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Old November 11th 07, 01:57 AM posted to sci.space.history
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Default New Book Reveals Untold Stories of Apollo 11

On Nov 10, 4:42 pm, wrote:
On Nov 3, 9:45 pm, BradGuth wrote:





On Nov 3, 2:10 pm, "Heinrich Zinndorf-Linker (zili@home)" spam-


wrote:
Am Sat, 03 Nov 2007 03:07:49 -0000 schrieb "BradGuth":


Your NASA/Apollo disinformation worth of infowar/infomercial hype is
still breaking wind, isn't it.
- Brad Guth -


And your major brain damage has worsened recently, hasn't it?


cu, ZiLi aka HKZL


I'd thought Hitler's screwed up DNA was dead and forever gone, and yet
incest cloned Zion Yids like yourself keep showing up. (imagine
that!)
- Brad Guth -


I guess it is a shame that we have let moon hoax believers hijack this
forum.

Tahir- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Advance Praise for We Came in Peace for all Mankind

Neil Armstrong and I almost forgot to leave the silicon disc on the
moon. But no one should forget the messages beautifully portrayed in
Rahman's book, We Came in Peace for all Mankind.

Buzz Aldrin, Apollo 11


In the ancient dust of the Moon's Sea of Tranquility there sits a tiny
silicon disc bearing messages of goodwill from the nations of Earth.
In the four decades since Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin left behind
the first human footprints on another world, those messages have gone
largely unread-- until now. In this beautiful and inspiring book,
Tahir Rahman spotlights the words of peace and hope that reflect the
true spirit of mankind's greatest adventure.

-- Andrew Chaikin, author of A Man on the Moon


Landing on the Moon was a shared global event which nearly all
humankind felt transcended politics. Tahir Rahman's beautifully
produced commemorative book, We Came in Peace for all Mankind, takes
us back to that priceless moment when all of the people on this Earth
were truly one.

James R. Hansen, Professor of History at Auburn University, author of
First Man


The silicon disc represents an historic time when many nations looked
beyond their differences to come together to achieve this historic
first.

Charlie Duke, Apollo 16 Moonwalker


Given an accomplishment as large as landing the first men on the Moon,
it is easy to understand why the smaller details of the Apollo 11
mission might be forgotten to the passage of time. It is therefore a
delight to see author Tahir Rahman return the spotlight (and
microscope) to the flight's goodwill silicon disc. What some may have
seen as a trinket, Rahman saw as the treasure it really it is. "We
Came In Peace for all Mankind" will fit as well in a space historian's
library as it will the space enthusiast's.

Robert Pearlman, Editor, collectSPACE.com ("The Source for Space
History & Artifacts")