Read "Live From Cape Canaveral": Covering the Space Race, From Sputnik to Today Online
Authors: Jay Barbree
Tags: #State & Local, #Technology & Engineering, #20th Century, #21st Century, #General, #United States, #Military, #Aeronautics & Astronautics, #History
The good news is NASA has a devoted and strong man at its helm in Dr. Michael Griffin. He told my NBC colleague Tom Costello, “The space station is on the footpath towards becoming a space-faring nation. If we’re going to go to Mars, if we’re going to go beyond to live on other planetary surfaces and use what we find there and bend it to our will just as the pilgrims did, we must take all these steps to become a space-faring nation. I want that for the American people—I want that for my grandchildren.”
I find myself chomping at the bit to go. It’s the excitement of Columbus’s voyage, of the wagon trains west. The crossing of the space ocean to younger, more promising planets is the future of humankind if our species is to survive. The only foundation that will not sink beneath our feet is knowledge.
After fifty years on the job, I find myself satisfied and grate
ful and pleased with a life well spent. Life is indeed good, and we should all cherish it. Knowing that my days are numbered, I find myself missing all those good friends and loved ones that have gone on before. You have found their stories in these pages and in a way, I’m looking forward to following, meeting up with them again. But I am sad that I won’t be shouting into an NBC microphone about the building of a lunar colony or the start of a months-long journey to Mars.
God, what exciting times they will be!
What a future for those who will live it—those who will be going and those who will be staying as the flotilla sails for the fourth planet. How I would like to be there!
And don’t count me out just yet! Astronauts are to return to the moon in this century’s second decade. If my flesh makes it, I will be in my eighties. If not, my spirit won’t be far away.
Advanced Research Projects Agency ARPA)
Aldrin, Buzz
Apollo 11
mission.
See Apollo 11
celebrating
Apollo 13
return
Gemini 12
mission
mastering spacewalking
moonwalk
notified of lunar mission
photograph
Anders, Bill
Anderson, Mike
Angotti, Joe
Antares
Apollo 1
countdown
fire inside
Frank Sinatra and
funerals after
futile attempts to save men
hatch problem
incompetence leading to disaster
investigation after
Lovell prayer thanking crew of
Apollo 7
Apollo 8
Christmas message
communication blackout and return
crew
descriptions of moon/Earth from
first orbit around moon
onboard television coverage
reading from Genesis (Bible)
reason for launch time
return to Earth orbit
splashdown
transcript anecdote
Apollo 9
Apollo 10
Apollo 11
countdown
crew advised of lunar landing mission
forces on crew
if
prerequisites
Jimmy Stewart watching
linking
Eagle
and
Columbia
minute following liftoff
Apollo 11 (cont).
moon landing
orbiting Earth
prelaunch preparations
public frenzy before
splashdown parties
thunderous liftoff
trans-lunar injection
See also
moonwalk (first)
Apollo 12
Apollo 13
in circumlunar orbit
cold and lonely astronauts
Deke Slayton managing problems
diagnosing problems
explosion aboard
fuel cell problem
Lovell’s perspective
lunar module lifeboat
as NASA’s finest hour
Nixon’s celebratory visit after
prayers and support for
predicament of
preparation for reentry
re-engineering carbon dioxide scrubbers
reentry
return contingency
return to command module
shutting down systems
sleep for crew
splashdown
Apollo 14
Alan Shepard leading
Cone Crater excursion
docking/return of
leaving moon
lunar rickshaw of
moon samples
moonwalks
Nixon endorsing flight of
views of Earth
Apollo 15
Apollo 16
Apollo 17
Apollo program.
See
Project Apollo;
specific Apollo missions
Apollo-Soyuz
birth of
building equipment for
Deke Slayton and
docking in space
engendering U.S./Soviet trust
importance of
launch of
meals on
shaking hands
Aquarius
See also Apollo 13
Armstrong, Neil Bob Button pilot error and
celebrating
Apollo 13
return
controlling reentry problem
as first civilian astronaut
Gemini 8
mission
as leading candidate
for first moon landing
moon landing
moonwalk
NASA hiring
notified of lunar mission
See also Apollo 11
AstroChimp.
See
chimpanzees in space
astronauts early challenges
first civilian.
See
Armstrong, Neil
qualifications and screening
selection
women and, stories
See also
Gemini Nine; Mercury Seven;
specific astronauts
Atlantis
Atlas 10B
(Project Score)
Aurora Seven
Bailey, Terry
Bales, Steve
Barbree, Jay breaking
Challenger
story
Christmas Eve with John Glenn
enduring test chambers
family taking more attention
flying Messerschmitt plane
future vision
Jimmy Carter and
losing son
love of flying
military background
move to Merritt Island
photographs
radio broadcasting
reflections on career and space program
sudden death experience.
