T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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408.1 | Patches described in ALL WE DID WAS FLY TO THE MOON | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Tue May 09 1989 12:01 | 23 |
| Author Dick Lattimer has come out with a "mini-history" of the
U.S. space program from MERCURY to SKYLAB entitled ALL WE DID WAS FLY
TO THE MOON. The subtitle reads: "A Mini-History of America's Manned
Moon Program Including America's Astronaut Patches and Callsigns."
There are excellent reproductions of the space mission patches,
including descriptions by the astronauts on how and why they were
designed; and even though the history may be "mini", I still found
it interesting and quite informative. There are also details on
touring the various space centers, and where the U.S. manned spacecraft
are currently located (as of 1988).
To order the book, send a check for $9.95 plus $2 postage and
handling to:
THE WHISPERING EAGLE PRESS
4300 N.W. 23rd Avenue
Post Office Box 1702-14
Gainesville, Florida 32602
U.S.A.
Florida residents add 6% Sales Tax.
|
408.2 | | SHAOLN::DENSMORE | Holy owned and operated! | Wed May 10 1989 13:48 | 4 |
| This book (and more) are available at the Boston Museum of Science store
and, I assume, at many other museums.
Mike
|
408.3 | Other NASA collectibles (and not) | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Jan 17 1992 12:39 | 68 |
| Article: 39332
From: [email protected] (Mike Smithwick)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Re: Moon Material Ownership
Date: 16 Jan 92 21:30:12 GMT
Organization: SF-Bay Public-Access Unix
In article <[email protected]>
[email protected] (Henry Spencer) writes:
>In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (Urban Fredriksson) writes:
>>... NASA has also sold
>>or given samples to organizations in many countries, so I'm
>>quite sure you could legally buy samples from somewhere.
>
>NASA hasn't sold any of the samples; they are not for sale, to anyone
>at any price. The few that went to museums etc. almost certainly had
>strings attached. Samples distributed for research that does not
>destroy them must be returned afterwards.
[]
>Mind you, I expect there are small amounts in private hands here and there.
>If by no other means, I suspect that some of the experimenters using samples
>in destructive procedures might not have destroyed quite all of what they got.
>But I'm not aware of any legitimate private ownership of Apollo material.
>--
>"Breakthrough ideas are not | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
>from teams." -- Hans von Ohain | [email protected] utzoo!henry
NASA is in general, very tight on space souveniers. After each shuttle
mission for instance, all of the flight documentation must be
accounted for and is in turn locked up to prevent theft. Imagine if
someone had a 300 page Flight plan, it could very easily be turned
into 150 very nice and saleable items.
The only things they officially approve of are those which the astros
can fit inside their personal preference kits, or special additional
things (such as envelopes or flags) requested by the govt. I believe
the crew members, or at least the one time payload specialists may
keep their flight suits. Also, special items are given to people as
gifts for their service to the program. (Remember that John Glenn's
first words after ignition in his 1962 Mercury flight were "roger,
liftoff and the clock is operating". I met the guy who has the clock.
He was chief of crew training up through ASTP in 1975).
I have a number of space items here recovered from surplus stores.
Several of which I am convinced flew to the Moon, (and down to the
surface in one case), but all of the ID tags have been taken off to
lessen their value on the collectors market.
Regarding the Moon samples, these would no doubt be the hottest items,
so NASA must take very draconian measures to discourage collectors.
And doing so can go a long way to minimize theft from the research
labs studying them. After all, half the fun of owning something like
that is to brag about it :-). If you can't own it legally, the appeal
goes way down. Remember the guy who boasted about having a tile from
Challanger? The FBI visited him very quickly.
There was an article in a recent Astronomy magazine (Jan. 1992) about
the only private individual in the world to legally own a Moon rock.
Robert Haag is a professional meteorite collector, and after returning
from Australia with about 600 pounds of possible meteorites, he found
one which seemed different than the others. He sent it in to the Lunar
and Planetary Laboratory for tests which confirmed that it was lunar
basalt. The article went on to say that there are a total now of 12
known lunar meteorites.
--
Mike Smithwick - ames!zorch!mike
|
408.4 | nit | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Jan 17 1992 13:34 | 3 |
| I remember John Glenn's first words as being "...and the clock is
running."
John Sauter
|
408.5 | | DECWIN::FISHER | I *hate* questionnaires--Worf | Sun Jan 19 1992 16:15 | 5 |
| Gee, I thought it was "the clock is (or has) started". Oh well...we
get the idea.
Burns
|
408.6 | Who said what? | TROOA::SKLEIN | Nulli Secundus | Sun Jan 19 1992 22:49 | 10 |
|
Re: last few
I didn't think that the quote was attributed to Glenn, rather Shepard.
So I looked it up. I have that Shepard's first words were "Roger, lift-off
and the clock is started". The first words uttered by Glenn were "The clock
is operating. We're under way!".
Susan
|
408.7 | thanks | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Jan 20 1992 10:16 | 5 |
| re: .6
Thanks for looking this up. Clearly my memory has faded with time.
I cannot now distinguish the Sheppard flight from the Glenn flight.
John Sauter
|
408.8 | | STAR::HUGHES | Captain Slog | Mon Jan 20 1992 18:00 | 12 |
| It was Shepard. According to 'Manned Spaceflight' (Baker, 1985), the
quote is "Ah roger, lift-off and the clock has started".
