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  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

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    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    2/50

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    3/50

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    4/50

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    5/50

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    6/50

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    7/50

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    8/50

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    9/50

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonizedby the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    10/50

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    11/50

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    12/50

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    13/50

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    14/50

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    15/50

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    16/50

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    17/50

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    18/50

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    19/50

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    20/50

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    21/50

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    22/50

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    23/50

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    24/50

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    25/50

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    26/50

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    27/50

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    28/50

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    29/50

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonizedby the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    30/50

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    31/50

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    32/50

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    33/50

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order andHigh School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    34/50

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    35/50

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore!But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    36/50

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    37/50

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    38/50

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    39/50

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation is through television. Gary D. Gaddy has his

    Ph.D. in Mass Communication Research and an M.A. in Communication Studies. He has

    published multiple homogenous articles about juvenile career consummation, such asHigh

    School Order and High School Achievement, Televisions Impact on High School Achievement,

    and Television and Scholastic Achievement: A Study of American High School Students. Gaddy

    believes that youths future adulthood and career choices are heavily influenced by what they

    observe on TV. He writes, Television influences achievement as it molds childrens thinking

    about school, influencing their expectations and aspirations (12). Since TV is such a demiurge

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    40/50

    upon the young individual, educational space programs are an excellent way of manifesting the

    societal and monetary benefits of space. It might help to reduce the negative correlation and

    exhibit all of the edification of innovation brought on by space exploration. Gaddy emphasizes,

    Television tends to displace other activities which serve the same needs but are less readily

    available or require more effort (14). There are other pedagogical educational sources, but

    Gaddy feels that TV is the easiest for people to turn to and utilize. There may be some people to

    whom television is anomalous and confusing. In this case, perhaps books or clubs might help to

    involve and confer with these individuals. Whatever the avenue, the road must be paved for

    national awareness and partisanship for the contentious, yet conspicuous profits of a space

    centered nation. After all, one cannot deny the monolithic innovations that have advanced

    humanity into a modern era. Such movements were generated by astronauts needing a new tool

    to accomplish their mission. Without gadgets as simple as the clothes upon firefighters backs,

    where would we be today without the auspice of such a laudable a space program?

    Bibliography

    Tyson, Neil deGrasse. "The Case For Space." Foreign Affairs 91.2 (2012): 22-33.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Elvis, Martin. "After Apollo."Harvard International Review 33.4 (2012): 38-43.Academic

    Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Gaddy, Gary D. "Television's Impact On High School Achievement." Public Opinion Quarterly

    50.3 (1986): 340.Academic Search Complete. Web. 12 Dec. 2012.

    Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Societally Rejuvenating

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    41/50

    Martin Elvis has his Ph.D. and is the Senior Astrophysicist at the Smithsonian

    Astrophysical Observatory (SAO). He has written over 300 articles features in refereed journals

    and is on the top 250 most cited researchers list, according to ISI Highly Cited Research, with

    over 15,000 citations. Elvis believes that the American people have lost interest in space

    because NASA has been stereotyped as a facile operation for expensive journeys of adventure.

    The public are unaware of the sublime potentiality the space program can have on the economy.

    He exemplifies, while referring to American space resources, Beaming solar power to Earth,

    mining the Helium isotope, and mining asteroids for iron, water, and methane for rocket fuel.

    These are truly vast resources, with trillions of dollars in street value, and capable of solving

    todays oil-based energy crisis (7). Citizens have been uninformed of multifaceted disposition

    of the space program. They think that the space program is too expensive for the state of the

    economy, but in actuality, space pioneering can help the monetary situation. Elvis reports,

    Military security, from spy satellites to the GPS system is also robust; the United States Air

    Force (USAF) and National Reconnaissance Office space programs form a $20-$30 billion-year

    enterprise (4). The space program has created a profitable and thriving business trade. Also,

    new technologies to improve Americas national security have been greatly provided for, via by

    the space program. Space exploration benefits America and should continue because of the

    long-term fiscal gain, due to the constant demand for innovation, brought on by discovery.

    Neil deGrasse Tyson is the Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum

    of Natural History. He has a Ph.D. in Astrophysics and is a science communicator. In 2001,

    President Bush appointed Tyson to serve on a 12-member commission that studied the Future of

    the US Aerospace Industry. Tyson believes that the lust for war against peers, money, and

    dominance are the three archetypal reasons that the world got involved in space exploration. In

  • 7/29/2019 Space Exploration: Monetarily Bereaving, Fiscally Rejuvenating

    42/50

    1961, President Kennedy presented a speech in which he encouraged America to reach for the

    moon. Tyson points out, Kennedys speech was not simply a call for advancement or

    achievement; it was a battle cry against communism. He might have simply said, lets go to the

    moon: what a marvelous place to explore! But no one would have written the check (4).

    America has always strived for intergalactic pioneering with specific goals in mind. There was

    always an objective to space exploration, besides that of the sheer love for adventure. Tyson

    exemplifies with the case of the Hubble Telescope and its blurry images. He shows, Lombardi

    Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers adapted the techniques that the Hubble scientists were

    using to analyze the telescopes blurry images and applied them to mammography, leading to

    significant advances in the early detection of breast cancer (25). Put simply, countless women

    are alive today because scientists were trying to fix a space camera. If such great contributions

    to society came from a few space-related repairs, try to conceptualize what the space industry

    could do with full public support. Tyson shows, The Apollo program produced technologies

    that improved kidney dialysis and water purification systems; sensors to test for hazardous gases;

    fire-resistant fabrics used by firefighters digital imaging, implantable pacemakers, collision-

    avoidance systems, [and] LASIK eye surgery (15). Tyson enhances, Imagine the

    excitement when NASA, bolstered by a fully funded long-term plan, starts to select the first

    astronauts to walk on Mars. Right now, those science-savvy future explorers are in middle school

    (29). The space program has been practically demonized by the public; people dont realize the

    amelioration space innovation has on their everyday lives.

    Instead of abstaining from space, Americans should educate themselves and their youth

    on the quintessential impact space has on not only innovation, but economic prosperity as well.

    Perhaps the best way to inform the next generation i


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