NASA Names Additional Ambassadors Of Exploration

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April 17, 2006

Dean Acosta/Bob Jacobs
Headquarters, Washington
Phone: (202) 358-1400/1600

Eileen Hawley
Johnson Space Center, Houston
Phone: (281) 483-5111

RELEASE: 06-186

NASA NAMES ADDITIONAL AMBASSADORS OF EXPLORATION

Two distinguished names have been added to the list of NASA's first 
generation of explorers honored as Ambassadors of Exploration.

They include a man considered the architect of Mission Control, 
designing systems from the ground up and known to many in the early 
days of space exploration simply as "Flight." The other will be 
forever linked to the phrase "Failure is not an option," and is 
remembered for his flat-top hairstyle and relentless dedication to 
mission success.

Christopher C. Kraft and Eugene F. Kranz join an eminent list of 
honorees that include astronauts Alan Shepard, U.S. Sen. John Glenn 
and Neil Armstrong.

NASA's Ambassadors of Exploration are presented a unique award that 
includes a moon rock to recognize the sacrifices and dedication of 
the astronauts and others who were part of the Mercury, Gemini and 
Apollo programs.

"The early years of our nation's space program had 400,000 heroes, not 
just the astronauts who took the first tentative steps into space," 
said Administrator Michael Griffin. "The managers, engineers, flight 
directors, the mathematicians and computer programmers, the 
technicians and construction workers, all of these carried what was 
in some ways the heaviest responsibility of all."

"Through their work, they held the lives of other men in their hands. 
And no one in those early years carried this responsibility more 
visibly, or with more grace and fortitude, than did 'Red Flight' 
Chris Kraft and 'White Flight' Gene Kranz. And no two people are more 
deserving of the title 'Ambassador of Exploration' than these men. I 
have been privileged to know them, and to confer this recognition 
upon them," Griffin said.

The award celebrates the realization of a vision for exploration first 
articulated 45 years ago next month by President John F. Kennedy, who 
was looking to bolster a nation and a fledgling space program. It was 
a mandate to extend humanity's reach further into the cosmos.

Kraft began his career as an aeronautical engineer with the National 
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, predecessor of NASA, and later 
became an original member of the Space Task Group for NASA in 1958. 
He was the agency's first flight director, responsible for developing 
the technologies and procedures for ground operations for Project 
Mercury. Kraft served as flight director throughout Mercury, 
including Shepard's historic first spaceflight and Glenn's orbital 
mission. He later moved up to director of flight operations 
throughout the entire Apollo program.

He is considered the father of Mission Control and later became the 
director of NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston from 1972 to 1982.

Kranz joined the Air Force in 1954 and flew jet fighter aircraft. He 
was selected to join the Space Task Group in 1960 and was assigned as 
assistant flight director. His first duty as flight director came in 
1965 for Gemini 4, which featured the first spacewalk by an American 
astronaut. Kranz was flight director for Apollo 11 and led the team 
that helped to safely return the crew of Apollo 13 back to Earth. He 
later became director of NASA mission operations and retired in 1994 
shortly after the space shuttle flight that repaired the ailing 
Hubble Space Telescope.

To date, NASA has presented 13 of the nearly 40 lunar samples awarded 
as part of the Ambassadors of Exploration initiative. The award was 
first announced in July 2004 on the 35th anniversary of the Apollo 11 
moon landing.

Tuesday afternoon in Cincinnati, Griffin is scheduled to present the 
award to Armstrong, a former naval aviator and NASA test pilot. As 
Apollo 11 commander, Armstrong was the first human to ever land a 
spacecraft on the moon and the first to step on the lunar surface. 
The presentation can be seen live on NASA TV and on the Web at 
www.nasa.gov/ntv at 11:15 a.m. EDT.

For information about the Ambassadors of Exploration award, the 
exploration of the moon and the Vision for Space Exploration, visit:

www.nasa.gov/exploration

www.nasa.gov/apollo

http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/AofEphotos.html

	
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