Jan 1 1965
From The Space Library
Apollo Monthly weight and balance report January 1965
Operation of SYNCOM II and SYNCOM III communications satellites was transferred to DOD by NASA, which had completed its R&D experiments. Telemetry and command stations and range and range-rate equipment operated by NASA for the Syncom program would be transferred to DOD along with the satellites. DOD had furnished the communications ground stations used to relay transmissions via the two Syncoms for the past two years and would provide NASA with certain telemetry and ranging data of continuing scientific and engineering interest. SYNCOM III was to prove useful in DOD's Vietnam communications. (NASA Release 65-5)
About 500 employees of the Manned Spacecraft Center's Florida Operations were transferred to the Kennedy Space Center, effective today, under a realignment announced Dec. 24, 1964, by NASA Hq. Elements of the manned space flight organization were regrouped to meet the requirements imposed by concurrent Gemini and Apollo launch schedules. (MSC Roundup, 1/6/65, 1)
Two hrs. and 20 min. of radio signals from Jupiter were received around midnight New Year's Eve as predicted by George A. Dulk of the Univ. of Colorado. The signals were received at the Altitude Observatory of the National Center for Atmospheric Research at Boulder, which had kept its radiotelescope operating for the event. (Osmundsen, NYT, 1/2/65, 1)
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