They were going to the moon, all right - at least that was the plan. That was the dream and the challenge set forth by one man, President John F. Kennedy, when he declared in May of 1961: "I believe this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to Earth."
—Team Moon: How 400,000 People
Landed Apollo 11 on the Moon,
Catherine Thimmesh
Read the two passages. Describe what the different perspectives help you learn.
Answers
Answer:
hereare4PrimaryStreamsavailableafter10 intheIndianEducationSystem,namely
th StreamsAvailableafter10
1.
Science-AGroup(withprimarysubjectsasPhysics,ChemistryandMaths)
2.
Science-BGroup(withprimarysubjectsasPhysics,ChemistryandBiology)
3.
CommerceGroup(withprimarysubjectsasAccounts,Statistics,EconomicsandBusinessStudies)
4.
Arts/HumanitiesGroup(withprimarysubjectsasHistory,Geography,PoliticalScience,SociologyandPsychology)
TherearefewSchoolswhoalsoofferanABGroup(withprimarysubjectsasPhysics,Chemistry,MathematicsandBiology.In
thiseitherMathsorBiologyistermedasanadditionalsubject)
Thestudenthastochooseoneoftheabovementionedgroupsofsubjectsingrade11and12primarilyifthe
candidatewishedtopursuehighereducationinIndia.
Answer:
Both texts tell me that President Kennedy was a big believer in space exploration. Reading Kennedy's own words in Team Moon helped me better understand his passion for space travel, while the NASA article provided more specific details about the space race and the time of the landing.
Explanation:
i got it right