Moon Bound [electronic resource] :Choosing and Preparing NASA's Lunar Astronauts / by Colin Burgess.
by Burgess, Colin [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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MAIN LIBRARY | TL787-4050.22 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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TA1637-1638 Video Analysis and Repackaging for Distance Education | TA1-2040 Antifreeze Solutions in Home Fire Sprinkler Systems | HD72-88 Dynamics of Industry Growth | TL787-4050.22 Moon Bound | HF4999.2-6182 Encyclopedia of Creativity, Invention, Innovation and Entrepreneurship | RC86-88.9 ICU Resource Allocation in the New Millennium | TJ210.2-211.495 Proceedings of the 2012 International Conference on Cybernetics and Informatics |
Part I Announcements and volunteers -- Screening the applicants -- The finalists -- The "Next Nine" -- Settling in -- Part II The boy from Barren Run -- Answering the call -- A few exceptionally good men -- The Fourteen -- Patience and Persistence -- "Before this decade is out" -- For some, the glory -- Appendices -- Bibliography -- Index.
Often lost in the shadow of the first group of astronauts for the Mercury missions, the second and third groups included the leading figures for NASA's activities for the following two decades. “Moon Bound” complements the author’s recently published work, “Selecting the Mercury Seven” (2011), extending the story of the men who helped to launch human spaceflight and broaden the American space program. Although the initial 1959 group became known as the legendary pioneering Mercury astronauts, the astronauts of Groups 2 and 3 gave us many household names. Sixteen astronauts from both groups traveled to the Moon in Project Apollo, with several actually walking on the Moon, one of them being Neil Armstrong. This book draws on interviews to tell the astronauts' personal stories and recreate the drama of that time. It describes the process by which they were selected as astronauts and explains how the criteria had changed since the first group. “Moon Bound” is divided into two parts, recounting the biographies relating to the nine astronauts from NASA’s Group 2 in the first part, and the fourteen finalists in Group 3 in the second part. The stories of both selection groups are narrated through the experiences of four finalists with interesting backgrounds. One of these men is Al Rupp of the USAF who, as a West Point cadet, cheekily helped to steal the Navy mascot goat prior to the annual Army versus Navy game in 1953, thus achieving legendary status in the game’s history. Rupp was killed in a plane crash just two years after being named as a finalist for Group 3. The service career of naval aviator John Yamnicky was also very much the equal of other finalists, but he was killed on September 11, 2001, as he was a passenger on hijacked Flight 77, which was flown into the Pentagon. At the end of the work there are several chapters on how these candidates were prepped for their missions.
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