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Not Even Past

Why We Don’t Go to the Moon Anymore: The Space Program and the Challenge to Scientific Thinking

by Matthew Tribbe This month marks the forty-fifth anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing. To understand Apollo’s place in history, it might be helpful to go back forty-four rather than forty-five years, to the very first anniversary of the event in 1970. That July, several newspapers conducted informal surveys that revealed large majorities of […]

Fire and Ice: How a Handshake in Space Turned Cold War Agendas from Competition to Cooperation

What role did space exploration assume in the history of Soviet-American relations? For her Texas History Day research paper, Kacey Manlove argues that it represented the “fire” of mutual distrust and fear, but also the “ice” of cooperation and détente.

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