Friday, June 14, 2019

"Hey Hoot, why do you do it man?"



from my private journal as Kerry Burgess: August 29, 2006

My doctor asked me why I wanted to return as Thomas Ray. As I was riding back on the bus, I decided that the real reason










stephen-king's-it_00h04m35s.jpg



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stephen-king's-it_00h05m10s.jpg






deed_29June1995.jpg, Kerry Burgess





http://articles.latimes.com/1995-06-28/news/mn-18110_1_space-station

Los Angeles Times

As Spirits Fly With Atlantis, Delays a Mir Inconvenience : Space: The shuttle pierces a blue sky after Florida storms scratched two launch dates. Linkup with Russian station is on track for Thursday.

June 28, 1995 K.C. COLE TIMES SCIENCE WRITER

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. — The space shuttle Atlantis cracked open a robin's-egg-blue Florida sky with a deafening roar Tuesday afternoon as hundreds of spectators and NASA officials cheered and sighed with collective relief.

Pounding rain with lightning had been soaking the area for days, preventing two scheduled launches last week and threatening to keep the five U.S. and two Russian crew members indefinitely on the ground. But the storms held off Tuesday.

Atlantis had to begin its journey during a 10-minute window beginning at 3:32 p.m. EDT in order to make its planned docking with the Russian Mir space station, now set for Thursday morning. Mir passed over Kennedy Space Center just minutes before Atlantis took off. By the time the shuttle left the ground, Mir was over Iraq.

"Liftoff of the space shuttle Atlantis on a mission that will herald a new day of international cooperation in space," launch commentator Bruce Buckingham announced as the shuttle, looking like a toy plane attached to a mile-high flamethrower, rode into orbit. The blastoff marked America's 100th manned trip into space.

The mission is the first joint U.S.-Russian mission since a U.S. Apollo spacecraft linked up briefly with a Russian Soyuz in 1975. This time, the two craft are to mate for five days at more than 200 miles above the Earth while the crew conducts several dozen experiments on biological effects of zero gravity to set the stage for building an international space station.

Waiting on Mir for a ride home is astronaut Norman E. Thagard, who broke the record for the longest U.S. spaceflight on June 6, when he logged 85 days on Mir. His two crew mates, cosmonauts Vladimir Dezhurov and Gennady Strekalov, will also be hitching a ride home on Atlantis.

Meanwhile, cosmonauts Anatoly Y. Solovyev, and Nikolai M. Budarin, who will ride up on Atlantis, will remain in space as the next Mir crew.

Atlantis is commanded by Navy Capt. Robert L. (Hoot) Gibson. In the pilot's seat is Air Force Lt. Col. Charles J. Precourt. The mission specialists are Dr. Ellen S. Baker, Gregory J. Harbaugh and Bonnie J. Dunbar.

Launch was delayed so long that dozens of Russian dignitaries gathered for the event had to leave for Moscow to get home in time for a meeting on space matters with Vice President Al Gore.

One of those dignitaries, cosmonaut Elena Kondakova, was waiting on Mir when Thagard arrived in March; in February, she had waved out Mir's window at the crew of the shuttle Discovery during its rendezvous. In a preliminary to the Atlantis docking, Discovery circled around Mir and hovered as close as 37 feet for just 10 minutes before backing off.

"It was a great pity they did not dock with us," said Kondakova just hours before heading home. "I will be jealous of those who will be on the station and receiving the crew."

Both U.S. and Russian crew members are eager to see their colleagues again.

"We're really excited about opening that hatch and seeing [Thagard's] smiling face," said Harbaugh. "I'm not sure if he's going to say hello in English or Russian."

This is to be the first of seven planned dockings, all to test procedures and equipment for the international space station, a partnership among Russia, the United States, Europe, Japan and Canada. Construction is due to begin in 1997, with occupancy scheduled for 2002.

Soon after launch, Atlantis began a series of rocket firings designed to put it in roughly the same orbit as Mir. Today crew members will continue to line up their orbit and will activate Spacelab, where experiments are stowed. They will also check out equipment and cameras for the docking.

On Thursday, they will drift up toward Mir. The docking itself, Gibson said, will be a "long, slow, laborious process."








https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Service_Ribbon

Sea Service Ribbon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A Sea Service Ribbon is an award of the United States Navy which recognizes those service members who have performed military duty while stationed on a United States Navy vessel at sea

Additional awards of the Sea Service Deployment Ribbon are denoted by bronze and/or silver service stars on the ribbon.








From 10/30/1946 ( Robert Gibson ) To 2/19/2006 is 21662 days

21662 = 10831 + 10831

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 6/29/1995 ( the Mir space station docking of the United States space shuttle Atlantis orbiter vehicle mission STS-71 includes me Kerry Wayne Burgess the United States Marine Corps officer and United States STS-71 pilot astronaut and my 3rd official United States of America National Aeronautics Space Administration orbital flight of 4 overall ) is 10831 days


From: Kerry Burgess

Sent: Sunday, February 19, 2006 1:26 PM

To: Kerry Burgess

Subject: February 19, 2006

Their contempt for my physical and psychological well-being continues.








http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0265086/quotes

IMDb

Black Hawk Down (2001)

Quotes

"Hoot": You know what I'll say? I won't say a goddamn word. Why? They won't understand.



- posted by Kerry Burgess 03:05 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Friday 14 June 2019