To the moon and beyond
There’s a solar system’s worth of information about the space program and its connection to Rice University on the Web:
A comprehensive look at NASA and Houston is the theme of the fall 2008 issue of Houston History magazine. It includes an article titled “Owls in Space,” with more about Rice’s connections to the Johnson Space Center.
“Suddenly, Tomorrow Came: A History of the Johnson Space Center” by Henry Dethloff is the source of several vignettes in this Rice News report.
The Curt Michel Collection at Rice’s Woodson Resource Center provides an insider’s view of NASA at a critical time in its history.
Douglas Brinkley, Rice professor of history and fellow in the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy, and famed historian and author Stephen Ambrose conducted a lengthy interview with Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon, in September 2001 for NASA’s Oral History Project.
Max Faget, who argued successfully for the form of America’s space capsules and played a major part in their design and construction as NASA’s director of engineering, taught graduate courses at Rice University.
Rice was once the home of the entire Apollo library, which now resides at the University of Houston’s Clear Lake campus.
Former Rice News staffer Lia Unrau wrote a lengthy history of Rice’s scientific collaborations with NASA during and after Apollo.
Robert O’Dell, a former Rice professor now at Vanderbilt, was the first and longest-serving chief scientist attached to the Hubble Space Telescope.
Mike Massimino, an adjunct professor in mechanical engineering and materials science, recently visited the Hubble and helped fix it.
In March 2008, Rice alums Peggy Whitson and Takao Doi found themselves in orbit at the same time.
Tayfun Tezduyar, Rice’s James F. Barbour Professor in Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, is helping design parachutes that will bring the next generation of astronauts back to Earth.
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