A-001
A-002
A-003
A-004
A-101 (SA-6)
A-102 (SA-7)
A-103 (SA-9)
A-104 (SA-8)
A-105 (SA-10)
ALSEP
AS-201
AS-202
AS-203
ASTP
Alfred Worden
American Samoa
American eagle
American flag
Apollo
Apollo–Soyuz Test Project
Apollo 1
Apollo 10
Apollo 11
Apollo 12
Apollo 13
Apollo 14
Apollo 14#Backup crew
Apollo 15
Apollo 15#Backup crew
Apollo 15 postage stamp incident
Apollo 16
Apollo 17
Apollo 4
Apollo 5
Apollo 6
Apollo 7
Apollo 8
Apollo 9
Apollo Belvedere
Apollo Command/Service Module
Apollo Lunar Module
Apollo program
Apollo program#Manned missions
Apsis
Astronaut ranks and positions
Astronomical Institute of Czech Academy of Sciences
Blue Marble
Boilerplate (rocketry)
C. Gordon Fullerton
Canceled Apollo missions
Charles Duke
Coordinate system
Coordinated Universal Time
Cyborg (novel)
Czech Republic
Czechoslovakia
David Scott
Deep Impact (film)
Deke Slayton
Dick Gordon
Douglas Preston
Earth
Eugene Cernan
Extra-vehicular activity
Florida
From the Earth to the Moon (miniseries)
From the Earth to the Moon (miniseries)#Episodes
Galaxy
Geologist
Google Moon
Greek mythology
Harrison Schmitt
Human spaceflight
Inclination
International Astronomical Union
James Irwin
Joe Engle
John Young (astronaut)
Kennedy Space Center
Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39
List of Apollo mission types
List of Apollo missions
List of artificial objects on the Moon
List of spacewalks
Low Earth orbit
Lunar Rover
Lunar Roving Vehicle
Lunar orbit
Lunar plaques
Lunar rover
Lunar rover (Apollo)
Main Page
Mare Serenitatis
Massif
Montes Taurus
Moon
Moon landing
Moon rock
NASA
Nebula
A-002
A-003
A-004
A-101 (SA-6)
A-102 (SA-7)
A-103 (SA-9)
A-104 (SA-8)
A-105 (SA-10)
ALSEP
AS-201
AS-202
AS-203
ASTP
Alfred Worden
American Samoa
American eagle
American flag
Apollo
Apollo–Soyuz Test Project
Apollo 1
Apollo 10
Apollo 11
Apollo 12
Apollo 13
Apollo 14
Apollo 14#Backup crew
Apollo 15
Apollo 15#Backup crew
Apollo 15 postage stamp incident
Apollo 16
Apollo 17
Apollo 4
Apollo 5
Apollo 6
Apollo 7
Apollo 8
Apollo 9
Apollo Belvedere
Apollo Command/Service Module
Apollo Lunar Module
Apollo program
Apollo program#Manned missions
Apsis
Astronaut ranks and positions
Astronomical Institute of Czech Academy of Sciences
Blue Marble
Boilerplate (rocketry)
C. Gordon Fullerton
Canceled Apollo missions
Charles Duke
Coordinate system
Coordinated Universal Time
Cyborg (novel)
Czech Republic
Czechoslovakia
David Scott
Deep Impact (film)
Deke Slayton
Dick Gordon
Douglas Preston
Earth
Eugene Cernan
Extra-vehicular activity
Florida
From the Earth to the Moon (miniseries)
From the Earth to the Moon (miniseries)#Episodes
Galaxy
Geologist
Google Moon
Greek mythology
Harrison Schmitt
Human spaceflight
Inclination
International Astronomical Union
James Irwin
Joe Engle
John Young (astronaut)
Kennedy Space Center
Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39
List of Apollo mission types
List of Apollo missions
List of artificial objects on the Moon
List of spacewalks
Low Earth orbit
Lunar Rover
Lunar Roving Vehicle
Lunar orbit
Lunar plaques
Lunar rover
Lunar rover (Apollo)
Main Page
Mare Serenitatis
Massif
Montes Taurus
Moon
Moon landing
Moon rock
NASA
Nebula
Apollo 17
Mission insignia
Mission statistics1
Mission name
Apollo 17
Command Module
CM-114
callsign America
mass 30,369 kg
Service Module
SM-114
Lunar Module
LM-12
callsign Challenger
mass 16,456 kg
Crew size
3
Call sign
Command module:
America
Lunar module:
Challenger
Booster
Saturn V SA-512
Launch pad
LC 39A
Kennedy Space Center
Florida, USA
Launch date
December 7, 1972
05:33:00 UTC
Lunar landing
December 11, 1972 19:54:57 UTC
Taurus-Littrow
20°11′26.88″N 30°46′18.05″E / 20.1908°N 30.7716806°E / 20.1908; 30.7716806 (Apollo 17 landing)
