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...event makes China the fifth nation after the Soviet Union the U. S., France, and Japan-to launch a rocket capable of placing a satellite in orbit...

Author: By M. D. L., | Title: First Chinese Satellite Gathers Information Plays Maoist June | 4/27/1970 | See Source »

Hsinhua stated that the satellite was relaying 40 seconds of music, ten seconds of data, and ten seconds of silence during each minute in orbit...

Author: By M. D. L., | Title: First Chinese Satellite Gathers Information Plays Maoist June | 4/27/1970 | See Source »

NASA was faced with a painful choice. If Mattingly were allowed to go on the mission, he might well be disabled by the disease (which can blur vision and swell the joints in the hand), perhaps while alone in orbit around the moon. If the mission were delayed until the next practical launch date, May 9, the extra cost would be $800,000 and there might also be some deterioration of the Saturn systems. In contrast, there was the possibility of replacing Mattingly with his back-up crewman, John Swigert, who was found to have immunity against rubella. But Swigert...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Heading for the Hills | 4/20/1970 | See Source »

...Alone in Orbit. Against the objections of Lovell, who wanted to risk taking Mattingly along, NASA officials decided to put Swigert to the test. He was substituted for Mattingly in mission simulator tests and quickly proved that he was master of his assignment. So while a delighted Swigert lifted off from Cape Kennedy, a bitterly disappointed Mattingly watched from the Mission Control Center in Houston...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Heading for the Hills | 4/20/1970 | See Source »

Swigert, too, will be left behind on Wednesday night, to orbit the moon in the command module Odyssey while Lovell and Haise make their scheduled descent in the lunar module Aquarius to land near Fra Mauro. Stopping 500 ft. or so west of their spacecraft on their first moon walk (see diagram), they will deploy a set of nuclear-powered experiments that should radio data to earth for at least a year. Their equipment will include two ingenious new devices to pry more secrets from the moon as well as the space around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Heading for the Hills | 4/20/1970 | See Source »

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