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The New Vision For Space Exploration. News. By Richard Godwin published 29 September 2005 When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
These are templates and lessons that NASA must incorporate into its plans or the Vision for Space Exploration (VSE) will join the other acronyms of space plan failure in the dustbin of history.
One year after President Bush visited NASA Headquarters on January 14, 2004 and proposed with the Vision for Space Exploration bold new goals for our nation’s space program, I’m pleased […] ...
The Vision for Space Exploration redirects NASA’s budget and provides marginal increases to focus the agency toward accomplishing achievable goals on an affordable timeline, ...
The Space Exploration Alliance brings together the sixteen leading non-profit space organizations to represent over 100,000 Americans, the largest group of space-interested citizens in the nation.
President Bush's "Vision for Space Exploration" made headlines when it was announced 31/2 months ago, but Congress has refused to even consider funding the initiative until NASA comes up with more ...
Lockheed Martin has shared its vision for humanity's future in space, as global space agencies aim for the moon and beyond.
When U.S. President George W. Bush stepped to the podium at NASA headquarters here Jan. 19, 2004, to call for returning humans to the Moon by 2020, cynics could be forgiven for giving the Vision ...
Instead, I want to comment on a theme that I see running through many of the reader comments, viz., that the Vision for Space Exploration (VSE) is dead, that it was a stupid idea to begin with ...
On May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy announced a bold new plan for NASA and the nation: To send an American to the moon, and to return him safely, by the close of the decade. Kennedy's ...
How Artemis 1 fits into NASA's grand vision for space exploration It's been nearly 50 years since the latest Apollo landing, and the landscape for space exploration is wildly different.