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ANNOUNCER: The Shirley Temple<i> program</i>
<i>usually seen at this time</i>

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<i>will not be presented</i>

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<i>in order that we may bring</i>
<i>you the following special broadcast.</i>

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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX

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<i>We have interrupted this program</i>

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<i>for a special broadcast</i>
<i>from Cape Canaveral.</i>

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RENICK: <i>May 5th, 1961, certainly a day</i>
<i>to be entered in the history books.</i>

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<i>Although the astronaut launch</i>
<i>is being seen close up</i>

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<i>and live on television screens,</i>

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<i>hundreds of persons traveled</i>
<i>to Cocoa Beach to see with their own eyes</i>

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<i>at long distance, the streak of flame</i>
<i>as the Redstone heads skyward.</i>

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CRONKITE: <i>I don't know any words</i>
<i>for this except the trite ones.</i>

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<i>Tension is mounting here</i>
<i>at Cape Canaveral.</i>

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RENICK: <i>The world watches with interest.</i>

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<i>The public has no trouble feeling concern</i>
<i>for the man who lies on his back</i>

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<i>at the nose end of a Redstone missile.</i>

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<i>Somehow, this doesn't seem to be the place</i>
<i>for a human being.</i>

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GLENN: <i>We're looking at this as</i>
<i>eventually a big exploration.</i>

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<i>We hope to lay the foundation</i>

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<i>for much broader exploration</i>
<i>in the future.</i>

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MCGEE:<i> I'm sure you've given some thought</i>
<i>to the possibility that</i>

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<i>this flight may not turn out well</i>
<i>and that you may not come back.</i>

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TROUT: <i>One man, backed up</i>
<i>by a team of 10,000,</i>

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<i>backed up by the most elaborate devices</i>
<i>that science can invent.</i>

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<i>But still, one man, alone, in a tiny shell</i>
<i>on top of a rocket.</i>

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When we asked NASA for some pictures
of the original American astronauts,

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John Glenn and the six others chosen
in 1959 for Project Mercury,

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look what we got.

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<i>The Seven in their spacesuits</i>
<i>as formal as a class picture</i>

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<i>or a management training group.</i>

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<i>But these, too, are the men</i>
<i>who are going to fly off into space</i>

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<i>and catch us up with the Russians</i>
<i>and win the Cold War</i>

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<i>against Sputnik with their hair down</i>
<i>and their burnouses up</i>

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<i>after four days of survival training</i>
<i>in the desert.</i>

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<i>What were the astronauts?</i>

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<i>Tall in-the-capsule superheroes</i>
<i>or just a bunch of regular fighter jocks?</i>

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<i>Well, writer Tom Wolfe has spent a number</i>
<i>of years now looking into their story</i>

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<i>and he has written it into a book called,</i>
The Right Stuff.

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<i>It's not the kind of story that we heard</i>
<i>at the time from the space managers</i>

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<i>and from the politicians,</i>
<i>or even from the American press.</i>

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Tom Wolfe, nice to have you
with us this morning.

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-Tom, good to see you.
-Uh, were we in need of heroes

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when these astronauts came along?

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Is that why we were so eager
to build them up into kind of false gods?

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Right now, it's so hard to remember
what a... how seriously the Cold War

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was taken back in the... in the late '50s.

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(COUNTDOWN IN RUSSIAN)

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(SPUTNIK LAUNCHES)

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<i>You are the first Americans</i>
<i>to see this launching of </i>Sputnik 1

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<i>from the desert of Kyzylkum,</i>
<i>in the Soviet Union.</i>

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("NAME THAT TUNE" THEME MUSIC PLAYS)

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DEWITT: And now back tonight and trying
for 20,000 dollars are Eddie Hodges,

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the ten-year-old schoolboy,
and his partner, Major John Glenn, Jr.,

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the Marine Corps jet pilot.

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Uh, what do you think
of the Russian satellite,

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which is circling the earth
at 18,000 miles per hour?

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It's the first time anybody has ever been
able to get anything out that far

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in space and keep it there
for any length of time.

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And this is probably the first step
toward space travel or moon travel,

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something we'll probably run into
maybe in Eddie's lifetime here at least.

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DEWITT: (CHUCKLES) Eddie, would you like
to take a trip to the moon?

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No, sir, I like it fine right here.

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(AUDIENCE LAUGHS)

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REPORTER: <i>Democrat Senator Jackson</i>
<i>of Washington describes</i>

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<i>the Russian achievement as a devastating</i>
<i>blow to the prestige of The United States.</i>

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<i>As the satellite travels around the world</i>
<i>once every hour and a half,</i>

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<i>its radio transmitters,</i>
<i>powered by chemical batteries,</i>

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<i>that are apparently sending back</i>
<i>coded messages to the Russians.</i>

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(RAPID FREQUENCIES)

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REPORTER: <i>The White House sizes</i>
<i>up the situation this way,</i>

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<i>The launching of Russia's</i>
<i>and the world's first</i>

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<i>artificial moon is of great scientific</i>
<i>interest but comes as no surprise.</i>

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REPORTER: <i>General, are you awed</i>
<i>by the Russian accomplishment</i>

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with this big <i>Sputnik?</i>

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MEDARIS: <i>You're only awed</i>
<i>by the things that you don't understand</i>

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<i>or don't believe someone can do.</i>

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REPORTER: In other words, we know what
they had to know to do this?

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-Certainly, we know it.
-REPORTER: Why haven't we done it?

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Well, we got started late.

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We didn't get about the job
as early as we might have.

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Now we have to work
like blazes to catch up.

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It means they're getting ahead of us
and we certainly need to...

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start working hard to catch up.

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I think it's about time America woke up
and did something about it.

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<i>There was a sense in this country</i>
<i>that it was all important...</i>

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<i>to catch up with the Russians in space.</i>

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<i>John McCormick, who was then the Speaker</i>
<i>of the House of Representatives,</i>

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<i>was getting up and saying</i>
<i>we face national extinction</i>

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<i>if we do not catch up with the Russians.</i>

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WALLACE: <i>In desperation, the United States</i>
<i>looked to the</i> Vanguard.

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<i>Nearly 200 newsmen</i>
<i>from all over the world were flown down</i>

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<i>for the big turkey shoot.</i>

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<i>At the launching site, they were given</i>
<i>a play-by-play account.</i>

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<i>They witnessed each tiny detail</i>
<i>of the usually top-secret preparation.</i>

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<i>And inside the block house,</i>
<i>the tension steadily mounted.</i>

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(ROCKET BLAST)

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(EXPLOSION)

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WALLACE:<i> America's prestige had</i>
<i>never been lower than at this moment,</i>

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<i>11:45 a.m., December 6, 1957.</i>

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There is a tremendous gap
between promise and performance.

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<i>I believe the American people</i>
<i>want action...</i>

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(EXPLOSION)

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JOHNSON:<i> ...and are demanding that</i>
<i>we get going with our program.</i>

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Public opinion in the civilized world
has grown accustomed to

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fast scientific progress.

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Already, the idea of <i>Sputnik</i> whirling
through space has become accepted

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and people are saying, "What comes next?
What comes after <i>Sputnik? </i>After <i>Vanguard?"</i>

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Well, the next step has been planned
for a long time. It is a manned satellite.

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WOLFE:<i> Catch up on all fronts.</i>
<i>That was the imperative.</i>

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<i>So a so-called quick and dirty approach</i>
<i>was seized upon.</i>

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<i>They would try to launch not a flying ship</i>

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<i>but a pod, a container,</i>
<i>a capsule... with a man in it.</i>

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<i>The man would not be a pilot.</i>

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<i>He would be a human cannonball.</i>

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<i>He would not be able to alter the course</i>
<i>of the capsule in the slightest.</i>

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<i>The job was assigned to NACA,</i>

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<i>the National Advisory Committee</i>
<i>for Aeronautics,</i>

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<i>which was converted into NASA.</i>

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We will be developing and launching
into space,

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vehicles needed to obtain scientific data
and to explore the solar system.

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<i>N.A.S.A. will have</i>
<i>about 300 million dollars</i>

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<i>for its program in fiscal 1959,</i>

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<i>and with this appropriation,</i>
<i>we must press forward</i>

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<i>the current research programs</i>
<i>in our laboratories.</i>

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<i>We must contract for work by others</i>
<i>in such fields as electronics and guidance</i>

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<i>and other areas where we have</i>
<i>neither the special competence,</i>

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<i>nor the facilities that are needed.</i>

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<i>We must accelerate</i>
<i>our development programs.</i>

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<i>We must acquire the vehicles that</i>
<i>will carry our data-gathering apparatus,</i>

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<i>and ultimately man, into space.</i>

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<i>The program to pick the</i>
<i>first man to American to try to pilot</i>

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<i>a rocket into orbit in space has begun.</i>

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<i>U.S. space chief T. Keith Glennan</i>
<i>announced tonight</i>

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<i>the American manned satellite program</i>
<i>will be called Project Mercury,</i>

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<i>its pilots will be known as</i>
<i>Mercury Aeronauts,</i>

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<i>and one of their number, all volunteers,</i>

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<i>will make the first spaceflight.</i>

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<i>Two months before the astronauts</i>
<i>were chosen they were still considering</i>

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<i>using racing car drivers,</i>
<i>mountain climbers, scuba divers,</i>

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<i>infantry men, anybody who had faced</i>
<i>stress and dangerous situations</i>

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<i>successfully would be allowed</i>
<i>to apply for astronaut</i>

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<i>because there wasn't any flying</i>
<i>to be done.</i>

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<i>Finally, Eisenhower decided,</i>
<i>"Well, hell, we've got 500 test pilots</i>

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<i>"in the military. We can call them</i>
<i>to Washington tomorrow."</i>

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<i>So let's get them from this</i>
<i>group of people we can totally control</i>

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<i>and get on with it.</i>

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<i>So they bring in these test pilots.</i>

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KRAMER:<i> From all of the active duty pilots</i>
<i>in the Navy, Marines, and Air Force,</i>

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<i>the service records of 473 test pilots</i>
<i>were selected for review.</i>

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<i>110 met the basic qualifications.</i>

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The Right Stuff<i> is both</i>
<i>a code of behavior and a mystical belief.</i>

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<i>As test pilots, you have to be willing</i>
<i>to go up and hang your mortal hide out</i>

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<i>over the edge and then have the experience</i>
<i>and the moxie and the talent</i>

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<i>to pull it back in,</i>
<i>and then go up the next day</i>

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<i>and the next day and the next day</i>
<i>and the next day, even,</i>

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<i>uh, the series is infinite.</i>

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(CRASH AND EXPLOSION)

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NASA OFFICIAL:
<i>Phase two of the selection program</i>

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<i>was a very thorough physical examination.</i>

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<i>And the men continued on</i>
<i>to the third phase.</i>

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<i>This phase involved exposure</i>
<i>to the acceleration, lowered pressure,</i>

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<i>noise, and other stresses expected</i>
<i>in space flight.</i>

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WRIGHT: <i>At a Washington news conference,</i>
<i>officials introduced seven carefully</i>

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<i>chosen military test pilots</i>
<i>as America's first spacemen.</i>

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REPORTER:
<i>How are the kids' appetites tonight?</i>

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Probably pretty good.

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REPORTER:<i> Better than usual</i>
<i>or worse than usual?</i>

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Well, probably a little bit, uh, they'll,
uh, be too excited.

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Maybe they won't eat
as much as they usually do.

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REPORTER:<i> Well, this is supposed</i>
<i>to have been a very tightly kept secret.</i>

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<i>How... how did you begin</i>
<i>to suspect something?</i>

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Well, listening to the news.

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MCCORMICK:<i> Well, all seven of the men</i>
<i>are officers and test pilots.</i>

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<i>Three Air Force, three Navy,</i>
<i>and one Marine. All are volunteers.</i>

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<i>Doctor T. Keith Glennan,</i>
<i>National Aeronautical</i>

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<i>and Space administrator introduced</i>
<i>them this afternoon at a news conference.</i>

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Which of these men will be first
to orbit the Earth, I cannot tell you.

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He won't know himself
until the day of the flight.

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<i>It's my pleasure to introduce... to you,</i>

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<i>and I consider it a very real honor,</i>
<i>gentlemen...</i>

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<i>from your right, Malcolm S. Carpenter,</i>

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Leroy G. Cooper, John H. Glenn,

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Virgil I. Grissom,

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<i>Walter M. Schirra,</i>

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Alan B. Shepard, Donald K. Slayton.

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These, ladies, and gentlemen,
are the nation's Mercury astronauts.

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(APPLAUSE)

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<i>The question everybody wants to ask,</i>
<i>"What do the wives and children</i>

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<i>"of these men think of their ambitions</i>
<i>to go into space?"</i>

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My wife's attitude toward this
has been the same as it has been

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all along through all my flying,
that, uh...

193
00:13:18,881 --> 00:13:21,676
if it's what I want to do
and she's behind it

194
00:13:21,759 --> 00:13:23,261
and the kids are, too, a 100 percent.

195
00:13:25,054 --> 00:13:27,682
Well, my wife feels the same way or,
of course, I couldn't be here.

196
00:13:28,641 --> 00:13:32,562
And she's, uh, with me all the way
and the boys are too little to, uh,

197
00:13:33,021 --> 00:13:35,565
realize what's going on yet,
but I'm sure they'd feel the same way.

198
00:13:36,274 --> 00:13:40,194
My wife has agreed that professional
opinions are mine, career's mine,

199
00:13:40,695 --> 00:13:42,363
but we also have to have a family life

200
00:13:42,447 --> 00:13:44,449
that we like and this is part
of the agreement.

201
00:13:45,116 --> 00:13:47,785
I have no problems at home.
My family's in complete agreement.

202
00:13:48,578 --> 00:13:51,789
(ALL LAUGH)

203
00:13:54,000 --> 00:13:56,294
<i>John Glenn was actually</i>
<i>unique among the seven</i>

204
00:13:56,377 --> 00:13:57,628
<i>in terms of his personality.</i>

205
00:13:57,962 --> 00:14:00,631
<i>I'm John Glenn,</i>
<i>I'm the lonesome Marine on this outfit</i>

206
00:14:00,798 --> 00:14:04,927
and I'm, uh, 37. I, jokingly, uh,
of course, said that, uh,

207
00:14:05,011 --> 00:14:07,221
I got on this project
because it'd probably be the nearest

208
00:14:07,305 --> 00:14:09,891
to heaven I'd ever get, and I wanted
to make the most of it.

209
00:14:10,058 --> 00:14:11,517
-(ALL LAUGH)
-But, uh...

210
00:14:11,768 --> 00:14:16,105
my feelings are that this whole project
with regard to... to space sort of stands

211
00:14:16,272 --> 00:14:18,941
with us now as... as if you wanna look
at it one way,

212
00:14:19,025 --> 00:14:21,736
like the Wright brothers stood
at Kitty Hawk about 50 years ago.

213
00:14:22,612 --> 00:14:24,864
WOLFE: <i>At the very first press conference</i>
<i>John Glenn proved</i>

214
00:14:24,947 --> 00:14:27,116
<i>to be the most articulate of the seven.</i>

215
00:14:27,200 --> 00:14:29,660
My wife made a remark the other day,
I've been out of this world

216
00:14:29,744 --> 00:14:31,704
for a long time I might as well
go on out there.

217
00:14:31,788 --> 00:14:32,830
(ALL LAUGH)

218
00:14:33,915 --> 00:14:35,291
GLENNAN: Next question, please.

219
00:14:35,958 --> 00:14:39,170
WOLFE: <i>He had a kind of countrified</i>
<i>sophistication, if you will,</i>

220
00:14:39,504 --> 00:14:43,716
<i>and he had a great freckle-faced smile</i>
<i>and was just great at handling</i>

221
00:14:44,008 --> 00:14:45,593
<i>what we now call the media.</i>

222
00:14:46,302 --> 00:14:51,057
GLENNAN: The question is, "Would the, uh,
gentlemen, uh, like to, uh...

223
00:14:51,891 --> 00:14:55,436
"say which, which test, uh,
they liked least?"

224
00:14:57,188 --> 00:14:58,231
(ALL LAUGH)

225
00:14:58,356 --> 00:15:00,650
Johnny Glenn, uh, you... you answer

226
00:15:00,733 --> 00:15:03,236
and then we'll start this way
and around that way.

227
00:15:03,945 --> 00:15:06,656
That's a real tough one
because we had some pretty good tests,

228
00:15:06,739 --> 00:15:10,701
but I... I think, uh, it's rather
difficult to pick one, because if the...

229
00:15:10,868 --> 00:15:13,287
if you figure how many openings
there are on the human body

230
00:15:13,371 --> 00:15:15,415
and how far you can go in any one of them.

231
00:15:15,498 --> 00:15:18,459
(ALL LAUGH)

232
00:15:18,626 --> 00:15:22,296
-SCHIRRA: You gave it away.
-(LAUGHTER CONTINUES)

233
00:15:22,713 --> 00:15:26,342
Now... Now ,you answer which one would
be the toughest for you.

