Or, to pay by check, make out the check (payable to SciArt Media) for $4.95 for each poster (or $12 for the whole set) plus $3.50 s/h to:
SciArt Media
P.O. Box 315
Greenfield, NH 03047
Place your order by phone by calling: 603-397-0053 - all major credit cards are accepted!
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These new posters from SciArt Media express the excitement, joy and adventure of exploring humankind's last great frontier. From the early excitement of Apollo, through the days of glory and heartbreak with the Space Shuttle, to the present and future days of the human race finally living in space in the International Space Station, it is all here.
Put these on your wall and show people that you support the future of the human race in space. Show off your favorite program or collect all three at a special discount rate!
Just $4.95 for one, or $12 for the entire set, this is s special gift for yourself or a loved one. 12x18, printed on heavy-duty paper. Get yours now!
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The Apollo Program - This program, fueled by the dream of John F. Kennedy to fly to the Moon (along with 7.5 million pounds of thrust!), began in earnest in 1961. It would be the third American spacecraft to carry humans into space (after Mercury and Gemini). In July of 1969, it would carry Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael COllins to our nearest celestial neighbor.
But this remarkable accomplishment did not come until after the loss of three brave astronauts during the testing of Apollo One, and the program nearly lost three more astronauts during the flight of Apollo 13.
Later, the project continued with the Apollo/Soyuz Mission and flights to Skylab, the first U.S. Space Station.
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The Space Shuttle (Space Transport System) - After over a decade of reseach and testing, the first Shuttle mock-up, named The Enterprise, after the famous fictional starship of the same name, flew off a jumbo jet in 1977. Then, in 1981, John Young and Robert Crippen boarded the spacecraft for the first-ever maiden flight of a new rocket. The shuttle fleet became the first-ever reusable space vehicle and was reliable for five years. Then, on January 28th, 1986, Challenger was lost 73 seconds into its flight. By the fall of 1988, the problems were fixed and the Shuttle program took to the air once more. Another loss came in 2003, when Columbia, the first of the space-worthy shuttles disintegrated on re-entry. During its tenture, the SHuttle was responsible for the launch and the repair of the Hubble Space Telescope, and for a large part of the construction of the International Space Station.
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The International Space Station - Toward the end of The Cold War, the superpowers each had a new design in mind for a space craft - Freedom was to replace SkyLab and the Russians would replace Mir with Mir 2. In a new age , as relations warmed, the two superpowers, along with Japan and the ESA, joined together to build the first space station for all of humanity - the International Space Station. This was a program larger, more complex and more expensive than any ever before seen in the history of the world.
Contruction began in 1998, and is only now nearing completion. This is the greatest step ever taken in the permanent colonization of space by beings from the planet Earth.
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