Atlantis has landed ending the manned space shuttle program.
When we had our first sputnik moment we were seized by fears - the Russians were smarter, at least definitely better at math. They were overtaking us. Some - like the ultra conservative Phyllis Shlafly - worked up hysterical claims that the Russians had nuclear bombs orbiting above us.
Americans were unnerved and intrigued by the prospect of space exploration. Rocket was the favorite word of the day. We were seized by a dream of exploration like that of the nineteenth century explorers - Lewis & Clark, Peary, Scott, Shackleton, and the triumphant Amundsen. John Kennedy tapped that spirit. The theme of his administration was the "new frontier" and we went to the moon. The shuttle was an attempt to routinize manned space flight. It didn't work out very well. There wasn't really very much to do up there, I guess. As we look back it is impossible to forget those who died in the effort, particularly Christa McAuliff the school teacher and the six others who died in the Challenger catastrophe.
When we had our first sputnik moment we were seized by fears - the Russians were smarter, at least definitely better at math. They were overtaking us. Some - like the ultra conservative Phyllis Shlafly - worked up hysterical claims that the Russians had nuclear bombs orbiting above us.
Americans were unnerved and intrigued by the prospect of space exploration. Rocket was the favorite word of the day. We were seized by a dream of exploration like that of the nineteenth century explorers - Lewis & Clark, Peary, Scott, Shackleton, and the triumphant Amundsen. John Kennedy tapped that spirit. The theme of his administration was the "new frontier" and we went to the moon. The shuttle was an attempt to routinize manned space flight. It didn't work out very well. There wasn't really very much to do up there, I guess. As we look back it is impossible to forget those who died in the effort, particularly Christa McAuliff the school teacher and the six others who died in the Challenger catastrophe.
1 comment:
It was a wonderful adventure. I covered two of the shuttle launches while I was with CBS - absolutely thrilling. The earth rumbled and rolled beneath my feet. The cloud from the rockets exhaust floated over us. At lift-off the shuttle seemed to move in slow-motion. Post-launch, we flew to Johnson Space Center to cover the flight and, one clear night, the flight path went right over Houston. We all went outside and, with the help of one of the earthbound astronauts, we picked out the light of the shuttle as it flew over. It supposedly dipped its wings to salute the folks at JSC but my eyes couldn't detect the movement. My friend Mark covered every space shot from 1968 on. He retired from CBS last November but on launch morning I got an e-mail from him. CBS kept him on contract to cover this last mission. So glad he could be there. The original space junkie.
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