Free Republic 3rd Qtr 2025 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $10,604
13%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 13%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: apollo11

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • After moon landing, Gaylord shocked everyone

    07/20/2019 10:44:45 AM PDT · by DFG · 7 replies
    mlb ^ | 07/20/2019 | Chris Haft
    On July 20, 1969, most Americans were consumed by the event of a lifetime: the Apollo 11 lunar landing. The Giants were no different. Giants groundskeeper Matty Schwab found space in his work area underneath the right-field grandstand at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park to plug in a black-and-white television set. Schwab’s hidden headquarters was close to the double doors adjacent to the Giants’ bullpen. So, thanks to Schwab, Giants relievers could sneak peeks at history during the early innings of San Francisco’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. Right-hander Bob Bolin was among the Giants with divided attention. As he...
  • American Pride is Essential to the American Experiment.

    07/20/2019 10:15:44 AM PDT · by E. Pluribus Unum · 9 replies
    Human Events ^ | July 19, 2019 | Michael Daughertyon
    It’s genuinely tragic, but July 4th has come to signify the death of common culture within America. While most red-blooded Americans were celebrating the birth of the greatest country in the world, the left was singing an entirely different tune. Anyone active on social media undoubtedly witnessed the screeds of social justice warriors attempting to justify their hatred of all things red, white, and blue. And while those unhinged rants could be dismissed as the ravings of liberal lunatics, the far left wasn’t alone in its anti-American sentiments. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a freshman Democratic Congresswoman and hero of the progressive left,...
  • 50th Anniversary of Apollo Landing Reminds Us: Substance Matters

    07/20/2019 8:02:37 AM PDT · by Kaslin · 17 replies
    Townhall.com ^ | July 19, 2019 | Andrew Langer
    Normally, I try to steer clear of putting opinion pieces into the first person, but the 50th Anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon Landing is enormously personal for me.  I was the kid in 5th Grade who dressed as Neil Armstrong in order to give a presentation of my report on Armstrong as one of the great “explorers” in world history.And I find it interesting that like the trashing of the legacy of those other great explorers by today’s progressives, the singular event of man’s achievement of landing on the moon is not spared the smearing of the world’s left....
  • Where were you July 20, 1969? -- vanity

    07/20/2019 7:06:19 AM PDT · by Skooz · 172 replies
    July 20, 2019 | Skooz
    My dad was USAF, stationed at Minot AFB, ND. I was a 9 year-old space nerd. Most of my friends were also space nerds and we followed the Apollo program closely. During the summer, the housing area was crawling with kids all day until the sun set about 10:00 pm. Every house had at least one kid, and most had 2 or 4. The winters were harsh, so we took full advantage of the summers and stayed outside as much as possible. GREAT place to grow up. The best. The evening of July 20, 1969, I was playing with some...
  • Donald Trump Celebrates 50th Anniversary of Planting American Flag on the Moon

    07/19/2019 8:41:23 PM PDT · by E. Pluribus Unum · 27 replies
    Breitbart ^ | 19 July 2019 | Charlie Spiering
    President Donald Trump welcomed Apollo 11 astronauts at the White House on Friday to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Americans landing on the moon and planting the American flag there. “Tomorrow will represent 50 years from the time we planted a beautiful American flag on the moon,” Trump said. The anniversary is on Saturday. Trump called the moon landing event “one of the greatest achievements ever” and said that the United States was committed to continuing the exploration of space. Buzz Aldrin, the Apollo 11 lunar module pilot, and Michael Collins, the Apollo 11 command module pilot, came to the...
  • The Left Dumps On Apollo 11 As A White, Male Enterprise

    07/19/2019 2:54:53 PM PDT · by detective · 79 replies
    The Federalist ^ | July 19, 2019 | Warren Henry
    This weekend, Americans will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, an event widely considered to be a pinnacle of human achievement, let alone American ingenuity. So, of course, it falls to the flagships of establishment journalism to complain about how white men dominated the program. In the Washington Post, style writer Karen Heller jokes, “In archival Apollo 11 photos and footage, it’s a ‘Where’s Waldo?’ exercise to spot a woman or person of color.” Without knowing it, she indicts America more than she does the space program. Keller writes: “As NASA worked relentlessly to fulfill John...
  • Neil Armstrong's Most Significant Steps Weren't On the Moon