(based on the IAU
Mean Earth Polar Axis coordinate system)
Lunar EVA duration
First 07:11:53
Second 07:36:56
Third 07:15:08
Total 22:03:57
Lunar surface time
3 d 02 h 59 m 40s
Lunar Roving Vehicle
LRV-3
CMP EVA duration
01:05:44
Lunar sample mass
110.52 kg (243.7 lb)
Total CSM time in lunar orbit
6 d 03 h 43 m 37 s
Landing
December 19, 1972
19:24:59 UTC
17°53′S 166°7′W / 17.883°S 166.117°W / -17.883; -166.117 (Apollo 17 splashdown)
Mission duration
12 d 13 h 51 m 59 s
Crew photo
Left to right: Schmitt, Cernan (seated), Evans
Related missions
Previous mission
Subsequent mission
Apollo 16
Skylab 2
Apollo 17 was the eleventh manned space mission in the NASA Apollo program. It was the first night launch of a U.S. human spaceflight and the sixth and final lunar landing mission of the Apollo program. It was a "J-type mission", missions including three-day lunar surface stays, extended scientific capability, and the Lunar Roving Vehicle.
Commander Eugene Cernan, Command Module Pilot Ronald Evans, and Lunar Module Pilot Harrison Schmitt launched at 12:33 a.m. EST on December 7, 1972. While Evans remained in lunar orbit above in the Command/Service Module, Cernan and Schmitt spent just over three days on the lunar surface in the Taurus-Littrow valley, performing three EVAs or moonwalks during which they collected lunar samples and deployed scientific instruments. Cernan, Evans, and Schmitt returned to Earth on December 19 after an approximately 12-day mission.
Investigators scour N.J. in search of missing Apollo 17 moon rocks
NASA Image ArchiveAstronaut Eugene A. Cernan, Apollo 17 mission commander, makes a short checkout of the Lunar Roving Vehicle during the early part of the first Apollo 17 extravehicular activity at the landing site in December 1972. This photograph was...
Apollo 17
Quicktime movie of the liftoff of the Apollo 17 LM from the Moon (80 K) ... Apollo Lunar Surface Journal - Transcript of Apollo 17 communications ...
Apollo 17 remains the most recent manned Moon landing and the most recent manned flight beyond low Earth orbit. It also broke several records set by previous flights, including longest manned lunar landing flight; longest total lunar surface extravehicular activities; largest lunar sample return, and longest time in lunar orbit.
Contents
1 Crew
1.1 Backup crew
1.1.1 Original
1.1.2 Replacement
1.2 Support crew
2 Mission parameters
2.1 Docking
2.2 EVAs
3 Mission highlights
3.1 Transit
3.2 Landing
3.3 EVAs
3.4 Return
3.5 Splashdown
4 Mission insignia
5 Spacecraft locations
6 Media
7 Depiction in fiction
8 See also
9 Notes
10 References
11 External links
//
Crew
Position
Astronaut
Commander
Eugene A. Cernan
Third spaceflight
Command Module Pilot
Ronald E. Evans
First spaceflight
Lunar Module Pilot
Harrison H. Schmitt
First spaceflight
Former X-15 pilot Joe Engle had trained extensively with Cernan and Evans for lunar exploration as the backup LMP on Apollo 14. This came with the expectation that the entire crew would rotate up to prime crew for Apollo 17, but once it became clear that this would be the last lunar flight, the scientific community pressed NASA to select a scientist-astronaut to land on the Moon. Being directed by NASA administration to assign the scientist-astronaut, Deke Slayton, Director of Flight Crew Operations responsible for crew assignments, presented Cernan with the choice of replacing Engle with geologist Harrison Schmitt on his crew, otherwise Slayton would assign Apollo 17 to Dick Gordon's entire crew to include Schmitt (backup crew for Apollo 15) from the now cancelled Apollo 18. Cernan opted to fly with Schmitt.
