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$35 for Spirits & Skeletons Mixer for One at Houston Museum of Natural Science on October 29 ($50 Value)

Houston Museum of Natural Science
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Costume-optional Halloween party with dancing, live music, performances, and local food trucks at the Houston Museum of Natural Science

The Deal

  • $35 for admission for one to the Spirits & Skeletons Halloween Mixer ($50 value)

The science-savvy party planners of the Houston Museum of Natural Science celebrate Halloween with a party for adults on Saturday, October 29, 2016. Costumes are encouraged but not required.

Offering free rein of the entire museum, the Spirits & Skeletons Halloween Mixer includes live music from Space Rockers and hits spun by DJs along with a caravan of food trucks to fuel the fun.

Food trucks featured:

  • Nom Mi Street
  • It’s a Wrap
  • Pho-Jita
  • Happy Endings
  • The Waffle Bus
  • HTownStEATs

Need To Know Info

Promotional value expires Oct 29, 2016. Amount paid never expires. Limit 4 per person. Limit 1 per visit. Valid only for option purchased. Must use promotional value in 1 visit. Valid only for event on October 29, 2016. Must be 21 years of age or older. Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services. Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Houston Museum of Natural Science

Seven days a week, the Houston Museum of Natural Science cultivates knowledge with interactive exhibits that shuttle minds into such far-flung realms as tropical rainforests and outer space. Permanent exhibit halls house everything from the skeletons of Diplodocus in the recently expanded Morian Hall of Paleontology to artifacts from ancient Egypt and the Americas.

Housed inside three stories of glass, the museum's Cockrell Butterfly Center habitat teems with more than 1,500 winged wonders from around the globe, which frolic around a 50-foot waterfall, and flutter through exotic plants. Visitors can also gaze skyward in the Burke Baker Planetarium, which casts more than 10 daily shows with curve-mirror projection technology. Eyes marvel at the planetarium's 30'x18' full-dome digital theater, capable of transporting families to the aurora borealis in the Arctic Circle or to the center of a black hole.

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