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The information and sources includes talking with the curator and astronomer Dr. Bill Samson, at the Mills Observatory, pamphlets and various leaflets and books available at the Observatory. Dr. Samson provided a lot of information, including Thomas Flood's Historical Survey and images for the use of Wikipedia. I will update the Sources list sooner.--Cyril Thomas 16:50, 4 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Presentations

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Dr. William Samson, curator and astronomer at the Mills Observatory offered abundant information by presenting documents, talks, emails and images of Mills Observatory. Robert Law, at the Mills Observatory also provided a lot of information for this article.--Cyril Thomas 14:07, 13 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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planetarium comments

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I worked for Viewlex on their Apollo planetarium models. All projected exactly 950 stars (so you might want to correct the number in the article), effectively those brighter than magnitude +4.65 and north of -70 degrees south latitude (further south being blocked by the mounting). However, there were four models, including the Apollo Portable (one of which I own). The other models, I, II, and III, have progressively improving abilities in terms of the ability to design automated shows. Each purchased Apollo (except the portables) came with two free automated shows, while more could be purchased (I wrote about one third of all the available shows). Thomas Wm. Hamilton 4897 Tomhamilton

Assessment

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At first glance, this article is almost "Complete". It just needs additional references. So for now, I set class to "Start". JoeNMLC (talk) 15:48, 27 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]