Backup crew
Original
Position
Astronaut
Commander
David Scott
Command Module Pilot
Alfred Worden
Lunar Module Pilot
James Irwin
This had been the Apollo 15 prime crew.
Replacement
Position
Astronaut
Commander
John Young
Command Module Pilot
Stuart Roosa
Lunar Module Pilot
Charles Duke
Girls beat E-Gals in slugfest, 78-60
In a game that saw bodies flying in several directions on more than one occasion, the Lady Cougars moved to 17-3 for the season with a workmanlike 78-60 win over the visiting Apollo E-Gals Monday n...
NASA Apollo Mission Apollo-17
This site was picked for Apollo 17 as a location where rocks both ... Scientific objectives of the Apollo 17 mission included geological surveying and sampling ...
The Apollo 15 prime crew received the backup assignment since this was to be the last lunar mission and the backup crew would not rotate to another mission. However, when the Apollo 15 postage stamp incident became public in early 1972 the crew was reprimanded by NASA and the Air Force (they were active duty officers). Director of Flight Crew Operations Deke Slayton removed them from flight status and replaced them with Young and Duke from the Apollo 16 prime crew and Roosa from the Apollo 14 prime and Apollo 16 backup crews.2 Young, Roosa and Duke were announced as backups on 23 May 1972 and began their formal training on 1 July.
Support crew
Robert F. Overmyer
Robert A. Parker
C. Gordon Fullerton
Mission parameters
Apollo 17 launches from Kennedy Space Center, December 7, 1972.
The Apollo 17 Saturn V awaits launch.
Mass:
Launch mass: 6,455,000 lb (2,928,000 kg)
Total spacecraft: 102,900 lb (46,700 kg)
CSM mass: 66,840 lb (30,320 kg), of which CM was 13,140 lb (5,960 kg), SM 53,700 lb (24,400 kg)
LM mass: transposition and docking stage 36,274 lb (16,454 kg), separation for lunar landing 36,771 lb (16,679 kg), ascent stage at liftoff 10,997 lb (4,988 kg)
Earth orbits: 2 before leaving for Moon, approximately one on return
Lunar orbits: 75
Perigee: 104.9 mi (168.8 km)
Apogee: 106.4 mi (171.2 km)
Inclination: 28.526°
Period: 87.83 min
Landing site, as imaged in 2009
Periselenium: 60.5 mi (97.4 km)
Aposelenium: 195.6 mi (314.8 km)
Inclination: 159.9°
Period: ~120 min
Landing Site: 20.19080° N - 30.77168° E or
20° 11' 26.88" N - 30.1° 46' 18.05" E
Docking
Undocked: December 11, 1972 - 17:20:56 UTC
Docked: December 15, 1972 - 01:10:15 UTC
EVAs
Cernan and Schmitt - EVA 1
EVA 1 Start: December 11, 1972, 23:54:49 UTC
EVA 1 End: December 12 07:06:42 UTC
Duration: 7 hours, 11 minutes, 53 seconds
Cernan and Schmitt - EVA 2
EVA 2 Start: December 12, 1972, 23:28:06 UTC
EVA 2 End: December 13 07:05:02 UTC
Duration: 7 hours, 36 minutes, 56 seconds
Cernan and Schmitt - EVA 3
EVA 3 Start: December 13, 1972, 22:25:48 UTC
EVA 3 End: December 14 05:40:56 UTC
Duration: 7 hours, 15 minutes, 08 seconds
Evans (Schmitt - Stand up) - Transearth EVA 4
EVA 4 Start: December 17, 1972, 20:27:40 UTC
EVA 4 End: December 17 21:33:24 UTC
Duration: 1 hour, 05 minutes, 44 seconds
NJ seeks leads on missing moon rocks
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — If $5 million worth of moon rocks happen to be junking up your home, could you give New Jersey State Police a call? Detectives will arrive at, well, warp speed to reclaim state property — and solve a 35-year-old mystery.
Apollo 17
Apollo 17 was the last Apollo mission to land men on the Moon. ... Compared to previous Apollo missions, Apollo 17 astronauts traversed the greatest distance using the Lunar ...
The splashdown point was 17° 52′ S, 166° 7′ W, 350 nautical miles (650 km) SE of the Samoan Islands and 6.5 km (4.0 mi) from the recovery ship USS Ticonderoga. Apollo 17 landed approximately 640 meters from its target point.
Mission highlights
This section requires expansion.
