Popular on TelAve
- Conexwest: Shipping Containers Are Powering the Next Generation of Bitcoin Mining Infrastructure
- New Book Warring From the Standpoint of the Throne Room Calls Believers to Pray From Victory
- $6 Million Funding Secured as Retail Expansion, Operational Streamlining, and Asset-Light Strategy Position the Company for Accelerated Growth $SOWG
- HRC Fertility to Celebrate Grand Opening of New Beverly Hills Location During National Infertility Awareness Week
- American Properties Realty, Inc. Leadership Attends NAHB International Builders' Show in Florida
- Nieuwe standaard in webdesign: Professionele website laten maken voor het MKB vanaf €249 door Websitepioniers
- High-Growth Power Infrastructure Play Targets AI Boom: 1606 Corp. Executes Aggressive Texas Expansion Strategy: 1606 Corp. (Stock Symbol: CBDW) $CBDW
- Homeowner Prep Announces Strategic Language Shift: Replacing "Renters" with "Future Homeowners" to Inspire Wealth-Building Mindsets
- Greg Wier Announces the Release of More Than Just Luck
- The AAA Metamorphosis: How Global Gaming Is Redefining Production Standards
Similar on TelAve
- Su Che Publishing Announces New Children's Book Celebrating Vaisakhi Festival
- Larry R. Wasion's Jump Gate 2: Teleporter Expands the Time Travel Universe with High-Stakes Action and Ethical Dilemmas
- Bruce A. Rosenblat Releases A Pocket Full of Change, a Sharp, Thought-Provoking Book on Growth, Perspective, and Personal Change
- Marcus Boyd Announces Upcoming Children's Book The Royal World of Autism and Expands His Global Advocacy for Autism Awareness
- P-Wave Classics Announces the Publication of The Female Quixote, Volume I, by Charlotte Lennox
- Deborah E. Jones Introduces Emotional Sovereignty, a Powerful New Book on Emotional Mastery, Resilience, and Intentional Living
- On the 296th Anniversary of the Ceremony That Made His Ancestor Emperor, a Cherokee Descendant Publishes the Novel That Restores Him
- The Inner Power of Emotional Self-Leadership
- Dr. Nadene Rose Shares the Secret to True Success: Faith, Obedience, and Divine Purpose
- Larry R. Wasion Highlights Jump Gate I: Time Chair. The Opening Novel in His Expansive Science Fiction Series
A Kickstarter Campaign for "A Cable To The Moon"
TelAve News/10892736
Uncovers the Hidden Apollo Story of a 16-Year-Old Mexican Immigrant Who Built a Spacecraft Test Cable in a Los Angeles Warehouse
LOS ANGELES - TelAve -- In the summer of 1968, a sixteen-year-old girl who had crossed from Tijuana two years earlier spent three months alone in a warehouse in Chatsworth, a neighborhood in Los Angeles, building a hundred-foot electrical test cable for a secretive aerospace job. She was too young and too far removed from positions of power to fully understand the significance of what she was building. Nobody told her it was for the Moon until the day it passed its final inspection.
Her name is Ramona Carrasco Ibarra. She was not an engineer. She was not on anyone's payroll with benefits or a badge. She was a teenager placed through a temp agency, working under a single supervisor in a building so quiet the only sounds were tools and meters. She built the cable while carrying trauma that most adults would not survive, enduring abuse at home during the same months she was performing flawless precision work on the shop floor.
Ramona was building the cable during one of the most turbulent periods of 1968, just weeks after the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy and in a year marked by war, protest, and global upheaval.
The cable she built was a ground test harness for NASA's Acceptance Checkout Equipment, the system used to verify Apollo spacecraft systems before launch. After nine previous candidates failed to pass the interview, Ramona was the tenth, and the one who got the job and finished it. She tested every circuit twice herself. A team of visiting engineers tested it a third time. It passed with no faults. Then she went home, and history forgot her name.
More on TelAve News
Today, Los Angeles writer Guillermo Wightman launches a Kickstarter campaign for A Cable to the Moon, a narrative nonfiction book that traces Ramona's full life, from her childhood in Mexico, to her crossing into the United States, through the abuse and instability she survived as a teenager, into the precision electronics work that placed her inside the Apollo program, and beyond. The campaign seeks funding for final editing, legal review, design, and publication.
The book is not only about the cable. It is about what Ramona did with the rest of her life. How she built a career. How she carried a secret for decades without ever seeking credit, and what it means that a story this extraordinary sat inside a woman who was never asked to tell it.
Part historical investigation, part immigrant story, and part act of restoration, A Cable to the Moon sits at the intersection of migration, labor, gender, memory, and the hidden workforce behind Apollo. It argues that the history of the space race is larger than astronauts, executives, and official archives. It also belongs to the women, immigrants, and working-class laborers whose hands helped turn ambition into achievement.
