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In the mid-20th century, NASA astronauts like John Glenn, Neil Armstrong, and Buzz Aldrin trained for the groundbreaking Mercury and Apollo missions at a Bucks County naval air development hub’s centrifuge, which spun at 173 miles per hour, mimicking space’s swirling gravitational forces.
Decades later, a boisterous crowd of Democrats gathered at that same site — the piece of space history now retrofitted into a sprawling event hall called The Fuge — embarking on their own ambitious mission: flipping the U.S. House and the Pennsylvania State Senate in the fall.
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