50 year anniversary of the Zeus 4 landing on the moon. SPAWN: “The moon landing was an important milestone, but we have to look beyond and our next objective is exploring new planets.”
Frank Port, fport@en.wst — (Eagle News)
March 22, 2013 | Old Lake, State of Montgomery, Western Confederal States
Cpt. Nick Rogers saluting in front of the Western 7-star.
Old Lake, State of Montgomery, WESTERN CONFEDERAL STATES - It dates back 50 years when the crew of Zeus 4 touched lunar ground. A multinational endeavour in which the Belfrasian, Belhavian and Western space agencies contributed to an early Pardesi moon mission. Cpt. Nick Rogers’ crew wrote history with an all-time nostalgic phrase: “Our planet is small, but our steps are big”.
Launched in the early 1960’s, the multinational Zeus project allocated Pardesi experts to the headquarters in Old Lake, Montgomery, Western Confederal States. Where day in day out new preparations and calculations were made in a decade of technological innovation, where the SPAWN (Space and Aeronautics for Western Novelties) played a crucial role..
“Our astronauts are tested and examined based on their physical and psychological capabilities, only the best are potentialized for a space flight.” Said SPAWN’s former administrator Greg Palin in 1963 just one year before Zeus 4 succeeded in landing on the moon.
According to opinion polls SPAWN’s involvement reached a certain peak in the 60s-70s. Now, according to many critics, it’s slowly drifting off its course.
Another innovative propulsion method intended for a manned spacecraft is on the march; a nuclear pulse mechanism that allows a spacecraft to use nuclear explosions for thrust. First proto-designs have been drawn out in the 70s.
Despite its efficiency, this was never portrayed on such a large scale and ever since its introduction sparked up controversy as many people were sceptical on the concept, which stayed a theoretical method and will likely remain for the upcoming years.
The SPAWN has, however, based on multiple tests confirmed that risks are minimal. If this 50 year anniversary is going to launch another program that would include the method is still debatable. “The moon landing was an important milestone, but we have to look beyond. Our next goal is exploring new planets. We may be small, but our steps will always be big.”
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