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<text>
<title>
(1988) The Magic Is Back!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
</history>
<link 07394>
<link 02175>
<link 01800>
<link 00224><article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
October 10, 1988
NATION
The Magic Is Back!
</hdr>
<body>
<p>On a thundering pillar of fire, Discovery carries the nation's
hopes aloft again
</p>
<p> For the more than 1 million Americans who crowded the Kennedy
Space Center last week, and for millions of other Americans
clustered around TV sets, the tension was palpable. As the
countdown clock flashed out the number of seconds until
lift-off, the eyes of an entire nation focused on Launch Pad
39-B and the gleaming white shuttle Discovery, flanked by its
two solid rocket boosters and clinging to the side of the giant,
rust-colored external fuel tank. In the minds of many, however,
another vision intruded: the hellish yellow-orange burst in the
middle of a Y-shaped cloud that 32 months earlier had marked the
destruction of the shuttle Challenger.
</p>
<p> Finally, spectators joined in for the last 15 seconds of
countdown, the engines ignited and the shuttle rose majestically
from the pad, carrying its crew of five veteran astronauts.
Over the space center's loud-speakers came the triumphant
announcement: "Americans return to space, as Discovery clears
the tower." But the cheers were muted as the crowd--many with
clenched fists, gritted teeth and teary eyes--nervously watched
the spacecraft rise on its pillar of flame, then begin its roll
out over the Atlantic. Again the visions of Challenger arose.
Now the loudspeakers carried the voice of Mission Control in
Houston, which took over from the Kennedy controllers seven
seconds into the flight. "Go at throttle up," Houston called at
around the 70-second mark, and more than a few stomachs
knotted. That was the last command heard by the crew of
Challenger, which exploded seconds later. "I was saying
`Please, please' as Discovery passed the 73-second mark," says
Psam Ordener, wife of a Houston space engineer.
</p>
<p> Discovery commander Rick Hauck promptly answered with a laconic
"Roger go," bringing a smattering of applause and cheers that
grew into a chorus near the two-minute mark, when the
spacecraft successfully jettisoned its two spent solid rocket
boosters. But experienced space observers did not relax until
Discovery shut down its three main engines 6 1/2 minutes later,
shucked off its external fuel tank, then slipped safely into
orbit about 180 miles above the earth a half hour later.
Declared elated space engineer John Kaltenbach: "This was the
one that had to fly. It looks damn good. Oh, it just feels so
good!"
</p>
<p> The nation's collective sigh of relief could have launched a
thousand shuttles. President Reagan opened an awards ceremony
in the White House Rose Garden with the dramatic announcement,
"America is back in space." Admitted Reagan: "I think I had
my fingers crossed like everybody else." In St. Charles, Mo.,
just after completing a campaign speech, George Bush got word
about Discovery and hurriedly retook the stage. "I thought you
might be interested,"he told the crowd. "The shuttle is
launched successfully, and America is back in space. We're
back! America is back!" The crowd roared its approval.
Declared Michael Dukakis, campaigning in New Jersey: "We're very
proud of the astronauts."
</p>
<p> Six hours later, Americans had more good news from space as
they watched the televised deployment from Discovery's cargo bay
of the $100 million Tracking and Data Relay Satellite. And so,
on the first day of its scheduled four-day mission, the five-man
Discovery crew achieved one of its major goals--sending TDRS
toward its designated orbit--and seemed well on its way toward
the other: a successful test flight of the newly refurbished
shuttle. Discovery's leap into space seemed at last to have
given the nation, as well as NASA, a long-needed catharsis,
purging it of the lingering horror of the Challenger disaster,
restoring the battered pride of Americans in their technological
prowess and providing new impetus to a languishing space
program.
</p>
<p> Despite all the euphoria, some tough questions remained, not
only about the future of the shuttle program but also about
where the Discovery mission would lead the country's space
program in the years ahead. Since the Challenger tragedy,
America's lead over the Soviets has slipped, ambitious plans for
scientific experiments in space have stalled, and commercial and
military payloads have for the most part been grounded.
Declared J.R. Thompson, director of the Marshall Space Flight
Center in Alabama: "One good launch doesn't make a space
program, but it's a damn good start!"
</p>
<p> It certainly was. As the shuttle eased into orbit, mission
commander Hauck felt only delight at the immediate tasks at
hand. "We're looking forward to the next four days," he said.
