Difference between revisions of "1960s (FASA)"

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{{ImageBox2|boxwidth=250px|file=christopher_john-tos-21.jpg|caption=[[U.S. Air Force Ranks#Captain|Captain]] [[Christopher, John (FASA)|John Christopher]] ([[Star Trek|TOS]] [[Tomorrow is Yesterday (Episode)|21]])}}
 
{{ImageBox2|boxwidth=250px|file=christopher_john-tos-21.jpg|caption=[[U.S. Air Force Ranks#Captain|Captain]] [[Christopher, John (FASA)|John Christopher]] ([[Star Trek|TOS]] [[Tomorrow is Yesterday (Episode)|21]])}}
 
* '''RSD -1/6701.26 (26 January):''' [[U.S. Air Force Ranks#Captain|Captain]] [[Christopher, John (FASA)|John Christopher]], an Air Force interceptor pilot, reports a UFO, but it soon disappears from view. The UFO is actually the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 (FASA)|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'']], which has accidentally traveled back in time.<ref name="TOS21"/><ref name="FASA2004A"/>
 
* '''RSD -1/6701.26 (26 January):''' [[U.S. Air Force Ranks#Captain|Captain]] [[Christopher, John (FASA)|John Christopher]], an Air Force interceptor pilot, reports a UFO, but it soon disappears from view. The UFO is actually the [[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701 (FASA)|U.S.S. ''Enterprise'']], which has accidentally traveled back in time.<ref name="TOS21"/><ref name="FASA2004A"/>
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==1968==
 
==1968==

Revision as of 21:09, 6 February 2022


Reference Stardate -1/6001 through -1/6912
  • Life prolongation experiments kill the entire adult population on Miri's World.[1]

1961

April

  • RSD -1/6104.12 (12 April): Vostok I carries the first man into space. The craft orbits for one revolution of 108 minutes, and an apogee of 302.3km and a perigee of 176.3km. This historic first keeps the USSR in the lead in the "space race."[3]
  • RSD -1/61: The United States launches Mercury 3, a one-man, suborbital, 15-minute flight in preparation for its first orbital mission in 1962. The Mercury missions will last from 1961-1963.[3]

1963

  • RSD -1/63: Vostok VI carries the first woman into space, staying aloft for 45 revolutions. Maneuvering the capsule, she approaches to within 5km of the companion Vostok V.[3]

1964

1965

1967

  • RSD -1/67: The first international outer space treaty is signed, addressing the global implications of spaceflight by stressing both the peaceful exploration of space and the need to extend the rule of law into the skies. "The exploration and use of outer space, including the moon and other celestial bodies, shall be carried out for the benefit, and in the interest of, all mankind."[3]

January

  • RSD -1/6701.26 (26 January): Captain John Christopher, an Air Force interceptor pilot, reports a UFO, but it soon disappears from view. The UFO is actually the U.S.S. Enterprise, which has accidentally traveled back in time.[4][5]


1968

  • RSD -1/68: In an historic first, the 3-man crew of Apollo 8 journeys around the moon, observing and photographing the natural satellite and viewing "Earthrise."[3]

March

  • RSD -1/6803.29 (29 March): Traveling in time, the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise encounters Supervisor 194, Gary Seven, on an assignment to prevent 20th-century Earth from destroying itself in nuclear war.[6][5]

1969

July

Notes and References