| Say, does THAT story ever bring back memories! I probably read it in the summer of 1969, right after graduating from High School and about the time of the first Apollo moon landing.
In November 1982 I had the privilege to view a shuttle launch from the VIP viewing area - over a mile from the launch pad, but a lot closer than the general public could get. I think it was the seventh flight of the shuttle, though I may be a little hazy on that detail. It WAS the first time the shuttle carried a commercial satellite. My employer had part of the payload for that mission, and allowed employees to use their passes to the VIP area. So at dawn that morning there were about 500 people shivering as we sat in portable bleachers in a swamp in Florida. Most had awakened around 3:00 AM to be escorted to the location at the specified time, or simply stayed up all night. But everybody had some tangible connection to the spacecraft. That's the similarity to the short story. My company's commercial viability - and my job - depended on the shuttle crew successfully placing a large, commercial communications satellite into a transfer orbit. Other folks present that morning worked for the contractors who built the shuttle, or its engines, or assembled it, or the Canadians who supplied the robot arm, or distant relatives of the crew (not eligible for the family observation area), etc, etc. When the count hit "20", everybody stood - almost like we were some precision drill team or marching band under a director. I thought those rickety bleachers were going to collapse! I've NEVER been part of any crowd, even at an athletic event, that moved with a single mind like that. Like I said - everybody present had a personal connection to that spacecraft. Then the cheering - which was drowned out (even at that distance) when the engines moved to full throttle. And in a couple of minutes it was all over. The spacecraft out of sight, with the vapor trails dissipating in the rising sunlight. Comprehending a little of what we had just experienced, quite a few folks started conversations with others around them, discovering the underlying connections and exchanging stories. I wish there had been more opportunity for that, but most of us had to be back on the buses shortly after the launch, and returned to wherever we were staying. That event remains as one of the most memorable of my lifetime. Not quite like getting married, holding my kids at birth (or my father at death), but certainly on par with my college graduation almost ten years previous - where, by the way, Deke Slayton had been the commencement speaker. After the Challenger accident I heard that NASA discontinued use of that viewing area so I don't know how many people ever had that experience. But if you ever have the opportunity, definitely make an effort to be there.
Dale |