"We have a lot to do, and we're going to have a lot of fun
doing it." Several hours later, astronauts Mike Lounge and
David Hilmers, manipulating controls in the cabin, raised and
tilted the TDRS package in the cargo bay, and activated springs
that pushed it out of the open doors into space. After Hauck
and pilot Dick Covey had maneuvered the shuttle to a safe 45
miles away, the TDRS rocket ignited, sending the satellite
farther away from earth. Later that night, the TDRS rocket's
second stage precisely nudged the satellite into a
geosynchronous orbit, where it hovered 22,250 miles above the
Pacific Ocean.
</p>
<p> There, like a butterfly emerging from a cocoon, it unfolded two
huge solar panels and two large umbrella-like antennas.
Together with its sister satellite, TDRS-1 (already in orbit
over the Atlantic), the new TDRS will give NASA the ability to
communicate through a single ground installation with dozens of
U.S. civil and military satellites.
</p>
<p> While the other astronauts continued to check out Discovery's
systems, Pinky Nelson began the first of eleven science
experiments: growing crystals, which form more precisely in zero
gravity, of specialized proteins such as gamma interferon and
an enzyme found in the AIDS virus. By studying the crystals,
scientists at the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography at
the University of Alabama-Birmingham hope to learn more about
the structure of the proteins, which may enable researchers to
create new disease-fighting drugs. Other experiments scheduled
during the mission included the production and study of
crystalline organic thin films, evaluation of an onboard
infrared communications system and the production in four space
furnaces of special metallic alloys.
</p>
<p> What may have been the biggest surprise of the mission's first
three days was a bracing wake-up call recorded by comedian Robin
Williams, patterned after the gag line of his movie Good
Morning, Vietnam. At 5:30 a.m. Friday, the astronauts heard
blaring from a cabin loudspeaker: "Gooooood Morning, Discovery!
Rise and shine. Time to start doing that shuttle shuffle.
Hey! Here's a little song coming from the billions of us to the
five of you."
</p>
<p> For a few hours during the Thursday-morning countdown, however,
the shuttle shuffle appeared destined for a scrub. All week
NASA technicians had isolated small glitches, from a tiny gas
leak on a main engine to a slight scratch on a thruster rocked.
Finally they seemed confident that only bad weather might
postpone the shuttle's launch. Although launch day dawned
bright and sunny, meteorologists warned that the high-altitude
winds in the shuttle's flight path, normally unruly in the Cape
Canaveral region during late September, had uncharacteristically
died down. The problem: Discovery's computers had been
programmed to maneuver the craft through strong, buffeting
winds. "Imagine yourself leaning way forward into a stiff
wind," explained Thomas Utsman, director of shuttle management
and operations. "But suddenly and unexpectedly, the wind stops,
and you fall flat on your face."
</p>
<p> That in effect is what NASA feared might happen to the shuttle
unless its computers were reprogrammed, a task they figured
would delay the launch by at least a day. Taking no chances,
NASA pushed back the launch time, while meteorologists
continuously monitored the winds with weather balloons. Before
long, the winds did shift and pick up a little, but they were
still outside NASA's criteria for a launch. After a detailed
analysis, the mission-management team agreed that the shuttle
was not endangered. Astronaut Robert Crippen, charged with
making the final go or no-go decision, had no qualms about
waiving the wind restriction. Less than an hour after
Discovery finally lifted off, an hour and 38 minutes late,
clouds moved in, and a bit later heavy rainstorms pelted the
cape.
</p>
<p> To most of the millions who witnessed Discovery's lift-off, the
spacecraft on the launchpad looked little different from its
ill-fated predecessor, Challenger. But the similarity was only
skin deep. Responding to the recommendations of the Rogers
commission, the 13-member panel appointed by the White House to
investigate the causes of the Challenger tragedy, NASA spent
$2.4 billion redesigning and replacing crucial components of its
shuttle fleet. Over the past two years, the space agency has
made more than 400 changes in the winged orbiter--including a
much touted new escape system--the solid rocket boosters, the
orbiter's three liquid-fuel engines and the huge external fuel
tank. What is more, each of the modifications or changes was
laboriously reviewed by the Discovery astronauts. "NASA went
far beyond our recommendations and fixed all that we wanted,"
says Robert B. Hotz, a member of the Rogers commission. "There
was a whole series of potential accidents waiting to happen.
I'm pleased with what NASA had done so far."
</p>
<p> Of all the changes, none was more carefully scrutinized than
the redesign of what proved to be Challenger's fatal flaw: the
joint between segments of the solid-fuel rocket booster.
