galrads: Hey, menu. CS is evolving like everything else. it's a little slow for a while now. Maybe things will pick up around CS once we get deeper into our Winter.
Yes bro. CS I monitored by there’re advertisements which keeps us going on for free as a datelining site. You’re a swell guy. Enjoy.
sophiasummer: I was sent my grandfathers history from my sister. He was born in Dublin, very poor with many siblings, his playtime was playing at the dump. They had the English soldiers there. Which he avoided.
galrads: The king of golf, Arnold Palmer passéd today.
Soar the Galaxies Edgar Mitchell!
The astronaut was born in Hereford, Texas, in 1930. A Navy pilot, he joined NASA in 1966 as part of the agency's astronaut corps. He was well-qualified: besides having served as a test pilot and college instructor, he earned a doctorate from MIT in aeronautics and astronautics.
Mitchell was part of the support crew for the Apollo 9 and Apollo 10 missions. A year after Apollo 14, in 1972, he left NASA to embark on his other activities.
He was in the news in 2011 when, threatened with a lawsuit from the U.S. government, he returned a camera he'd kept as a memento of the mission. NASA agreed to display the camera at the National Air and Space Museum.
With Mitchell's death, of the 12 men who have walked on the moon, seven survive: Buzz Aldrin, Alan Bean, David Scott, John W. Young, Charles Duke, Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt.
Many have talked of their missions with joy and wonder. Mitchell went beyond, however: he believed we were all connected -- to everything.
"We are not alone in the universe," he told the Utica Phoenix. "We are just one grain of sand on a huge beach."
The astronaut was born in Hereford, Texas, in 1930. A Navy pilot, he joined NASA in 1966 as part of the agency's astronaut corps. He was well-qualified: besides having served as a test pilot and college instructor, he earned a doctorate from MIT in aeronautics and astronautics.
Mitchell was part of the support crew for the Apollo 9 and Apollo 10 missions. A year after Apollo 14, in 1972, he left NASA to embark on his other activities.
He was in the news in 2011 when, threatened with a lawsuit from the U.S. government, he returned a camera he'd kept as a memento of the mission. NASA agreed to display the camera at the National Air and Space Museum.
With Mitchell's death, of the 12 men who have walked on the moon, seven survive: Buzz Aldrin, Alan Bean, David Scott, John W. Young, Charles Duke, Eugene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt.
Many have talked of their missions with joy and wonder. Mitchell went beyond, however: he believed we were all connected -- to everything.
"We are not alone in the universe," he told the Utica Phoenix. "We are just one grain of sand on a huge beach."
Ah, yes, we are all star dust, fugitive particulates....
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Yes bro. CS I monitored by there’re advertisements which keeps us going on for free as a datelining site. You’re a swell guy. Enjoy.