasFilm owners Disney to revitalize the Indiana Jones property. It was just something lost in the mail. Sigh.
Well, Charfauros said he was making his customer in Italy a new journal and that the University of Chicago was welcome to keep the one they mistakenly received. "It will find its home either in the Oriental Institute at UChicago or the Special Collections at the Regenstein Library," read the University's Tumblr updating the situation [http://uchicagoadmissions.tumblr.com/post/38161122385/mischief-managed-for-those-of-you-who-have]. "Because, as many have noted, 'It belongs in a museum!'."
That sounds about right.
Source: Wired [http://www.wired.com/underwire/2012/12/indiana-jones-journal-mystery-solved/?cid=4988494]
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Abner Ravenwood had nothing to do with the journal delivered at the University of Chicago.
Just to get you up to speed, one of his Ebay transactions [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/121109-Indiana-Jones-Mail-Mystifies-University] lost in the mail on its way to a buyer in Italy.
[gallery=987]
The package had an exterior box, but the shell was damaged and removed. Inside was the manila envelope with the fake Egyptian postage and the incomplete address of the University of Chicago on it. "Somewhere between Guam and Italy the replica fell out of its original external package and was lost in Honolulu, Hawaii," reported Garrett Brinker, director of undergraduate outreach at the University of Chicago. "Then for some reason, with fake postage, no tracking, not even a zip code - it looks like the Postal Service had to manually write in a zip code on the package - somehow without all of that, the package landed in our laps in Chicago, Illinois."
Paul Charfauros received a letter from the Post Office in Hawaii which informed him that one of his packages had been damaged. Around the same time, Brinker contacted him to ask whether the journal was his. So it wasn't a massive ARG or a publicity stunt by the new LucasFilm owners Disney to revitalize the Indiana Jones property. It was just something lost in the mail. Sigh.
Well, Charfauros said he was making his customer in Italy a new journal and that the University of Chicago was welcome to keep the one they mistakenly received. "It will find its home either in the Oriental Institute at UChicago or the Special Collections at the Regenstein Library," read the University's Tumblr updating the situation [http://uchicagoadmissions.tumblr.com/post/38161122385/mischief-managed-for-those-of-you-who-have]. "Because, as many have noted, 'It belongs in a museum!'."
That sounds about right.
Source: Wired [http://www.wired.com/underwire/2012/12/indiana-jones-journal-mystery-solved/?cid=4988494]
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