GJZDAD Posted August 8, 2025 Posted August 8, 2025 RIP legend 🙏 I live 1,200 miles away. What a coincidence to be here today… 3
Popular Post JohnS Posted August 8, 2025 Popular Post Posted August 8, 2025 A truly great loss! James A. Lovell Jr., Commander of Apollo 13, Is Dead at 97 He led the three-man crew that survived a near catastrophic explosion in space in 1970, and was later immortalized by Tom Hanks in the movie “Apollo 13.” James A. Lovell Jr., right, and Fred W. Haise Jr., two of the three Apollo 13 crew members, appeared at a news conference in Cape Kennedy, Fla., before their ill-fated journey to the moon.Credit...Associated Press By Richard Goldstein - Aug. 8, 2025Updated 5:50 p.m. ET James A. Lovell Jr., the commander of the three-man Apollo 13 spacecraft that survived a near catastrophic explosion as it approached the moon in April 1970, before safely returning to Earth in an extraordinary rescue operation, died on Thursday in Lake Forest, Ill. He was 97. His family confirmed his death in a statement to NASA. He lived in Lake Forest. Captain Lovell, a former Navy test pilot, flew for some 715 hours in space, the most of any astronaut in the pioneering Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs forged by the United States as it vied with the Soviet Union to put a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s. He took part in two Gemini missions that orbited Earth and was one of the three astronauts aboard Apollo 8, the first spaceflight to orbit the moon, before he was chosen by NASA for Apollo 13. The purpose of the mission was to land Captain Lovell and Fred W. Haise Jr. on the moon while the third member of the crew, John L. Swigert Jr., orbited in the spaceship to awaiting their return. They were to explore a spot called Fra Mauro, a highland whose topography could provide important insights into the moon’s geology. Captain Lovell during the Apollo 13 mission. He never did realize his dream of reaching the moon’s surface.Credit...NASA, via Associated Press Captain Lovell never realized his dream of reaching the lunar surface. But he became something of a pop culture figure when he was portrayed by Tom Hanks in the 1995 movie “Apollo 13,” which drew on Captain Lovell’s book “Lost Moon: The Perilous Voyage of Apollo 13” (1994, with Jeffrey Kluger). The phrase “Houston, we have a problem,” Mr. Hanks’s version of Captain Lovell’s call to NASA ground control when an explosion rocked his spaceship, became a part of the American lexicon, a wry way of signaling that something was amiss. But the movie engaged in some artistic license. In the real-life Apollo 13, it was the command module pilot, Mr. Swigert, who first told NASA that there was trouble. Captain Lovell echoed his words when NASA asked for the message to be repeated. Both of the men had said, “Houston, we’ve had a problem.” Mr. Swigert’s alert was not in the movie, and Captain Lovell’s exact wording was altered to provide a more dramatic sense of immediacy. The plight of Apollo 13 in 1970 transfixed Americans. The capsule was nearly 56 hours into its flight and some 200,000 miles from Earth when the astronauts heard that ominous bang. Red lights signaling system failures glowed on their console. Captain Lovell, along with Mr. Swigert and Mr. Haise, civilians but also former test pilots who were making their first spaceflight, joined the scientists and technical experts on the ground to improvise a plan that might bring the crew home safely. “At first, we thought it was a meteor strike,” Captain Lovell told The Chicago Tribune 35 years later. “We knew that would cause a puncture that would allow all our air to escape, leaving us dead in a few minutes. When we realized that it wasn’t a meteor, we very quickly got busy figuring out what did happen and how we could get back home.” Unknown to the crew, wires inside one of the two oxygen tanks in the spacecraft’s service module had been damaged before installation. The tanks fed cold liquid oxygen to the fuel cells that produced electricity and drinking water for the command module, and provided the crew’s breathable air. When Mr. Swigert flipped a switch to carry out a routine task, the maneuver generated a spark that ignited the wires’ insulation. The tank ruptured, emptying its contents into space. The other oxygen tank was left damaged and leaking. A view of the damaged service module in a photo taken from the lunar module.Credit...NASA/Associated Press The rescue plan was this: Use the spacecraft’s undamaged lunar module, which had been designed to descend to the moon with Captain Lovell and Mr. Swigert and which was equipped with its own oxygen and electrical supply, as a lifeboat for the three astronauts. But the lunar lander was intended to carry only two astronauts for up to two days. All three crewmen crowded into it, turning off the module’s lights and heaters to conserve its life-sustaining energy. An immediate U-turn for the journey home was considered too risky, so the spacecraft looped around the moon before making a slingshot-like maneuver to hurtle it back toward Earth. The crew endured temperatures of 38 degrees in the powered-down lunar module. To ease their dehydration, the astronauts chewed on packages of hot dogs for moisture. They improvised with common materials, and at one point used duct tape and a wool sock for part of an air-filtering contraption. “We rubbed our hands together and stamped our boots to keep warm,” Captain Lovell later told a congressional committee. Captain Lovell maneuvered the rocket firing to get the spacecraft on a course for the trip home, and as the astronauts approached Earth, they moved back into the nearly lifeless command module, which bore the heat shield needed for the descent through the Earth’s atmosphere. After jettisoning the crippled service module and the lunar module, the astronauts drew on the last of the command module’s battery power and reserve oxygen to make it to a splashdown in the Pacific. The Apollo 13 crew members headed for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean on April 17, 1970.Credit...NASA, via Associated Press On a partly cloudy afternoon on April 17, 610 miles southeast of American Samoa, three large orange and white parachutes were spotted over the aircraft carrier Iwo Jima, the spaceflight’s recovery ship. The capsule splashed down at 1:07 p.m. Eastern time, six days after liftoff and three days and 16 hours after its power supplies had been crippled. The astronauts were plucked from the ocean and greeted by the ship’s commander, Capt. Leland E. Kirkemo, who was played by Captain Lovell himself in the “Apollo 13” movie. In