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Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 11, November 1965.
The magazine includes the articles "The Soft Splash", "Frontierland, U.S.A.", "Her Name is Miss Magnolia", "Alignment for Tall Tools", "Better and 9 Times Smaller", "Instant Jet Tankers", "Broad-Field Man", and "New Turbine-Powered Vehicles". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company. -
Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 10, October 1964.
The magazine includes the articles "Long Stride for Logistics", "Tests Prove Special Landing Gear", "School Days at Cape Kennedy", "Costs Cut by Fiberglass", "Rockets to Fire Soon", "Boomerang Booster", "Tested Tester", and "Non-Stop Titanium Milling". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company. -
Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 10, October 1965.
The magazine includes the artciles "Forward Edge of Research", "727s to Florida", "39 More Passengers", "Breadboards and D-Birds", "The Artful Imitators", "Instinct for Achievement", "Pointer", and "Don't Touch". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company. -
Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIII, no. 11, November 1963.
The magazine includes the article "Saddle the Dragon", "The 100 Secondsof 27 Charlie", "Which Alloy is Best?", "How to Knock Out an ICBM", "Inner Test for Outer Space", "Air Guards Get More 97s", "New Beauty Salon for Jets", "Builder Blue", "A Feel for the Wind", and "Instant Money". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company. -
Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 9, September 1964.
The magazine includes the articles "Next Stop: Mars", "Up the river to the Moon", "Air Force Tests New Missile", "Shake Well Before Using", "Quick Cargo Cash", "New Heart for the B-52", "What-Next Man", "Mostly on Time", and "Faster Inspector". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company. -
Boeing Subcontractors on Project Apollo.
The document is a list of Boeing subcontractors on Project Apollo including contractor locations, projects, and funding. -
Booster instrumentation for static firing.
The document is an Instrument Society of America Symposium Preprint of the "Booster Instrumentation for Static Firing" by Marin A. Ferrario. "Booster Instrumentation for Static Firing" was included in the 10th National Aerospace Instrumentation Symposium which occured from May 4th - 6th at the Hotel Biltmore in New York, NY. -
"Brooks Watson and Saturn's Steel Mountain."
Included are a copy of page 7 of the December 1963 publication of Pan Am (GMRD) Clipper magazine and a letter from Pan American World Airways to David Christensen. The magazine article briefly describes the gantry that surrounded Saturn-V and Pan American's Saturn complex Supervisor, Brooks Watson. -
Draft of "Building the Moon Rocket."
"Building the Moon Rocket" was presented at the National Machine Tool Builders Association Meeting, Doral Beach Hotel, Miami, Florida on November 3, 1965 by Dr. Mathias P.L. Siebel, the Deputy Director, Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory. There are handwritten notes throughout. -
"Capabilities and Limitations of Space Communication Systems."
The paper "Capabilities and Limitations of Space Communication Systems" is part of a General Electric Technical Information Series prepared for the Apollo Support Department. The abstract states "A survey and study of the basic parameters of information transfer systems for space communications is presented in this paper, to familiarize systems checkout and on communication engineers with the state-of-the-art and trends in this field. Both current and anticipated requirements for space communication systems are briefly considered. Some of the problems that exist in space communication are presented, along with a general review of current communication systems, their capabilities, and limitations as well as possible improvements in the areas of spacecraft directional antennas, ground stations and antennas, spacecraft transmitter power, and telemetry systems. It is concluded that the increased capabilities expected by the end of this decade should make adequate and reliable space communication possible for most predicted communication needs of future space missions at lunar and near-planet ranges."