Zeroing in on the booster joints, which are sealed by rubber O
rings that are supposed to prevent leaks of superhot gas from
the burning fuel, a team composed of outside experts as well as
specialists from NASA and Morton Thiokol, manufacturer of the
rocket, evolved a design that eventually withstood five
full-scale, two-minute stationary firing tests at Thiokol's Utah
proving grounds.
</p>
<p> Still, gnawing doubts remained. Despite exhaustive ground
testing of the new and modified shuttle parts, none had been
tried in the harsh environment of a launch, or in orbit or
re-entry. Moreover, some of them are among the more than 1,500
"criticality 1" parts--that is, items without backup whose
failure could end the mission, perhaps catastrophically.
</p>
<p> NASA took steps to improve the astronauts' chances of survival
should such a mishap occur. For the first time since the summer
of 1982, the crew left the launch pad ensconced in bulk space
suits, each partly pressurized and equipped with an oxygen tank,
a parachute and an inflatable raft. In addition, a new
emergency escape system was designed to give the astronauts a
change to leave the orbiter quickly in the event of a "benign
disaster" after the boosters had fallen away. In such a crisis,
the crew would jettison the huge external fuel tank and
stabilize the winged orbiter into a downward glide. Then, when
the craft descended to an altitude of about 30,000 ft., the
astronauts would set off explosive bolts, blowing a newly
installed hatch off the ship, and extend the 12-ft. telescoping
escape pole, which is positioned to guide them away from the
orbiter's wing and tail. One by one, each would slip a ring
attached to his suit around the pole and would slide off into
the thin air, deploy his parachute and drop into the ocean,
where his radio transmitter would lead rescuers to him. The
escape procedure would work, of course, only under circumstances
that leave the vehicle intact and under control.
</p>
<p> Right up to the moment of Discovery's launch, the space agency
displayed caution--and in the view of some critics, excessive
caution--in preparing to resume shuttle flights. Time and
again during the past year, as problems cropped up during tests
of new and redesigned shuttle equipment, officials pushed back
Discovery's launch date, from February to August, finally
settling on Sept. 29. Even during the final stages of the
countdown, mission manager Crippen polled top weather advisers
individually before waiving the restriction about the winds
aloft.
</p>
<p> NASA's new manner was in marked contrast to its bold, often
arrogant and occasionally careless approach in pre-Challenger
days. NASA initially promoted the shuttle as a routine "space
truck," and efficient, economical transport vehicle capable of
lofting any payload--commercial, scientific or military--into
orbit. Washington succumbed to that pitch, allowing NASA to
decree that expendable rockets such as the Delta, Atlas and
Titan be phased out in favor of the shuttle.
</p>
<p> But behind NASA's confident facade, reality was beginning to set
in. Beset by technical problems and delayed launches, the agency
reduced its estimate of annual launches from 60 to 40, then to
24, but was unable to attain even that. Given the shuttle
program's tremendous overhead and fewer flights, the cost for
each launch rose from a promised $10 million to as high as $300
million. In a frantic effort to accelerate its schedule, NASA
began to cut corners. Officials at the Marshall Space Flight
Center responsible for certifying the launchworthiness of the
external tank, the boosters and the main engines of each shuttle
began issuing more and more waivers on questionable
"criticality" items like the O rings that had shown signs of
erosion and charring on earlier flights. In fact Challenger was
flown with at least four procedural waivers.
</p>
<p> The Challenger explosion confirmed what some critics had been
saying from the outset: the U.S. had grievously miscalculated
in putting all its space eggs into the shuttle basked. The
Pentagon, long suspicious of the shuttle's reliability, wrangled
appropriations from Congress to build eleven Titan 34-D rockets
for military missions. The nation's scientists, for their part,
despaired as the eagerly awaited shuttle launch of the Hubble
space telescope, which could revolutionize astronomy by
extending our view to the edges of the universe, fell years
behind schedule. Crucial deadlines were missed for shuttle
launches of the planetary probes Magellan, designed to map the
surface of Venus, Galileo, to survey Jupiter and its moons, and
Ulysses, to conduct solar studies from a polar orbit around the
sun.
</p>
<p> As a result of its difficulties, NASA has lost potential
commercial clients to the European Space Agency, which will put
payloads into orbit aboard unmanned Ariane rockets at bargain
prices (cost: about $40 million per payload). Even more
galling was last month's decision by the Reagan Administration
to allow China to launch two U.S. communications satellites, a
move that stunned the fledgling U.S. commercial rocket industry.
"That hurt, and hurt hard," says an executive of one U.S. firm.
"We wanted those birds."
