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11 June, 09:45

What was president Kennedy's position on space exploration

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  1. 11 June, 09:50
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    In 1961, President John F. Kennedy began a dramatic expansion of the U. S. space program and committed the nation to the ambitious goal of landing a man on the Moon by the end of the decade. In 1957, the Soviet Union launched the satellite Sputnik, and the space race was on.
  2. 11 June, 09:56
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    John F. Kennedy Space Center is the space port used by NASA to launch rockets.

    Soon after the Second World War, a new international confrontation began, but with very particular characteristics. The Cold War polarized the world between followers of capitalism and followers of socialism. The first group was led by the United States and the second by the Soviet Union, both winners of Nazism in the conflict ended in 1945. As the main representations on each side were powerful enough to wreak havoc on the enemy and on humanity, a conflict especially in the ideological field, seeking to demonstrate the superiority of each political-social system. One of the main characteristics of this dispute was the space race, in which those involved ran to discover and conquer the universe faster. In this context, the United States built a missile test area in the Cape Canaveral region in 1949. The location was ideal, as it was close to the Equator and allowed a launch base facing the Atlantic Ocean. In the same year, the first sub-orbital flight took place. In 1951, the Air Force Missile Test Center was established and the first attempt to put a satellite into orbit was in 1957, resulting in a catastrophic explosion. It was not until the following year that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration agency, popularly known as NASA, was founded, which gradually transformed Cape Canaveral into its main launch site.
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