newsfile subjects

The Race to the Moon
The story of Sputnik and the space race

Space Stations
Skylab, Mir and the ISS

Shuttles
From Discovery to Challenger

Adventures on Mars
The next stop in our solar system

Solar System and Beyond
Profiling the probes that have reached interstellar space







the race to the moon
The Cold War was only beautiful once, and that was during the race to space. Because after the Russians fired Sputnik across our bow in October 1957, and generals and presidents fretted over great missile silos in the sky, there were others who just wanted to see whose guys could fly the highest. When Yuri Gagarin (above) went first, America countered with its first real heroes since the war: The Mercury Seven. Alan Shepard was the first American to go up, in '61; John Glenn went up and around and around and around, and we all craned our necks and cheered and made him a senator. We saw blood on the launchpad after three were burned alive right on the ground; we saw footprints on the moon, back in 1969 when something like a moon landing could still get an 80 share (what were the other 20 percent watching?). And of course there was the Challenger in 1986, that awful fire in the sky. But we won. And we've been lucky. And we've used the moon for a driving range. Now for the planets, and the stars in the sky at night.

--Frank Pellegrini

 


Soviet Satellite Sends U.S. Into a Tizzy
October 18, 1957


The Seer of Space
Lifetime of Rocket Work Gives Army's Von Braun Special Insight Into Future
October 18, 1957


THE MEN OF MERCURY

The Astronauts -- Ready to Make History

In Their Own Words

"I've the Normal Desire to Go a Little Higher"
by Gordon Cooper

"There Won't Be Time to Send For the Manual"
by Walter Schirra

"Space Is at the Frontier of My Profession"
by John Glenn

"You Just Don't Have Time to Get Frightened"
by Virgil Grissom

"I Know it Can Be Done and I Want to Do It"
by Alan Shepard

"This Is Going to Be One Hell of A Thrill"
by Donald Slayton

"This Is Something I Would Give My Life For"
by Scott Carpenter
September 14, 1959


YURI GAGARIN

Soviet Traveler Returns From Out of This World

How the News Hit Washington - With Some Reactions Overseas

A Chance That We Missed . . .And the Chance We Have

Editorial: Some Cosmonautical Questions
April 4, 1961


SPACE WALK

The Glorious Walk in the Cosmos
Ed White Steps Out of the Capsule

Vigil of Genius Behind Gemini 4
Flight Director Chris Kraft
June 18, 1965


TRAGEDY

Apollo I Fire
Put Them High On The List Of Men Who Count
March 3, 1967

The Search Begins In The Scorched Capsule
March 10, 1967

For The Heroes, Salute And Farewell
March 10, 1967


TO THE MOON AND BACK
Moon Landing: Apollo II

Biographies: Aldrin, Collins, Armstrong

Neil Armstrong: He Could Fly Before He Could Drive

Buzz Aldrin: 'The Best Scientific Mind In Space'

Mike Collins: An Engineer Who Does Not Love Machines
August 10, 1969


PHOTO: JAMES WHITMORE FOR LIFE

 
Copyright © 1999 Time Inc. New Media. All Rights Reserved.