Wightman, a Colombian American journalist and California State University, Northridge graduate based in Los Angeles, has spent three and a half years researching and writing the book since first hearing Ramona's story at a family gathering in 2022. He developed the manuscript late at night while balancing full-time work and family life.
The project has grown to roughly 42,000 words, supported by extensive interviews, archival research, and technical investigation into Apollo-era spacecraft checkout systems. Both the NASA History Office and the National Archives have reviewed his research and directed the search toward specific Apollo-era record groups where documentation of the cable may survive.
More on TelAve News
"One of the most incredible things for me was discovering that a close family friend I had seen at countless family parties for years was connected to the space race," said Wightman. "I have always loved space, and although I studied journalism, I built my career in sales and marketing. I have always been drawn to unheard stories. What moved me most was the contrast at the center of Ramona's life: a sixteen-year-old who had migrated from Tijuana just two years earlier, who carried deep trauma and was being abused while building the cable, still created something with her hands that helped test the spacecraft tied to Apollo 11. Sometimes reality is more unbelievable than fiction."
The campaign launches at a moment when firsthand witnesses to the Apollo era are disappearing, and when the country is still reckoning with whose stories are preserved, celebrated, or left behind.
As NASA's Artemis II mission marks the first crewed lunar flyby in 50 years, A Cable to the Moon looks back to Apollo to recover one of the human stories left in the shadows of that first great leap. Through her journey, A Cable to the Moon connects Los Angeles, Mexico, and the Moon landing, reminding us that history's greatest moments are built from the quiet efforts of those who rarely see their names in headlines.
Backers can choose from digital editions, signed print copies, special acknowledgments, and exclusive behind-the-scenes material.
Campaign link: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/acabletothemoon/a-cable-to-the-moon-the-immigrant-teen-behind-apollo-11
Her name is Ramona Carrasco Ibarra. She was not an engineer. She was not on anyone's payroll with benefits or a badge. She was a teenager placed through a temp agency, working under a single supervisor in a building so quiet the only sounds were tools and meters. She built the cable while carrying trauma that most adults would not survive, enduring abuse at home during the same months she was performing flawless precision work on the shop floor.
Ramona was building the cable during one of the most turbulent periods of 1968, just weeks after the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy and in a year marked by war, protest, and global upheaval.
The cable she built was a ground test harness for NASA's Acceptance Checkout Equipment, the system used to verify Apollo spacecraft systems before launch. After nine previous candidates failed to pass the interview, Ramona was the tenth, and the one who got the job and finished it. She tested every circuit twice herself. A team of visiting engineers tested it a third time. It passed with no faults. Then she went home, and history forgot her name.
More on TelAve News
- Larry R. Wasion's Jump Gate 2: Teleporter Expands the Time Travel Universe with High-Stakes Action and Ethical Dilemmas
- Bruce A. Rosenblat Releases A Pocket Full of Change, a Sharp, Thought-Provoking Book on Growth, Perspective, and Personal Change
- Marcus Boyd Announces Upcoming Children's Book The Royal World of Autism and Expands His Global Advocacy for Autism Awareness
- Phuket Bike Week Rebrands as Hard Rock Cafe Phuket Bike Week Under Landmark 5-Year Partnership
- L2 Aviation Appoints Tony Bailey as President and Chief Operating Officer
Today, Los Angeles writer Guillermo Wightman launches a Kickstarter campaign for A Cable to the Moon, a narrative nonfiction book that traces Ramona's full life, from her childhood in Mexico, to her crossing into the United States, through the abuse and instability she survived as a teenager, into the precision electronics work that placed her inside the Apollo program, and beyond. The campaign seeks funding for final editing, legal review, design, and publication.
The book is not only about the cable. It is about what Ramona did with the rest of her life. How she built a career. How she carried a secret for decades without ever seeking credit, and what it means that a story this extraordinary sat inside a woman who was never asked to tell it.
Part historical investigation, part immigrant story, and part act of restoration, A Cable to the Moon sits at the intersection of migration, labor, gender, memory, and the hidden workforce behind Apollo. It argues that the history of the space race is larger than astronauts, executives, and official archives. It also belongs to the women, immigrants, and working-class laborers whose hands helped turn ambition into achievement.
Wightman, a Colombian American journalist and California State University, Northridge graduate based in Los Angeles, has spent three and a half years researching and writing the book since first hearing Ramona's story at a family gathering in 2022. He developed the manuscript late at night while balancing full-time work and family life.