If I remember correctly, the the clock in question had been a source of
problems during testing and Shepard was telling the support crew that
it actually worked for a change. The press jumped on it and it became a
sort of in joke.
One of the odd things that history records. Imagine if Neil Armstrong's
first words as he stepped off the LM were "Ooops!".
gary
|
408.9 | | HELIX::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Jan 21 1992 00:12 | 18 |
| Oddly enough, Armstrong was worried about saying "Ooops", but it was just
after liftoff, not on the Moon. As I remember in Collins book "Carrying the
Fire" he mentioned that as commander flying in the left seat, Armstrong had
access to a attitude control stick that was set up during launch so that in the
event of an emergency it could activate the escape tower. By turning and moving
the stick, the escape tower would pull the command module away from the Saturn
V / service module stack. Armstrong was afraid that he would bump the stick and
be remembered for saying "oops" as the command module flew away from the launch
vehicle.
By the way, I highly recommend Collins' book. It picks up where Tom Wolf's
"Right Stuff" leaves off and tells the story from the astronauts point of view
of the Gemini program, the early Apollo flights, right through Apollo 11.
Now to get back on track, what did Gus Grissom say just after liftoff on the
2nd Mercury flight?
George
|
408.10 | My guess..... | STRATA::PHILLIPS | Music of the spheres. | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:09 | 16 |
| Re. .9
Hmmmm, I'll hafta check my Time-Life recording to be sure...
I believe Grissom's flight began like this:
Grissom: "This is Liberty Bell Seven; the clock is started."
Shepard [CAPCOM]: "Loud and clear, Jose - don't cry too much!"
Grissom: "Okey-doke ... (it's) a nice ride up till now...."
--Eric--
P.S. 100 quatloos to anyone who can elaborate on the "Jose" reference.
;^) ;^) ;^) ;^)
|
408.11 | | FASDER::ASCOLARO | Not Short, Vertically Challenged | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:31 | 6 |
| I guess, I get 100 quatloos, although it isn't even hard.
Jose Himinez was an 'astronaut' skit on Ed Sullivan. I'm too young,
but apparently it was quite humorous.
Tony
|
408.12 | | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:50 | 10 |
| I can, but I can't spell (or correctly recall) the details.
Jose refers to a character "Jose Himenez"(?) created by a hispanic comic
(Bill ?). He was a real favorite of the original 7 astronauts, and especially
of Grissom. [I'll probably be unable to get to sleep tonight trying to
fill in the details ... *thanks*]
- dave
|
408.13 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DCU -- I'm making REAL CHOICES | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:53 | 3 |
|
The "Jose Jiminez" comedian was (is) Bill Dana.
|
408.14 | | IAMNRA::SULLIVAN | Hang on, here we goooooooo! | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:56 | 8 |
| I think the comic's name was Bill Dana.
I recall, though it could be getting mixed up with the movie "The Right Stuff",
that it was Shepard that was known for immitations of Bill Dana's act.
I am old enough to remember (grumble).
-SES
|
408.15 | Bill Dana | CXO3L1::KOWTOW::J_MARSH | | Mon Apr 13 1992 19:48 | 4 |
| Bill Dana even had his own TV show for awhile. One of the regulars on
the show was Don Adams (This was before "Get Smart").
Now I feel really old...
|
408.16 | "My name Jose Jimenez..." | STRATA::PHILLIPS | Music of the spheres. | Tue Apr 14 1992 09:03 | 35 |
| Re. last few
Congratulations! Your Provider is pleased with your performances! ;^)
To give a bit of background, comedy writer Bill Dana created the
character Jose Jimenez as part of his nightclub act. Early in the
space program, Mr. Dana wrote a sketch with Jose Jimenez as "The
Reluctant Astronaut" - a wistful, please-don't-send-ME Hispanic
pilot who was pretty much the antithesis of the "right-stuff" types.
The "Reluctant Astronaut" sketch was successful enough in nightclubs
that it became the subject of a Capitol record album (and led to the
Ed Sullivan appearance that was seen in the movie "The Right Stuff").
Somewhere along the way, it was Al Shepard who discovered Bill Dana
and adopted Jose as the unofficial "Eighth Astronaut" - to relieve
tension and provide a laugh where needed.
I have a photo in a Time-Life album showing Bill Dana in a nightclub;
John Glenn is to his left holding a microphone (obviously doing the
part of the "reporter") and to his right are Al Shepard, Deke Slayton
and Wally Schirra cracking up over some comment of Bill's. It's price-
less!
Before we return you to the rathole in progress, be advised that Bill
Dana (and NOT Don Adams) was responsible for the phrases "Would you
believe..?" and "Sorry about that..." that became trademarks of the
show "Get Smart!"
Grins.
--Eric--
Reporter: "I've been noticing this, Mr. Jimenez. What is this called,
a 'crash helmet'?"
Jose: (pause) "....oooooh, I HOPE not...."
|
408.17 | Space Patches Club | VERGA::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Wed Sep 09 1992 21:19 | 5 |
| Space Patch Collector's Club
P.O. Box 17310
Pittsburg, PA 15235-0310
U.S.A.
|