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- Newsgroups: sci.space.news
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- From: yee@atlas.arc.nasa.gov (Peter Yee)
- Subject: Stafford receives Congressional Space Medal of Honor [Release 93-14] (Forwarded)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.214914.25271@news.arc.nasa.gov>
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- Reply-To: yee@atlas.arc.nasa.gov (Peter Yee)
- Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1993 21:49:14 GMT
- Approved: sci-space-news@ames.arc.nasa.gov
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-
- Jim McCulla
- Headquarters, Washington, D.C. January 19, 1993
- (Phone: 202/358-1600)
-
- RELEASE: 93-14
-
- STAFFORD RECEIVES CONGRESSIONAL SPACE MEDAL OF HONOR
-
- Thomas P. Stafford, a pioneer NASA astronaut who commanded
- the first flight of the lunar module to the moon as well as the
- American crew that rendezvoused with a Soviet spacecraft in 1975 to
- improve relations between the two nations, was awarded the
- Congressional Space Medal of Honor today at the direction of
- President Bush.
-
- The award -- the highest that can be given for space exploration
- -- was presented by Vice President Quayle at a ceremony in the Old
- Executive Office Building, Washington, D.C.
-
- "This is the greatest honor of my life. I am very proud to have
- contributed to our nation's future in space and I am deeply grateful for
- the opportunity to have participated in the beginning of America's
- venture into the new and endless frontier," said Stafford who retired
- from the Air Force as a lieutenant general in 1979.
-
- The citation that accompanied the medal lauds the NASA
- pioneer for "exceptional meritorious efforts and contributions to the
- welfare of the nation and mankind."
-
- "He continues to serve the nation in charting a future vision for
- our space program.
-
- "From the infancy of the United States space program, through
- its unprecedented achievements, to its extraordinary future potential
- for mankind, Lieutenant General Thomas P. Stafford, USAF (Retired),
- has left an enduring legacy."
-
- Stafford flew both the Gemini VI and IX missions in 1965 and
- 1966, during which he developed rendezvous principles and
- techniques that remain in use today.
-
- On Apollo 10, he commanded the first flight of the lunar module
- to the moon and performed the first rendezvous and docking in lunar
- orbit. During that mission Stafford and Eugene Cernan descended to
- within 8 miles of the Moon's surface, setting the stage for the first
- lunar landing in July.
-
- Completing his service with NASA in 1975, Stafford returned to
- the Air Force to assume command of the Air Force Flight Test Center
- at Edwards, Calif. He subsequently served as Deputy Chief of Staff for
- Research Development and Acquisition, during which he was
- instrumental in the development of major weapons systems that
- remain critical to national security.
-
- Stafford personally directed the start of the F-117A Stealth
- Fighter program. In early 1979, he personally wrote the initial
- specifications for the B-2 bomber and started that program.
-
- In 1990, the Vice President and NASA Administrator asked
- Stafford to chair a team to independently advise NASA on how to
- return to the Moon and send men on to explore Mars. This study
- produced a report called "America at the Threshold," which is a
- roadmap for the next 30 years of U.S. manned space flight. He
- currently serves as a member of the Vice President's Space Policy
- Advisory Board.
-