Transit
Schmitt took this picture of Cernan flanked by an American flag and their lunar rover's umbrella-shaped high-gain antenna near the beginning of their third and final excursion across the lunar surface. The prominent Sculptured Hills lie in the background while Schmitt's reflection can just be made out in Cernan's helmet.
Close-up of the orange soil discovered at Shorty crater, the result of volcanic glass beads.
During the transit to the Moon, the astronauts took a famous photograph of the earth known as "The Blue Marble", which shows almost the entire continent of Africa and the continent of Antarctica. The other lunar landing missions that photographed the earth shortly after lunar orbit insertion showed the western hemisphere.
Landing
The landing site for this mission was on the southeastern rim of the Mare Serenitatis, in the southwestern Montes Taurus. This was a dark mantle between three high, steep massifs, in an area known as the Taurus-Littrow region. Pre-mission photographs showed boulders deposited along the bases of the mountains, which could provide bedrock samples. The area also contained a landslide, several impact craters, and some dark craters which could be volcanic.
EVAs
Apollo 17 was a J-class mission. The crew used a Lunar Rover and conducted three lunar surface excursions, lasting 7.2, 7.6 and 7.3 hours. The mission returned 110.5 lb (50.1 kg) of samples from the Moon.
Schmitt and Cernan collected a record 109 lb (49 kg) of rocks during three Moonwalks. The crew roamed for 34 km (21 mi) through the Taurus-Littrow valley in their rover, discovered orange-colored soil, and left the most comprehensive set of instruments in the ALSEP on the lunar surface. Their mission was the last in the Apollo lunar landing missions. The last 4 Apollo craft were used for the three Skylab missions and the ASTP mission in 1975.
Return
Command Module pilot Ron Evans performs a trans-earth EVA to retrieve film from the Apollo 17 SIM Bay camera
New Jersey seeks leads on missing moon rocks
TRENTON — If $5 million worth of moon rocks happen to be junking up your home, could you give New Jersey State Police a call? Detectives will arrive at, well, warp speed to reclaim state property — and solve a 35-year-old mystery. The rocks were supposed to go on public display starting in 1976, when an astronaut presented the governor's office with goodwill tokens of Apollo 17, the last manned ...
Apollo 17
Apollo 17 (AS-512), the final Apollo manned lunar landing mission, was launched from Pad ... Apollo 17 was scheduled to leave the Cape at 9:38 p.m. EST on ...
Eugene Cernan is, to date, the last man to have walked on the Moon. Just before he returned to the Lunar Module for the last time, he said,
As I take man's last step from the surface, back home for some time to come — but we believe not too long into the future — I'd like to just [say] what I believe history will record — that America's challenge of today has forged man's destiny of tomorrow. And, as we leave the Moon at Taurus-Littrow, we leave as we came and, God willing, as we shall return, with peace and hope for all mankind. Godspeed the crew of Apollo 17.
Although Cernan's last words before liftoff have been widely quoted as the colorful "Let's get this mother out of here", this is not supported by the transcript and audio recordings of the LM crew voices.3
A plaque left on the ladder of the descent stage of Challenger reads:
Here man completed his first explorations of the Moon December 1972 A.D. May the spirit of peace in which we came be reflected in the lives of all mankind.
The plaque shows two hemispheres of Earth and the near side of the Moon, and bears the signatures of Cernan, Evans, Schmitt, and President Richard M. Nixon.
Splashdown
Apollo 17 recovery operations
Like the astronauts of Apollo 10, 12, 13, and 14 before them, the Apollo 17 crew were recovered in Pacific waters near American Samoa after splashdown. The recovery operation was performed by US Navy helicopter squadron HC-1, with Commander Edward E Dahill III as prime recovery pilot flying helicopter 001. Commander Dahill flew the astronauts to the nearby recovery ship USS Ticonderoga. They were subsequently flown from the recovery ship to the airport at Tafuna where they were greeted with an enthusiastic (and well practiced) Samoan reception before being flown on to Honolulu, thence to Houston.
Apollo 17 Summary
The Apollo 17 Summary, by Eric M. Jones, contains an excellent discussion of the Apollo 17 mission.
Commander Eugene Cernan had taken a Czechoslovak flag with him to the Moon because his ancestors came from Czechoslovakia. Later he gave it to the Institute of Astronomy in Ondřejov (now Czech Republic).