a nation battered by domestic turmoil and devastated by Vietnam War casualties, the safe return of the astronauts lifted American spirits and renewed attention to the space program, which had drifted in the aftermath of the first two manned landings on the moon. President Richard M. Nixon flew to Hawaii to award the astronauts the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the crew embarked on a good-will trip abroad. James Arthur Lovell Jr., who was known as Jim, was born in Cleveland on March 25, 1928, the only child of Arthur and Blanche (Masek) Lovell. His father, a salesman for a coal furnace company, died in an auto accident when he was a child, and the boy and his mother settled in Milwaukee, where he attended high school. He was intrigued by the possibility of space travel, and as a teenager he and a friend built a rocket using gunpowder. It blew up in midair, but his life course was set. He attended the University of Wisconsin-Madison for two years, then entered the Naval Academy, graduating in 1952. After serving as a Navy test pilot, he was selected in September 1962 as a NASA astronaut in a group that would be trained for Gemini and Apollo flights. Captain Lovell’s first space mission came in December 1965 when he orbited Earth with Lt. Col. Frank Borman in Gemini 7, a flight of more than 330 hours that included the first rendezvous of two manned spacecraft, the type of maneuver that would have to be carried out for a moon landing. From left, Captain Lovell, Maj. William A. Anders and Col. Frank Borman during training for the Apollo 8 mission in 1968. They became the first men to orbit the moon.Credit...Associated Press Captain Lovell commanded Gemini 12 in November 1966, flying with Maj. Buzz Aldrin of the Air Force, who in July 1969 became the second man to walk on the moon, after Neil Armstrong, in the flight of Apollo 11. Gemini 12 carried out 59 orbits of Earth over four days to close out the Gemini program. Captain Lovell was the command module pilot on the six-day journey of Apollo 8 at Christmastime 1968, joining with Colonel Borman and Maj. William A. Anders as the first men to orbit the moon, looping around it 10 times. “The moon is essentially gray, no color,” Captain Lovell reported in a telecast seen by millions around the world. “Looks like plaster of Paris.” Soon after that transmission, Major Anders captured what became an iconic color photo of Earth, appearing like a partly shadowed blue marble in the heavens. The image, known as Earthrise, is considered an inspiration for the environmental movement. The astronauts ended their Christmas Eve telecast by reading from the Book of Genesis, telling of the creation of Earth. “And God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Night,” Captain Lovell read. “And the evening and the morning were the first day." Captain Lovell appeared at the White House in 1995 to accept the Congressional Space Medal of Honor from President Bill Clinton. Tom Hanks, who portrayed Captain Lovell in the movie “Apollo 13,” was at left.Credit...Wilfredo Lee/Associated Press He retired from NASA and the Navy in March 1973. He was named president and chief executive of the Bay-Houston Towing Company in 1975 and was later a senior executive at telecommunications companies. He was the owner of Lovell Communications, a Chicago-area consulting firm that provides marketing and public relations advice to corporations. His family owned and operated a restaurant in Lake Forest, Ill., that featured memorabilia from his space career. It closed in 2015. President Nixon awarded Captain Lovell the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1970, considered the highest civilian honor bestowed in the United States. In 1995, President Bill Clinton awarded him the Congressional Space Medal of Honor. Captain Lovell is survived by his sons, James III (known as Jay) and Jeffrey; his daughters, Barbara Lovell Harrison and Susan Lovell; 11 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. His wife, Marilyn (Gerlach) Lovell, died in 2023. Captain Lovell at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago in 2024.Credit...Mustafa Hussain for The New York Times As they scrambled to survive in space, Captain Lovell and his Apollo 13 crew had no time for fear. “We were all test pilots, and the only thing we could do was try to get home,” he told The New York Times. “The idea of despair never occurred to us, because we were always optimistic we would get home.” Captain Lovell never achieved his goal of walking on the moon. But, as he told The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 35 years after Apollo 13 had passed into history, he had found an important consolation with the passing of the years. “I realized that although I didn’t land on the moon and was disappointed,” he said, “it was a triumph in a different direction, meaning getting people back from a certain catastrophe.” Ash Wu contributed reporting. Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/08/science/space/james-a-lovell-jr-dead.html 4 1
MrBirdman Posted August 9, 2025 Posted August 9, 2025 Ah, what a shame but what a great American and charismatic astronaut. It’s pretty disgraceful that I just finished reading the news and didn’t see anything about this. There aren’t many people from the Apollo program left now - hard to believe that in the late 60s everyone assumed that by the year 2000 travel to the moon would be no big deal. I’m not sure anyone imagined that 50 years later, not another soul has set foot there. The Artemis program seems to be living on borrowed time; NASA’s manned program has been completely rudderless since Apollo. You think we’d have learned from the space shuttle how drip feeding funding for a manned program just leads to billions upon billions spent going nowhere. Now, most of the money is being spent on a jobs program called the Space Launch system, a rocket literally designed by Congress to ensure space shuttle contractors could stay on the gravy train. Pains me to say this, but it really would be better to just can manned space flight if there isn’t the political will or public interest to vigorously pursue it. Dollars goes so much further with unmanned science, it’s better to spend it there rather than wasting money, pretending we have a manned program. Rest in peace, Captain Lovell. I hope one day others will follow you and your comrades’ legacy to posterity. 2
MrBirdman Posted August 10, 2025 Posted August 10, 2025 4 hours ago, HDGSN said: An apt time to repost this. A great listen. Second that, both seasons are fantastic.
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