234
00:15:26,467 --> 00:15:29,345
(ALL LAUGH)

235
00:15:32,849 --> 00:15:35,518
WOLFE: <i>So, after this one man, Glenn,</i>
<i>who's so articulate starts</i>

236
00:15:35,601 --> 00:15:38,479
<i>saying all these things about God,</i>
<i>country, family, all the rest,</i>

237
00:15:38,604 --> 00:15:41,899
<i>immediately there's the picture</i>
<i>of seven astronauts</i>

238
00:15:41,983 --> 00:15:46,112
<i>as these sort of God-fearing,</i>
<i>small town family men.</i>

239
00:15:47,238 --> 00:15:48,656
<i>And the rest of them were stuck with it.</i>

240
00:15:48,739 --> 00:15:51,033
<i>They either had a choice</i>
<i>of raising their hands and saying,</i>

241
00:15:51,117 --> 00:15:52,994
<i>"Now wait a minute, I...</i>
<i>I don't really go on with that,</i>

242
00:15:53,077 --> 00:15:54,912
<i>"I don't think you have</i>
<i>to be all that faithful to your wife</i>

243
00:15:54,996 --> 00:15:56,456
<i>"and your children and the church,"</i>

244
00:15:56,539 --> 00:16:00,251
<i>or else doing the wise thing</i>
<i>and saying, "Me, too."</i>

245
00:16:01,043 --> 00:16:03,212
I'm not real active in the church as, uh,

246
00:16:03,296 --> 00:16:06,716
Mr. Glenn is, but, uh, I consider myself
a good Christian still.

247
00:16:07,633 --> 00:16:11,262
REPORTER: Mrs. Grissom,
did you have any indication that

248
00:16:11,512 --> 00:16:15,266
-anything was going on before today?
-I had a pretty good idea.

249
00:16:16,517 --> 00:16:19,479
REPORTER: <i>Have you had time to decide</i>
<i>how you feel about it?</i>

250
00:16:20,980 --> 00:16:23,316
Well, I don't know yet.

251
00:16:34,160 --> 00:16:35,536
REPORTER: Have the kids
in the neighborhood

252
00:16:35,620 --> 00:16:36,913
been asking you about this?

253
00:16:38,289 --> 00:16:41,709
No, not yet, but my teacher called
a little while ago and...

254
00:16:42,668 --> 00:16:44,879
and she said congratulations.

255
00:16:45,922 --> 00:16:48,549
REPORTER: <i>Do you think this is gonna</i>
<i>make you a big man around town?</i>

256
00:16:48,633 --> 00:16:50,301
SCOTT: <i>Mm-hmm. </i>(LAUGHS)

257
00:16:51,219 --> 00:16:54,597
REPORTER: <i>How does the wife</i>
<i>of a spaceman feel about the possibility</i>

258
00:16:54,680 --> 00:16:55,765
<i>of so great an adventure?</i>

259
00:16:56,307 --> 00:16:59,727
<i>Well, we're not oblivious</i>
<i>to the dangers involved,</i>

260
00:17:00,102 --> 00:17:04,774
<i>but, uh, I would like to go along with him</i>
<i>if I could and so would the boys.</i>

261
00:17:10,446 --> 00:17:13,032
WRIGHT: <i>After rigorous training,</i>
<i>one of these men will ride</i>

262
00:17:13,199 --> 00:17:17,620
<i>a Project Mercury space capsule</i>
<i>around the Earth in a 125-mile high orbit</i>

263
00:17:18,120 --> 00:17:20,998
<i>before retro rockets slow the capsule</i>
<i>for a descent into the Atlantic.</i>

264
00:17:24,293 --> 00:17:25,962
(FAN WHIRRING)

265
00:17:27,046 --> 00:17:30,258
<i>Although the astronauts,</i>
<i>all test pilots, feel that space flight</i>

266
00:17:30,341 --> 00:17:33,219
<i>is no more than the next step</i>
<i>along a familiar path,</i>

267
00:17:33,302 --> 00:17:35,721
<i>most of us still think of it</i>
<i>as being unreal.</i>

268
00:17:35,805 --> 00:17:36,806
(CAMERA CLICKS)

269
00:17:36,931 --> 00:17:40,977
<i>But, in fact, it is reality catching up</i>
<i>with unreality.</i>

270
00:17:42,019 --> 00:17:45,314
<i>Cocoa Beach, Florida is home base</i>
<i>for those who fly rockets</i>

271
00:17:45,439 --> 00:17:47,024
<i>from adjoining Cape Canaveral.</i>

272
00:17:47,358 --> 00:17:50,570
<i>Ten years ago, only 246 people lived here,</i>

273
00:17:50,695 --> 00:17:53,965
<i>but now the glittering neon signs bear</i>
<i>testimony to the boom.</i>

274
00:17:54,782 --> 00:17:57,910
<i>Population has increased 1,312 percent.</i>

275
00:17:59,078 --> 00:18:01,789
<i>Everything here is space oriented.</i>

276
00:18:04,500 --> 00:18:06,210
(MUSIC STARTS PLAYING)

277
00:18:09,547 --> 00:18:13,718
<i>Here at Cape Canaveral</i>
<i>The astronauts are all ready</i>

278
00:18:15,720 --> 00:18:19,473
<i>They will pave the way</i>
<i>Into space for the USA</i>

279
00:18:21,976 --> 00:18:25,730
<i>They are guys with wives</i>
<i>Whose lives are just ordinary</i>

280
00:18:28,316 --> 00:18:31,819
<i>But will pave the way</i>
<i>As we say with JFK</i>

281
00:18:34,614 --> 00:18:37,074
<i>There's John Glenn, Grissom</i>
<i>And Shepard, too</i>

282
00:18:37,617 --> 00:18:40,620
<i>Astronauts who really have come through</i>

283
00:18:40,911 --> 00:18:46,250
<i>Slayton, Schirra, and Cooper passed</i>
<i>Carpenter's bongos are a blast off</i>

284
00:18:46,500 --> 00:18:50,963
<i>Let's all drink a toast to the men</i>
<i>The most in missiles</i>

285
00:18:53,215 --> 00:18:59,388
<i>And cheers to the man who's going out</i>
<i>In space, out in space</i>

286
00:18:59,555 --> 00:19:03,476
<i>Ten, nine, eight, seven, six, five, four</i>
<i>Three, two, one</i>

287
00:19:03,701 --> 00:19:08,748
<i>Going out in space</i>

288
00:19:21,994 --> 00:19:24,622
WHITE:<i> We've tried to develop</i>
<i>what we call dynamic testing.</i>

289
00:19:24,789 --> 00:19:25,873
MCGEE: <i>What does that mean?</i>

290
00:19:26,248 --> 00:19:28,584
WHITE: <i>Well, in dynamic testing,</i>
<i>what we do is that we try</i>

291
00:19:28,709 --> 00:19:33,339
<i>to give the man a challenge,</i>
<i>which is applicable to the kind</i>

292
00:19:33,422 --> 00:19:35,091
<i>of stress loads that he would get</i>
<i>in flight.</i>

293
00:19:35,216 --> 00:19:37,093
MCGEE: <i>Get him as close as you can</i>
<i>to actually doing it?</i>

294
00:19:37,176 --> 00:19:38,302
WHITE: <i>That is correct.</i>

295
00:19:39,762 --> 00:19:42,890
<i>The whole idea of the training</i>
<i>was not to enable the astronaut</i>

296
00:19:42,973 --> 00:19:45,518
<i>to control and handle the machine</i>
<i>as other flight training.</i>

297
00:19:46,894 --> 00:19:49,271
<i>It was really to desensitize the astronaut</i>

298
00:19:49,397 --> 00:19:51,732
<i>to the terrors of what</i>
<i>he was gonna undertake.</i>

299
00:20:01,450 --> 00:20:04,912
<i>And there was a principle in psychology</i>
<i>that if you expose a man</i>

300
00:20:05,079 --> 00:20:08,958
<i>to a terrible type of event</i>
<i>in gradual stages,</i>

301
00:20:10,209 --> 00:20:11,752
<i>he can overcome the terror.</i>

302
00:20:12,920 --> 00:20:15,756
<i>We've had to think in terms</i>
<i>of certain stress loads.</i>

303
00:20:15,840 --> 00:20:18,509
<i>We know that the man, for example,</i>
<i>is going to be exposed</i>

304
00:20:18,592 --> 00:20:22,513
<i>to certain accelerations,</i>
<i>certain heat loads, certain vibrations,</i>

305
00:20:22,596 --> 00:20:27,727
<i>noise, certain psychic trauma, that, uh,</i>
<i>are just a part of doing these kind</i>

306
00:20:27,810 --> 00:20:28,853
<i>of new adventures.</i>

307
00:20:29,937 --> 00:20:32,773
CAPCOM:<i> ASGAR, this is Recovery 5.</i>

308
00:20:32,982 --> 00:20:35,693
MCGEE: <i>What you're hearing</i>
<i>is a simulation of the communications</i>

309
00:20:35,776 --> 00:20:38,154
<i>between the space capsule</i>
<i>and ground control.</i>

310
00:20:38,279 --> 00:20:39,947
ASTRONAUT:<i> Standing by</i>
<i>for impact and pickup.</i>

311
00:20:40,030 --> 00:20:41,657
<i>Does Recovery have me? Over.</i>

312
00:20:42,658 --> 00:20:45,411
MCGEE: <i>A less frightening exercise,</i>
<i>depending on how you look at it,</i>

313
00:20:45,536 --> 00:20:47,621
<i>is the underwater escape training.</i>

314
00:20:54,754 --> 00:20:58,507
<i>In their training, actually undergoing</i>
<i>these tests, which one do you feel</i>

315
00:20:58,591 --> 00:21:00,634
<i>puts them under the greatest strain?</i>

316
00:21:01,218 --> 00:21:07,141
WHITE: <i>I think the centrifuge program</i>
<i>is probably the best single stress load.</i>

317
00:21:07,266 --> 00:21:11,729
<i>This has come closest to being able</i>
<i>to superimpose all the flight stresses</i>

318
00:21:11,812 --> 00:21:14,106
<i>in one spot, simultaneously.</i>

319
00:21:16,108 --> 00:21:18,527
(RAPID WHIRRING)

320
00:21:19,528 --> 00:21:22,072
GRISSOM:<i> The centrifuge is like</i>
<i>a merry-go-round with one seat,</i>

321
00:21:22,531 --> 00:21:25,284
<i>one seat out on a long arm that swings</i>
<i>you around and around,</i>

322
00:21:25,367 --> 00:21:27,828
<i>faster and faster until they get</i>
<i>the G-level that they want.</i>

323
00:21:29,663 --> 00:21:33,709
<i>And we've gone as high as 18 Gs,</i>
<i>which means 18 times the pull of gravity.</i>

324
00:21:37,379 --> 00:21:39,673
(RAPID WHIRRING INCREASES)

325
00:21:49,767 --> 00:21:55,064
(CHEERFUL MUSIC PLAYING)

326
00:21:56,065 --> 00:21:58,859
(CAMERA CLICKS)

327
00:21:59,735 --> 00:22:01,570
-Scene one, take one.
-(BOARD CLICKS)

328
00:22:04,907 --> 00:22:08,410
I am John Glenn, one of our astronauts
who is preparing

329
00:22:08,494 --> 00:22:11,080
for our first manned ballistic flights
into space.

330
00:22:12,373 --> 00:22:15,960
Naturally, all of us take a very deep
personal interest, needless to say,

331
00:22:16,043 --> 00:22:20,130
in the Mercury capsule here that one of us
will ride one of these days into space.

332
00:22:31,642 --> 00:22:34,895
WOLFE: LIFE Magazine<i> decided</i>
<i>to buy the rights</i>

333
00:22:35,020 --> 00:22:37,231
<i>to the personal stories of the astronauts.</i>

334
00:22:39,525 --> 00:22:41,610
<i>And they paid what at the time</i>
<i>was a colossal sum,</i>

335
00:22:41,694 --> 00:22:44,071
<i>five hundred thousand dollars</i>
<i>for three years to the seven men.</i>

336
00:22:44,196 --> 00:22:48,200
<i>It came out to about 25 thousand dollars</i>
<i>per family per year for three years,</i>

337
00:22:48,325 --> 00:22:50,244
<i>and for families that were,</i>
<i>had been used to making</i>

338
00:22:50,327 --> 00:22:52,162
<i>eight or nine thousand</i>
<i>it was a lot of money.</i>

339
00:22:53,998 --> 00:22:56,500
<i>We knew there would be</i>
<i>a lot of press attention,</i>

340
00:22:57,293 --> 00:23:02,298
<i>but none of us realized that, uh,</i>
<i>we were going to lose anonymity.</i>

341
00:23:02,756 --> 00:23:07,177
Time Life<i> painted us as boy scouts</i>
<i>and we were all American heroes,</i>

342
00:23:07,887 --> 00:23:09,430
<i>and that was fine.</i>

343
00:23:12,474 --> 00:23:14,101
NARRATOR:<i> Here's Astronaut John Glenn.</i>

344
00:23:14,476 --> 00:23:17,938
Hello, fellas, I'd like to talk to you
for a moment about adventure.

345
00:23:18,606 --> 00:23:20,149
<i>Did you ever climb a mountain?</i>

346
00:23:20,649 --> 00:23:21,859
<i>Or land a trout?</i>

347
00:23:22,526 --> 00:23:24,904
<i>That's the kind of adventure</i>
<i>you have in the Boy Scouts.</i>

348
00:23:25,154 --> 00:23:28,532
<i>If you're looking for adventure, boys</i>

349
00:23:28,616 --> 00:23:31,952
<i>Come join the Scouts today</i>

350
00:23:33,621 --> 00:23:36,415
MCGEE: <i>Alan Shepard has a lively sense</i>
<i>of the ludicrous,</i>

351
00:23:36,540 --> 00:23:38,417
<i>which he keeps fairly well under control.</i>

352
00:23:38,876 --> 00:23:41,128
<i>But he would prefer to skirt</i>
<i>serious subjects.</i>

353
00:23:41,462 --> 00:23:44,173
And in a group, is likely to make
the witty remark that

354
00:23:44,256 --> 00:23:47,384
turns conversation into a lighter vein.

355
00:23:47,718 --> 00:23:51,180
And if the technicians connected
with the training of the astronauts

356
00:23:51,305 --> 00:23:55,309
<i>can be said to have a favorite, well,</i>
<i>their favorite appears to be Shepard.</i>

357
00:23:58,812 --> 00:23:59,813
Okay.

358
00:23:59,897 --> 00:24:03,484
MCGEE: <i>Each astronaut has several</i>
<i>meticulously fitted flight uniforms,</i>

359
00:24:03,651 --> 00:24:06,987
<i>which they prefer to have called</i>
<i>"pressure," not spacesuits.</i>

360
00:24:08,113 --> 00:24:11,325
<i>Shepard says it contributes more</i>
<i>to the astronauts' peace of mind</i>

361
00:24:11,408 --> 00:24:14,370
<i>to say they've been inflated</i>
<i>instead of blown up.</i>

362
00:24:19,333 --> 00:24:22,169
<i>Now when you fellas get together</i>
<i>among yourselves, what do you talk about?</i>

363
00:24:22,336 --> 00:24:25,464
Well, we have... have very little
time off actually.

364
00:24:25,881 --> 00:24:29,677
Our attentions are focused pretty much
on the objectives of spaceflight.

365
00:24:30,302 --> 00:24:35,265
We do take a few moments
for such things as waterskiing

366
00:24:35,349 --> 00:24:37,434
-and... and playing golf.
-MCGEE: You like waterskiing?

367
00:24:37,518 --> 00:24:39,979
-Yes, I do.
-MCGEE: What about that, uh, Corvette,

368
00:24:40,062 --> 00:24:42,189
that white Corvette I've seen you drive,
you like that?

369
00:24:42,314 --> 00:24:43,816
Well, I do enjoy driving that, yeah.

370
00:24:43,899 --> 00:24:45,526
MCGEE: What... what do you
like most about it?

371
00:24:46,360 --> 00:24:48,946
SHEPARD: <i>Well, it has a few little goodies</i>
<i>underneath the hood that</i>

372
00:24:49,071 --> 00:24:51,532
<i>-make it go faster than the ordinary car.</i>
-MCGEE: <i>Yeah.</i>

373
00:24:54,326 --> 00:24:56,578
WOLFE: <i>When I started looking</i>
<i>into the stories of the astronauts,</i>

374
00:24:56,662 --> 00:24:59,373
<i>they came from out of the world</i>
<i>of what they themselves</i>

375
00:24:59,456 --> 00:25:00,916
<i>-called the fighter jocks.</i>
-BROKAW: <i>Yeah.</i>

376
00:25:01,000 --> 00:25:03,711
WOLFE: <i>And the fighter jocks are</i>
<i>at the top</i>

377
00:25:03,919 --> 00:25:06,380
<i>-of the pyramid of flying in the military.</i>
-BROKAW: <i>Yeah.</i>

378
00:25:06,463 --> 00:25:09,341
WOLFE: <i>And these are people</i>
<i>who not only fly hard, they play hard,</i>

379
00:25:09,550 --> 00:25:12,094
and also, they're justifiably away
from home a lot.

