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2011 Art. Exhibit. Introducing the Artwork of Dr. Any Drollinger “Madame Van Gogh”. Welcome to the NASA Trilogy Viewing Pages. Apollo I Jan 27, 1967. Virgil "Gus" Ivan Grissom, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF Command Pilot Edward Higgins White, II, Lieutenant ColonelUSAF Senior Pilot
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2011 Art Exhibit
Introducing the Artwork of Dr. Any Drollinger“Madame Van Gogh”
Welcome to the NASA Trilogy Viewing Pages
Apollo IJan 27, 1967 Virgil "Gus" Ivan Grissom, Lieutenant Colonel, USAF Command Pilot Edward Higgins White, II, Lieutenant ColonelUSAF Senior Pilot Roger Bruce Chaffee, Lieutenant Commander, USN Pilot
AS-204 was to be the first manned flight of a Command and Service Module (CSM) to Earth orbit, launched on a Saturn 1B. CM-012, the Apollo 1 Command Module, was of an early Block I design before the Lunar Module (LM) landing technique was chosen, and therefore lacked the docking equipment needed for mating to a LM. This would be added to the later Block II design, along with lessons learned to solve technical problems encountered in Block I. At first only two manned Block I missions were planned, but the second one was cancelled in late 1966.The AS-204 mission was scheduled for February 21, 1967, having already missed a target date for the last quarter of 1966 (it was suggested that the first Apollo flight might coincide with the last Gemini flight, and rendezvous, but this never seems to have been a serious possibility). The flight was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the Apollo-Saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed. Grissom resolved to keep AS-204 in orbit for a full 14 days if there was any way to do so.AS-204 was intended to be followed by two more Apollo missions in the summer and late autumn of 1967. The first of these would have launched a Block II CSM on a Saturn IB along with an unmanned LM on a second Saturn IB, for a CSM-LM rendezvous and docking in low Earth orbit. The second mission would have launched the CSM and LM together on a Saturn V to high Earth orbit.
ChallengerJan 28, 1986 Francis R.“Dick “Scobee Commander, USAF Michael J. Smith Shuttle Pilot, USN Ronald E. McNair Ph.D Mission Specialist Judith ReznikPh.D Mission Specialist Ellison S.Onizuka, MS Mission Specialist Gregory B. Jarvis, MS Payload Specialist Sharon Christa McCauliffe, MS Teacher
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