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Neil Armstrong stepped onto the Moon in 1969. Almost 40 years later, millions believe Apollo 11 was a hoax crafted by President Nixon, the CIA, and Stanley Kubrick. Apollo astronauts tell their stories about how real it was.
By Aly Adair | Published 11/1/2007
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A preview of Coheed & Cambria's upcoming album, Good Apollo, I'm Burning Star Volume II: No World For Tomorrow, due to be released October 23 on Equal Vision Records.
By Brian Willett | Published 10/25/2007
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Apollo Bay is built on a perfect, bow shaped beach whose white sands and gentle waves help justify this label, as does the relaxed atmosphere of the town and the laid back, no worries attitude of its residents.
By Gavin Wyatt | Published 10/17/2007
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"That's one small step for man. One giant leap for mankind." - Neil Armstrong Few words have ever caught the human spirit so effectively as these, and without the Apollo space program they would never have been uttered.
By M. Beck | Published 9/6/2007
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experience at contact program in Apollo Gleneagles Hospital
By Pratanu Banerjee | Published 8/13/2007
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Did the Apollo astronauts find something more interesting than rocks on the moon? An imaginative new book called "The Apollo Prophecies" takes another look at what might have happened on the lunar surface.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 12/15/2006
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Apollo 13, Ron Howard's epid telling of a true life space adventure, does not rely on blasters of aliens like other space films. That's because the events told in the movie actually happened.
By Mark Whittington | Published 12/7/2005
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I pieced together the skeleton of this poem in my head while I was on the plane home from a holiday visit to Montana. This poem is about seeing ordinary things in a way that transforms them into something beyond magical.
By Shannon Hilson (a.k.a. wolfmorphine) | Published 1/16/2008
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Move your child's learning base beyond A is for apple or Z is for zoo.
By Eclectic Muse | Published 10/10/2007
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This is a hospital administration contact program i am attending recently. Some of the excerpts of the lectures are as follows...
By Pratanu Banerjee | Published 8/9/2007
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You really think that blowing up an asteroid coming at us with a nuclear weapon is the best way to go? Ever heard of shrapnel?
By Nick Howes | Published 5/22/2007
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The Space Race started in 1957 when the Soviet Union launched SPUTNIC 1, the first manmade satellite, into space on October 4,1957.
By Karen Cooper | Published 3/8/2007
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Designers of women's clothing are increasingly creating for all shapes and sizes as the 'true size' of the average American woman shapes profit sales.
By Nelressa Monique | Published 2/26/2007
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Does it take a rocket scientist to demonstrate the difference between good business management and bad? Perhaps.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 11/7/2006
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On Christmas Eve, 1968, three explorers gave a Christmas present to the world that was much needed. That year had not been a happy one, with wars, riots, assassination, and political unrest. But that Christmas Eve was glorious indeed.
By Mark Whittington | Published 12/22/2005
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Rocket Man, by Nancy Conrad and Howard A. Klausner, is an account of the life of Pete Conrad, not only one of the most famous astronauts of the Apollo era, but also one of the most colorful and interesting.
By Mark Whittington | Published 5/18/2006
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In the winter of their lives, two aging politicians, both stricken with the same deadly illness, wrestle with legacy in an age of space that never was.
By Mark Whittington | Published 1/26/2008
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It's been nearly 35 years since the last men set foot on the moon, yet the Apollo lunar missions continue to pique our curiosity.
By General Jabbo | Published 11/16/2007
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An overview of how Hollywood treats real-life disasters in film.
By Glen Peters | Published 10/19/2007
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Using archival footage and interviews with the surviving astronauts, this documentary examines the Apollo missions in which America shot for the Moon
By Steven Bryan | Published 9/26/2007
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In the Shadow of the Moon is a celebration of the singular greatest technological feat in history. British director David Singleton scores a particular artistic coup by allowing the astronauts themselves to tell their stories, clear and unvarnished.
By Mark Whittington | Published 9/24/2007
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Patient satisfaction survey done by me in Apollo Gleneagles Clinic in Kolkata, India
By Pratanu Banerjee | Published 9/10/2007
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In Aeschylus' Eumenides, soon after the murder of Clytemnestra by her son Orestes he, plagued by the Furies, seeks aid at the temple of Apollo in Delphi.
By Bhaskar Banerjee | Published 8/31/2007
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In Aeschylus' Cheophoroe, some seven years after the murder of Agamemnon, Orestes along with his friend Pylades enter Argos (Mycenae) disguised as travellers and approach the tomb of Agamemnon....
By Bhaskar Banerjee | Published 8/28/2007
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The first manned moon landing was the United States Apollo 11 mission. The United States made no claim of ownership.
