Posted on 04/12/2009 11:23:45 AM PDT by Excuse_My_Bellicosity
Famed Mercury astronaut John Glenn has an open seat at his lunch table, provided you're willing to foot the bill.
Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth, is offering an afternoon lunch as part of a charity auction for the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, which is raising college scholarship funds for aspiring engineers and scientists.
It was 50 years ago today that NASA unveiled Glenn and the six other Mercury astronauts - the country's first spaceflyers - to the world in a frenzied press conference that made the seven men instant national heroes. On that April 9 in 1959, Glenn compared his feelings for spaceflight to those of the Wright Brothers as they prepared for their history-making air flights.
"I think we stand on the verge of something as big and as expansive as that was fifty years ago," Glenn, now 87, said in that briefing according to NASA's transcript, adding that he and the other Mercury astronauts felt lucky and blessed to be part of it. "This can mean an awful lot to this country, of course."
At the time, the United States was embroiled in a Space Race with the former Soviet Union, one that culminated in the Apollo missions that landed Americans on the moon in the late 1960s and early 1970s.Since then, more than 300 NASA astronauts have followed, with another 10 or 12 expected to join the agency's spaceflying corps in a few weeks' time.
But Glenn and his fellow Mercury astronauts - Alan Shepard, Gus Grissom, Scott Carpenter, Donald "Deke" Slayton, Walter Schirra and Gordon Cooper - have been the popular image for America's past and present astronaut corps. Five of the seven have passed away in the last five decades, with Glenn and Carpenter all that remain.
Glenn first launched into space in 1962 aboard his Mercury capsule Friendship 7. It was America's third manned spaceflight after the suborbital trips of Shepard and Grissom, but the first to reach orbit and he circled the Earth three times before landing.
In 1998, Glenn launched into space again at age 77 aboard NASA's shuttle Discovery, setting a world record for the oldest human to fly in space. Unlike his first flight, Glenn spent nine full days in space performing experiments to investigate spaceflight and the aging process. He also served as a senator for his home state of Ohio for 24 years before retiring in 1999.
The Astronaut Scholarship Foundation's last lunch date with Glenn fetched a cool $6,050 during a 2008 auction. But the experience is not the only one up for sale. Seven other astronaut experiences are for sale - including a meal with Carpenter - and other astronaut memorabilia are also up for grabs to benefit the foundation's scholarships.
While the online bidding for the foundation's auction opened Thursday, it runs through April 18. Click here for more information via the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation.
My thoughts exactly... he’s a big liberal... no thanks.
I would rather spit on him.
I was in middle school when Glenn went into orbit, and I always thought of him as a great national hero. But when he sold us out just so he could get one last geriatric ride in space, I realized that he was never a patriot -- just a hot-dogger with aspirations of personal glory.
The boys that went up (even today) had/have a huge set of cajones on them. Too bad some of them squandered it away by joining that cesspool fraternity of bottom feeders in DC.
I’ve come to believe that an honorable “politician” is as difficult to find as a virgin in a whore house.
The term “politician” has an unsavory connotation...
However - I have known men and women who have served in public office who have indeed been honorable - but I would never call them “politicians”...
Patriotic Americans who HONORED THEIR OATH OF OFFICE is a more appropriate description...
Obama and most of his fellow Democrats VIOLATE their oath of office and the Constitution on a daily basis and are IGNORED FOR THEIR CRIMES.
I’ll have lunch with him.
First question:
“How in the hell could you ever be a Democrat”?
I’m related to the guy, yet I would rather have lunch with Big Bird.
I was fortunate enough to have a handshake and short conversation with Alan Shepard in 1974... that was cool, but unfortunately I was too starstruck to really hold an intelligent conversation.
John Glenn is just a low rent Murtha.
He did, they just stuffed him and sat him in a chair.
Caveat is, you get tang instead of wine.
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