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Conn. Girl Fights for Grissom's Space Suit
Lakeland Ledger/AP ^ | August 28, 2005 | Matt Apuzzo

Posted on 08/28/2005 12:41:31 PM PDT by billorites

MADISON, Conn. A 15-year-old girl with a Web site, a summer of free time and an astronaut for a hero is trying to solve a 3-year-old dispute over one of NASA's earliest space suits.

The family of pioneering astronaut Gus Grissom has been trying to get NASA to give them his 1961 Mercury space suit. NASA says the suit is government property and an artifact that should be kept at the Astronaut Hall of Fame in Florida.

Enter Amanda Meyer, space enthusiast and co-captain of her school's debate team. She believes she has a compromise and, after launching an Internet petition drive, has spent the summer writing and calling NASA, the Smithsonian Institution, Congress and anyone else she can think of.

Meyer says the government doesn't have to give up its claim to the suit but should loan it to the Gus Grissom Memorial, a museum in his hometown of Mitchell, Ind.

"It just seems fair," Meyer said. "It should be in his museum because that's where he would want it."

She is to meet this week with a representative of the government contractor that operates the Astronaut Hall of Fame.

Relations between Grissom's wife, Betty, and NASA have been uneasy since he and two other Apollo 1 astronauts died in a 1967 command module fire during a training exercise. The space agency, she feels, ignored her family after the tragedy, even as it honored the crews of Challenger and Columbia.

Grissom wore the suit during his Mercury mission, in which his spacecraft landed in the ocean but sank after a hatch prematurely blew. Grissom escaped and said the hatch malfunctioned. But some, including author Tom Wolfe in his book "The Right Stuff," suggested he panicked and blew the hatch early.

After the mission, Grissom took the suit home and never returned it, NASA said. Family members have said he rescued it from the trash, a contention NASA denies. In 1989, Betty Grissom lent the suit to the privately run Astronaut Hall of Fame. But in 2003, after the government took over the museum, she and her son, Scott, tried to get it back.

NASA agreed to return 15 items, including a flight log and his commemorative medals, but not the suit, saying it was government property belonging in the Smithsonian.

Meyer heard about the dispute in February, after she sent Scott Grissom a copy of a school essay she wrote about his father. When Scott Grissom phoned, Amanda's mother was so excited she pulled Amanda out of school to return the call. Since that call, Meyer has worked to get the space suit moved.

"Gus Grissom is my hero," Meyer said. "I'd like to see his memory commemorated the way it should be."

As the school year waned, she pledged to spend summer on the issue. Through her Web site and petition drives outside a grocery store, she says she has collected about 2,000 signatures.

"She's persistent," said NASA spokesman George H. Diller.

It's not the first time Amanda has thrown herself at an issue, said her mother, Carolyn Meyer. She raised money for a local no-kill animal shelter, worked on a state representative's campaign and, after growing out her hair to the point where she could sit on it, abruptly cut it off and donated it to make wigs for cancer patients.

Her Grissom petition has become fodder for space-related Web logs and message boards. Some admire her drive; others say she's being used in the Grissoms' dispute with NASA.

Delaware North Companies, the government contractor that operates the Astronaut Hall of Fame, has said only the Smithsonian can transfer such artifacts.

"Amanda Meyer is a nice young lady, and as well meaning as she is, she's a third party in this," said Roger Launius, chairman of space history at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum.

The space suit's fate will be reconsidered at the end of the year, NASA said. The agency plans to ask the Smithsonian to keep it in Florida.

Launius said Meyer is ignoring a key issue: The Grissom Memorial hasn't asked for the suit, a necessary first step before starting a transfer.

The Grissom Memorial's Brandt Baughman said it's premature to talk about filing a request.

Meyer says she spent most of the summer on this project and had hoped to have something to show for her work by the time she returns to Daniel Hand High School in Madison next week. But she said she won't give up and plans to keep sending letters and collecting signatures.

---


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: nasa
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1 posted on 08/28/2005 12:41:33 PM PDT by billorites
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To: billorites

Embarrassing that a kid is the one thinking like an adult.


2 posted on 08/28/2005 12:45:53 PM PDT by coconutt2000 (NO MORE PEACE FOR OIL!!! DOWN WITH TYRANTS, TERRORISTS, AND TIMIDCRATS!!!! (3-T's For World Peace))
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To: billorites

1. It's NASA property

2. The Grissom Memorial hasn't asked for the suit


3 posted on 08/28/2005 12:48:38 PM PDT by mtbopfuyn (Legality does not dictate morality... Lavin)
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To: billorites

Interesting that Mrs. Grissom sounds the way she was portrayed in The Right Stuff.


4 posted on 08/28/2005 12:50:06 PM PDT by atomicpossum (Replies should be as pedantic as possible. I love that so much.)
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To: billorites
But some, including author Tom Wolfe in his book "The Right Stuff," suggested he panicked and blew the hatch early.

