|
Robert G. Walsh, 65 Worked on Apollo moon landing
|
Robert G. Walsh, an instrumentation researcher who worked on the
Apollo moon landing of 1969 and on Navy missiles, died of a heart
attack Feb. 18 at his home in Palm Bay, Fla., He was 65 and a former
resident of Waltham.
Mr. Walsh, a native of Holidaysburg, Pa., worked on the Apollo and
the Polaris, Poseidon and Trident programs at the Draper Laboratory
in Cambridge.
He leaves his wife, Ma...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Engineering: Moon Landing Ranked Top Feat
The Washington Post
; The greatest engineering achievement of the past quarter century was the Apollo moon landing. That's the opinion of the National Academy of Engineering, which, in celebration of its 25th anniversary, issued its list of the Top 10 engineering achievements of its lifetime. "Unfortunately, the general
|
|
Apollo Moon Images Made Available Online
NPR All Things Considered
; ANDREA SEABROOK NPR All Things Considered 08-06-2007 Apollo Moon Images Made Available Online Host: ANDREA SEABROOK Time 20:00-21:00 PM Play Audio ANDREA SEABROOK, host: Astronomers are seeing the moon in a way they've never seen it before, and you can, too. Then again, the pictures they're looking
|
|
Moon landing album all set for blast-off
Derby Evening Telegraph
; Having missed out on seeing the acclaimed Derby Playhouse musical Moon Landing, I wasn't quite sure what to expect from the live recording which has now been released on CD. Perhaps surprisingly, it succeeds as a stand-alone piece that tells this epic story of the first men to set foot on the moon.
|
|
NSW: Kids to quiz astronauts over UFOs and the hoax moon landing
AAP General News (Australia)
; AAP General News (Australia) 02-11-2004 NSW: Kids to quiz astronauts over UFOs and the hoax moon landing By Lisa Davies SYDNEY, Feb 11 AAP - Was ...
|
|
NASA commissions book to prove moon landing really happened.
Knight Ridder Washington Bureau (via Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service)
; Byline: Seth Borenstein WASHINGTON _ More than 33 years after the United States landed men on the moon, NASA is spending more than $15,000 to convince people that it really did happen and that the space agency didn't make it all up. Stubborn conspiracy theorists claim that NASA's six Apollo-program
|