380
00:25:12,177 --> 00:25:13,887
-BROKAW: Mm-hmm.
-They're attractive to women,

381
00:25:13,971 --> 00:25:15,848
and this began to play a part
in their lives

382
00:25:15,931 --> 00:25:17,349
like the lives of every other
fighter jocks.

383
00:25:17,433 --> 00:25:20,060
Well, at one point the astronauts, I mean,
there were so many women around them

384
00:25:20,144 --> 00:25:22,980
at all times that John Glenn felt
compelled to say something

385
00:25:23,063 --> 00:25:25,274
<i>to 'em about it. I mean,</i>
<i>this thing has gotten to be too public,</i>

386
00:25:25,357 --> 00:25:27,192
<i>is what he said at a meeting in San Diego.</i>

387
00:25:39,580 --> 00:25:42,916
WOLFE: <i>There was bound to arise conflict</i>
<i>between someone like, uh,</i>

388
00:25:43,042 --> 00:25:45,377
<i>Glenn on the one hand, and say</i>
<i>Alan Shepard on the other.</i>

389
00:25:47,171 --> 00:25:48,881
<i>So finally, there was a little showdown.</i>

390
00:25:49,256 --> 00:25:52,885
<i>It was out at the Kona Kai Hotel</i>
<i>on Shelter Island in San Diego.</i>

391
00:25:55,929 --> 00:25:58,724
<i>Now Glenn, I must say,</i>
<i>does not mind being a maverick.</i>

392
00:25:59,391 --> 00:26:02,352
<i>He thought that this playing around</i>
<i>with the cookies was getting out of hand.</i>

393
00:26:03,520 --> 00:26:06,231
<i>Cookies, as groupies were called</i>
<i>in those days,</i>

394
00:26:07,191 --> 00:26:10,944
<i>Glenn thought the time had come to deliver</i>
<i>a little lecture on the subject,</i>

395
00:26:11,070 --> 00:26:15,157
<i>so he started saying how he wasn't gonna</i>
<i>stand by and let other members</i>

396
00:26:15,240 --> 00:26:18,368
<i>of the group ruin the chance of a lifetime</i>
<i>by creating some scandal</i>

397
00:26:18,452 --> 00:26:20,037
<i>through playing around with these girls.</i>

398
00:26:21,622 --> 00:26:25,125
<i>The others could not believe that</i>
<i>one pilot, a peer among peers,</i>

399
00:26:25,209 --> 00:26:27,461
<i>was standing up</i>
<i>and giving this moral lecture.</i>

400
00:26:27,586 --> 00:26:30,672
<i>So, Alan Shepard, who was a very</i>
<i>different man from John Glenn,</i>

401
00:26:30,756 --> 00:26:33,842
<i>stood up and in his stern</i>
<i>and sort of icy commander,</i>

402
00:26:34,093 --> 00:26:37,387
<i>Naval Academy fashion, says,</i>
<i>"Listen, you're not gonna stand up</i>

403
00:26:37,471 --> 00:26:40,057
<i>"and tell me or anybody else</i>
<i>your view of morality."</i>

404
00:26:43,769 --> 00:26:49,900
<i>That scene was one of the things that</i>
<i>set off a real conflict between two camps.</i>

405
00:26:50,442 --> 00:26:53,612
<i>One camp was really John Glenn</i>
<i>and Scott Carpenter on one side,</i>

406
00:26:53,695 --> 00:26:55,906
<i>and the others basically agreed</i>
<i>with Shepard.</i>

407
00:26:56,782 --> 00:27:00,452
<i>He was saying, it is not for you,</i>
<i>as one of our peers,</i>

408
00:27:00,619 --> 00:27:02,329
<i>to tell us how we're going to act.</i>

409
00:27:03,247 --> 00:27:05,165
<i>And this became the rival position.</i>

410
00:27:21,890 --> 00:27:25,644
REPORTER: <i>From President to taxi driver,</i>
<i>every American is worried</i>

411
00:27:25,853 --> 00:27:29,398
<i>about Russia's lead in this race</i>
<i>to put man into space.</i>

412
00:27:30,816 --> 00:27:34,111
We should do everything
possible to make any sacrifice

413
00:27:34,319 --> 00:27:36,280
<i>to help our country get up there, too.</i>

414
00:27:45,080 --> 00:27:47,583
REPORTER: <i>The </i>MR-2 <i>craft will carry</i>
<i>a chimpanzee,</i>

415
00:27:48,125 --> 00:27:51,962
<i>specially trained for the mission</i>
<i>at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico.</i>

416
00:27:52,546 --> 00:27:55,132
<i>The chimpanzees were kidnapped</i>
<i>in West Africa</i>

417
00:27:55,257 --> 00:27:58,260
<i>and they were trained to ride</i>
<i>in the Mercury capsule.</i>

418
00:27:58,760 --> 00:28:01,013
<i>And the training was really quite complex</i>

419
00:28:01,221 --> 00:28:03,182
<i>and started as soon as</i>
<i>astronaut training began.</i>

420
00:28:03,891 --> 00:28:06,602
<i>They even did some reading of a console,</i>
<i>the instrument panel.</i>

421
00:28:07,019 --> 00:28:10,355
<i>They were given symbols,</i>
<i>such as two circles and one triangle</i>

422
00:28:10,439 --> 00:28:11,982
<i>and they had to hit the triangle,</i>

423
00:28:12,399 --> 00:28:15,402
<i>the odd symbol,</i>
<i>in order not to get a shock.</i>

424
00:28:17,154 --> 00:28:20,991
NARRATOR:<i> The next decision,</i>
<i>which chimpanzee to send on the flight.</i>

425
00:28:22,075 --> 00:28:24,870
<i>Each of the candidates gets</i>
<i>a complete medical checkup.</i>

426
00:28:25,537 --> 00:28:31,168
<i>And the honor goes to an astrochimp</i>
<i>who was nicknamed, "Ham."</i>

427
00:28:37,716 --> 00:28:39,801
<i>This is </i>Mercury-Redstone 2,

428
00:28:41,595 --> 00:28:46,767
MR-2, <i>and Ham is on his way.</i>

429
00:28:53,482 --> 00:28:58,070
<i>Concern mounts, Ham's heartbeat</i>
<i>and respiration climb fast.</i>

430
00:28:59,112 --> 00:29:01,657
<i>The flight surgeon's eyes are glued</i>
<i>to his console,</i>

431
00:29:02,449 --> 00:29:03,951
<i>monitoring Ham's condition.</i>

432
00:29:07,246 --> 00:29:09,373
(BEEPING)

433
00:29:09,539 --> 00:29:11,291
REPORTER:
<i>The Flight Surgeon watches the monitors,</i>

434
00:29:11,625 --> 00:29:13,460
<i>and now Ham is doing better.</i>

435
00:29:14,920 --> 00:29:18,465
MR-2<i> is up over the top</i>
<i>and reentry begins.</i>

436
00:29:24,221 --> 00:29:26,473
<i>The spacecraft is spotted from the air.</i>

437
00:29:41,655 --> 00:29:42,739
<i>Ham is fine.</i>

438
00:29:46,118 --> 00:29:52,165
MR-2<i> was a significant milestone</i>
<i>on the highway to man's flight into space.</i>

439
00:29:53,166 --> 00:29:57,796
<i>And the evidence is a live,</i>
<i>space experienced, chimpanzee.</i>

440
00:30:14,479 --> 00:30:17,357
<i>The Soviets never would identify</i>
<i>the leader of their space program.</i>

441
00:30:17,441 --> 00:30:18,942
<i>They always called him,</i>
<i>"The Chief Designer."</i>

442
00:30:19,026 --> 00:30:21,945
<i>And Khrushchev would always say that</i>
<i>they couldn't possibly identify him</i>

443
00:30:22,029 --> 00:30:25,574
<i>because the enemy agents</i>
<i>would seek him out and kill him.</i>

444
00:30:26,033 --> 00:30:29,036
<i>And the real reason was</i>
<i>the man, his name was Sergei Korolev,</i>

445
00:30:29,661 --> 00:30:32,039
<i>he had been a political prisoner</i>
<i>for ten years.</i>

446
00:30:32,122 --> 00:30:33,790
<i>He was an ex-con in the Soviet Union.</i>

447
00:30:34,124 --> 00:30:37,294
<i>They couldn't admit an ex-con</i>
<i>was running their space program.</i>

448
00:30:37,669 --> 00:30:40,297
<i>It was presumed that the Soviets...</i>

449
00:30:41,048 --> 00:30:43,008
<i>had somehow come up</i>
<i>with a whole generation</i>

450
00:30:43,300 --> 00:30:47,304
<i>of super scientists who could</i>
<i>churn out these incredible space vehicles.</i>

451
00:30:47,387 --> 00:30:50,682
<i>In fact, there was this one man,</i>
<i>this one genius named Korolev</i>

452
00:30:50,766 --> 00:30:52,225
<i>who had always been considered a nut.</i>

453
00:31:12,954 --> 00:31:16,833
COLLINGWOOD: <i>Twenty-five thousand miles,</i>
<i>17,000 miles an hour,</i>

454
00:31:17,376 --> 00:31:19,795
<i>nobody else has ever done</i>
<i>anything like it.</i>

455
00:31:20,379 --> 00:31:21,588
<i>This vehicle,</i>

456
00:31:21,755 --> 00:31:25,300
<i>a machine that until today was only a term</i>
<i>in the vocabulary of fiction,</i>

457
00:31:25,717 --> 00:31:26,802
<i>it was a spaceship.</i>

458
00:31:28,178 --> 00:31:31,807
The spaceship was built in Russia,
the takeoff and the landing

459
00:31:32,015 --> 00:31:33,183
<i>somewhere in Russia.</i>

460
00:31:33,892 --> 00:31:38,855
<i>The name of the man...</i>
<i>Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin.</i>

461
00:31:39,773 --> 00:31:42,275
(PATRIOTIC MUSIC PLAYS)

462
00:31:42,401 --> 00:31:44,986
<i>The first hero of the space age receiving</i>

463
00:31:45,070 --> 00:31:46,780
<i>a hero's welcome today.</i>

464
00:31:47,531 --> 00:31:52,536
<i>Yuri Gagarin, the first man ever to circle</i>
<i>the Earth in orbit, reports to his chief,</i>

465
00:31:53,036 --> 00:31:57,124
<i>Nikita S. Khrushchev,</i>
<i>Prime Minister of the Soviet Union.</i>

466
00:31:57,499 --> 00:32:01,837
<i>And in a day of wild jubilation,</i>
<i>he was embraced by the Soviet people</i>

467
00:32:02,087 --> 00:32:07,592
<i>as a new pioneer, a Columbus,</i>
<i>a Linden, Lenin in a spacesuit.</i>

468
00:32:15,350 --> 00:32:18,854
RENICK:<i> Here at Cape Canaveral,</i>
<i>the announcement of the Russian success</i>

469
00:32:18,979 --> 00:32:23,650
<i>has made no visible impact</i>
<i>on this space-oriented community.</i>

470
00:32:24,484 --> 00:32:28,155
<i>The people who live here,</i>
<i>the ones who watch missile firings</i>

471
00:32:28,238 --> 00:32:33,535
<i>as a pastime, still have a local pride</i>
<i>in NASA's Project Mercury.</i>

472
00:32:34,494 --> 00:32:37,414
<i>They are anxiously awaiting</i>
<i>the American firing</i>

473
00:32:37,581 --> 00:32:39,833
<i>of an astronaut into space.</i>

474
00:32:41,042 --> 00:32:44,921
<i>A shot that is anticipated</i>
<i>in the next two or three weeks.</i>

475
00:32:48,300 --> 00:32:51,553
MCGEE: <i>At Cape Canaveral, the countdown,</i>
<i>which could take days,</i>

476
00:32:51,678 --> 00:32:53,346
<i>began early this morning.</i>

477
00:32:53,889 --> 00:32:56,933
<i>And there are rumors that Shepard</i>
<i>has been selected for the flight</i>

478
00:32:57,017 --> 00:32:59,686
<i>with Glenn as standby and vice versa.</i>

479
00:32:59,769 --> 00:33:03,648
The Project Mercury officials have made
no announcement on either the timing

480
00:33:03,732 --> 00:33:05,984
of the launch or the astronaut chosen.

481
00:33:06,860 --> 00:33:08,778
<i>But the launching fever</i>
<i>is gripping the cape</i>

482
00:33:08,862 --> 00:33:10,864
<i>and will soon spread across the country.</i>

483
00:33:11,740 --> 00:33:15,368
<i>The anticipation will however be dulled</i>
<i>by the sobering fact that</i>

484
00:33:15,452 --> 00:33:18,246
<i>even if this experiment</i>
<i>is a spectacular success,</i>

485
00:33:18,872 --> 00:33:22,250
<i>it will still leave the United States</i>
<i>second to Russia.</i>

486
00:33:22,918 --> 00:33:27,339
<i>And if it's a catastrophic failure,</i>
<i>there will be deep gloom compounded</i>

487
00:33:27,422 --> 00:33:30,300
<i>by the tragic loss perhaps of human life.</i>

488
00:33:33,553 --> 00:33:36,848
-(ENGINE REVVING)
-(BEEPING)

489
00:33:39,559 --> 00:33:42,729
ANCHOR:<i> We have interrupted</i>
<i>this program for a special broadcast</i>

490
00:33:42,812 --> 00:33:43,980
<i>from Cape Canaveral.</i>

491
00:33:44,606 --> 00:33:45,982
<i>We switch now to the Cape.</i>

492
00:33:46,608 --> 00:33:48,985
MCGEE: <i>The actual rocket that</i>
<i>will be fired in this launching</i>

493
00:33:49,069 --> 00:33:51,530
<i>and the capsule that will ride atop it</i>
<i>have been selected</i>

494
00:33:51,613 --> 00:33:53,615
<i>and made ready at Cape Canaveral.</i>

495
00:33:54,157 --> 00:33:57,035
<i>The name of the astronaut chosen</i>
<i>is not to be made known</i>

496
00:33:57,118 --> 00:33:59,204
<i>until moments before the launch.</i>

497
00:34:07,879 --> 00:34:10,340
REPORTER:<i> The pilot selected</i>
<i>for the first manned flight attempt</i>

498
00:34:10,590 --> 00:34:12,759
<i>was Alan B. Shepard, Jr.</i>

499
00:34:15,554 --> 00:34:19,140
RENICK:<i> Hundreds of persons traveled</i>
<i>to Cocoa Beach to see with their own eyes</i>

500
00:34:19,391 --> 00:34:23,728
<i>at long distance, the streak of flame</i>
<i>as the Redstone heads skyward.</i>

501
00:34:24,688 --> 00:34:29,109
<i>People stayed at beach vantage points</i>
<i>through the night sleeping in automobiles,</i>

502
00:34:29,317 --> 00:34:30,777
<i>tucked into sleeping bags.</i>

503
00:34:31,111 --> 00:34:35,240
<i>In the distance, about two miles away,</i>
<i>huge searchlights were trained</i>

504
00:34:35,323 --> 00:34:37,242
<i>on the Redstone gantry tower.</i>

505
00:34:38,577 --> 00:34:43,081
<i>Shepard left the Mercury astronaut hangar</i>
<i>in the specially equipped</i>

506
00:34:43,456 --> 00:34:49,045
<i>transportation van, and then he journeyed</i>
<i>to the launching pad area, got out,</i>

507
00:34:49,129 --> 00:34:52,799
<i>took a look at the missile,</i>
<i>and proceeded up the elevator</i>

508
00:34:52,966 --> 00:34:57,262
<i>to assume his position inside</i>
<i>the space, uh, capsule.</i>

509
00:34:59,264 --> 00:35:01,766
ABERNATHY: <i>He will not go into orbit,</i>
<i>as Yuri Gagarin did,</i>

510
00:35:02,183 --> 00:35:06,396
<i>but he will ride his capsule</i>
<i>or spacecraft 116 miles up.</i>

511
00:35:06,896 --> 00:35:09,441
<i>And there he'll hang weightless</i>
<i>for about five minutes</i>

512
00:35:09,524 --> 00:35:13,194
<i>until gravity pulls him back</i>
<i>through the atmosphere to the sea</i>

513
00:35:13,292 --> 00:35:15,196
<i>nearly three hundred miles down range.</i>

514
00:35:18,325 --> 00:35:21,745
<i>The whole flight will take just 16 minutes</i>
<i>but even though brief,</i>

515
00:35:21,870 --> 00:35:26,041
<i>it will help tell us whether man</i>
<i>can be useful in nearby space.</i>