Mission insignia
Robbins Medallion from Apollo 17
The circular patch is one of the most detailed of the Apollo series. The official NASA press release said: "The insignia is dominated by the image of Apollo, the Greek sun god. Suspended in space behind the head of Apollo is an American eagle of contemporary design, the red bars of the eagle's wing represent the bars in the U.S. flag; the three white stars symbolize the three astronaut crewmen. The background is deep blue space and within it are the Moon, the planet Saturn and a spiral galaxy or nebula. The Moon is partially overlaid by the eagle's wing suggesting that this is a celestial body that man has visited and in that sense conquered. The thrust of the eagle and the gaze of Apollo to the right and toward Saturn and the galaxy is meant to imply that man's goals in space will someday include the planets and perhaps the stars. The colors of the emblem are red, white and blue, the colors of the U.S. flag; with the addition of gold, to symbolize the golden age of space flight that will begin with this Apollo 17 lunar landing. The Apollo image used in this emblem was the profile of the Apollo Belvedere sculpture now in the Vatican Gallery in Rome. This emblem was designed by artist Robert T. McCall in collaboration with the astronauts." The insignia is surrounded by a light gray band with names of the crew and the words APOLLO XVII.
Spacecraft locations
The command module America is currently on display at Space Center Houston in Houston, Texas.
The ascent stage of lunar module Challenger impacted the Moon December 15, 1972 at 06:50:20.8 UT (1:50 AM EST), at 19°57′36″N 30°30′0″E / 19.96°N 30.5°E / 19.96; 30.5 (Apollo 17 LM ascent stage). The descent stage remains on the Moon at the landing site, 20°11′26.88″N 30°46′18.05″E / 20.1908°N 30.7716806°E / 20.1908; 30.7716806 (Apollo 17 LM descent stage).
Media
Olney knocks off Newton
Donald Totten, Michael Fehrenbacher and Brook Pampe came through at the free-throw line Saturday January 29 for the Olney Tigers. The trio combined to make nine charity tosses in the final minute as the Tigers topped Newton 47-42 at Ron Herrin Gym. After going 11-of-18 from the stripe Friday in a 54-45 Apollo Conference setback to Salem, Olney (17-6 overall, 5-3 in the Apollo) went 19-of-22 ...
Apollo 17 Lunar Surface Journal
Apollo 17 LM Lunar Surface Checklist. Apollo 17 Traverse Planning Data (23 Mb PDF) Apollo ... Bill Wood - Apollo TV Essay. TV and Communications Documentation ...
Astronaut Harrison Schmitt falls while on a Moonwalk.
Harrison Schmitt sings I was strolling on the Moon one day.
Apollo 17's Lunar Module blasts off and leaves the Moon.
Schmitt stands next to a large boulder during EVA 3.
The plaque left on the Moon by Apollo 17.
Apollo 17 photo of the Earth as the spacecraft headed for the Moon (now known as "The Blue Marble photo").
A model of the UV spectrometer used to take the first accurate measurements of the constituents of the Moon's atmosphere.
Harrison Schmitt posed with the American flag and Earth in the background during Apollo 17's first EVA. Eugene Cernan is visible reflected in Schmitt's helmet visor.
Depiction in fiction
Portions of the Apollo 17 mission are dramatized in the miniseries From the Earth to the Moon episode entitled "Le Voyage dans la Lune".
The novel Tyrannosaur Canyon by Douglas Preston opens with a depiction of the Apollo 17 Moonwalks using quotes taken from the official mission transcript.
Additionally, there have been fictional astronauts in film, literature and television who have been described as "the last man to walk on the Moon," implying they were crew members on Apollo 17. One such character was Steve Austin in the television series The Six Million Dollar Man. In the 1972 novel Cyborg, upon which the series was based, Austin remembers watching the Earth "fall away during Apollo XVII."4 In an episode of the series, Austin clearly states that he flew on "Apollo 17". Another example is the character of Captain Tanner played by Robert Duvall in the science fiction film Deep Impact.
The mission patch for Apollo 17 was used for the mission patch for the NASA space ship Charybdis in an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation entitled "The Royale".
See also
Spaceflight portal
Extra-vehicular activity
Google Moon
List of artificial objects on the Moon
List of spacewalks
Splashdown
Notes
^ Richard W. Orloff. "Apollo by the Numbers: A Statistical Reference (SP-4029)". NASA. http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4029/Apollo_00g_Table_of_Contents.htm.
