back to article It's been 25 years since NASA astronaut John Glenn's geriatric jaunt around Earth

This week marks 25 years since NASA astronaut John Glenn returned to space aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery and became the oldest person to orbit the Earth. Glenn was flown on STS-95, nearly 37 years after becoming the first American to orbit the Earth during his 1962 Friendship 7 mission. Following his first mission, Glenn …

  1. Spazturtle Silver badge

    "The current NASA administrator, Bill Nelson, was flown on Columbia as part of the STS-61C crew in 1986. Nelson's mission was the last before the Challenger accident."

    Nelson lobbying his way onto Columbia is one of the causes of the Challenger disaster. They had to bump a science specialist from Columbia to Challenger to make room for him which then caused a delay to the research which they had said would be done by a certain date, this caused NASA to come under pressure to 'catch up' and accelerate the shuttle launch schedule so they could get everything back on track.

    1. UCAP Silver badge

      Nelson lobbying his way onto Columbia is one of the causes of the Challenger disaster

      I think that's stretching it just a little bit. The underlying cause of the Challenger disaster was NASA's increasingly laissez-faire attitude to the risks associated with spaceflight which resulted in STS-51-L launching despite suspect O-ring seals on the SRBs (as evidenced from films of previous shuttle launches that appeared to show leaks followed up by damage assessments of the seals after the SRBs had been recovered) and in weather conditions that NASA had been informed (by Morton Thiokol engineers) was well outside of the operational specifications for the o-rings and hence might compromise the seals even more.

    2. John H Woods

      Challenger accident...

      I personally find it more believable that PowerPoint is responsible: https://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard. I realize the example is Columbia, but I'm pretty sure that the lesson is the same.

  2. Winkypop Silver badge
    Alien

    25 years you say

    Still impressive.

    Up with this kind of thing.

  3. RosslynDad

    Call-sign

    Apparently Bill Nelson's call-sign on this mission was "Baggage". Ouch.

    1. Flocke Kroes Silver badge

      Re: Call-sign

      The crew used the nickname "Ballast". I cannot find any evidence of a call-sign.

      I do not think he can beat former senator Richard Shelby's contribution to space flight but he is a strong contender for second from last.

  4. Eclectic Man Silver badge

    Yuri Gagarin

    The first ever human in space only flew once, and was similarly considered too much of a national icon to be risked again. He did lots of appearances and died in a air crash in 1968.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuri_Gagarin

  5. Marty McFly Silver badge
    Pint

    Godspeed John Glenn

    Despite the thoroughly analyzed and now well-understood problems with the Shuttle system, Glenn's first flight was even riskier. Literally atop a rocket designed to serve as an ICBM. A recycled design that was never intended to be 100% perfect because its mission did not require it.

    With the huevos to sit atop that rocket and make a solo trip to space, I think Glenn deserved the victory lap - regardless of the political wrangling it took to get there.

    1. Philo T Farnsworth Bronze badge

      Re: Godspeed John Glenn

      Not only a rocket designed to serve as an ICBM but, as one astronaut purportedly quipped, "My life depended on 150,000 pieces of equipment – each bought from the lowest bidder[1]."

      In my opinion, Glen deserved another ride and I'm glad he got one, stunt or no.

      As a side note, my partner's father was an electrical engineer in the "space race" era and in one of his jobs he designed a component, albeit a minor one -- a thermistor, if memory serves, for the Apollo command module.

      She claims that her dad bit his fingernails to the quick every time, from launch to splashdown, worried that, beyond the best of his abilities, he'd made some mistake that would jeapordize the mission and the crew.

      _____________

      [1] It may have been Alan Shepard or Glenn himself but there appears to be no definitive source for the quote.

      1. Phones Sheridan Silver badge
        Joke

        Re: Godspeed John Glenn

        I always attributed it to Steve Buscemi!

        https://youtu.be/CuAUE58MQt4?si=s7h3l7GF0qtj4bYB

  6. Steve Crook
    Coat

    Career trajectory

    Bill Nelson. All the way from Bebop deluxe to NASA administrator. Oh, what's that you say...

  7. hittitezombie

    I'm happy to send Trump into space, and have an accident in his space suit.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      A Trump dump, if you will?

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