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Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
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Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex - This Week in Space August 1-15, 2014
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Cape Canaveral, FL – July 2014 / Newsmaker Alert / Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex brings to life the epic story of the U.S. space program, offering a full day or more of fun and educational activities, including the Kennedy Space Center Tour featuring the Saturn V Center with an actual Saturn V moon rocket.

August 1, 1967: The first permanent structures of Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex opened. It consisted of two auditoriums, a snack bar, a souvenir sales area and a ticket counter. Today, the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex tells NASA’s story and continues to educate the public on the U.S. space program.

August 2, 1971: The first televised lunar liftoff occurred during the Apollo 15 mission. The lunar module, Falcon, left the moon’s surface at 1:11 p.m. EDT after a three day visit.

August 3, 2004: The Messenger spacecraft launched to study the planet Mercury. Following a seven-year journey, Messenger reached Mercury in 2011 and mapped out 100% of the planet for the first time.

August 4, 2007: The Phoenix Mars Lander launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and landed on Mars in May 2008. The Phoenix Mars Lander’s main objectives were to research any former presence of life, prepare for human exploration and characterize the geology and climate.

August 5, 1930: Astronaut Neil Armstrong was born in Cleveland, Ohio. Armstrong was the first human to step foot on the moon, putting America ahead in the 1960s “Space Race” between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

August 6, 2012: The Curiosity Rover landed on Mars. Originally planned for a 23 month mission, the main objective was to find evidence of a past environment that could support microbial life. Images sent from the touchdown area showed water had once existed in the area.

August 7, 1959: The first TV images of Earth were taken by the Explorer 6 satellite. The Explorer 6’s purpose was to study confined radiation of numerous energies in the upper atmosphere.

August 8, 1949: U.S. Air Force Major Frank K. Everest was flying his X-1 aircraft when his cabin lost pressure at a high altitude of 69,000 feet. In that moment, Everest made the first operational emergency use of a T-1 partial pressure suit. The T-1 partial pressure suit was designed to protect pilots by providing oxygen if the air pressure became too low. Partial pressure suits eventually evolved into the full pressure suits that astronauts use for spacewalks today.

August 8, 1949: U.S. Air Force Major Frank K. Everest was flying his X-1 aircraft when his cabin lost pressure at a high altitude of 69,000 feet. In that moment, Everest made the first operational emergency use of a T-1 partial pressure suit. The T-1 partial pressure suit was designed to protect pilots by providing oxygen if the air pressure became too low. Partial pressure suits eventually evolved into the full pressure suits that astronauts use for spacewalks today.

August 9, 1972: Rockwell International was contracted by NASA to begin construction on space shuttle Enterprise. Although Enterprise was not built to fly in space, it was used for landing tests.

August 10, 1966: Lunar Orbiter 1 was launched as the first of five Lunar Orbiter missions assigned to map out the moon’s surface before the Apollo lunar landings.

August 11, 1960: Discoverer 13, an earth-orbiting satellite, became the first recovered spacecraft when it splashed down from orbit in the Pacific Ocean.

August 12, 1977: First glide test of a space shuttle was executed by Enterprise. During this glide test, Enterprise piggybacked off a modified Boeing 747 airplane and glided safely to the floor of the Mojave Desert.

August 13, 1960: The first known photographic geological survey of the moon’s surface was captured. This survey aided in selecting future Apollo landing sites for manned and unmanned spacecraft.

August 14, 1961: The first Saturn I rocket arrived at Cape Canaveral. Saturn I was one of two versions of the Saturn rockets (Saturn V being the other). Saturn I launched Apollo into low Earth orbit and also supported the Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz Test project.

About Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex brings to life the epic story of the U.S. space program, offering a full day or more of fun and educational activities, including the Kennedy Space Center Tour featuring the Saturn V Center with an actual Saturn V moon rocket, the Angry Birds™ Space Encounter, Shuttle Launch Experience, 3D IMAX® space films, Astronaut Encounter, Exploration Space: Explorers Wanted and many other interactive exhibits. The new $100 million home for Space Shuttle Atlantis (SM) opened June 29, 2013. Admission also includes the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame®, featuring historic spacecraft and the world’s largest collection of personal astronaut memorabilia, which opens daily at noon and closing times vary by season. Only 45 minutes from Orlando, Fla., Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex opens daily at 9 a.m. with closing times varying by season. Admission is $50 + tax for adults and $40 + tax for children ages 3-11. The Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex Commander’s Club Annual Pass is $75 + tax for adults and $60 + tax for children ages 3-11. For more information, call 877-313-2610 or visit www.KennedySpaceCenter.com.

About Delaware North Companies Parks & Resorts
Delaware North Companies Parks & Resorts is an industry leader, providing Stewardship and Hospitality in Special Places (SM) with hotel, retail, food service, recreation and transportation operations at historic and scenic properties in North America and Australia. The company operates Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida; in Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Sequoia, Kings Canyon, Olympic (Kalaloch Lodge), Shenandoah and Yosemite national parks, including The Ahwahnee and other Yosemite lodges; The Lodge at Geneva-on-the-Lake in Ohio; Harrison Hot Springs Resort & Spa in British Columbia; Gideon Putnam Resort in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.; Peaks of Otter Lodge on the Blue Ridge Parkway and in Niagara Falls State Park. The company also owns and operates Tenaya Lodge at Yosemite; the Park Gate Lodges at Yellowstone, which are the West Yellowstone Holiday Inn, Gray Wolf Inn and Suites and Yellowstone Park Hotel, as well as the new Explorer Cabins, all in West Yellowstone, Mont.; and five luxury resorts in Australia: Lizard Island Resort, Heron Island Resort, Wilson Island Resort, Kings Canyon Resort and El Questro Homestead and Wilderness Park. To learn more about Delaware North Companies’ hospitality management expertise, visit www.DelawareNorth.com/parks-and-resorts-home.aspx.

About Delaware North Companies
Delaware North Companies is one of the largest and most admired privately held hospitality companies in the world. Founded and owned for nearly 100 years by the Jacobs family, it is a global leader in hospitality and food service. Its family of companies includes the newly acquired Patina Restaurant Group, Delaware North Companies Parks & Resorts, Delaware North Companies Gaming & Entertainment, Delaware North Companies Travel Hospitality Services, Delaware North Companies Sportservice, Delaware North Companies International and Delaware North Companies Boston, owner of TD Garden.

Through these companies, Delaware North manages and provides food and beverage concessions, premium dining, entertainment, lodging, and retail at many large venues and special places. These include high-profile venues ranging from sports stadiums, entertainment complexes, national parks, airports, and some of the top regional casinos in the country.

Delaware North Companies has revenue exceeding $3 billion annually and 60,000 associates serving half a billion customers in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand. For more information, visit www.DelawareNorth.com.

Contacts: 
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
Andrea Farmer
321-449-4318
Angelica Deluccia-Morrisey
321-449-4273
 
 

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Delaware North Companies Parks & Resorts

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Placement Dates: 07/31/14 – 09/30/14
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