PlaneShift
Fan Area => The Hydlaa Plaza => Topic started by: Dermathil on July 20, 2009, 03:51:45 pm
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40 years ago, Neil Armstrong said the now famous sentence, "It's one small step for a man, but a giant leap for mankind."
I think he deserves a topic to speak of it.
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According to my father, they were supposed to touch down on the moon on the 19th, his bday, but technical issues delayed it until the 20th. He still holds a grudge against them for that.
makes me chuckle.
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I had just turned 5 years old and can clearly remember sitting in the living room of The Victoria Inn in Deopham my parents having just taken over the tenancy and surrounded by the boxes of our possessions watching it on a small B&W portable tv.
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Always wondered if the guy spent hours thinking about what to say when he got there or if he just winged it. He probably had the time, huh? Or maybe someone down here told him: "You totally gotta say this, bro, it'll get you quoted beyond belief:..." :P
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nah the pr flacks at nasa central handed him the script. hence the slight decrepancy. he is heard to say "one small step for man..." while the script says "one small step for a man..." though recent audio analysys indicates that he just really clipped the 'a'.
further proof that it was a live event rather then recorded on a sound stage.
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Always wondered if the guy spent hours thinking about what to say when he got there or if he just winged it. He probably had the time, huh? Or maybe someone down here told him: "You totally gotta say this, bro, it'll get you quoted beyond belief:..." :P
On the morning news, I discovered he simply winged it. He had thought of it just before walking out, or so I've heard.
P.S: I'd have a request to make. When this thread will be locked for whatever reason it will be ('cuz I'm sure it will be locked one day or another), maybe prepare it so someone could unlock it on the July 20th, 2019, maybe? (Not asking it to be locked right now, but... I guess you might understand what I ask.)
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According to my father, they were supposed to touch down on the moon on the 19th, his bday, but technical issues delayed it until the 20th. He still holds a grudge against them for that.
And so he should! :D
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I was chillin there in Mare Tranquillitatis at the time and I don't recall seeing them anywhere near there. Maybe they landed on the dark side by mistake.... no wonder they had to fake all the evidence!
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Always wondered if the guy spent hours thinking about what to say when he got there or if he just winged it. He probably had the time, huh? Or maybe someone down here told him: "You totally gotta say this, bro, it'll get you quoted beyond belief:..." :P
On the morning news, I discovered he simply winged it. He had thought of it just before walking out, or so I've heard.
P.S: I'd have a request to make. When this thread will be locked for whatever reason it will be ('cuz I'm sure it will be locked one day or another), maybe prepare it so someone could unlock it on the July 20th, 2019, maybe? (Not asking it to be locked right now, but... I guess you might understand what I ask.)
Well of course he's gonna say he winged it! But I still think the guy had a ghostwriter who spent the whole anniversary day complaining about the credit she/he never got for that phrase. :)
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This happened one month after I was born. I never lived in an America that had not gone to the moon. Science and mathematics generates amazing results when applied by roughly 400K people to a body of technology. Mars next. Too bad the moon had not had tonnes of easily-recoverable water on the surface... we're just gonna have to capture a comet or something before we can have a Lunar city. Prolix is a Capricorn V fan. *winks*
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How many of us know that in the original USA Mercury astronaut trainees, there were 15 females? And one of them outscored all the males on every test- intelligence, stress endurance, science, strength. And that when the NASA documents of the time were released under the State's 'Freedom Information" regs, there was a memo from the head of NASA about they had decided no girls would ever be allowed to be an astronaut because they were too emotional.
Wonder what the warrior females of Planeshift think about that? It's good that the world evolves...h'aint it?
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The considerations are at least partially physical ones, and the psychological aspects are very, very important in space flight. But we are no longer in the 1960s in terms of medical understanding or social bias.
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How many of us know that in the original USA Mercury astronaut trainees, there were 15 females? And one of them outscored all the males on every test- intelligence, stress endurance, science, strength.
Citation needed... interesting if true, not surprising if she got turned down for being female.
Mars next.
But this time it'll be the Chinese and not the US? :)
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Citations, as requested:
http://www.fiu.edu/~mizrachs/technocult.html
http://space.about.com/od/spaceexplorationhistory/a/mercury13.htm
http://space.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ&sdn=space&cdn=education&tm=120&f=00&su=p897.4.336.ip_&tt=2&bt=1&bts=0&zu=http%3A//history.nasa.gov/flats.html
this is NASA's site
http://www.mercury13.com/index.html
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Quickly scanned over it and didn't notice anything about strength but, either way, must have been an exceptional lady.
Wonder what the warrior females of Planeshift think about that?
They'd probably get too emotional and overreact :P
But still, historic day and what not!