Spaceman
Sometimes an entire era is represented by a single career.
- By Geoffrey Little
- Air & Space magazine, September 2005
Waiting inside the Gemini 3 capsule on March 23, 1965, John Young was about to embark on the first of six voyages into spaceseven if you count Apollo 16's liftoff from the moon.
Johnson Space Center/NASA
John Young begins one of his last full weeks at NASA by heading to the regular Monday morning “all pilots” meeting at Houston’s Johnson Space Center. Wiry and fit at 74, a bit lower to the ground than he used to be, Young moves through the center with a determined gait. On duty, he usually wears a nondescript gray suit; off duty, he’s at home in a big black Stetson, denim jacket, and jeans, clothes that harken back to his boyhood in the farm country of Orlando, Florida. It’s December 2004, and the six-time astronaut, who has been to the moon twice, has announced he’ll retire at the end of the month.
In the astronaut office’s meeting room, it’s all business. Most of the active-duty astronaut pilots are present, including Alvin Drew, 42, a former Air Force pilot who was born the same year Young joined NASA. The main topic today, as it has been for nearly two years, is the shuttle’s return to flight after the loss of Columbia and its crew in February 2003. Young stands up to speak, and the room goes quiet—what Drew calls “the E.F. Hutton effect.” “When he talks at a meeting, any side chatter just stops,” Drew says. “He doesn’t say anything unless it’s important.”
Drew recalls another such briefing, in the dark days right after Columbia. “The number-one job of any astronaut,” he remembers Young saying, “is to keep any other astronaut from getting killed.” Like other younger members of NASA’s space corps, Drew looks up to Young as “the corporate knowledge…. He knows what mistakes we’ve made, what mistakes we’ve made twice, and he’s there to keep us from making those mistakes a third time, or a fourth time.”
One of Drew’s first encounters with the veteran astronaut was in January 2000, when he was applying to NASA. Among the first things on the agenda was a briefing from John Young, “to give you a reality check.” Young wasted no time, showing some numbers on an overhead projector to the group of 19 candidates. “You have a 1-in-258 chance of a catastrophic failure on any given shuttle mission,” he told them. Drew wasn’t sure whether that was good or bad. Then Young put up risk numbers for air combat, “things like fighters over the top of Hanoi.” Drew was surprised by Young’s next remark: “Flying one shuttle mission is as dangerous as any 60 combat missions you would fly.”
Drew, a veteran of 90 helicopter combat missions in Panama and the first Iraq war, remembers thinking, “These were not generic missions where nobody’s shooting at you, but real ‘no kidding there’s bullets flying’-type combat missions.” Young’s statistics didn’t deter anyone in the class, he says, but it made them think.
Today in the December meeting, with the return to flight on everyone’s mind, Young is going to make them think again.
“Who here thinks the culture at NASA has changed?”
After a slight pause, Young asks for a show of hands, looking around the room at the veteran and rookie astronauts. Not one hand goes up.
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Comments (2)
i have followed nasa activities my entire life and john young was always one of my all-time favorite astronauts. in may, 2008 i attended a luncheon at the kennedy space center's visitors complex during hall of fame induction ceremony fesitivities. john young and charlie duke of apollo 16 spoke and answered questions from the lunchon crowd.
guenter wendt who just passed away last week was also there. we had the opportunity to have a photo taken with guenter. that photo ironically was taken exactly two years to the day that he died.
we also had the good fortune of being able to sit at a table right in front of john and charlie on stage.
on a side note, i also met mike mullane who flew three shuttle missions. in his book "riding rockets", mike describes some "uncomfortable" meetings with both john young and george abbey, his superiors. he definitely had strong feelings about young.
whatever happened between mullane and young was their business - i still have very high respect for both of them.
Posted by RON POWELL on May 11,2010 | 11:18 PM
"Every man dies, not every man TRULY lives."
--William Ross Wallace
Posted by jose fco. altamirano henaro on May 17,2011 | 02:45 PM