Wolfe's insinuations of panic on Grissom's part were way off base according to astronaut Gordon Cooper. "He [Grissom] did not screw up and lose his spacecraft," Cooper said. "Later tests showed the hatch could malfunction, just as Gus said it did. A vacuum built up in the firing pin channels." Sam Beddingfield, a NASA engineer responsible for the pyrotechnics and recovery system on the Mercury capsule and a friend of Grissom who believed in the astronaut's courage and poise, thoroughly investigated the incident and discovered two ways in which the hatch could have blown in the manner described by Grissom. Even the actor who played the unlucky astronaut in the movie The Right Stuff, Fred Ward, expressed doubt about Grissom blowing the hatch on purpose. Ward learned that all the astronauts who did blow their hatches suffered bruised knuckles, and Grissom's knuckles were not bruised. "I think NASA sort of pointed the finger at him to take the blame off themselves for losing the capsule," the actor said. "I don't think he was responsible at all."

http://indiana.history.museum/pop_hist/people/grissom.html

 

5 posted on 08/28/2005 1:10:35 PM PDT by jwh_Denver (The MSM, turn off, tune out, and drop it.)
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To: billorites
"It just seems fair,"

Yeah, that's a good way to make policy.

6 posted on 08/28/2005 1:11:47 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: billorites

According to collectspace.com, Betty Grissom is said to prefer the Happiest Place on Earth™ - namely, Walt Disney World's Epcot Center.


7 posted on 08/28/2005 1:22:08 PM PDT by BulletBobCo
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To: billorites
Here's a quarter, call someone who.......

FMCDH(BITS)

8 posted on 08/28/2005 1:27:28 PM PDT by nothingnew (I fear for my Republic due to marxist influence in our government. Open eyes/see)
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To: mtbopfuyn

Yeah, but a 12 year old kid has weighed in... the moral authority of a 12 year old kid is absolute.


9 posted on 08/28/2005 1:30:18 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: billorites
My take is that possession made it personal property, subject to legal action. Taking over the museum did not change that, and gave the government the right to turn a loan into a gift/theft. It may indeed be the government's, but not until the matter is resolved by due process, not forcible and illegal retention of what is not theirs.

The government thugs have no more right to keep the suit than they would to bust into the Grissom home to retrieve it (without a court order.)
10 posted on 08/28/2005 2:20:31 PM PDT by Atlas Sneezed (Your FRiendly FReeper Patent Attorney)
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To: mtbopfuyn
1. It's NASA property

And who funds NASA? I thought it was the American taxpayer. NASA owns nothing! They just manage it!

11 posted on 08/28/2005 2:49:34 PM PDT by Bommer
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To: jwh_Denver; billorites

The capsule was recovered in 1999. The protective cover for the emergency hatch release was in place, but corrosion reportedly made it difficult to determine conclusively whether the release had been actuated.


12 posted on 08/28/2005 3:10:00 PM PDT by no-s
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To: jwh_Denver
Very right and thanks for raising it. I am a huge fan of the history of the space program and that imputed reaction by Grisson is very out of character for him. Cooper is right, and he knew both Grissom and the space program best, having been one of the original Project Mercury astronauts (along with Grissom).

I think the heat on Grisson is mostly on NASA playing the blame game a bit, which was later fanned a bit by who have the tendency to tear down people of courage, a normal side effect of having small raisins instead of grapefruits.

Salute to Lt Col Virgil 'Gus' Grissom!
13 posted on 08/28/2005 3:17:18 PM PDT by HitmanLV
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To: HitmanNY

I thought I had heard several months ago that NASA had changed its mind about Gus's "mistake". So I Googled it and found that website I posted. Now I question the entire movie "Right Stuff". It's too bad this wasn't discovered before he died.

Old Gus, one of the early pioneers of the exploration of space. That will never change.


14 posted on 08/28/2005 4:28:51 PM PDT by jwh_Denver (The MSM, turn off, tune out, and drop it.)
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To: jwh_Denver

Right Stuff is a great movie except for what I consider to be a mischaracterization of Grissom.

When I said NASA's blame game, I meant NASA back then. I wasn't aware they backtracked from their story - good.

Grissom is a hero - they all are.

PS - Don't forget another of my favorite american astronauts, Ham the chimp! Just cause he isn't human doesn't mean he isn't a hero too!


15 posted on 08/28/2005 4:48:51 PM PDT by HitmanLV
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To: HitmanNY

Ham the chimp!

Didn't the orginal 7 astronauts refer to themselves as "monkeys in capsules"? or something to that affect?


16 posted on 08/28/2005 6:26:36 PM PDT by jwh_Denver (The MSM, turn off, tune out, and drop it.)
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To: RaceBannon; scoopscandal; 2Trievers; LoneGOPinCT; Rodney King; sorrisi; MrSparkys; monafelice; ...
Connecticut ping!

Please Freepmail me if you want on or off my infrequent Connecticut ping list.

17 posted on 08/29/2005 11:21:26 AM PDT by nutmeg ("We're going to take things away from you on behalf of the common good." - Hillary Clinton 6/28/04)
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To: nutmeg

The guy who lived 2 houses down from me when I was a kid designed the air packs worn on the moon walks. He gave me a bunch of space related pics when I was a kid.


18 posted on 08/29/2005 11:28:24 AM PDT by Fierce Allegiance (This ain't your granddaddy's America)
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To: Rodney King

"It just seems fair,"

"Yeah, that's a good way to make policy."

As opposed to what?
Fairness sure seems like the right basis for making policy to me, anyway. What other standard is there that is not intolerable?


19 posted on 08/29/2005 11:53:06 AM PDT by Vicomte13 (Et alors?)
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To: Vicomte13
Fairness sure seems like the right basis for making policy to me, anyway. What other standard is there that is not intolerable?

It's not fair that Bill Gates has so much money. The rich should pay more taxes. Did you know that there are kids who can't afford a backpack for schoo? That's not fair.

20 posted on 08/29/2005 12:00:02 PM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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