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Astronaut's Long Career Ends - AP

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Revision - 08 Dec 2004 07:27 GMT
Astronaut's Long Career Ends
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/08/science/08astronaut.html?oref=login
Published: December 8, 2004

HOUSTON, Dec. 7 (AP) - The longest serving astronaut in history, John W.
Young, announced his retirement on Tuesday.

Mr. Young, who has spent 42 years at the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, plans to leave the agency on Dec. 31.

Mr. Young, who commanded the first shuttle mission and flew twice to the
Moon, was the first person to fly in space six times and the only
astronaut to pilot four different spacecraft. He flew in the Gemini,
Apollo and space shuttle programs.

"John's tenacity and dedication are matched only by his humility," said
Sean O'Keefe, the administrator of NASA. "He's never sought fame and
often goes out of his way to avoid the limelight."

Mr. O'Keefe said Mr. Young's legacy would inspire space explorers for
years to come.

Mr. Young, 74, joined NASA in 1962. His first mission was in 1965 as a
pilot of the first manned flight of the Gemini program. He went on to
command the Gemini 10 in 1966, followed by his orbit of the Moon in the
Apollo command module in 1969.

Mr. Young went back to the Moon in 1972 in Apollo 16. He and his fellow
astronaut, Charles M. Duke, collected more than 200 pounds of lunar
samples.

"John has an incredible engineering mind, and he sets the gold standard
when it comes to asking the really tough questions," said William F.
Readdy, NASA's associate administrator for space operations. In 1981, Mr.
Young commanded the Columbia during the first space shuttle mission. In
his final space mission, in 1983, he again commanded the Columbia.

Mr. Young was chief of the agency's astronaut office for more than a
dozen years and was an assistant and associate director of the Johnson
Space Center for eight years.

"John Young has no equal in his service to our country and to humanity's
quest for space," said Jefferson D. Howell Jr., director of the Johnson
Space Center.
Mary Shafer - 11 Dec 2004 19:39 GMT
>HOUSTON, Dec. 7 (AP) - The longest serving astronaut in history, John W.
>Young, announced his retirement on Tuesday.

I believe that Vance Brand now becomes the longest serving astronaut
at NASA.  He's at Dryden.

Mary

Signature

Mary Shafer   Retired flight research engineer
shafer.mfs@gmail.com

Bill the Cat - 11 Dec 2004 20:49 GMT
>>HOUSTON, Dec. 7 (AP) - The longest serving astronaut in history, John W.
>>Young, announced his retirement on Tuesday.
>
> I believe that Vance Brand now becomes the longest serving astronaut
> at NASA.  He's at Dryden.

You are correct. <http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/astrobio_activemgmt.html>
lists him as the last member of Group 5 (1966) still at NASA, followed by
Robert Parker (Group 6, 1967) and Gordon Fullerton (Group 7, 1969).

The longest serving non-management astronauts are Anna Fisher (Group 8,
1978) and Marsha Ivins (Group 10, 1984), though some of the other
management astros from those classes may return to active status.
 
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