From the Tulsa World of August 23, 1969:
Don't sneeze on the asteroid Geographos, they say. You might catch your death!
From the Tulsa World of August 23, 1969:
Don't sneeze on the asteroid Geographos, they say. You might catch your death!
... According to this gag photo in the July 18, 1969 Tulsa World.
Of course, this was a modern-day riff on the 1902 Georges Méliès flick A Trip to the Moon.
See ya next Monday!
From the July 14, 1969 Newsweek, we have a summary of the plaque attached to Apollo 11.
See you next Monday.From the August 13, 1969 Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise:
From the July 22, 1969 Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise:
Well, it's like the Moon Rocks. I mean, they have rocks on the Moon, and they have rocks in Hobart. So, yeah, this guy's rocks are like Moon Rocks, right?
In the Tuesday, July 22, 1969 Tulsa World, Billy Graham's syndicated column worries that learning more about creation may make people take creation for granted.
That's just a silly worry, don't you agree? The more we learn, the more we learn that we don't yet know! But I suspect that Graham and I agree that the pie-in-the-sky optimism of STAR TREKlike worldviews are silly. Greed will always be a human trait.
From the July 22, 1969 Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise, a pair of Moon bits printed side-by-side.
See you next week.
From the July 19, 1969 Tulsa World:
One of our Space-Age heroes, Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins, died April 28. The title of today's blog post certainly applied to him as he piloted Columbia while Aldrin and Armstrong descended to land on the Moon.
This article is from the August 18, 1969 Tulsa World.
See you next Monday!
Page 5 of the Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise comprised various photos concerning the events of this historic Moon-day.
See you next Moon-Day!