516
00:35:30,337 --> 00:35:34,591
<i>The tall gantry tower moved back</i>
<i>on its tracks nearly three hours ago,</i>

517
00:35:34,758 --> 00:35:39,262
<i>leaving the white Redstone standing alone</i>
<i>like a monument of the space age.</i>

518
00:35:41,181 --> 00:35:44,225
<i>Alan Shepard, encased in his</i>
<i>cumbersome pressure suit,</i>

519
00:35:44,309 --> 00:35:47,604
<i>has remained in the capsule on his back</i>
<i>on his contour couch,</i>

520
00:35:47,979 --> 00:35:50,565
<i>busy with his laboratory</i>
<i>of complex instruments,</i>

521
00:35:50,774 --> 00:35:53,902
<i>going through the motions he's often</i>
<i>gone through in practice sessions,</i>

522
00:35:54,110 --> 00:35:55,779
<i>talking to the control center.</i>

523
00:35:56,112 --> 00:35:58,823
ENGINEER: <i>Firing command, 30, mark.</i>

524
00:35:59,157 --> 00:36:01,493
SHEPARD:<i> Roger, Periscope has retracted.</i>

525
00:36:01,868 --> 00:36:03,703
ENGINEER:<i> That is the best periscope</i>
<i>we've got.</i>

526
00:36:04,287 --> 00:36:06,122
SHEPARD: <i>Main bus 24 volts.</i>

527
00:36:06,289 --> 00:36:08,375
TROUT: <i>He has been busy</i>
<i>but he would not be human</i>

528
00:36:08,458 --> 00:36:09,751
<i>if he did not feel the strain.</i>

529
00:36:09,876 --> 00:36:11,294
ENGINEER: <i>Program. Roger.</i>

530
00:36:11,878 --> 00:36:15,215
<i>C.O. Control fuel.</i>
<i>Roger, fire one. Awesome panel.</i>

531
00:36:15,340 --> 00:36:18,343
SHEPARD: <i>Automatic fuel is 95.</i>
<i>Regular is 96.</i>

532
00:36:18,426 --> 00:36:19,928
<i>Cameras and tape recorders are running.</i>

533
00:36:20,095 --> 00:36:22,806
VON FREMD:<i> Sixty-two newsmen</i>
<i>from 12 foreign countries are present.</i>

534
00:36:23,056 --> 00:36:26,476
<i>Some pace about, some sit ramrod straight</i>
<i>staring at the launching pad</i>

535
00:36:26,559 --> 00:36:27,602
<i>where the Redstone sits.</i>

536
00:36:27,686 --> 00:36:30,980
<i>A squawk box just announced T-minus</i>
<i>six minutes and counting.</i>

537
00:36:33,483 --> 00:36:36,236
WOLFE:
<i>I sensed that in Alan Shepard's... flight,</i>

538
00:36:37,362 --> 00:36:40,198
<i>that as it got down close to zero,</i>

539
00:36:40,323 --> 00:36:45,245
<i>that the engineers were so worked up</i>
<i>for fear, each one for fear that</i>

540
00:36:45,328 --> 00:36:47,372
<i>it would be his system that</i>
<i>would cause a catastrophe.</i>

541
00:36:49,207 --> 00:36:51,292
<i>Finally, Shepard heard one of them...</i>

542
00:36:51,793 --> 00:36:53,712
<i>talking about an overheating piece</i>
<i>of equipment.</i>

543
00:36:53,878 --> 00:36:56,297
ENGINEER: <i>Somebody along, somebody,</i>
<i>a mechanic on the second?</i>

544
00:36:56,506 --> 00:36:59,050
WOLFE: <i>The one engineer was saying</i>
<i>to the other, "You know, I think we better</i>

545
00:36:59,134 --> 00:37:02,345
<i>"take that thing out and look at it before</i>
<i>we proceed."</i>

546
00:37:02,429 --> 00:37:06,808
<i>And Shepard knew that taking</i>
<i>that thing out was not a 15-minute job,</i>

547
00:37:06,891 --> 00:37:07,976
<i>it was a two-day job.</i>

548
00:37:08,518 --> 00:37:11,646
ENGINEER: <i>Down at 170.</i>
<i>No, they should standby.</i>

549
00:37:12,230 --> 00:37:14,649
WOLFE: <i>And at this point,</i>
<i>he got on the radio, and he says,</i>

550
00:37:14,733 --> 00:37:16,943
<i>"Look... I'm cooler than you are."</i>

551
00:37:17,694 --> 00:37:19,779
WOLFE:<i> "Why don't you fix</i>
<i>your little problem</i>

552
00:37:19,863 --> 00:37:20,989
<i>"and light this candle?"</i>

553
00:37:21,197 --> 00:37:24,659
DC power will be applied to the capsule.
DC power will be applied to the capsule.

554
00:37:24,743 --> 00:37:26,494
WOLFE: <i>And that seemed to pull 'em</i>
<i>all together and said,</i>

555
00:37:26,578 --> 00:37:30,290
<i>"Okay, if he's willing to take the risk,</i>
<i>then by God we should be willing, too."</i>

556
00:37:30,874 --> 00:37:32,834
ENGINEER: <i>T-minus 15 seconds.</i>

557
00:37:33,793 --> 00:37:39,466
<i>T-minus ten, nine, eight, seven,</i>
<i>six, five, four,</i>

558
00:37:40,049 --> 00:37:43,470
<i>-three, two, one, zero.</i>
-(BLASTS)

559
00:37:43,928 --> 00:37:46,097
<i>Lift off. Ignition.</i>

560
00:37:46,222 --> 00:37:48,558
SHEPARD:
<i>Roger, lift off and the clock has started.</i>

561
00:37:49,392 --> 00:37:54,022
REPORTER: <i>The Redstone is rising</i>
<i>from its launching pad, slowly at first,</i>

562
00:37:55,315 --> 00:37:57,525
<i>going straight up into the sky.</i>

563
00:37:58,735 --> 00:38:00,612
SHEPARD:
<i>Yes, sir, reading you loud and clear.</i>

564
00:38:01,905 --> 00:38:04,824
RENICK:<i> The sound is now reaching</i>
<i>our vantage point here.</i>

565
00:38:05,909 --> 00:38:07,494
<i>So far, so good.</i>

566
00:38:08,536 --> 00:38:10,872
<i>The news people are applauding.</i>

567
00:38:12,332 --> 00:38:14,167
<i>Tremendous cheers going off.</i>

568
00:38:14,542 --> 00:38:18,379
<i>Alan B. Shepard in the nose cone</i>
<i>of that rocket.</i>

569
00:38:20,715 --> 00:38:26,846
SHEPARD:<i> This is </i>Freedom 7.
<i>The fuel is go, 1.2 G, cabin at 14 psi.</i>

570
00:38:26,971 --> 00:38:28,431
<i>Oxygen is go.</i>

571
00:38:28,681 --> 00:38:30,809
REPORTER:<i> Seventy-eight thousand</i>
<i>pounds of thrust.</i>

572
00:38:31,392 --> 00:38:33,269
<i>They're pushing the missile up</i>
<i>into the sky.</i>

573
00:38:33,436 --> 00:38:34,896
ENGINEER: <i>The trajectory is A-okay.</i>

574
00:38:35,772 --> 00:38:39,567
REPORTER: <i>The speed is picking up</i>
<i>to 4,500 miles an hour...</i>

575
00:38:42,237 --> 00:38:45,949
<i>to carry spaceman Shepard</i>
<i>115 miles above the earth.</i>

576
00:38:46,282 --> 00:38:49,285
LAUNCH STAFF: Freedom 7 <i>is still go.</i>
<i>The trajectory is A-okay.</i>

577
00:38:50,203 --> 00:38:55,500
Freedom 7 <i>with astronaut Alan B. Shepard</i>
<i>reports the fuel system is go, 4 G.</i>

578
00:38:56,167 --> 00:38:58,378
SHEPARD: <i>Cabin holding at 5.5.</i>

579
00:38:58,795 --> 00:39:03,508
LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Cabin 5.5 pounds per square</i>
<i>inch. Oxygen go, all systems go.</i>

580
00:39:03,925 --> 00:39:07,637
HACKES: <i>Medical monitor okay.</i>
<i>Apparently, the flight is going just</i>

581
00:39:07,720 --> 00:39:10,515
<i>as well as planned,</i>
<i>perhaps even a little better.</i>

582
00:39:10,640 --> 00:39:13,935
<i>None of the emergencies for which</i>
<i>we had planned for so long</i>

583
00:39:14,018 --> 00:39:17,397
<i>has, uh, yet taken place, and, of course,</i>
<i>we hope none of them will.</i>

584
00:39:18,523 --> 00:39:21,568
SHEPARD: <i>On the periscope,</i>
<i>what a beautiful view.</i>

585
00:39:23,236 --> 00:39:27,365
HACKES: <i>At this point, the pilot</i>
<i>is about six minutes and 30 seconds</i>

586
00:39:27,448 --> 00:39:30,326
<i>after his launch, 6:30 after launch.</i>

587
00:39:30,577 --> 00:39:34,581
<i>In just a moment or two, he will confirm</i>
<i>that he is at the apogee of his flight,</i>

588
00:39:34,664 --> 00:39:37,375
<i>that is the most distant point</i>
<i>from the Earth,</i>

589
00:39:37,458 --> 00:39:40,879
<i>which we expect will be 115 to 117 miles.</i>

590
00:39:42,463 --> 00:39:43,840
(HELICOPTER WHIRRING)

591
00:39:44,090 --> 00:39:48,011
REPORTER:<i> Far out at sea an armada</i>
<i>of ships stand by to pick the capsule</i>

592
00:39:48,344 --> 00:39:50,597
<i>out of the sea after it parachutes in.</i>

593
00:39:51,431 --> 00:39:54,517
SHEPARD: <i>Okay, reentry attitude</i>
<i>retros are jettisoned.</i>

594
00:39:55,685 --> 00:39:57,687
MUELLER:
<i>The capsule is dropping radar chaff</i>

595
00:39:57,812 --> 00:39:59,355
<i>for the search planes and the ship.</i>

596
00:40:02,150 --> 00:40:06,070
SHEPARD: <i>Uh... G-buildup, three...</i>

597
00:40:06,946 --> 00:40:09,490
<i>six... nine.</i>

598
00:40:12,410 --> 00:40:16,205
<i>Main chute is green, main chute is coming</i>
<i>un-reefed and looks good.</i>

599
00:40:16,331 --> 00:40:18,833
HACKES: <i>This, of course, will be</i>
<i>the first, uh, word we get.</i>

600
00:40:18,917 --> 00:40:22,503
<i>We hope within a matter of seconds</i>
<i>that the capsule has been spotted.</i>

601
00:40:29,761 --> 00:40:31,971
DOWNS:
<i>It just hit the water a moment ago.</i>

602
00:40:32,847 --> 00:40:36,100
<i>A cheer went up from the ship company</i>
<i>watching here from all decks</i>

603
00:40:36,184 --> 00:40:37,518
<i>on the aircraft carrier.</i>

604
00:40:38,144 --> 00:40:42,148
<i>The astronaut, Alan Shepard,</i>
<i>has just climbed out of the capsule.</i>

605
00:40:42,815 --> 00:40:46,319
<i>And they are now trying</i>
<i>to get him up into the helicopter.</i>

606
00:40:53,576 --> 00:40:56,704
<i>No one, especially newsmen,</i>
<i>will be allowed to ask him any questions</i>

607
00:40:56,788 --> 00:40:59,248
<i>until he has been debriefed by doctors.</i>

608
00:41:05,296 --> 00:41:08,967
WOLFE: <i>Glenn and the others now watched</i>
<i>from the sidelines as Al Shepard</i>

609
00:41:09,092 --> 00:41:10,677
<i>was hoisted out of their midst.</i>

610
00:41:11,094 --> 00:41:13,763
REPORTER:<i> Here come the astronauts,</i>
<i>and there's Shepard!</i>

611
00:41:14,013 --> 00:41:18,101
WOLFE: <i>And installed as a national hero</i>
<i>on the order of a Lindbergh.</i>

612
00:41:20,353 --> 00:41:24,983
As the first United States Astronaut,
was an outstanding contribution

613
00:41:25,650 --> 00:41:29,028
to the advancement of human knowledge
of space technology.

614
00:41:29,153 --> 00:41:32,532
<i>And I speak on behalf of,</i>
<i>uh, the Vice President, who is Chairman</i>

615
00:41:32,615 --> 00:41:35,827
of our Space Council,
the members of the House and Senate,

616
00:41:36,202 --> 00:41:38,454
space committee who are with us today.

617
00:41:39,664 --> 00:41:40,748
And, uh...

618
00:41:41,207 --> 00:41:43,751
this decoration which has gone
from the ground up, here.

619
00:41:43,835 --> 00:41:48,464
(LAUGHTER AND APPLAUSE)

620
00:41:57,890 --> 00:42:02,353
Well, all of a sudden during the period
of the middle of the weightlessness,

621
00:42:03,187 --> 00:42:05,523
I realized that somebody was
gonna ask me that question.

622
00:42:06,024 --> 00:42:08,359
(ALL LAUGH)

623
00:42:10,570 --> 00:42:11,446
So...

624
00:42:11,821 --> 00:42:15,033
(APPLAUSE)

625
00:42:15,575 --> 00:42:17,869
So, I said to myself
you'd better figure out an answer.

626
00:42:20,580 --> 00:42:25,585
Seriously, as we have said before, uh,
during the short periods of weightlessness

627
00:42:25,668 --> 00:42:28,171
that we've experienced during
our training period,

628
00:42:28,838 --> 00:42:30,590
it's quite a pleasant sensation.

629
00:42:37,680 --> 00:42:39,724
KENNEDY:
<i>Finally, if we are to win the battle</i>

630
00:42:39,974 --> 00:42:41,893
<i>that is now going on around the world...</i>

631
00:42:42,852 --> 00:42:47,774
between freedom and tyranny,
the dramatic achievements in space,

632
00:42:47,857 --> 00:42:51,694
which occurred in recent weeks,
should have made clear to us all,

633
00:42:52,612 --> 00:42:54,989
as did the <i>Sputnik</i> in 1957,

634
00:42:55,990 --> 00:43:01,079
impact of this adventure on the minds
of men everywhere

635
00:43:02,038 --> 00:43:06,459
who are attempting to make a determination
of which road they should take.

636
00:43:07,502 --> 00:43:11,798
I believe that this nation should commit
itself to achieving the goal

637
00:43:12,673 --> 00:43:16,219
before this decade is out
of landing a man on the Moon

638
00:43:16,302 --> 00:43:20,556
-and returning him safely to the Earth.
-(APPLAUSE)

639
00:43:20,973 --> 00:43:24,811
SHEARER: <i>The president put it like this,</i>
<i>"It will not be one man going to the Moon,</i>

640
00:43:24,894 --> 00:43:28,731
<i>"it will be the entire nation,</i>
<i>for all of us must work to put him there."</i>

641
00:43:41,327 --> 00:43:45,915
(EPIC MUSIC PLAYING)

642
00:43:46,499 --> 00:43:49,544
MCGEE: <i>This training device was created</i>
<i>especially for the astronauts.</i>

643
00:43:50,169 --> 00:43:53,673
<i>By releasing jets of air, they learn</i>
<i>to control their movements</i>

644
00:43:53,756 --> 00:43:57,260
<i>in any one of three directions,</i>
<i>or any combination of the three.</i>

645
00:44:08,980 --> 00:44:12,733
<i>As they perform these exercises,</i>
<i>a film strip of the world's geography</i>

646
00:44:12,817 --> 00:44:16,320
<i>is projected on a screen to help</i>
<i>them learn, by instant sighting,</i>

647
00:44:16,445 --> 00:44:18,739
<i>where they may be</i>
<i>along their projected path.</i>

648
00:44:22,160 --> 00:44:23,995
<i>Virgil Grissom is the astronaut.</i>

649
00:44:24,787 --> 00:44:27,456
<i>Do you have any difficulty convincing</i>
<i>yourself that you might actually</i>

650
00:44:27,540 --> 00:44:29,292
<i>see the world go by like that someday?</i>

651
00:44:29,750 --> 00:44:32,503
I really don't sit in the trainer
and think about myself

652
00:44:32,628 --> 00:44:34,088
being 100 miles above the Earth.

