Article about the ways of behaviour and SPACE EXPLORATION
by Henryk Szubinski
President Kennedy was said to "be the kind of man that did not lack the courage of hos conviction".
SPACE as previous to the SPACE EXPLORATION and the
types of " good behaviour bonds" of many who did something which the
governement did not like. So then it was because the bonds were related to
using up space, or doing something menial in some pre mentioned space as
paying ones dews.
As the space exploration started in the 50's , this meaning of the menial and meaningless
use of space, only to use up time, by those doing "good behaviour"(the 3rd REICH
did not have the GOOD BEHAVIOUR, rather they had the total opposite of it.)
, so it was
HATCHED in the 50's that the "DOING GOOD BEHAVIOUR" would be tested in space
by some astronauts. They are mentioned below.So it had to displace from Earth
to SPACE as "HAVING DONE ONES good behaviour" reference and passed the grade.
As such President Kennedy had the concept of the applied descriptive of "what it
will be like in space in the future with the "way that one behaves" as being the measure
of the "way that one survives".
This was said by Kennedy to be the "most dangerous mission" of any man , to be in isolation
and yet, to have the measure of "behaviour" as SURVIVAL.
From the list below of some of the astronauts of the Apollo mission, these BEHAVIOURS are
shown as the "selling of rocks from the moon, cameras and documents. The basic needs
of documented evidence that has in it the character of the astronauts in it and which was
used to show the completion of "moral character" in the missions to the Moon.
www.thefreedictionary.com
date 2018
May 03
have the courage of convictions
Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus, Legal.
Related to have the courage of convictions: courage of your convictions
have the courage of (one's) convictions
To have the confidence to act or behave in accordance with one's beliefs or ideologies, especially in the face of resistance, criticism, or persecution. The governor was presented with a bribe to help the corporation avoid regulation, but she had the courage of her conviction to refuse such an offer.
to have enough courage and determination to carry out one's goals. It's fine to have noble goals in life and to believe in great things. If you don't have the courage of your convictions, you'll never reach your goals. Jane was successful because she had the courage of her convictions.
See also: conviction, courage, have, of
noun
1.
the quality of mind or spirit that enables a person to face difficulty, danger, pain, etc., without fear; bravery.
2.
Obsolete. the heart as the source of emotion.
Idioms
3.
have the courage of one's convictions, to act in accordance with one's beliefs, especially in spite of criticism.
the courage of your convictions
phrase
If you have the courage of your convictions, you have the confidence to do what you believe is right, even though other people may not agree or approve.
Developers should have the courage of their convictions and stick to what they do best.
HERE ARE SOME OF THE PROBLEMS of the ASTRONAUTS that worked with the APOLLO MISSIONS to the MOON:
www.pe.com/2017/04/14/lake-elsinore-woman-wins-round-against-nasa/
NEIL ARMSTRONG
Joann Davis had a moon rock. Yes, it was real. A gift, she said, from Neil Armstrong to her late husband.
NASA lunar experts later confirmed the authenticity of the moon rock in Davis’ possession, but prosecutors never filed charges against her, the 9th Circuit said.
Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, had told investigators that he never gave or sold lunar material to anyone, according to an affidavit in the case. He died in 2012. Davis sought $1.7 million for the rock.
BUZZ ALDRIN
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/2272321.stm
Californian authorities have decided against prosecuting former astronaut Buzz Aldrin after he punched a documentary maker who claimed his moon missions were faked.
Buzz Aldrin
Astronaut was called "a liar and a coward"
Mr Aldrin, famous for his participation in the Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969, hit Bart Sibrel after he approached the former astronaut outside a hotel in Beverley Hills, Los Angeles and demanded he swear on a Bible that the landing was not staged.
Mr Aldrin responded by punching Mr Sibrel, but said he merely struck out to defend himself and his stepdaughter, who was with him at the time.
Beverly Hills police investigated the incident, which occurred 9 September, but said that the charges were dropped after witnesses came forward to say that Mr Sibrel had aggressively poked Mr Aldrin with the Bible before he was punched.