</p>
<p> Belatedly aware of the folly of total dependence on manned
launch vehicles to deploy spacecraft, the U.S. has been forced
to play a catch-up game. Since January 1986, the Soviets have
launched scores of satellites, sent two scientific probes to
Mars, and ferried a stream of cosmonauts between the earth and
the space station Mir--all with the aid of antiquated but
tried-and-true expendable rockets. In the process, they have
pushed far ahead of the U.S. in knowledge of the effects of
extended space flight on humans.
</p>
<p> With the shuttle back in space, the U.S. may begin to reduce
the Soviet advantage. In addition to one more flight this year,
NASA has scheduled seven for 1989, ten for 1990, nine for 1991
and 13 for 1992. For the time being, the Pentagon remains
partly dependent on the shuttle. Its high-resolution "keyhole"
photo-reconnaissance satellite, which will be used in part to
monitor Soviet compliance with nuclear-arms-reduction treaties,
will be aboard the next shuttle. Scientists too have been
granted accommodations--aboard the Atlantis in April 1989, the
next opportunity to launch the Magellan mission, and the
following October for the Galileo probe. The Hubble telescope
may finally get off the ground in February 1990, and Ulysses in
October of that year.
</p>
<p> Despite the excitement about Discovery's mission, and the talk
of the U.S. space program getting back on track, some caution
flags were raised last week. "It was an impressive and
important first step," says John Logsdon, director of George
Washington University's Space Policy Institute. "But many of
the problems that have been there are still there." Those
problems are legion. For starters, the shuttle's complexity and
NASA's heightened concern for safety lead many experts to doubt
the agency's ability to hold to even its relatively modest
schedule of 18 more flights between now and the end of 1990.
Richard Truly, the agency's space-flight director, concedes that
improvements can be made. "You can't have too much safety in
a program," he says. "But you can have procedures that don't
contribute to it." And he vows to fix those.
</p>
<p> By far the most serious stumbling block to a smooth shuttle
operation is the simple fact that the U.S. space program, and
thus the purpose of the shuttle itself, is still ill defined and
adrift. Unless a strong consensus emerges for clear national
priorities in space, the situation is unlikely to change. With
the completion of the Discovery mission, NASA will doubtless
argue that the shuttle is of crucial importance in building the
proposed space station scheduled for the mid-1990s. Just last
week the U.S. signed an agreement with eleven Western nations
to undertake jointly the construction of the manned outpost,
which would require 20 shuttle flights. Both presidential
candidates support the ambitious plans for the station. But
neither has yet explained how he would justify its estimated
$30 billion cost or said precisely how he thinks it should be
used.
</p>
<p> Others are just as vague. Should the station be a research and
manufacturing facility for performing microgravity experiments
and making substances not possible on earth? An assembly
platform for the large craft needed to carry humans to Mars?
A combination of both? In fact, a station is not needed for
former astronaut Sally Ride's "Mission to Planet Earth," a
proposal to study the earth's environment and atmosphere from
satellites. And some argue that it may not even be needed for
another major space project: a permanent manned base n the
moon.
</p>
<p> What is needed, says Logsdon, is "a purposeful, well-funded,
coherent program. That, I think the country wants, and that is
waiting for the next President to shape--early in his
Administration." NASA adviser Alan Ladwig agrees and urges "a
national commitment to space. It's up to the White House and
Congress to lead. It's not NASA's job anymore."
</p>
<p> At week's end NASA's immediate job was clearly delineated: to
complete Discovery's mission and bring it safely back to earth.
Aboard the spacecraft, the astronauts attended to a few
glitches, including a nagging problem in the craft's cooling
system and a balky antenna on a communications instrument, which
they managed to retract. They worked on science experiments,
played tapes of classical and pop music and shot pictures of
Pacific thunderstorms, of a lava flow in Ethiopia and of coastal
erosion wreaked by Hurricane Gilbert in Yucatan.
</p>
<p> On Sunday the astronauts were expected to conduct an in-flight
televised news conference, announce plans for a memorial to the
Challenger astronauts and complete their science experiments.
Then, if all went well, they were to stow their gear and make
other preparations for an early Monday-afternoon landing at
California's Edwards Air Force Base. Discovery's dramatic
mission will be over. But an even more pressing
mission--returning America to space with a meaningful and
long-range program--is just beginning.
</p>
<p>-- By Leon Jaroff. Reported by Glenn Garelik and Jerry
Hannifin/Cape Canaveral and Richard Woodbury/Houston.
</p>
<p>America's Five Highflyers
</p>
<p> Frederick H. Hauck, 47, mission commander. If any one man
typifies the "right stuff" aboard Discovery, it is Hauck.