653
00:44:35,506 --> 00:44:38,634
<i>I'm occupied with the control task</i>
<i>and this is the thing that</i>

654
00:44:38,718 --> 00:44:40,678
<i>really occupies my mind, not daydreaming.</i>

655
00:44:44,182 --> 00:44:46,517
BERGMAN:<i> And here we are back</i>
<i>at </i>ABC News<i> headquarters</i>

656
00:44:46,601 --> 00:44:47,894
<i>on Cape Canaveral.</i>

657
00:44:48,019 --> 00:44:51,606
<i>Scarcely three minutes away</i>
<i>from America's second manned space shot</i>

658
00:44:51,856 --> 00:44:54,734
<i>with captain Gus Grissom sitting</i>
<i>in the Mercury space capsule</i>

659
00:44:54,817 --> 00:44:57,612
<i>atop that 83-foot high Redstone rocket.</i>

660
00:44:58,321 --> 00:45:01,115
<i>And as of now, everything looks like</i>
<i>it's in a go condition.</i>

661
00:45:05,494 --> 00:45:07,205
SHEPARD: <i>Periscope has retracted.</i>

662
00:45:09,540 --> 00:45:11,667
<i>T-minus 15 seconds.</i>

663
00:45:13,628 --> 00:45:17,506
<i>Ten, nine, eight, seven, six,</i>

664
00:45:18,257 --> 00:45:22,803
<i>five, four, three, two, one.</i>

665
00:45:23,304 --> 00:45:25,598
<i>Ignition. Lift off.</i>

666
00:45:25,765 --> 00:45:27,433
(LAUNCHES)

667
00:45:43,991 --> 00:45:46,744
MALE VOICE: <i>All systems are go,</i>
<i>and Gus Grissom sounds</i>

668
00:45:46,827 --> 00:45:49,413
<i>like a very confident test pilot today.</i>

669
00:45:50,289 --> 00:45:52,166
-SHEPARD: <i>Loud and clear.</i>
-LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Roger.</i>

670
00:45:53,125 --> 00:45:56,254
GRISSOM: <i>Okay, the fuel is go,</i>
<i>about one and a quarter Gs.</i>

671
00:45:56,337 --> 00:45:59,423
<i>Cabin pressure is just coming off the peg.</i>
<i>The oxygen is go.</i>

672
00:46:02,802 --> 00:46:04,428
POWERS: <i>Six seventeen into the flight.</i>

673
00:46:05,846 --> 00:46:08,516
<i>The capsule is coming around</i>
<i>into orbit attitude.</i>

674
00:46:10,559 --> 00:46:14,272
<i>He has brought his spacecraft around</i>
<i>into reentry attitude</i>

675
00:46:14,355 --> 00:46:17,566
<i>that is with the big bell shape</i>
<i>beginning to point down.</i>

676
00:46:43,509 --> 00:46:46,345
REPORTER: <i>Flight Surgeon reports</i>
<i>that Gus Grissom came through</i>

677
00:46:46,429 --> 00:46:49,682
<i>the high G forces of reentry</i>
<i>in A-okay condition.</i>

678
00:47:05,573 --> 00:47:08,117
REPORTER: <i>Now, we're advised that</i>
<i>as a result of communications</i>

679
00:47:08,200 --> 00:47:12,246
<i>with Gus Grissom floating in the water,</i>
<i>he's told his recovery helicopters that</i>

680
00:47:12,830 --> 00:47:16,292
<i>he intends to finish his checklist</i>
<i>and make sure that everything is secure</i>

681
00:47:16,375 --> 00:47:18,878
<i>in the cockpit before he opens</i>
<i>the hatch to come out.</i>

682
00:47:22,048 --> 00:47:24,759
(HELICOPTER WHIRRING)

683
00:47:30,473 --> 00:47:33,559
MALE VOICE:<i> The astronaut, Virgil Grissom,</i>
<i>is out of the capsule,</i>

684
00:47:33,642 --> 00:47:34,935
<i>swimming in the water.</i>

685
00:47:41,817 --> 00:47:44,904
<i>The capsule itself is apparently sinking</i>
<i>lower into the water...</i>

686
00:47:47,406 --> 00:47:51,202
<i>and there is fear that it might sink</i>
<i>completely below the surface of the water.</i>

687
00:47:51,494 --> 00:47:54,455
<i>Two helicopters are hovering</i>
<i>very close to the astronaut</i>

688
00:47:54,538 --> 00:47:55,790
<i>and the capsule out there.</i>

689
00:48:00,795 --> 00:48:03,339
<i>The helicopter is holding</i>
<i>up the capsule itself.</i>

690
00:48:03,631 --> 00:48:06,342
<i>They're checking on Grissom again,</i>
<i>but the helicopter has a cable</i>

691
00:48:06,425 --> 00:48:09,387
<i>aboard the capsule and is holding it up</i>
<i>at the present time.</i>

692
00:48:11,013 --> 00:48:14,058
<i>The helicopter is hovering over</i>
<i>and holding the capsule up.</i>

693
00:48:14,767 --> 00:48:18,562
<i>The capsule was sinking badly in the water</i>
<i>and that's the reason that Virgil Grissom</i>

694
00:48:18,646 --> 00:48:20,231
<i>got out of the capsule.</i>

695
00:48:22,191 --> 00:48:24,360
<i>One helicopter is hovering very close</i>
<i>to the capsule</i>

696
00:48:24,485 --> 00:48:26,070
<i>and now they're moving in beside it.</i>

697
00:48:26,278 --> 00:48:29,573
<i>They'll have to hold the capsule up</i>
<i>and get a cable down to Grissom as well.</i>

698
00:48:31,951 --> 00:48:33,119
(LOUD SPLASH)

699
00:48:33,577 --> 00:48:35,454
MALE VOICE: <i>The capsule has dropped.</i>

700
00:48:35,788 --> 00:48:38,165
<i>The capsule has been dropped</i>
<i>by the helicopter.</i>

701
00:48:38,499 --> 00:48:40,209
<i>And it's dropped back into the water.</i>

702
00:48:40,292 --> 00:48:42,628
<i>Now, whether they can get it</i>
<i>again before it sinks or not,</i>

703
00:48:42,962 --> 00:48:45,297
<i>that is going to be a major problem</i>
<i>at this time.</i>

704
00:48:53,347 --> 00:48:55,266
WOLFE:<i> By this time, Grissom</i>
<i>was nearly drowning.</i>

705
00:48:55,349 --> 00:48:57,518
<i>He had forgotten to close one</i>
<i>of the inlet valves</i>

706
00:48:57,601 --> 00:48:59,145
<i>for the oxygen supply in his suit.</i>

707
00:49:00,521 --> 00:49:02,523
(HELICOPTER WHIRRING)

708
00:49:04,442 --> 00:49:07,778
REPORTER:<i> They're making an attempt</i>
<i>to get a cable to Virgil Grissom.</i>

709
00:49:10,990 --> 00:49:14,577
<i>And it looks like Grissom is coming up</i>
<i>now, it looks like Grissom is coming up</i>

710
00:49:14,702 --> 00:49:18,747
<i>out of the water. And there's, you can,</i>
<i>you can see him now.</i>

711
00:49:18,956 --> 00:49:22,376
<i>He's about four miles from us,</i>
<i>and he's being pulled up.</i>

712
00:49:29,383 --> 00:49:33,220
<i>And Grissom is safe and sound</i>
<i>in the helicopter after his dunking</i>

713
00:49:33,304 --> 00:49:35,556
<i>when the capsule itself started to sink.</i>

714
00:49:41,395 --> 00:49:44,648
MCGEE:<i> To recap briefly,</i>
<i>we have had a second successful launching</i>

715
00:49:44,732 --> 00:49:47,943
<i>of an American astronaut. Obviously</i>
<i>not as successful as the first one</i>

716
00:49:48,027 --> 00:49:51,155
<i>because the capsule itself</i>
<i>was lost in the recovery operation,</i>

717
00:49:51,238 --> 00:49:54,492
<i>but successful in its most important</i>
<i>and critical area.</i>

718
00:49:54,700 --> 00:49:58,746
<i>The astronaut himself, Air Force</i>
<i>Captain Virgil Grissom, was recovered.</i>

719
00:50:00,456 --> 00:50:02,958
WOLFE: <i>The capsule had been equipped</i>
<i>for the first time with a hatch</i>

720
00:50:03,042 --> 00:50:04,502
<i>that could be opened from the inside.</i>

721
00:50:07,171 --> 00:50:11,175
<i>Now, the controversy was over whether</i>
<i>or not he had panicked and decided,</i>

722
00:50:11,258 --> 00:50:13,135
<i>"I've gotta get out of this thing,"</i>
<i>and hit the button,</i>

723
00:50:13,219 --> 00:50:15,721
<i>causing this catastrophe.</i>
<i>Or whether he had blundered,</i>

724
00:50:16,055 --> 00:50:18,224
<i>and had inadvertently somehow</i>
<i>hit the thing,</i>

725
00:50:18,557 --> 00:50:21,060
<i>either of which would be a cardinal sin.</i>

726
00:50:22,144 --> 00:50:23,938
REPORTER: <i>The President has called</i>

727
00:50:24,063 --> 00:50:27,274
<i>to the astronaut</i>
<i>Captain Virgil Gus Grissom.</i>

728
00:50:52,091 --> 00:50:54,051
WOLFE:
<i>Grissom had John F. Kennedy to thank.</i>

729
00:51:00,766 --> 00:51:05,229
<i>He was not about to let the second flight</i>
<i>of his new administration</i>

730
00:51:05,729 --> 00:51:07,356
<i>be classified as a debacle.</i>

731
00:51:08,524 --> 00:51:10,401
<i>By, it's kind of universal agreement,</i>
<i>it was said,</i>

732
00:51:10,484 --> 00:51:12,778
<i>"Well, Gus's flight was really a success.</i>

733
00:51:16,282 --> 00:51:18,325
<i>"He just had a little trouble</i>
<i>at the very end."</i>

734
00:51:24,081 --> 00:51:26,500
GRISSOM:
I started my, uh, pitch and yaw movement

735
00:51:26,584 --> 00:51:31,255
to check out the manual control system,
and, uh, I was so fascinated by this view

736
00:51:31,338 --> 00:51:33,757
out the window that I had difficulty
controlling on...

737
00:51:34,049 --> 00:51:35,718
difficulty concentrating
on the instruments.

738
00:51:35,801 --> 00:51:37,344
I kept wanting to peek out
the window.

739
00:51:38,679 --> 00:51:39,680
You over here.

740
00:51:40,306 --> 00:51:44,226
REPORTER: What happened to
the inflatable, uh, life raft, Gus?

741
00:51:44,310 --> 00:51:47,313
Did you have to get out too fast for that,
or what's the procedure?

742
00:51:47,396 --> 00:51:51,191
GRISSOM: <i>Uh... I took off my helmet,</i>
<i>unstrapped myself,</i>

743
00:51:51,609 --> 00:51:55,738
<i>I called, uh, helicopters, told them</i>
<i>I was ready to come out.</i>

744
00:51:56,030 --> 00:51:58,991
<i>So I was all set, waiting for them,</i>
<i>laid back down on the couch.</i>

745
00:51:59,491 --> 00:52:02,036
<i>I was just laying there,</i>
<i>minding my own business when, "Pow,"</i>

746
00:52:02,745 --> 00:52:05,247
<i>the hatch went, I looked up,</i>
<i>and I saw nothing but blue sky,</i>

747
00:52:05,331 --> 00:52:06,999
<i>and water starting to come in</i>
<i>over the sill.</i>

748
00:52:07,082 --> 00:52:09,710
<i>Uh, without a doubt that</i>
<i>was the biggest shock of the day to me,</i>

749
00:52:09,793 --> 00:52:10,919
<i>to see that door go off.</i>

750
00:52:11,170 --> 00:52:12,880
-Back, over here.
-REPORTER: Do you have an impression

751
00:52:12,963 --> 00:52:15,132
of how much time elapsed
between the time the hatch blew

752
00:52:15,215 --> 00:52:17,509
<i>-and the capsule would fill?</i>
-REPORTER: <i>Somebody said to you,</i>

753
00:52:17,635 --> 00:52:20,137
<i>"Get out of the blank,</i>
<i>blank capsule quick."</i>

754
00:52:20,429 --> 00:52:22,640
-Was this part of your conversation?
-REPORTER: In addition to the hatch,

755
00:52:22,723 --> 00:52:24,391
what are the other things you...

756
00:52:24,475 --> 00:52:26,310
REPORTER: Captain, do you have
any explanation

757
00:52:26,393 --> 00:52:28,187
of why that escape hatch came off?

758
00:52:28,270 --> 00:52:31,982
Is it possible you could have grazed
against the plunger button?

759
00:52:32,775 --> 00:52:35,194
Well, I'm, uh, pretty certain
in my own mind that I didn't

760
00:52:35,277 --> 00:52:37,279
because it's quite difficult
to get to it.

761
00:52:37,905 --> 00:52:42,368
(APPLAUSE)

762
00:52:42,951 --> 00:52:46,705
REPORTER: NBC News<i> has presented</i>
<i>a news conference by Mercury astronaut</i>

763
00:52:46,830 --> 00:52:51,502
<i>Virgil I. Grissom, who, yesterday,</i>
<i>became America's second man into space.</i>

764
00:53:08,394 --> 00:53:10,688
REPORTER:
<i>Two pilot teams have been selected</i>

765
00:53:10,783 --> 00:53:14,458
<i>for Project Mercury's initial manned</i>
<i>orbital spaceflight.</i>

766
00:53:15,609 --> 00:53:19,530
<i>John H. Glenn Jr. has been selected</i>
<i>for the first flight</i>

767
00:53:20,114 --> 00:53:22,491
<i>with Scott Carpenter acting as backup.</i>

768
00:53:27,663 --> 00:53:30,249
GLENN: <i>We've done a great amount</i>
<i>of training, as you're well aware.</i>

769
00:53:30,666 --> 00:53:34,920
<i>A lot of it has been new and varied,</i>
<i>and as we have gone through a lot of this,</i>

770
00:53:35,045 --> 00:53:38,006
<i>I have tried to share a lot of this</i>
<i>with the family when I come home</i>

771
00:53:38,090 --> 00:53:39,591
<i>from various activities.</i>

772
00:53:39,758 --> 00:53:42,761
<i>In fact, that's usually the first thing</i>
<i>we do when I get home from a trip.</i>

773
00:53:42,845 --> 00:53:45,723
<i>We all, uh, get caught up,</i>
<i>not only on my activities,</i>

774
00:53:45,806 --> 00:53:48,559
<i>but on what Annie and the children</i>
<i>have been doing, too.</i>

775
00:53:50,102 --> 00:53:53,021
I'm sure you've given some thought
to the possibility that this flight

776
00:53:53,105 --> 00:53:55,357
may not turn out well,
and that you may not come back.

777
00:53:56,191 --> 00:53:57,943
If that should happen,
what kind of a memory

778
00:53:58,026 --> 00:53:59,903
would you want your boy to have about you?

779
00:54:08,036 --> 00:54:10,581
Well, that's an interesting question,
to say the least. (CHUCKLES)

780
00:54:10,664 --> 00:54:11,623
MCGEE: It is.

781
00:54:12,666 --> 00:54:14,126
GLENN: <i>We all have certain talents.</i>

782
00:54:14,334 --> 00:54:17,671
<i>It's up to us to use those talents that</i>
<i>we have to the maximum.</i>

783
00:54:17,921 --> 00:54:22,551
And if I can leave that sort of a heritage
that I used the talents I had to the best

784
00:54:22,801 --> 00:54:26,889
of my ability while I was here, I think
that's the best memory anyone could leave.

