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Displaying 51—60 of 1000 matches for query "Oct_16_1999" retrieved in 0.006 sec with these stats:

  • "oct" found 41586 times in 2554 documents
  • "16" found 34109 times in 13481 documents
  • "1999" found 7431 times in 589 documents



... 10 Oct 11 1986 11 Oct 12 1986 12 Oct 13 1986 13 Oct 14 1986 14 Oct 15 1986 15 Oct 16 1986 16 Oct 17 1986 17 Oct 18 1986 18 Oct 19 1986 19 Oct 20 1986 20 Oct 21 1986 21 Oct 22 ...
... 10 Oct 11 1990 11 Oct 12 1990 12 Oct 13 1990 13 Oct 14 1990 14 Oct 15 1990 15 Oct 16 1990 16 Oct 17 1990 17 Oct 18 1990 18 Oct 19 1990 19 Oct 20 1990 20 Oct 21 1990 21 Oct 22 ...
... 10 Oct 11 2000 11 Oct 12 2000 12 Oct 13 2000 13 Oct 14 2000 14 Oct 15 2000 15 Oct 16 2000 16 Oct 17 2000 17 Oct 18 2000 18 Oct 19 2000 19 Oct 20 2000 20 Oct 21 2000 21 Oct 22 ...
Media:Airscoop1943V2I26.pdf NACA LMAL Bulletin Issue 26 Vol 2 Oct 16 1943
... '' WASHINGTON -- NASA will host a media teleconference at 3 p.m. EDT on Thursday, Oct. 18, about the latest status of the Curiosity rover's mission to Mars. The Mars ... NASA History symposium about past, present and future solar system exploration. The event takes place Oct. 25-26 from 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. EDT, at the Lockheed Martin ... free and open to the public with prior registration. The deadline for registration is Friday, Oct. 19 at 5 p.m. The Solar System Exploration @ 50 Symposium will explore the milestones ...
Media:81-10-16.pdf Space News for this day. (1MB PDF)
Final tests of Army's airplane radiotelephone at Langley Field, Va., achieved 25 miles for plane-to-plane communication and 45 miles airplane-to-ground.
Test pilot Robert O. Rahn, flying a Douglas XF-4D Skyray fighter at Edwards AFB , Muroc, Calif., established a world closed-course speed record of 728.11 mph.
USAF successfully launched pellets at a speed faster than 33,000 mph (some 8,900 mph faster than the velocity necessary to escape from the earth) by an Aerobee rocket to a height of 35 miles ; the nose section then ascended to a height of 54 miles where shaped charges blasted the pellets into space.
“Conquest of the Moon” by Arthur Charles Clarke Arthur C. Clarke with images by Ralph Andrew Smith R.A. Smith of the British Interplanetary Society in Everybody’s Weekly Magazine

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