'False pretences'
Witnesses also told police that Mr Sibrel had lured Mr Aldrin to the hotel under false pretences in order to interview him.
Deputy District Attorney Elizabeth Ratinoff told Reuters news agency that a videotape shot by a cameraman hired by Mr Sibrel had shown the film-maker follow Mr Aldrin, calling him a "thief, liar and coward".
Mr Sibrel handed over the tape to police investigators, but as Mr Sibrel sustained no visible injury and did not seek medical attention, and Mr Aldrin had no previous criminal record, no charges were filed.
Mr Sibrel says his new documentary proves the Apollo 11 landings were faked by the Nasa space agency in order to fool the then-Soviet Union into thinking the US had beaten them in the space race.
The two countries had been embroiled in a desperate race to reach the moon, with the US initially trailing after the Soviets became the first to send a man into space and orbit the earth.
Moon walk
Mr Aldrin, the second man after Neil Armstrong to set foot on the moon in the Apollo 11 mission, is one of America's most famous space pioneers.
A former US Air Force pilot who flew in the Korean war, Mr Aldrin joined Nasa space agency in 1963.
Since his retirement from Nasa, Mr Aldrin has dedicated much of his time to publicising space travel for civilians.
See also:
26 Sep 99 | Science/Nature
Aldrin calls for 'space tourism'
16 Jul 99 | The moon landing
Walking on the moon
23 Jul 99 | The moon landing
The Moon Landing
Internet links:
Buzz Aldrin official website
Nasa
City of Beverly Hills
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EDGAR MITCHELL
from:
motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/aek7ez/astronaut-edgar-mitchell-outer-space-inner-space-and-aliens
Mitchell's imagination was expansive, but he never imagined he would be named in a lawsuit by the U.S. government. That's what happened in 2011, after Justice Dept. lawyers sought to stop the sale of a camera that Mitchell had used on Apollo 14 and that had been given to him afterwards as a souvenir. For decades, it was customary at NASA for astronauts and their teams to take home mementos, and for decades, many of these objects have shown up at auctions. In 2014, another controversial camera that reportedly went to the moon—and said to be "the only one" that returned—fetched $760,000. It's not just equipment that gets put up for sale: at a space history auction last year, Alan Bean offered up a freeze-dried spaghetti dinner that he took to the moon and back, still in its original packaging.
But in recent years, NASA has vigorously sought to stop the sale of some of these artifacts, on the basis that they were never properly gifted to the people who have them. In "The United States of America Vs. Edgar Mitchell," the Justice Dept. claimed that Mitchell was not assigned clear title for the camera and that it was the "exclusive property of the United States."
Robert Pearlman, a space historian and the editor of CollectSpace.com, said this was the only instance he knew of in which the government had sued a NASA astronaut. But he sought to clarify that while Mitchell was named as the defendant in the lawsuit, he wasn't facing any charges, such as theft of government property. "The only question before the court was whether the camera belonged to the federal government," Pearlman wrote by email. "So the subtlety is that Mitchell wasn't guilty (or not guilty) of anything; it was simply the government wanting to regain control of the camera."
OK, Houston. We’ve had a problem.”NO "A"
Forty-five years ago this coming Monday, Apollo 13 astronaut Jim Lovell said the now-famous phrase to Mission Control, a phrase tweaked slightly to “Houston, we have a problem” in the 1995 Tom Hanks film.
Those words kicked off four of the U.S. space program’s most angst-ridden days.
It would turn out that one of the spacecraft’s oxygen tanks had exploded, setting off a cavalcade of dire issues and forcing an abortion of the mission’s goal of landing on the moon.
JIM LOVELL
/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/space/8997787/Nasa-embroiled-in-row-with-Apollo-13-commander-Jim-Lovell.html
Jim Lovell, commander of the doomed mission, sold the 70-page checklist for more than £247,000 ($388,000) at an auction in Dallas last November.
But now Nasa lawyers have laid claim to the document, annotated with Lovell's handwritten calculations that helped secure his team's miraculous return to Earth after disaster struck.
The space agency has challenged the right of Lovell, 83, to sell the ring-bound papers after arguing that there was no evidence they had transferred ownership to him.