785
00:54:29,516 --> 00:54:31,351
REPORTER: <i>Around town,</i>
<i>the tension is building,</i>

786
00:54:31,435 --> 00:54:33,395
<i>perhaps more than we've</i>
<i>ever seen it here.</i>

787
00:54:35,898 --> 00:54:39,526
RENICK: <i>The big question here surrounding</i>
<i>tomorrow's scheduled launch</i>

788
00:54:39,610 --> 00:54:42,029
<i>of astronaut John Glenn</i>
<i>into a triple orbit around</i>

789
00:54:42,112 --> 00:54:43,655
<i>the Earth is weather.</i>

790
00:54:44,031 --> 00:54:47,159
<i>Weather here at the launch site</i>
<i>and downrange in the Atlantic</i>

791
00:54:47,284 --> 00:54:52,269
<i>where Navy recovery vessels are scheduled</i>
<i>to meet Glenn as he comes out of orbit.</i>

792
00:54:59,379 --> 00:55:03,050
WOLFE: <i>John Glenn was about to</i>
<i>make his flight,</i>

793
00:55:03,133 --> 00:55:05,385
<i>in which he would be the first American</i>
<i>to go into orbit.</i>

794
00:55:08,138 --> 00:55:11,225
<i>The flight was to take place in February,</i>
<i>and there was about four or five flights</i>

795
00:55:11,308 --> 00:55:13,310
<i>that were delayed by the weather.</i>

796
00:55:18,232 --> 00:55:21,610
<i>Glenn had been up on top of the rocket</i>
<i>for five and a half hours,</i>

797
00:55:22,194 --> 00:55:23,737
<i>waiting for the weather to clear.</i>

798
00:55:25,823 --> 00:55:29,493
<i>Finally, it wouldn't clear,</i>
<i>and the flight was scrubbed.</i>

799
00:55:31,453 --> 00:55:32,996
REPORTER:
<i>I have an announcement for you.</i>

800
00:55:33,288 --> 00:55:34,998
<i>An attempt to launch a man</i>

801
00:55:35,082 --> 00:55:38,252
<i>to orbital Project Mercury spacecraft</i>
<i>here today...</i>

802
00:55:38,794 --> 00:55:43,048
<i>was postponed due to a heavy overcast</i>
<i>in the launch area.</i>

803
00:55:44,132 --> 00:55:47,052
WOLFE:<i> And at this point, Lyndon Johnson,</i>
<i>who was Vice President,</i>

804
00:55:47,135 --> 00:55:50,681
<i>and had been made a kind of functionary</i>
<i>in-charge of the space program</i>

805
00:55:50,806 --> 00:55:52,391
<i>to give a Vice President something to do,</i>

806
00:55:52,599 --> 00:55:55,352
<i>was suffering an extreme case</i>
<i>of media deprivation.</i>

807
00:55:55,435 --> 00:55:58,689
<i>And he was determined to get</i>
<i>inside of the Glenn household,</i>

808
00:55:58,772 --> 00:56:00,983
<i>and console Annie Glenn...</i>

809
00:56:01,567 --> 00:56:04,444
<i>on nationwide television for the ordeal</i>
<i>that she had had to go through</i>

810
00:56:04,528 --> 00:56:07,531
<i>while waiting to see if her husband</i>
<i>was going to be exploded into space,</i>

811
00:56:07,614 --> 00:56:08,866
<i>or up to the harp form.</i>

812
00:56:09,491 --> 00:56:11,827
REPORTER: <i>The reaction here</i>
<i>at the Glenn household, of course,</i>

813
00:56:11,910 --> 00:56:15,289
<i>is one of disappointment.</i>
<i>Mrs. Glenn, uh, was anxious for the shot</i>

814
00:56:15,372 --> 00:56:17,875
<i>to go this morning,</i>
<i>as, uh, were all of us.</i>

815
00:56:18,292 --> 00:56:21,336
<i>She is looking forward to the next</i>
<i>launching date, yet to be announced.</i>

816
00:56:21,420 --> 00:56:24,006
<i>As you can see, a large crowd</i>
<i>of reporters, neighbors,</i>

817
00:56:24,089 --> 00:56:26,425
<i>and casual spectators are gathered here.</i>

818
00:56:27,467 --> 00:56:30,554
WOLFE: <i>Now, Annie Glenn was</i>
<i>terrified of this visit.</i>

819
00:56:31,096 --> 00:56:33,390
<i>Fact was, as practically no one</i>
<i>in the country knew,</i>

820
00:56:33,515 --> 00:56:35,058
<i>she had a ferocious stutter.</i>

821
00:56:37,978 --> 00:56:40,606
<i>So, she kept sending out word that,</i>
<i>"No. Thank you very much.</i>

822
00:56:40,689 --> 00:56:42,482
<i>"I really don't want to</i>
<i>see the Vice President.</i>

823
00:56:42,566 --> 00:56:44,026
<i>"It's a very private moment for me."</i>

824
00:56:44,484 --> 00:56:45,986
<i>She just wouldn't let him in the door.</i>

825
00:56:46,361 --> 00:56:49,281
<i>And by now, he was in a limousine</i>
<i>about six blocks away,</i>

826
00:56:49,364 --> 00:56:52,200
<i>waiting to be admitted to the presence</i>
<i>of the space-wife.</i>

827
00:56:53,619 --> 00:56:56,204
<i>First thing Glenn knows,</i>
<i>he's back in the ready room,</i>

828
00:56:56,288 --> 00:56:59,166
<i>taking off his pressure suit,</i>
<i>and in comes a delegation...</i>

829
00:56:59,458 --> 00:57:01,919
<i>of brass from NASA,</i>
<i>marching into the place, saying,</i>

830
00:57:02,044 --> 00:57:03,420
<i>"John, we need your cooperation,</i>

831
00:57:03,503 --> 00:57:05,255
<i>"we're having a little problem</i>
<i>with your wife."</i>

832
00:57:05,339 --> 00:57:06,924
<i>He says, "You're having a problem</i>
<i>with my wife?"</i>

833
00:57:07,341 --> 00:57:10,093
<i>And they said, "Well, yeah, she won't let</i>
<i>the Vice President into the house.</i>

834
00:57:10,177 --> 00:57:13,096
<i>"And you tell her, she's going to let</i>
<i>the Vice President of the United States</i>

835
00:57:13,180 --> 00:57:16,600
<i>"into that house to console her."</i>
<i>So Glenn gets on the telephone,</i>

836
00:57:16,683 --> 00:57:20,062
<i>and he says, "Look, if you don't want the</i>
<i>Vice President to come in,</i>

837
00:57:20,145 --> 00:57:23,273
<i>"if you don't want the President</i>
<i>to come in, they're not coming in!"</i>

838
00:57:24,816 --> 00:57:30,113
<i>Well, Glenn, with that gesture,</i>
<i>stood a good chance of losing his flight</i>

839
00:57:31,114 --> 00:57:33,367
<i>because James Webb, who was</i>
<i>the new administrator of NASA</i>

840
00:57:33,450 --> 00:57:35,369
<i>at that time, he wanted to replace him</i>
<i>right away.</i>

841
00:57:36,078 --> 00:57:37,829
<i>You know, he said,</i>
<i>"He's not a team player."</i>

842
00:57:38,747 --> 00:57:41,875
<i>It was only the fact that some</i>
<i>of Webb's subordinates immediately said,</i>

843
00:57:41,959 --> 00:57:44,086
<i>"Look, the astronauts have</i>
<i>their differences.</i>

844
00:57:44,169 --> 00:57:45,379
<i>"They have a lot of rivalries.</i>

845
00:57:45,462 --> 00:57:47,631
<i>"But on something like this,</i>
<i>they're going to close ranks</i>

846
00:57:48,173 --> 00:57:51,093
<i>"as any pilots would in a squadron,</i>
<i>and they're going to rebel.</i>

847
00:57:54,471 --> 00:57:56,723
<i>"And you simply will not be able</i>
<i>to carry it through."</i>

848
00:58:10,237 --> 00:58:12,823
KAPLOW:
<i>And here is pilot Glenn stepping out now.</i>

849
00:58:14,950 --> 00:58:17,577
<i>Switching the portable air cooler</i>

850
00:58:17,661 --> 00:58:19,913
<i>from his left to his right hand,</i>
<i>then back to his left.</i>

851
00:58:19,997 --> 00:58:23,500
<i>And he moves his way around the front</i>
<i>of the truck on Launchpad 14.</i>

852
00:58:29,423 --> 00:58:32,009
<i>And now stepping into the elevator,</i>
<i>followed by Dr. Douglas,</i>

853
00:58:32,092 --> 00:58:35,804
<i>by suit technician Schmitt,</i>
<i>by astronaut Deke Slayton.</i>

854
00:58:39,349 --> 00:58:43,020
BERGMAN:<i> Colonel John Glenn</i>
<i>was awakened at 2:20 a.m. Eastern Time</i>

855
00:58:43,145 --> 00:58:45,689
<i>this morning to begin preparing</i>
<i>for this mission.</i>

856
00:58:48,233 --> 00:58:51,945
<i>The second attempt at getting</i>
<i>the free world's first man hurled</i>

857
00:58:52,029 --> 00:58:54,406
<i>into a three-orbit mission</i>
<i>around this world.</i>

858
00:59:11,173 --> 00:59:13,550
I don't know any words
for this except the trite ones,

859
00:59:13,675 --> 00:59:15,969
tension is mounting here
at Cape Canaveral.

860
00:59:16,511 --> 00:59:20,390
<i>We've heard that phrase so many times</i>
<i>before, but I don't know any circumstance</i>

861
00:59:20,474 --> 00:59:22,309
<i>to which is applies quite like this.</i>

862
00:59:22,517 --> 00:59:24,102
FLIGHT DIRECTOR:
<i>Status check, pressurization?</i>

863
00:59:24,186 --> 00:59:27,189
MALE VOICE: <i>Go. LOX tanking? I have a</i>
<i>blinking, high-level light?</i>

864
00:59:27,314 --> 00:59:30,150
-MALE VOICE 1: <i>You are Go!</i>
-MALE VOICE 2:<i> Umbilical retract now?</i>

865
00:59:30,275 --> 00:59:32,527
-FLIGHT DIRECTOR:<i> Range operations?</i>
-LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Go, clear to launch.</i>

866
00:59:32,611 --> 00:59:34,112
-FLIGHT DIRECTOR:<i> Mercury capsule?</i>
-LAUNCH STAFF:<i> Go!</i>

867
00:59:34,196 --> 00:59:38,200
<i>Fifteen seconds. Good Lord</i>
<i>riding all the way. Godspeed, John Glenn.</i>

868
00:59:38,366 --> 00:59:41,119
REPORTER: <i>Moving past 30 seconds</i>
<i>into the countdown.</i>

869
00:59:41,203 --> 00:59:42,788
LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Ten seconds and counting.</i>

870
00:59:43,371 --> 00:59:46,458
-REPORTER: <i>T-minus ten seconds.</i>
-LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Ten, nine, eight, seven,</i>

871
00:59:46,625 --> 00:59:50,212
<i>six, five, four, three</i>

872
00:59:50,796 --> 00:59:54,716
<i>two, one, zero, ignition.</i>

873
00:59:55,842 --> 00:59:59,096
<i>Liftoff. Liftoff!</i>

874
01:00:01,348 --> 01:00:03,850
(TRIUMPHANT MUSIC PLAYING)

875
01:00:06,019 --> 01:00:08,230
REPORTER: <i>The Atlas missile has</i>
<i>lifted off from the pad,</i>

876
01:00:09,022 --> 01:00:11,274
<i>and is rising steady into the sky.</i>

877
01:00:20,909 --> 01:00:23,286
(ROCKET ENGINE ROARING)

878
01:00:36,049 --> 01:00:42,722
REPORTER: <i>As John Glenn Jr. has begun</i>
<i>his first orbital ride around the Earth.</i>

879
01:00:54,109 --> 01:00:56,319
The time of the lift off was 9:47.

880
01:00:56,611 --> 01:00:59,614
As the spacecraft moved out
of sight from Florida,

881
01:00:59,698 --> 01:01:01,950
<i>it was picked up by the</i>
<i>Bermuda tracking station.</i>

882
01:01:02,826 --> 01:01:05,871
<i>John Glenn's voice was coming in</i>
<i>loud and clear.</i>

883
01:01:06,788 --> 01:01:09,332
GLENN: <i>So, the sun is coming up</i>
<i>behind me in the periscope,</i>

884
01:01:09,624 --> 01:01:11,877
<i>a brilliant, brilliant red. Over.</i>

885
01:01:13,253 --> 01:01:14,754
-MALE VOICE: Roger.
-(RADIO STATIC)

886
01:01:22,304 --> 01:01:24,514
TOWNSEND:<i> Exactly one hour</i>
<i>and three minutes ago,</i>

887
01:01:24,639 --> 01:01:26,892
<i>John Glenn left Cape Canaveral.</i>

888
01:01:27,267 --> 01:01:31,605
<i>Traveling at 17,545 miles an hour</i>
<i>at an altitude varying</i>

889
01:01:31,771 --> 01:01:35,233
<i>from 100 to 160 miles above the Earth.</i>

890
01:01:38,778 --> 01:01:40,530
REPORTER:
<i>Did you ever show up for work today?</i>

891
01:01:40,614 --> 01:01:43,909
FEMALE VOICE: <i>Yes, I did. We got</i>
<i>permission from our company to watch it.</i>

892
01:01:43,992 --> 01:01:45,327
REPORTER: Good for them. I don't...

893
01:01:45,410 --> 01:01:47,704
imagine they figure they'd get
much work out of you anyway.

894
01:01:47,787 --> 01:01:50,081
Not today. They said this is more
important than work.

895
01:01:52,042 --> 01:01:55,378
GLENN:<i> Uh, this is </i>Friendship 7,
<i>I'll try to describe what I'm in here.</i>

896
01:01:55,754 --> 01:01:59,758
<i>Uh, I am in a... a big mass</i>
<i>of some very small particles,</i>

897
01:02:00,217 --> 01:02:03,094
<i>uh, that are brilliantly lit up,</i>
<i>like they're luminescent.</i>

898
01:02:03,178 --> 01:02:05,347
<i>I never saw anything like it.</i>
<i>They're around a little...</i>

899
01:02:05,931 --> 01:02:07,599
<i>they're coming by the capsule...</i>

900
01:02:08,767 --> 01:02:12,729
<i>uh, and they look like little stars,</i>
<i>a whole shower of them coming by.</i>

901
01:02:14,648 --> 01:02:17,192
WOLFE: <i>They were undoubtedly particles</i>
<i>of some sort,</i>

902
01:02:17,484 --> 01:02:20,278
<i>particles that caught the sunlight</i>
<i>at a certain angle.</i>

903
01:02:21,071 --> 01:02:22,197
<i>They were beautiful.</i>

904
01:02:23,949 --> 01:02:25,909
There are literally thousands of them.

905
01:02:26,910 --> 01:02:28,620
WOLFE: <i>But were they coming</i>
<i>from the capsule?</i>

906
01:02:28,995 --> 01:02:30,205
<i>That could mean trouble.</i>

907
01:02:37,254 --> 01:02:40,465
WOLFE: <i>They swirled around his capsule</i>
<i>like tiny weightless diamonds,</i>

908
01:02:40,674 --> 01:02:44,010
<i>little bijoux, no?</i>
<i>They were more like fireflies.</i>

909
01:02:45,387 --> 01:02:47,597
GLENN: <i>Uh, now that I am out</i>
<i>in the bright sun,</i>

910
01:02:47,973 --> 01:02:49,891
<i>uh, they seem to have disappeared.</i>

911
01:02:59,526 --> 01:03:01,111
LAUNCH STAFF:
<i>Flight from data reduction.</i>

912
01:03:01,736 --> 01:03:02,737
<i>Go ahead.</i>

913
01:03:18,169 --> 01:03:19,212
(ALARM BLINKING)

914
01:03:19,421 --> 01:03:22,590
LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Uh, </i>Friendship 7,<i> uh, we</i>
<i>have been reading, uh,</i>

915
01:03:22,674 --> 01:03:26,720
<i>indication on the ground on segment 51,</i>
<i>which is landing bag deploy.</i>

916
01:03:27,053 --> 01:03:29,889
<i>Uh, we suspect this is</i>
<i>an erroneous signal.</i>

917
01:03:34,602 --> 01:03:37,230
WOLFE: <i>If the landing bag had deployed,</i>
<i>and there was no way</i>

918
01:03:37,314 --> 01:03:38,982
<i>he could look out and see it,</i>

919
01:03:39,274 --> 01:03:43,153
<i>not even with the periscope</i>
<i>because it would be directly behind him,</i>

920
01:03:43,361 --> 01:03:46,781
<i>if it had deployed,</i>
<i>then the heat shield must be loose,</i>

921
01:03:47,115 --> 01:03:49,159
<i>and might come off during reentry.</i>

922
01:03:50,493 --> 01:03:55,915
<i>If the heat shield came off, he would</i>
<i>burn up inside the capsule like a steak.</i>

923
01:03:58,585 --> 01:04:02,380
REPORTER: <i>When the, uh, craft does begin</i>
<i>to encounter denser atmosphere</i>

924
01:04:02,464 --> 01:04:07,135
<i>that temperature we were talking about</i>
<i>will mount up to about 3,000 degrees.</i>

925
01:04:07,385 --> 01:04:11,306
<i>That will occur at approximately</i>
<i>25 miles altitude.</i>

926
01:04:12,140 --> 01:04:17,062
<i>And at that point, the spacecraft will be</i>
<i>moving at about 15,000 miles an hour.</i>

927
01:04:17,479 --> 01:04:20,648
<i>The craft will sustain temperature</i>
<i>of that amount for about two minutes,</i>

928
01:04:21,107 --> 01:04:25,445
<i>and the problem will be to have</i>
<i>it absorbed by the heat shield,</i>

929
01:04:25,528 --> 01:04:30,200
<i>which is made of a very special sort of</i>
<i>plastic material that will burn off.</i>

930
01:04:33,912 --> 01:04:36,414
LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Can you give him</i>
<i>that message please, Linus?</i>

931
01:04:36,623 --> 01:04:37,832
<i>Roger, we can do.</i>

932
01:04:39,459 --> 01:04:41,211
SHEPARD: <i>Uh, </i>Seven, <i>this is Cape. Over?</i>

933
01:04:41,920 --> 01:04:45,215
<i>We're not sure whether</i>
<i>or not your landing bag has deployed.</i>

934
01:04:45,590 --> 01:04:50,345
<i>Uh, we feel it's far safer to re-enter</i>
<i>with the retro package on.</i>

935
01:04:50,762 --> 01:04:55,141
<i>Uh, we see no difficulty at this time</i>
<i>in that type of reentry. Over.</i>

936
01:04:55,475 --> 01:04:58,103
Uh, this is <i>Friendship </i>7.
Now, what is the reason for this?