"Rick's the ultimate straight shooter," says crew member Pinky
Nelson. "He's the ideal commander." Hauck has flown on two
previous shuttle missions. One, which he commanded, was the
1984 Discovery mission to retrieve two wayward satellites. He
has not lost a sense of wonder about the shuttle: "It's kind
of mystical being out thereon a launchpad listening to the
sounds. It seems like a breathing, alive machine." A graduate
of Tufts University and a Navy combat pilot in Southeast Asia,
Hauck planned to take Beatles and Billy Joel tapes on Discovery.
He and his wife Dolly have two adult children, Whitney and
Stephen. Hauck, a water skier and car buff, enjoys tinkering
with his 1958 Corvette. He is encouraged by NASA's overhaul
since the Challenger debacle. "What went wrong?" he asks. "We
didn't communicate well enough. Now we are talking much better
than before. We need to ask ourselves tough questions."
</p>
<p> Richard O. Covey, 42, pilot. "If I thought we were the only
five guys in the whole world willing to fly Discovery, it would
be different. But I'm in an office of people who are hungry to
go sit on that rocket." Convey's sentiment amply reflects his
gung-ho attitude about NASA's return to space. Covey rose to
the rank of colonel after graduating from the U.S. Air Force
Academy in 1968 and studying aeronautics and astronautics at
Purdue University. He flew 339 combat missions in Viet Nam,
then became an Air Force weapons-system test pilot. He piloted
the 1985 Discovery shuttle flight that deployed three
communications satellites and repaired a fourth. The
Coveys--Dick, wife Kathleen and Daughters Sarah, 14, and Amy,
12--often socialize with the Haucks outside work and enjoy a
close relationship. Covey, who is in line for a shuttle command
himself, snapped up Hauck's invitation to pilot the critical
Discovery mission.
</p>
<p> David C. Hilmers, 38, mission specialist. Jan. 28, 1986, was
Hilmers' 36th birthday. But it was no time for celebrating:
that was the day Challenger disappeared in a cloud of smoke.
Ever since, Hilmers has had a dream that "one day a shuttle
would once again make its way to the launchpad to launch
Americans into space." A religious man, he says his anxiety
about the mission was "soothed by my faith in God." Hilmers,
who doubles as Covey's backup pilot, is a math whiz. He
graduated summa cum laude from Cornell College, in Iowa, and
earned an electrical-engineering degree from the U.S. Naval
Postgraduate School. He joined the Marines in 1972, and was
selected as an astronaut in 1980. Hilmers was mission
specialist on the first flight of the orbiter Atlantis five
years later. Hilmers, a proficient pianist and an enthusiastic
gardener, and his wife Lynn have two sons, Matthew, 12, and
Daniel, 9.
</p>
<p> George D. Nelson, 28, mission specialist. An astronomer by
training, Pinky Nelson has logged a total of 314 hours in space,
ten of them spacewalking, mostly during Challenger's 1984
satellite-repair operation. He is the only member of the crew
who is not a military man. Nelson is an avid reader, jogs about
three miles a day and is a good golfer. He plays guitar along
with fellow astronauts Hoot Gibson and Brewster Shaw in an
all-astronaut rock band called Max Q. Nelson, born in Charles
City, Iowa, and his wife Susan have two teenage daughters,
Aimee, 16, and Marti, 13. Like other crew members, Nelson
questions the efficacy of some new safety features built into
the shuttle. Still, he says, "I don't think we'll ever see a
rocket built again that doesn't have an escape system."
</p>
<p> John M. Lounge, 42, mission specialist. NASA is very much a
full-time business for the Lounge family. "Mike" Lounge has
been with the agency since 1978, first as an engineer and since
1981 as an astronaut, and flew his first shuttle mission in
1985. His wife Kathryn is a manager of shuttle cargo at the
Johnson Space Center. He and Kathryn have three children,
Shannon, 17, Kenneth, 7, and Kathy, 4. The Lounges live near
a private airstrip and enjoy taking their Tiger airplane up for
an afternoon flight. Lounge, who plays a mean bluegrass guitar,
holds a master's degree in astrogeophysics and shares his
colleagues' concern about the Soviets' lead in space. He warns
that the flight of Discovery alone will not be enough to let the
U.S. catch up. A former navy flyer, Lounge is a lieutenant
colonel in the Texas Air National Guard. He declares that the
Discovery mission "is just one stone we have to put in place."
Was he afraid before the lift-off? "Afraid is too strong a
word," cracked Lounge, "and a fighter pilot would never admit
to that."</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>