The project has grown to roughly 42,000 words, supported by extensive interviews, archival research, and technical investigation into Apollo-era spacecraft checkout systems. Both the NASA History Office and the National Archives have reviewed his research and directed the search toward specific Apollo-era record groups where documentation of the cable may survive.
More on TelAve News
- Pieter Bouterse Studio Founder to Retire After 40+ Years; Seeks Successor to Continue Legacy
- #WeAreGreekWarriors Opening Reception Packs the House
- Mensa Brings National Board Game Competition to Northern Virginia April 16-19
- Special Alert! Highly Undervalued Stock: $317M Revenue in 2025 for Telecom Leader IQSTEL, Inc. (N A S D A Q: IQST)
- Igniting High-Growth Transformation With Launch of XMax AI Subsidiary, Leveraging Global Furniture Dominance to Enter Explosive AI Markets: XMax Inc
"One of the most incredible things for me was discovering that a close family friend I had seen at countless family parties for years was connected to the space race," said Wightman. "I have always loved space, and although I studied journalism, I built my career in sales and marketing. I have always been drawn to unheard stories. What moved me most was the contrast at the center of Ramona's life: a sixteen-year-old who had migrated from Tijuana just two years earlier, who carried deep trauma and was being abused while building the cable, still created something with her hands that helped test the spacecraft tied to Apollo 11. Sometimes reality is more unbelievable than fiction."
The campaign launches at a moment when firsthand witnesses to the Apollo era are disappearing, and when the country is still reckoning with whose stories are preserved, celebrated, or left behind.
As NASA's Artemis II mission marks the first crewed lunar flyby in 50 years, A Cable to the Moon looks back to Apollo to recover one of the human stories left in the shadows of that first great leap. Through her journey, A Cable to the Moon connects Los Angeles, Mexico, and the Moon landing, reminding us that history's greatest moments are built from the quiet efforts of those who rarely see their names in headlines.
Backers can choose from digital editions, signed print copies, special acknowledgments, and exclusive behind-the-scenes material.
Campaign link: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/acabletothemoon/a-cable-to-the-moon-the-immigrant-teen-behind-apollo-11
Source: Vesper Public Relations
0 Comments
Latest on TelAve News
- InterMountain Announces the Opening of TownePlace Suites Reno
- MAG Magna Corp Targets Trillion-Dollar Opportunity by Tokenizing Rare Earth Assets Critical to AI, EVs, & Defense: MAG Magna Corp.: Stock Symbol: MGNC
- SnapTax Launches AI-Powered Tax Planning Platform for Freelancers and 1099 Workers — Now Free for 90 Days
- Congressional Roundtable Exposes Mental Health Crisis: More Spending and Treatment, Worse Results – CCHR Demands Accountability
- Attorney Joseph C. Kreps Files Lawsuit to Stop Alabama State Board of Pharmacy's Unlawful "Revenue-First" Rulemaking
- NAIDOC Week Australia 2026 | 50 Years Deadly - Celebrates Culture, Resilience, and Global Connection
- PlanetAI Nature Space (PNS), certificadora Europea, lanza su plataforma EUDR-PNS Ready basada en IA, satélites y trazabilidad blockchain
- Rhealize Strategic Talent Advisory Co-Founder Dona Baker to Speak at DisruptHR YEG 15.0 in Edmonton on Hiring Innovation
- Instant IP Teams: Bringing Enterprise-Grade Collaboration to IP Protection at the Speed of Thought
- UK Financial Ltd Confirms CATEX Exchange Integration of SMPRA and LTNS 1 Ahead of Compliance-Based Trading Activation
- Ashikaga Flower Park's "Great Wisteria Festival 2026"
- Architect of Neurodiversity Will Lead the First U.S. Team of Autistic Children to the "Genius Cup" in Hiroshima, Japan, in 2027
- Deborah E. Jones Introduces Emotional Sovereignty, a Powerful New Book on Emotional Mastery, Resilience, and Intentional Living
- New Research Identifies "The Busy Effect": 89% of Americans Want a Laid-Back Vacation — Only 15% Actually Achieve It
- Alchemy 43 Appoints Shane Smith as CEO to Drive Operational Performance and Scalable Growth
- Best Spiritual Healing, Meditation & Retreats in Sedona — Rise Meditation Helps You Find and Book Transformational Experiences
- $16 Billion Market by 2034 in Underwater Drones Presents Huge Opportunity for AI-Powered Autonomous Vehicle Serving Defense & Commercial Customers
- Appliance EMT Named Among Jacksonville's Top 3 Appliance Repair Companies by ThreeBestRated®
- Geekstorians Nominated For Best History Podcast In The 30th Annual Webby Awards
- Quality Water Treatment Unveils SoftPro Elite HE Water Softener for City Water, Setting a New Standard in Residential Water Treatment