937
01:04:58,186 --> 01:04:59,646
Do you have any reason? Over.

938
01:05:05,360 --> 01:05:08,071
DAVIS: <i>There had been some trouble</i>
<i>with the heat shield equipment</i>

939
01:05:08,571 --> 01:05:12,158
<i>over Hawaii, and they have taken</i>
<i>a precautionary measure</i>

940
01:05:12,242 --> 01:05:15,787
<i>to keep the heat shield equipment</i>
<i>on with the retro package for a while,</i>

941
01:05:16,246 --> 01:05:19,457
<i>to make sure that the warning</i>
<i>they got was a false warning.</i>

942
01:05:19,833 --> 01:05:23,920
<i>And so, the heat shield retro packet</i>
<i>was kept on the space capsule,</i>

943
01:05:24,254 --> 01:05:26,005
<i>and, uh, precautions were taken.</i>

944
01:05:26,631 --> 01:05:30,176
Uh, this is <i>Friendship </i>7, uh, going
to reentry attitude then in that case.

945
01:05:31,511 --> 01:05:33,346
REPORTER: <i>The retro packet</i>
<i>and the retrorockets</i>

946
01:05:33,471 --> 01:05:35,181
<i>we talk about are really brakes.</i>

947
01:05:35,598 --> 01:05:40,520
<i>John Glenn's capsule was in space</i>
<i>with the large blunt end, facing forward,</i>

948
01:05:40,603 --> 01:05:43,773
<i>and the retrorockets are</i>
<i>on that blunt end.</i>

949
01:05:44,232 --> 01:05:47,861
<i>And what they are, is they throw</i>
<i>some thrust out forward,</i>

950
01:05:48,069 --> 01:05:51,072
<i>slowing the capsule down,</i>
<i>and that reduces its speed</i>

951
01:05:51,156 --> 01:05:55,243
<i>below orbital velocity, and the capsule</i>
<i>starts to reenter the atmosphere.</i>

952
01:05:55,994 --> 01:05:57,704
All right, roger,
retracting scope manually.

953
01:05:59,330 --> 01:06:03,042
REPORTER:<i> He is in good condition,</i>
<i>and preparing to fire those retrorockets</i>

954
01:06:03,168 --> 01:06:06,254
<i>to begin that long landing flight</i>
<i>towards the Atlantic.</i>

955
01:06:07,505 --> 01:06:12,927
CAPCOM:<i> Five, four, three, two, one, fire.</i>

956
01:06:14,012 --> 01:06:17,724
GLENN: <i>Roger, retros are firing.</i>
<i>Are they ever.</i>

957
01:06:18,141 --> 01:06:19,976
It feels like I'm going back
toward Hawaii.

958
01:06:29,611 --> 01:06:31,112
CAPCOM:<i> Uh, </i>Seven,<i> this is Cape. Over.</i>

959
01:06:32,405 --> 01:06:35,658
-Go ahead, Cape, you're going out.
-(RADIO STATIC)

960
01:06:35,867 --> 01:06:37,994
CAPCOM: <i>Uh, we recommend that you...</i>

961
01:06:47,587 --> 01:06:50,632
LAUNCH STAFF: Friendship 7<i> spacecraft</i>
<i>is now encountering the atmosphere</i>

962
01:06:51,257 --> 01:06:53,384
<i>off the east coast of Florida.</i>

963
01:06:53,635 --> 01:06:55,470
TOWNSEND: <i>He's over</i>
<i>the east coast of Florida,</i>

964
01:06:55,720 --> 01:06:59,224
<i>and, uh, at the moment,</i>
<i>there is no contact with John Glenn.</i>

965
01:07:01,059 --> 01:07:04,312
GLENN: (INAUDIBLE) <i>I have a</i>
<i>white sand... correction...</i>

966
01:07:04,437 --> 01:07:06,356
CAPCOM:<i> Uh, </i>Seven,<i> this is Cape,</i>
<i>do you read? Over.</i>

967
01:07:13,071 --> 01:07:16,574
POWERS:<i> The Mercury spacecraft</i>
<i>is in its reentry process at this time.</i>

968
01:07:17,116 --> 01:07:19,452
CAPCOM: <i>Uh, </i>Seven,<i> this is Cape,</i>
<i>do you read? Over.</i>

969
01:07:20,620 --> 01:07:23,706
POWERS: <i>We are not receiving any</i>
<i>voice communication at this time.</i>

970
01:07:24,040 --> 01:07:28,378
<i>And we're waiting for the electric moment</i>
<i>when we hear that the main chute</i>

971
01:07:28,461 --> 01:07:31,839
<i>has deployed, and is bringing him</i>
<i>safely back to Earth.</i>

972
01:07:32,257 --> 01:07:34,133
CAPCOM: Friendship 7,
<i>this is Cape, do you read?</i>

973
01:07:38,388 --> 01:07:41,224
(INDISTINCT CLAMOR)

974
01:07:43,601 --> 01:07:49,023
(INTENSE MUSIC PLAYING)

975
01:07:51,526 --> 01:07:54,028
GLENN: <i>This is </i>Friendship 7.
<i>A real fireball outside.</i>

976
01:08:13,339 --> 01:08:17,927
DOWNS: <i>We have not yet seen any sign</i>
<i>of the drogue parachute,</i>

977
01:08:18,011 --> 01:08:21,306
<i>which would appear, it opens up</i>
<i>at about 40,000 feet.</i>

978
01:08:23,683 --> 01:08:24,767
(AIR WHOOSHES LOUDLY)

979
01:08:25,018 --> 01:08:28,146
GLENN: <i>The chute is on green,</i>
<i>chute is out in reef condition</i>

980
01:08:28,229 --> 01:08:31,816
at 10,800 feet and beautiful chute.

981
01:08:32,942 --> 01:08:34,193
Chute looks good.

982
01:08:35,862 --> 01:08:39,115
<i>LAUNCH STAFF: The </i>Destroyer<i> has the</i>
<i>capsule parachute in sight.</i>

983
01:08:39,490 --> 01:08:41,117
<i>-They are talking.</i>
-MALE VOICE:<i> Roger.</i>

984
01:08:41,576 --> 01:08:44,120
TOWNSEND:<i> He should be splashing down</i>
<i>in about 20 seconds from now,</i>

985
01:08:44,203 --> 01:08:45,538
<i>if our advance estimate is correct.</i>

986
01:08:48,750 --> 01:08:50,752
This is <i>Friendship</i> 7,
standing by for impact.

987
01:08:56,633 --> 01:09:00,303
TOWNSEND: <i>Right now,</i>
<i>the </i>Destroyer Noa<i> is coming</i>

988
01:09:00,386 --> 01:09:02,138
<i>right alongside the capsule.</i>

989
01:09:02,388 --> 01:09:06,476
<i>So, within a matter of a very few</i>
<i>minutes, we ought to be getting word</i>

990
01:09:06,726 --> 01:09:10,063
<i>on the pickup of John Glenn</i>
<i>from the </i>Friendship 7.

991
01:09:12,440 --> 01:09:15,276
<i>We have another report now</i>
<i>from Colonel Powers. Here he is.</i>

992
01:09:15,360 --> 01:09:17,445
POWERS: <i>The spacecraft was picked</i>
<i>up clear of the water</i>

993
01:09:17,528 --> 01:09:19,364
<i>at one minute after 3:00,</i>

994
01:09:19,447 --> 01:09:22,325
<i>and finally set down on the deck</i>
<i>at four minutes</i>

995
01:09:22,408 --> 01:09:25,036
<i>after 3:00 this afternoon,</i>
<i>Eastern Standard Time.</i>

996
01:09:27,121 --> 01:09:28,748
SHADEL:<i> We have our reporter,</i>
<i>Dave Nichols,</i>

997
01:09:28,831 --> 01:09:30,750
<i>standing by at Arlington, Virginia,</i>

998
01:09:31,209 --> 01:09:32,502
<i>at the home of Colonel Glenn.</i>

999
01:09:33,961 --> 01:09:37,006
<i>Mrs. Glenn will make an appearance there</i>
<i>for the first time today.</i>

1000
01:09:37,965 --> 01:09:40,718
There are several things that... that we
would like to say,

1001
01:09:40,802 --> 01:09:42,929
but I would want everyone to know...

1002
01:09:43,971 --> 01:09:47,433
that this is the most wonderful day
for my family, and we're quite...

1003
01:09:47,517 --> 01:09:52,355
we're so proud of our... of their...
their... their father,

1004
01:09:53,022 --> 01:09:56,192
of the... Mercury team...

1005
01:09:57,568 --> 01:10:01,239
of everyone that's made this
such a successful day.

1006
01:10:15,628 --> 01:10:19,590
TOWNSEND: <i>Each orbit took approximately</i>
<i>89 minutes. There were three of them.</i>

1007
01:10:20,133 --> 01:10:24,679
<i>Undoubtedly, the most eventful four hours</i>
<i>and 50 minutes of his entire life.</i>

1008
01:10:28,516 --> 01:10:31,352
GLENN:<i> Perhaps I could've been given</i>
<i>information a little earlier</i>

1009
01:10:31,477 --> 01:10:34,605
<i>and a little more completely</i>
<i>on the heat shield problem</i>

1010
01:10:34,689 --> 01:10:36,357
<i>where they thought it possibly was loose.</i>

1011
01:10:38,109 --> 01:10:40,611
<i>Apparently, there was a very,</i>
<i>very lengthy discussion on this</i>

1012
01:10:40,695 --> 01:10:43,865
<i>that I was unaware of.</i>
<i>And, uh, if I had been aware that</i>

1013
01:10:44,073 --> 01:10:46,325
<i>there was possibly a problem</i>
<i>in this regard,</i>

1014
01:10:46,951 --> 01:10:49,912
<i>I would have been aware to watch</i>
<i>more closely for little bumps</i>

1015
01:10:49,996 --> 01:10:52,999
<i>on the capsule, or anything that</i>
<i>might have given a clue as to our status.</i>

1016
01:10:54,584 --> 01:10:57,003
<i>I was kept reasonably in the dark on this.</i>

1017
01:10:59,130 --> 01:11:02,008
-How do you do, sir? What's your name?
-My name is Oliver Whiting,

1018
01:11:02,091 --> 01:11:03,593
and I'm a British subject, sir.

1019
01:11:03,676 --> 01:11:05,803
That's rather apparent, sir,
what do you think of, uh...

1020
01:11:05,887 --> 01:11:08,181
-Well, I think this is one of...
-...what America and the free world

1021
01:11:08,306 --> 01:11:10,892
-have accomplished today.
-Indeed. I think it's one of the greatest

1022
01:11:11,017 --> 01:11:14,520
scientific advances that has ever taken
place in the lives of anybody

1023
01:11:14,604 --> 01:11:17,315
in this vast concourse. And I would like
to say something,

1024
01:11:17,398 --> 01:11:19,442
-if I may be permitted to do so.
-Please do.

1025
01:11:19,650 --> 01:11:23,738
Well, sir, it's this, I think that
in this scientific age today,

1026
01:11:23,863 --> 01:11:26,491
we have shrunk the surface of the Earth

1027
01:11:26,949 --> 01:11:29,952
to such a state that now
it's a single unit, and we cannot think

1028
01:11:30,036 --> 01:11:32,497
of it as otherwise,
and I hope we never will again.

1029
01:11:41,088 --> 01:11:43,049
CRONKITE: <i>John Glenn arrived</i>
<i>home this morning</i>

1030
01:11:43,132 --> 01:11:45,092
<i>to be met in Florida by his family.</i>

1031
01:11:54,852 --> 01:11:58,481
(CHEERING)

1032
01:12:06,989 --> 01:12:09,075
(MOTORCYCLE ENGINES REV)

1033
01:12:13,996 --> 01:12:16,666
CRONKITE:
<i>John Glenn now points out details</i>

1034
01:12:16,749 --> 01:12:18,793
<i>of the capsule to President Kennedy.</i>

1035
01:12:19,377 --> 01:12:22,380
GLENN: <i>Normally, those retrorockets</i>
<i>are dropped off after firing.</i>

1036
01:12:22,505 --> 01:12:24,882
<i>There was some indication, though,</i>
<i>on the ground</i>

1037
01:12:25,299 --> 01:12:27,885
<i>that the, uh, heat shield might have</i>
<i>come loose,</i>

1038
01:12:28,177 --> 01:12:31,013
and if this had happened, why, of course,
the whole thing would just have

1039
01:12:31,097 --> 01:12:32,849
disintegrated, and burned up.

1040
01:12:33,432 --> 01:12:36,602
So that was rather...
it was an interesting return.

1041
01:12:36,978 --> 01:12:39,480
Kind of like having a... (INAUDIBLE)

1042
01:12:40,356 --> 01:12:43,985
CRONKITE: <i>Along with some answers,</i>
<i>Glenn's flight produced some questions,</i>

1043
01:12:44,068 --> 01:12:46,529
<i>like the mystery of the tiny</i>
<i>luminous particles</i>

1044
01:12:46,654 --> 01:12:48,698
<i>he reported seeing with each sunrise.</i>

1045
01:12:49,490 --> 01:12:51,325
All I can say about these
is I observed them.

1046
01:12:51,409 --> 01:12:56,747
I saw them for about, from the first
light of sun to a period of some...

1047
01:12:57,498 --> 01:13:01,085
Uh... oh, three and a half, four minutes.

1048
01:13:01,919 --> 01:13:04,755
That time period made
close observation of them.

1049
01:13:05,089 --> 01:13:08,759
<i>Uh, they were very luminous,</i>
<i>a yellowish green color.</i>

1050
01:13:10,011 --> 01:13:13,848
And, uh, as George Ralph, our psychiatrist
listened to this and said,

1051
01:13:14,265 --> 01:13:18,311
-"What did they say, John?"
-(ALL LAUGH)

1052
01:13:18,728 --> 01:13:21,522
<i>People I was sittin' this mornin'</i>
<i>With this on my mind</i>

1053
01:13:22,315 --> 01:13:25,151
<i>Said there ain't no livin' man who go</i>
<i>Around the world three time</i>

1054
01:13:25,484 --> 01:13:26,986
<i>But John Glenn done it</i>

1055
01:13:29,405 --> 01:13:30,406
<i>Yes, he did</i>

1056
01:13:30,489 --> 01:13:33,200
WOLFE:<i> When John Glenn became</i>
<i>the first American to go into Earth orbit,</i>

1057
01:13:33,618 --> 01:13:35,202
<i>there was a ticker tape parade for him.</i>

1058
01:13:35,578 --> 01:13:40,333
<i>The astronauts all remembered</i>
<i>so vividly the sight of New York policemen</i>

1059
01:13:40,416 --> 01:13:42,877
<i>directing traffic in the intersections</i>
<i>for this big parade,</i>

1060
01:13:43,252 --> 01:13:45,796
<i>crying, tears rolling down their cheeks.</i>

1061
01:13:47,506 --> 01:13:49,300
<i>And saying, you know,</i>
<i>"We love you, Johnny,"</i>

1062
01:13:49,383 --> 01:13:51,969
<i>to John Glenn, "We love you."</i>
<i>And I think it was an emotional moment</i>

1063
01:13:52,261 --> 01:13:55,389
<i>in this country's history that has</i>
<i>never been equal since then.</i>

1064
01:13:55,473 --> 01:13:57,975
<i>I don't think we've had a nationwide hero</i>
<i>since John Glenn.</i>

1065
01:13:58,059 --> 01:13:59,393
<i>John Glenn said it</i>

1066
01:13:59,977 --> 01:14:04,649
MALE VOICE: <i>All I can say is that</i>
<i>in my 72 years of life, I, uh,</i>

1067
01:14:04,732 --> 01:14:07,234
never witnessed anything like this before.

1068
01:14:09,862 --> 01:14:13,824
Today, I know that I seem to be standing
alone on this great platform...

1069
01:14:15,534 --> 01:14:17,370
just as I seemed to be alone
in the cockpit

1070
01:14:17,453 --> 01:14:19,121
of the <i>Friendship 7</i> spacecraft...

1071
01:14:20,456 --> 01:14:21,582
but I'm not.

1072
01:14:22,416 --> 01:14:26,337
<i>There were with me then and with me now,</i>
<i>thousands of Americans,</i>

1073
01:14:26,420 --> 01:14:29,423
<i>and many hundreds of citizens</i>
<i>of many countries around the world.</i>

1074
01:14:31,884 --> 01:14:34,971
As our knowledge of this universe
in which we live increases,

1075
01:14:35,930 --> 01:14:38,975
may God grant us the wisdom
and guidance to use it wisely.