    07/19/2019 11:58:18 AM PDT · by CondoleezzaProtege · 13 replies
    Townhall ^ | Jul 15, 2019 | Jonathan Feldstein
    More than two decades after his first moon walk, Armstrong visited Israel where he didn’t chart a new path, but followed an old one. In 1994 he was brought to a place in the Old City of Jerusalem and asked Meir Ben-Dov, his host and noted archeologist, if Jesus himself actually would have walked there. “I told him, ‘Look, Jesus was a Jew,'” recalled Ben-Dov. “These are the steps that lead to the Temple, so he must have walked here many times.” Armstrong asked if these were the original steps, and Ben-Dov said that they were. “So Jesus stepped right...
  • The Times’ obscene attacks on the Apollo program

    07/19/2019 5:07:59 AM PDT · by Rummyfan · 39 replies
    NY Post ^ | 18 July 2019 | Karil Markowicz
    As America prepares to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo moon landing, The New York Times is busy celebrating the Soviet space program and bashing America’s. A Times op-ed Thursday highlighted how the Soviet Union was oh-so-diverse, sending women and people of color into space long before stuffy, old America got around to doing the same. As the USSR retreats into the rearview mirror of history, there is a growing tendency to romanticize its disastrous reign through the lens of contemporary wokeness. Sure, Communists tortured and executed dissidents, starved their own people by the millions and operated gulags —...
  • For Apollo 11's Anniversary, The Washington Monument Becomes A Rocket

    07/17/2019 2:20:50 AM PDT · by Libloather · 21 replies
    NPR ^ | 7/16/19 | JOSH AXELROD, SHURAN HUANG
    One small holograph for man. One giant holograph for the Washington Monument. The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum will celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing with a life-size projection of the Saturn V rocket on the Washington Monument on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. The Saturn V rocket is now iconic for carrying the Apollo 11 crew to the moon in 1969. The projection-mapping-artwork will occupy 363 of the Monument's 555 vertical feet. On Friday and Saturday, the semi-centennial show will switch to a 17-minute film that recreates the Apollo 11 launch.
  • Landed Us on the Moon Play Video MOON LANDING Apollo 11 Had a Hidden Hero: Software

    07/16/2019 10:04:37 AM PDT · by DUMBGRUNT · 24 replies
    WSJ ^ | 14 July 2019 | Robert Lee Hotz
    It was poetry in the enigmatic commands of machine language. “They had to gamble that the kids would rise to the occasion,” says Mr. Eyles. “We were brought into a sort of loose managerial situation and allowed to thrive.” There was an art to finding people like Mr. Eyles who could turn engineering equations into code for a journey to another world, says Dan Lickly, 86, who oversaw the computer software development. “You can’t get a degree in how to fly to the moon,” ... ...“You had to get people who know how to think, who are creative and alert....
  • Apollo 11 Launch (Original NASA Video)

    07/16/2019 7:00:31 AM PDT · by Sparky1776 · 18 replies
    YouTube ^ | July 6, 2012 | JP Major
    The liftoff of Apollo 11's Saturn V carrying Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins into space exploration history on July 16, 1969. Look for the shockwave as the Saturn V punches through the clouds at 1:14!
  • A real-time journey through the first landing on the Moon

    07/15/2019 9:45:54 AM PDT · by infool7 · 46 replies
    NASA ^ | 2019 | Ben Feist
    Introduction: This website replays the Apollo 11 mission as it happened, 50 years ago. It consists entirely of historical material, all timed to Ground Elapsed Time--the master mission clock. Footage of Mission Control, film shot by the astronauts, and television broadcasts transmitted from space and the surface of the Moon, have been painstakingly placed to the very moments they were shot during the mission, as has every photograph taken, and every word spoken. Interface: Upon starting the application, select whether to begin one minute before launch, or click "Now" to drop in exactly 50 years ago, to-the-second during the anniversary....
  • "It Was Impossible"— The Starry-Eyed Dream that Launched Us to the Moon 50 Years Ago This Week

    07/15/2019 6:51:19 AM PDT · by Thistooshallpass9 · 20 replies
    50 years ago this summer, the U.S. landed men on the moon. We’ve all seen the grainy video footage of Neil Armstrong. We’ve heard the recording of his famous words about the “small step" and the "giant leap." And in our imaginations, this unbelievable achievement has essentially been distilled down to that. But this accomplishment was the result of a massive team of people laboring for a decade on an effort unlike anything that came before it. And it was driven largely by a desire to keep the world from being enslaved to a most dangerous ideology. In this episode,...
  • Washington Monument will become Apollo 11 rocket next week