By Larry Fowler | Published 8/20/2007
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From temples to baths to aqueducts, Augustus erected buildings everywhere as part of his program of revival after the debilitating civil wars. Two such edifices characterize the extravagant nature of his reign.
By M B | Published 7/17/2007
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In the year 2092, one hundred and twenty five years after man's momentous Apollo 11 mission to the moon, the four man member crew of the starship Excelsior became the first humans to travel to another star system.
By Michael Miller | Published 7/11/2007
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When Wendy Pendleton wanted to become an astronaut, it was not considered a suitable job for a woman. But that didn't stop her. A Children of Apollo alternate history story.
By Mark Whittington | Published 6/24/2007
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A recent film documentary produced in France explores curious facts surrounding the Apollo space program, linking it with one of the most brilliant and controversial film makers in history.
By Myriam Bloomberg | Published 5/30/2007
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The B-2, with its singular flying wing design, joins a display of more aircraft than some small countries have on...including military aircraft from World War Two, Korea, Vietnam, and today in Iraq. There will be numerous civilian aircraft, even biplanes.
By Nick Howes | Published 5/18/2007
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Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr., known as Wally, died Thursday, May 3, 2007, at the age of 84. Schirra was one of the original seven Mercury astronauts and the only one to fly on all three of NASA 's Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs. Read more about Schirra's career.
By Courtney Gable | Published 5/5/2007
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Wally Schirra was the only astronaut to fly in the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs. His professionalism is still a shining example today.
By Steven Bryan | Published 5/3/2007
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Walter M. Schirra Jr., the only astronaut to fly in the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs, dies of natural causes at his home in California.
By Lynne William | Published 5/3/2007
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Who ran NASA during the go-go 1960s? A new biography by Piers Bizony explains the lofty ambitions of James E. Webb and the race to reach the moon.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 3/15/2007
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The two would meet up in New York City, where Richards will be performing on Broadway for the debut of "Boogie Nights Live" playing the role of Scotty.
From there Oprah decides it's time to take Richards to a very nice place, Apollo Theatre in Harlem.
By George F'N Washington | Published 1/12/2007
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The earth becomes a tiny blue marble from far away amongst the stars, the moon, the sun
By vicsflick | Published 1/9/2007
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The misty streets of Harlem were stained with muddy water, but the rainy weather did not stop music and film fans from convening at the world famous Apollo Theater for the Second Annual Imagenation 2006 Revolution Awards. .
By Binga Cannon | Published 12/8/2006
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One of the largest castrophe's associated with the number 13 is the ill-fated Apollo 13 lunar mission which promptly left the launching pad at 13:13 hours and was aborted on April 13.
By Sherri Granato | Published 10/23/2006
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Three Apollo missions to the Moon, which would have taken place in the early 1970s, were cancelled, largely due to budgetary reasons. If flown,. they would have extended the first era of lunar exploration another two years.
By Mark Whittington | Published 8/15/2006
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The Fisher Space Pen is a patented tool able to write in freezing cold, extreme heat, under water or in orbit. It is a great gift and comes with its own lesson in problem solving.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 7/11/2006
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The Dish is one of the sweetest, if also the most quirky, homage to the spirit of space exploration ever filmed. The time is July, 1969 and the occasion is the Apollo 11 moon landing.
By Mark Whittington | Published 12/16/2005
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Magnificent Desolation is a new, 40-minute 3D IMAX film produced by Tom Hanks which tells the story of the Apollo missions to the Moon.
By Mark Whittington | Published 10/18/2005
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A new book explores the meaning of the Apollo space program by interviewing the last living astronauts who walked on the moon.
By Eve Lichtgarn | Published 10/2/2005
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The known medieval legend has been produced in many forms, but there are in it special motifs which originate in ancient pagan myths.
By Tala Bar | Published 5/5/2005
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This is a revised feature on the left hand, information, and a list of some famous lefties.
By Pat Jacobs | Published 4/30/2005
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It's about the power of the opening night. At no other time is the energy as high, the audience as passionate, or the experience as genuine.
By The Jay | Published 4/29/2005
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After 500 years, this "Garden of Miracles" is thriving once again. Villa d'Este's allure is undiminished, due in part to its ageless grace and beauty, and in part to its captivating symbolism. Nothing in design or element is without meaning in Villa d'Es
By Kate Sheridan | Published 3/29/2005
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A look at Damon Wood, guitarist for James Brown and frontman for Harmonious Junk.
By Nick Hutchinson | Published 3/17/2005
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Fancy colored diamonds are considered to be orchids of the gem world. Find out why.
By Bobbye | Published 2/11/2005
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