^ Donald K. Slayton, "Deke!" (New York: Forge, 1994), 279
^ "Apollo 17 Lunar Surface Journal". http://history.nasa.gov/alsj/a17/a17.html. Retrieved November 18, 2009.
^ Caidin, Martin: Cyborg, page 15. Warner Paperback Library, 1972.
References
NASA NSSDC Master Catalog
Apollo 17 Info by NASA
Apollo by the numbers: A Statistical Reference by Richard W. Orloff (NASA)
Development of Manned Space Flight, American and Soviet NASA SP-4209
The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology
Apollo Program Summary Report
Apollo 17 Characteristics - SP-4012 NASA historical data book
Apollo 17 entry at Apollo Lunar Surface Journal - Provides an extensive insight of the mission, along with full transcripts and detailed interviews with the crewmembers.
Lattimer, Dick (1985). All We Did was Fly to the Moon. Whispering Eagle Press. ISBN 0-9611228-0-3.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Apollo 17
NASA Apollo 17 press kit - Nov 26, 1972
Apollo 17 - entry in Encyclopedia Astronautica
Apollo 17 - Final Reflections on Apollo Video as the crew wraps up the final Apollo mission
Apollo 17 - Science Experiments
Apollo 17 - Voice Transcript Pertaining to the Geology of the Landing Site
Apollo landing Locations at Google Moon
Apollo 17 Campsite - Microsoft Photosynth
Apollo Lunar Surface VR Panoramas QTVR panoramas
Apollo simulation for Orbiter spaceflight sim
September 1973 National Geographic Magazine article
Transcript of lifting off from the Moon
Apollo 17 television transmissions ApolloTV.net Video
v · d · eMissions of the Apollo program
Rocket tests
SA-1 · SA-2 · SA-3 · SA-4 · SA-5 · AS-203 (Apollo 2)
Abort tests
QTV · Pad Abort Test-1 · A-001 · A-002 · A-003 · Pad Abort Test-2 · A-004
Boilerplate tests
A-101 · A-102 · A-103 · A-104 · A-105
Unmanned missions
AS-201 · AS-202 (Apollo 3) · Apollo 4 · Apollo 5 · Apollo 6 · Skylab 1
LEO missions
Apollo 7 · Apollo 9 · Skylab 2 · Skylab 3 · Skylab 4 · Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
Lunar missions
Apollo 8 · Apollo 10 · Apollo 11 · Apollo 12 · Apollo 13 · Apollo 14 · Apollo 15 · Apollo 16 · Apollo 17
Apollo 1 (AS-204) · List of missions · Mission Types · Canceled missions
Sara Lee said to get Apollo bid close to $20 a share
Sara Lee said to get Apollo bid close to $20 a share Bloomberg News Updated Jan 25, 2011 07:24AM MDT Sara Lee Corp. received a takeover bid from Apollo Global Management LLC, Bain Capital LLC and TPG Capital that is higher than the food company’s most recent closing share price of $18.70, said three people with knowledge of the matter. The offer gets close to the $20 a share that Sara Lee’s ...
Apollo 17 Lunar Surface Journal : Crew
As he discusses in his Apollo 17 commentary, the difficulties he experienced demonstrated ... Following Apollo 17, Cernan helped in the planning for Apollo-Soyuz ...
Sara Lee Said to Get Apollo Bid Exceeding Current Market Value
Sara Lee Corp. received a takeover bid from Apollo Global Management LLC, Bain Capital LLC and TPG Capital that is higher than the food company’s current share price of $18.70, said three people with knowledge of the matter.
NASA - Apollo 17
Apollo 17 was the sixth and last Apollo mission in which humans walked on the lunar surface. ... This, the last of the Apollo/Saturn missions launched Dec. 7, 1972. ...
Sara Lee Said to Get Apollo Bid Close to $20 a Share
Sara Lee Corp. received a takeover bid from Apollo Global Management LLC, Bain Capital LLC and TPG Capital that is higher than the food company’s most recent closing share price of $18.70, said three people with knowledge of the matter.
Apollo 17 Mission Last man on the Moon - Full Screen QTVR ...
Apollo 17 Mission the last man on the moon - interactive panorama
Glendale Apollo High School girls soccer having breakout season
On Tuesday, Glendale Apollo's girls soccer team skied to No. 2 in the Class 4A Division I power rankings.















