Robert Crippen, an American Astronaut, made history as the pilot of the Space Shuttle Columbia's maiden voyage, paving the way for the era of space exploration. His pioneering achievements in spaceflight and his dedication to advancing scientific knowledge have earned him a place among the heroes of space exploration.
"I was selected to be an astronaut on a military program called the Manned Orbiting Laboratory back in '67. That program got cancelled in '69 and NASA ended up taking half of us."
"We were on the dark side of the Earth when we started to see outside the window this soft pink glow, which is a lot of little angry ions out there going very fast. We were hitting them very fast."
"You're going very fast when you're on orbit, going around the world once every hour and a half."
"Having the opportunity to fly the first flight of something like a space shuttle was the ultimate test flight."
"Living inside the shuttle was a little like camping out. We ended up sleeping in our seats. You had to pay attention to housekeeping, not get things too dirty."
"We were only on orbit a little over two days, so we had no adverse effects from being weightless."