1076
01:14:39,850 --> 01:14:44,605
-Thank you very much.
-(APPLAUSE)

1077
01:14:51,946 --> 01:14:54,365
VON FREMD: <i>This flight was just the</i>
<i>end of the beginning.</i>

1078
01:14:54,448 --> 01:14:57,535
<i>It was the first American orbital flight,</i>
<i>but by no means the last.</i>

1079
01:14:58,285 --> 01:15:01,747
<i>The next one on the schedule should come</i>
<i>about 60 days from now.</i>

1080
01:15:04,792 --> 01:15:09,171
REPORTER: <i>Donald Slayton, known as</i>
<i>Deke, was replaced by M. Scott Carpenter,</i>

1081
01:15:09,338 --> 01:15:14,135
<i>the next astronaut in line for orbit,</i>
<i>because of mild heart palpitations.</i>

1082
01:15:25,604 --> 01:15:26,772
(TAPE STARTS RECORDING)

1083
01:15:27,064 --> 01:15:29,692
WOLFE: <i>Okay, repeat after me,</i>
<i>I went to a wonderful party.</i>

1084
01:15:29,859 --> 01:15:31,444
RENE: <i>I went to a wonderful party.</i>

1085
01:15:31,694 --> 01:15:35,114
-WOLFE: <i>I must say the fun was intense.</i>
-RENE:<i> I must say the fun was intense.</i>

1086
01:15:35,239 --> 01:15:38,492
WOLFE: <i>We all had to do what the people</i>
<i>we knew would be doing 100 years hence.</i>

1087
01:15:38,576 --> 01:15:42,663
RENE: <i>We all had to do what the people we</i>
<i>knew would all be doing 100 years hence.</i>

1088
01:16:27,041 --> 01:16:29,424
RENE: <i>Yeah, I asked. Mm-hmm.</i>

1089
01:16:46,977 --> 01:16:48,979
WOLFE: <i>After a while,</i>
<i>Rene didn't know whether</i>

1090
01:16:49,063 --> 01:16:51,273
<i>it was her modest literary ambitions</i>

1091
01:16:52,108 --> 01:16:56,028
<i>or her resentment of the pat role</i>
<i>of astronaut wife that made her do it.</i>

1092
01:17:19,844 --> 01:17:22,972
After the earlier successes
of Shepard, Grissom, and Glenn,

1093
01:17:23,222 --> 01:17:26,600
Scott Carpenter's mission seemed,
in advance, almost routine.

1094
01:17:27,143 --> 01:17:29,645
Actually, it was our most
ambitious challenge yet.

1095
01:17:30,020 --> 01:17:34,233
<i>It required the pilot to do things</i>
<i>we hadn't dared ask of his predecessors.</i>

1096
01:17:34,358 --> 01:17:37,486
<i>A larger degree of control</i>
<i>and maneuvering the space capsule,</i>

1097
01:17:37,778 --> 01:17:40,531
<i>more tests to help measure the way</i>
<i>things move in space,</i>

1098
01:17:40,781 --> 01:17:42,992
<i>and how they look to a man observing them.</i>

1099
01:17:53,544 --> 01:17:57,423
REPORTER: <i>Now, the astronaut's ready,</i>
<i>and so is everything else.</i>

1100
01:17:58,966 --> 01:18:03,262
LAUNCH STAFF:
<i>Ten, nine, eight, seven, six.</i>

1101
01:18:03,679 --> 01:18:06,182
RENE:

1102
01:18:06,557 --> 01:18:10,644
LAUNCH STAFF:
<i>Zero, ignition. Liftoff.</i>

1103
01:18:13,230 --> 01:18:15,983
LAUNCH STAFF:
<i>Liftoff. Liftoff. The clock has started.</i>

1104
01:18:17,735 --> 01:18:20,404
<i>-Roger.</i>
-CARPENTER: <i>Loud and clear, Gus.</i>

1105
01:18:20,779 --> 01:18:23,991
GRISSOM:<i> Roger, </i>Aurora 7. <i>Standby</i>
<i>for the time hack.</i>

1106
01:18:24,074 --> 01:18:24,950
CARPENTER:<i> Roger.</i>

1107
01:18:30,456 --> 01:18:32,750
RENE:

1108
01:18:44,888 --> 01:18:46,639
(RENE LAUGHS)

1109
01:18:47,681 --> 01:18:48,933
WOLFE:

1110
01:18:49,016 --> 01:18:50,559
RENE:

1111
01:18:50,643 --> 01:18:52,186
WOLFE:<i> Thorns.</i>

1112
01:18:54,396 --> 01:18:55,773
GRISSOM: <i>Roger, </i>Aurora.

1113
01:18:58,275 --> 01:18:59,652
CARPENTER: <i>Clear blue sky.</i>

1114
01:19:28,305 --> 01:19:29,515
(SHUTTER CLICKS)

1115
01:19:30,391 --> 01:19:33,352
CARPENTER:

1116
01:19:33,727 --> 01:19:34,728
(SHUTTER CLICKS)

1117
01:19:34,812 --> 01:19:39,094
CARPENTER:

1118
01:19:56,875 --> 01:19:58,460
CAPCOM:

1119
01:19:58,794 --> 01:20:00,713
CARPENTER:

1120
01:20:05,467 --> 01:20:06,677
CAPCOM:

1121
01:20:07,177 --> 01:20:09,513
CARPENTER:

1122
01:20:13,475 --> 01:20:15,060
CAPCOM:

1123
01:20:15,185 --> 01:20:16,228
CARPENTER:

1124
01:20:18,022 --> 01:20:20,024
CRONKITE:
<i>The crowds at Grand Central New York</i>

1125
01:20:20,482 --> 01:20:21,859
<i>and around the United States...</i>

1126
01:20:23,235 --> 01:20:25,404
<i>wait prayerfully for this moment,</i>
<i>here's Powers.</i>

1127
01:20:25,821 --> 01:20:29,450
POWERS: <i>Our data at this time indicates</i>
<i>that it is distinctly possible that</i>

1128
01:20:29,533 --> 01:20:31,952
<i>the </i>Aurora 7<i> spacecraft may land</i>

1129
01:20:32,036 --> 01:20:35,122
<i>considerably longer down range</i>
<i>than it was planned.</i>

1130
01:20:35,873 --> 01:20:41,128
<i>Our present estimate of his landing point</i>
<i>may go as far as 200 miles down range.</i>

1131
01:20:44,298 --> 01:20:46,592
WOLFE:<i> Cronkite had been explaining</i>
<i>Scott's fuel problem</i>

1132
01:20:46,717 --> 01:20:48,218
<i>as he entered the atmosphere,</i>

1133
01:20:48,761 --> 01:20:52,639
<i>then Cronkite's voice began to take</i>
<i>on more and more concern.</i>

1134
01:20:53,390 --> 01:20:58,187
We have a very, even more disturbing
report it seems to this reporter here

1135
01:20:58,270 --> 01:21:00,439
from NASA, from space authorities.

1136
01:21:01,023 --> 01:21:04,651
<i>They say they did not pick up</i>
<i>any radar blips</i>

1137
01:21:05,361 --> 01:21:08,280
from the descending spacecraft.

1138
01:21:09,698 --> 01:21:14,453
<i>It almost begs for interpretation</i>
<i>as to what that could mean.</i>

1139
01:21:34,807 --> 01:21:40,396
There has not even been radar contact
with the <i>Aurora 7</i> since the last contact

1140
01:21:40,479 --> 01:21:42,606
with, uh, Scott Carpenter by voice,

1141
01:21:43,065 --> 01:21:46,735
which was back when he announced
his G forces building

1142
01:21:47,111 --> 01:21:49,071
for the reentry into the atmosphere.

1143
01:21:50,114 --> 01:21:53,283
<i>This is the worst chore this reporter</i>
<i>ever went through,</i>

1144
01:21:54,118 --> 01:21:57,496
<i>trying to fill time when there</i>
<i>is nothing to say, except wait.</i>

1145
01:22:14,555 --> 01:22:17,683
Uh, it would seem that even 200 miles
would not be too far to pick up

1146
01:22:17,766 --> 01:22:19,268
<i>a radar signal.</i>

1147
01:22:27,151 --> 01:22:28,861
(ENGINE REVVING)

1148
01:22:29,069 --> 01:22:32,781
POWERS: <i>A US Navy P2V aircraft</i>
<i>in the landing area</i>

1149
01:22:32,865 --> 01:22:35,033
<i>-has received an electronic contact.</i>
-(BEEPING)

1150
01:22:38,871 --> 01:22:40,080
RENE:

1151
01:22:51,633 --> 01:22:54,011
POWERS: <i>We do not have any further</i>
<i>details at this time,</i>

1152
01:22:54,094 --> 01:22:56,847
<i>except now diverting his aircraft</i>
<i>into that immediate area.</i>

1153
01:22:57,598 --> 01:23:01,852
CRONKITE: <i>Let's go now to Joe Campbell,</i>
<i>who is aboard the </i>USS Intrepid.

1154
01:23:01,935 --> 01:23:04,688
CAMPBELL: <i>Well, we've just received</i>
<i>a happy word that one of the ships'</i>

1155
01:23:04,813 --> 01:23:06,315
<i>own jet helicopters,</i>

1156
01:23:06,607 --> 01:23:08,692
<i>which has been speeding</i>
<i>to the scene of impact,</i>

1157
01:23:09,026 --> 01:23:13,530
<i>has just affected rescue</i>
<i>of astronaut Scott Carpenter,</i>

1158
01:23:13,655 --> 01:23:16,366
<i>and is now proceeding</i>
<i>towards the </i>Intrepid.

1159
01:23:20,662 --> 01:23:23,999
-CRONKITE: <i>Oh, boy.</i>
-(CHEERING)

1160
01:23:25,250 --> 01:23:28,253
CRONKITE: <i>Well, that's the longest</i>
<i>45 minutes we've ever spent.</i>

1161
01:23:29,463 --> 01:23:31,840
<i>Scott Carpenter is out</i>
<i>of the Atlantic Ocean.</i>

1162
01:23:32,508 --> 01:23:36,803
<i>After his four hours and 50 minutes</i>
<i>in space, three hours on the Atlantic,</i>

1163
01:23:36,887 --> 01:23:38,889
<i>bobbing around in that small raft.</i>

1164
01:23:43,018 --> 01:23:45,312
EDWARDS:<i> Well, it started out</i>
<i>like </i>Buck Rogers,

1165
01:23:45,395 --> 01:23:48,482
<i>and wound up like a condensed</i>
<i>version of </i>Robinson Crusoe.

1166
01:23:50,734 --> 01:23:54,279
<i>News of Carpenter's recovery reached</i>
<i>his wife Rene at Cocoa Beach, Florida,</i>

1167
01:23:54,363 --> 01:23:56,782
<i>-the site of space program headquarters.</i>
-RENE: I want to say...

1168
01:23:58,825 --> 01:23:59,743
that...

1169
01:24:00,911 --> 01:24:04,248
the effort... involved...

1170
01:24:05,499 --> 01:24:10,837
in one of these missions...
is such that...

1171
01:24:13,882 --> 01:24:19,137
at the end, we often feel...
emotionally drained...

1172
01:24:21,223 --> 01:24:24,935
and we tend to fall back on...

1173
01:24:27,312 --> 01:24:29,147
the comfortable phrases...

1174
01:24:31,733 --> 01:24:36,822
and words like "happy,"
"proud," "thrilled, "

1175
01:24:38,031 --> 01:24:39,533
and we feel so much more.

1176
01:24:53,463 --> 01:24:59,136
I do want to say... that
I know that this has been hard

1177
01:24:59,219 --> 01:25:03,807
for you not being able
to have... the doorstep...

1178
01:25:05,350 --> 01:25:11,440
but the privacy that it afforded me
was wonderful for me today.

1179
01:25:17,154 --> 01:25:19,531
I think it's thrilling.
I stopped everything, and watched it,

1180
01:25:19,615 --> 01:25:22,284
and the baby was watching it,
and she wanted to go too.

1181
01:25:22,409 --> 01:25:26,246
She's four years old, and she wanted
to go on the trip with the, with the man.

1182
01:25:26,330 --> 01:25:28,957
And when his children and his wife
were on, uh,

1183
01:25:30,000 --> 01:25:31,585
I thought it was real exciting.

1184
01:25:32,419 --> 01:25:35,213
I think everybody was more or less
sitting on the edge

1185
01:25:35,297 --> 01:25:37,132
of their seats until they did find him.

1186
01:25:37,215 --> 01:25:40,927
I think it's wonderful. I think
it's a great thing for this country!

1187
01:25:41,136 --> 01:25:43,430
And believe me,
we're never going to be buried.

1188
01:25:55,442 --> 01:25:57,861
LAUNCH STAFF: <i>Roger, Wally,</i>
<i>you got anything to say to everyone</i>

1189
01:25:57,944 --> 01:25:59,696
<i>watching you across the country</i>
<i>on this thing?</i>

1190
01:25:59,780 --> 01:26:01,031
<i>We're going out live on this.</i>

1191
01:26:02,157 --> 01:26:04,284
SCHIRRA: <i>I'm looking at the United States,</i>

1192
01:26:04,993 --> 01:26:07,663
<i>and starting to pitch up slightly</i>
<i>with this drifting rate.</i>

1193
01:26:08,246 --> 01:26:11,249
<i>And I see the Moon, which I'm sure no one</i>
<i>in the United States can see</i>

1194
01:26:11,333 --> 01:26:12,751
<i>as well as I right now.</i>

1195
01:26:26,139 --> 01:26:29,768
CRONKITE:<i> This flight's scheduled</i>
<i>to be the last of the Mercury Program</i>

1196
01:26:29,851 --> 01:26:32,729
<i>before the Mercury Program ends,</i>
<i>and we begin flights</i>

1197
01:26:32,938 --> 01:26:35,399
<i>in our two-man capsule, the </i>Gemini<i>.</i>

1198
01:26:35,524 --> 01:26:39,361
<i>The intermediate step before we go</i>
<i>to </i>Apollo, <i>and the step to the Moon.</i>

1199
01:26:43,323 --> 01:26:46,535
REPORTER: <i>America's team of astronauts</i>
<i>was increased to 16 today,</i>

1200
01:26:48,078 --> 01:26:51,456
<i>when The Manned Space Center at Houston,</i>
<i>Texas named the men today.</i>

1201
01:26:51,623 --> 01:26:55,252
<i>It was specified that they will be trained</i>
<i>for trips to the Moon.</i>

1202
01:26:58,922 --> 01:27:00,173
We've had a number of these...

1203
01:27:01,007 --> 01:27:03,844
ceremonies at the White House
and at Cape Canaveral to pay tribute

1204
01:27:04,711 --> 01:27:07,097
to a very distinguished group
of Americans, who have in,

1205
01:27:07,431 --> 01:27:12,185
our time, in this rather civil society,
demonstrated that there are...

1206
01:27:13,019 --> 01:27:14,980
<i>great frontiers still to be crossed.</i>

1207
01:27:15,605 --> 01:27:19,568
<i>And in flying through space, they've</i>
<i>carried with them the wishes, the prayers,</i>

1208
01:27:19,693 --> 01:27:23,155
<i>the hopes and the pride of 180 million</i>
<i>of their fellow countrymen.</i>

1209
01:27:26,450 --> 01:27:29,953
<i>I hope that, uh, we will be encouraged</i>
<i>to continue with this program.</i>

1210
01:27:30,620 --> 01:27:33,039
<i>I know that a good many people</i>
<i>say, "Why go to the Moon?"</i>

1211
01:27:33,373 --> 01:27:36,334
<i>Just as many people said</i>
<i>to Lindbergh, "Why go to Paris?"</i>

1212
01:27:39,296 --> 01:27:42,424
Lindbergh said, "It's not so much a matter
of logic as it is of feeling."

1213
01:27:47,304 --> 01:27:50,307
<i>I think that the United States has</i>
<i>committed itself to this great adventure</i>

1214
01:27:50,390 --> 01:27:53,977
<i>in the '60s. I think before the end</i>
<i>of the '60s, we will see a man</i>

1215
01:27:54,060 --> 01:27:55,479
<i>on the Moon, an American.</i>

1216
01:27:55,854 --> 01:27:59,024
<i>And I think in so doing, it's not nearly</i>
<i>that we're interested in making</i>

1217
01:27:59,107 --> 01:28:02,611
<i>this particular journey, but we are</i>
<i>interested in demonstrating</i>

1218
01:28:02,736 --> 01:28:04,946
<i>a dominance of this new sea,</i>

1219
01:28:05,572 --> 01:28:08,742
<i>and making sure that</i>
<i>in this new great adventurous period,</i>

1220
01:28:09,242 --> 01:28:13,288
<i>that the Americans are playing</i>
<i>their great role as they have in the past.</i>

1221
01:28:14,915 --> 01:28:17,292
(DRAMATIC MUSIC PLAYING)

1222
01:28:33,433 --> 01:28:35,727
(SOFT MUSIC PLAYING)