See
sudden death, of author telling whoppers
Barbree, Jo Reisinger
handling moon-launch crank callers
losing son
meeting/marrying author
photograph
responding to sudden death
watching
Challenger
disaster
Bean, Alan
Beatty, Morgan
Beckman, Dan
Bedard, Chris
Beddingfield, Sam
Benedict, Howard
Bloom, David
Bluford, Guion
Borman, Frank
Apollo 8
mission
on
Apollo 12
fate
Gemini 7
mission
investigating
Apollo 1
fire
NASA hiring
Brand, Vance
Brinkley, David
.
See also Huntley-Brinkley Report
Broad, Bill
Brokaw, Tom
Challenger
disaster coverage
Columbia
disaster coverage
Hubble repair coverage
John Glenn return coverage
Brown, Curt
Brown, Dave
Browne, Don
Bubb, Mary
Button, Bob
Bykovsky, Valery F.
Caidin, Martin coauthoring Titov book
flying with author
N–1 information
novel inspiring space rescue
photograph
as reference for author
Russian sources
secret space book
Yuri Gagarin sharing memories with
Cain, LeRoy
Cape Canaveral history/ecological makeup
naming of
Capra, Frank
Carpenter, (Malcolm) Scott
Carr, Jerry
Carter, Jimmy
Caskey, Martha
Casper
Cavanaugh, Brian
Cernan, Jim
Chaffee, Roger
Challenger
debut
Challenger
disaster
author experience
black smoke indicator
breaking story of
breakup statistics
Christa McAuliffe and
countdown
countdown delay
crew photograph
crew surviving blast
crew unaware of problem
death of crew, unknown cause
flames and destruction
liftoff
O-ring seal problem
premonitions of
press reports
reactions to
recovering remains
weather conditions
Chancellor, John
Charlie Brown
Chawla, Kalpana
chimpanzees in space
Christmas mission.
See Apollo
Civil Rights Act of 1964
Clark, Laurel
Clemons, Ed
Cocoa, Florida, early days
Coledan, Stefano
Collins, Eileen
Collins, Mike
Apollo 11
mission
Gemini 10
mission
on Presidential Goodwill Tour
Columbia
(
Apollo 11
command ship)
Columbia
(Shuttle) first mission
last mission
See also Columbia(Shu
ttle) disaster pre-launch security breaches
rollout of
second mission
Columbia
(Shuttle) disaster
countdown/liftoff
flight safety risk assessment
investigation after
Israeli on board
known foam risks
losing foam
ominous signs
planned mission
reentry and disintegration
search-and-recovery for
what-ifs
Conrad, Charles “Pete”
Apollo 12
mission
celebrating
Apollo 13
return
Gemini 5
mission
“honoring” Mercury Seven
NASA hiring
Cooper, (Leroy) Gordon
accolades to
“buzzing” incident
cheating death
cleared for Mercury flight
Deke Slayton and
drag races
filling pool with fish
in
Gemini
image and qualifications
Mercury flight
photographs
practical jokes
saving Mercury mission
traffic-cop incident
corned beef sandwich prank
Costello, Tom
Couric, Katie
Covey, Dick
Crippen, Robert “Crip,”
Cronkite, Walter
Destiny Laboratory
disasters and near-disasters
Apollo 1
Aurora Seven
Friendship Seven
Gemini 8
reentry
Mercury-Redstone rocket
Mir
fire and docking problem
Polaris launch
Soviet Voshkod
Vanguard
See also Apollo 13
;
Challenger
disaster;
Columbia
(Shuttle) disaster
Discoverer spy ship
Discovery
flying after
Challenger disaster
flying after
Columbia
disaster
John Glenn returning to space on
releasing Hubble
station keeping with
Mir
docking in space, first
Douglas, Bill
drag races
Duke, Charlie
Eagle
(
Apollo 11
lunar module)
Eagle
(Russian ship)
early days
Eisenhower, Dwight David message in space
responding to
Sputnik
pressure
response to
Vanguard
failure
Sputnik
beating U.S. to space and
Endeavour
(
Apollo 15
)
Endeavour
(Shuttle)
Engle, Joe
Enos, the chimpanzee
equal rights battle
equigravisphere
Evans, Ron
Explorer 1
Faith Seven
Falcon
Farley, Jim
firefly-like lights
firsts American black astronaut
American in orbit.
See Friendship Seven
American satellite.
See Juno 1
American woman astronaut
American/Soviet mission.
See Apollo-
Soyuz
docking in space
landing on moon
man in space
moonwalk
orbit around moon
rendezvous in space
Russian satellite.
See Sputnik
Shuttle mission
spacewalk
women in space
See also
McAuliffe, Sharon Christa
Fitzgerald, Bill