    07/11/2019 8:01:42 PM PDT · by Ezekiel · 16 replies
    WWNY ^ | July 10, 2019 at 2:04 PM EDT - Updated July 11 at 8:16 AM | Ed Payne
    For five days, the Smithsonian will project a full-sized Saturn V rocket on the east face of the Washington Monument.
  • One giant ... lie? Why so many people still think the moon landings were faked

    07/10/2019 10:21:39 AM PDT · by NRx · 138 replies
    The Guardian ^ | 07-10-2019 | Richard Godwin
    It took 400,000 Nasa employees and contractors to put Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the moon in 1969 – but only one man to spread the idea that it was all a hoax. His name was Bill Kaysing. It began as “a hunch, an intuition”, before turning into “a true conviction” – that the US lacked the technical prowess to make it to the moon (or, at least, to the moon and back). Kaysing had actually contributed to the US space programme, albeit tenuously: between 1956 and 1963, he was an employee of Rocketdyne, a company that helped to...
  • Columbia Goes to the Moon

    06/26/2019 4:21:31 AM PDT · by COBOL2Java · 4 replies
    Columbia Magazine ^ | Summer 2019 | Paul Hond
    On the afternoon of July 20, 1969, Gary Latham ’65GSAS, a thirty-three-year-old geophysicist at Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory, arrived at NASA’s Manned Spaceflight Center (now the Johnson Space Center) in Houston to witness the fulfillment of thousands of years of curiosity and wonder: humanity’s first attempt to land men on the moon. Four days earlier, Latham, along with millions of others around the world, had stared rapt at a TV screen as a 363-foot-tall Saturn V rocket lifted off in a Zeusian thundercloud from Cape Canaveral. Atop the rocket was the Apollo 11 spacecraft, carrying astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin...
  • Apollo 11 in Real Time

    06/18/2019 3:28:11 PM PDT · by Magnatron · 100 replies
    A real-time journey through the first landing on the Moon This website consists entirely of original historical mission material. Apollo 11 in Real-Time Included real-time elements: All mission control film footage All TV transmissions and onboard film footage 2,000 photographs 11,000 hours of Mission Control audio 240 hours of space-to-ground audio All onboard recorder audio 15,000 searchable utterances Post-mission commentary Astromaterials sample data
  • Apollo 11 50th anniversary

    06/18/2019 1:56:35 PM PDT · by central_va · 64 replies
    history.com ^ | 1/30/19 | editors
    On July 20, 1969, American astronauts Neil Armstrong (1930-2012) and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin (1930-) became the first humans ever to land on the moon. About six-and-a-half hours later, Armstrong became the first person to walk on the moon. As he set took his first step, Armstrong famously said, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." The Apollo 11 mission occurred eight years after President John F. Kennedy (1917-63) announced a national goal of landing a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s. Apollo 17, the final manned moon mission, took place in 1972.
  • "Apollo 11" movie review (Spoiler: We land on the moon!)

    03/13/2019 7:18:05 PM PDT · by LS · 53 replies
    self | 3/13/2019 | LS
    So far this year, if there is one move you should see it's a space movie. No, not "Captain Marvel." It's "Apollo 11," and believe it or not, it's by (gulp) CNN. That's right. Well done, CNN. Using often the highest quality documentary footage from NASA's moon mission, this film follows the spacecraft from its slow slothlike transit to the launch pad to the three Apollo astronauts climbing aboard to the army of engineers, scientists, and technicians in both Florida and in Houston as Apollo 11 makes its epic voyage. With the exception of a very few well-placed simple animations...
  • Astronaut Legend Receives Naval Astronaut Wings Aboard 'Ike'

    03/11/2010 1:01:48 AM PST · by ErnstStavroBlofeld · 8 replies · 563+ views
    Navy.mil ^ | 3/11/2010 | Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class (SW) Amy Kirk
    Legendary astronaut and former Navy pilot received a pair of honorary Naval Astronaut Wings in a ceremony aboard USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69) (Ike) March 10 in recognition for his dedicated service to the Navy and in the field of space exploration. Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the moon July 20, 1969, was aboard Ike as part of the "Legends of Aerospace" tour sponsored by Morale Entertainment. "Today is a special occasion for all of naval aviation. As you can imagine, it is a tremendous honor for me to present Neil Armstrong with astronaut wings,"...