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Bill Kaysing (July 31, 1922 [not verified in body] – April 21, 2005 [not verified in body]) was an American author and conspiracy theorist who claimed that the Apollo Moon landings between 1969 and 1972 were hoaxes.
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"Telescopic Tracking of the Apollo Lunar Missions" at Bill Keel's Space History Bits "Bezos Expeditions recovers pieces of Apollo 11 rockets" by Jay Greene for CNET (March 20, 2013), contradicting Bill Kaysing's published claim that genuine Rocketdyne F-1 engines were not used.
Kaysing, a librarian, had nothing intelligent to say about the moon landings, and it is an insult to pretend otherwise. Logicman1966 ( talk ) 03:27, 13 June 2008 (UTC) [ reply ] Please do not continue to add unsubstantiated comments and/or claims to the article with a sheer purpose of skewing the content of the article in a sole and blatant ...
The notion that the Apollo Moon landings were hoaxes perpetrated by NASA and other agencies has appeared many times in popular culture. Not all references to Moon landing conspiracy theories are in support of them, but the ideas expressed in them have become a popular meme to reference, both in humor and sincerity.
Bill Kaysing, controversial American writer known for first advancing the Moon landing conspiracy theory, in Chicago (d. 2005) Hank Bauer , baseball player and manager, in East St. Louis, Illinois (d. 2007);
Bill Kaysing – founder of the Moon landing conspiracy movement Ray Kellogg – special effects artist and film director ( The Green Berets ) Gene Kelly – Oscar-nominated actor, filmmaker, dancer, singer ( Singin' in the Rain )
Local Indigenous people historically used the warm mineral springs. [5] Later, it became part of a Mexican Land Grant as a Rancho of California. The springs were later discovered by Dr. Edward Bale in 1848 who then opened a resort in 1852, [6] although another account by the St. Helena Historical Society states that the springs were discovered by John York. [7]