Flight has defined most of
life. Born in Cambridge, Ohio, he attended
nearby Muskingum College before entering a Naval Aviation
program in 1942. He served as a fighter pilot in both World
War II and the Korean conflict. In 1954, he completed
training as a test pilot, and in 1957, Colonel John Glenn
made the first transcontinental, nonstop supersonic flight.
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Astronaut John
Glenn sits in the cramped capsule of the Mercury
spacecraft, preparing for his historic flight
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In 1959, he was one of seven men chosen
for the original group of American astronauts. Three years
later, on February 20, 1962, John Glenn made history in a
cramped, one-man space capsule named
.
Glenn circled the Earth three times and splashed down safely
at sea. The mission, which lasted less than five hours, made
him the first American to orbit the Earth. Soviet cosmonaut
Yuri Gagarin had become the first human to do so a year
earlier.
But Glenn says his flight was an important
breakthrough for the fledgling U.S. space program in its
Cold War-era space race with the Soviet Union.
"We were behind the Russians at that time," he points out.
"We were very concerned that the Soviets had gotten ahead of
us, technologically. We just wanted to get going, get caught
up."
Besides competition from Moscow, Glenn and the other early
astronauts had to worry about their rockets blowing up and
the unknown physical effects of space travel.
"One of the things was, would your eyeballs change shape?"
he says.
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John Glenn, a
veteran test pilot, was one of the 7 original U.S.
astronauts |
He recalls there were miniature eye
charts at the top of the Friendship 7's instrument panel
that he was to read every 20 minutes during flight, so space
agency physicians could determine if his eyes were changing
shape or not.
John Glenn left the astronaut program in 1964 to enter
politics. He was elected to represent Ohio in the U.S.
Senate in 1974 and kept the seat for 24 years.
On Capitol Hill, Senator Glenn was known for a keen interest
in defense and nuclear non-proliferation. And he remained a
staunch supporter of America's space program.
He insisted,
"In bad times, or even in recession time, [you have] to keep
spending some money on research and looking into the future.
I think that what builds this country are two things:
education, number one, and number two, we've poured more of
our GNP [gross national product] back into basic,
fundamental research. That is where the space administration
fits in."
The astronaut-turned-senator said that there were tangible
benefits to space research that could help people here on
Earth.
"New medicines that could be manufactured up there on a
space station, pharmaceuticals that are so important to us
here on Earth. That is the benefit. It is not just to do a
high-wire act [exhibition] and see how far in space you can
go."
He stressed that America should be getting the most it could
out if its investment in space research.
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On Discovery,
Glenn conducted a series of investigations into the
physiology of the human aging process |
John Glenn had made only one flight into
space, but always said that if America's space agency needed
him again, he'd be ready.
"I've already told them, when they get around to doing their
geriatric studies, I'm their guinea pig, and they already
have a baseline [medical record] on me!"
And he did return to orbit - on the shuttle Discovery, in
1998, shortly before retiring from the Senate - becoming the
oldest man to go into space. During the nine-day flight, the
77-year-old took part in several experiments assessing the
effects of space travel on the elderly.
Marking NASA's 50th anniversary last
year, Glenn returned to Capitol Hill and urged his former
colleagues to continue funding space research and the
International Space Station.
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John and Annie Glenn met when
they were children growing up in New Concord, Ohio
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"The output here that comes from this is more advancement of
science, research, new things that will benefit people right
here on Earth," he pointed out, explaining that there are
two kinds of exploration. "One is macro, one's micro. You
can go to the moon and Mars, but at the same time you want
to do the micro stuff, too, that's of value to people right
here."
With a nod to the $10 billion the
United States has invested in the space station, he added,
"Compared to the overall cost of the vehicle [the space
station] up there, the amount of money required to put more
people into research is fairly small."
Since retiring from the Senate and returning from space,
Glenn and his wife Annie have been putting their efforts
into the
. Through its programs, they work to improve
the quality of public service and encourage young people to
pursue careers in government
on Earth, and perhaps, one
day, on Mars.
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Link to original story at VOAnews.com
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