NASA Discovers Space Spies From the 60's 302
Saeed al-Sahaf writes "In a room forgotten for more than thirty years at NASA's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, NASA recently found suits for space spies. Originally thought to be Gemini suits, the manufacturer determined that they were suits from a short-lived Cold War-era military program to put a manned reconnaissance station in space. Begun in 1964, the Manned Orbiting Laboratory program was an Air Force initiative that would have sent Air Force astronauts to a space station in a Gemini capsule. After spending a few weeks in orbit, the crew would undock and return to Earth. An interesting blast from the past."
Nasa is just telling you this... (Score:3, Funny)
Interesting technical detail (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Interesting technical detail (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Interesting technical detail (Score:2)
they found a suit with number 007
Re:Interesting technical detail (Score:2)
Clearly Universal Exports was involved.
Lawyer? (Score:5, Funny)
The spacesuit with identifying number 008 had the name "LAWYER" on the left sleeve. The suit was traced to Lt. Col. Richard E. Lawyer, a member of the first group recruited to be MOL astronauts in 1965. Records show that official ownership of this suit was transferred by NASA to the Smithsonian Institution in 1983. The suit itself has now been returned to the Smithsonian.
I thought the idea was to send lawyers in space WITHOUT environmental gear, sillies.
Re:Lawyer? (Score:2)
That clinches it. The MOLP from the sixties is still around [microsoft.com] spying on people! [cryptome.org]
Re:Lawyer? (Score:4, Insightful)
When you've been falsely accused of a crime or illegal tactics are used against you, you'll gain a new appreciation for lawyers.
LK
Re:Lawyer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Lawyers are used to carry out both activities. The fact that one has to spend exorbitant amounts of money on their own lawyers to fight it off is reason enough to have contempt for both lawyers and the system.
Re:Lawyer? (Score:2, Interesting)
My problem in both cases is with the police, the "law enforcement" officers that are supposed to make the system work.
LK
Re:Lawyer? (Score:2)
Ah the bygone days of paranoia (Score:5, Funny)
Wasn't Paranoia (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:4, Insightful)
I think that the USSR was considered an enemy because we were in the way of them accomplishing their stated goal of world conquest. They threatened to nuke us several times if we interfered.
It was soooo long ago; maybe it didn't happen...
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Insightful)
That's funny, because in Soviet Russia, the USA was considered an enemy because the Soviets were in the way of the US accomplishing their stated goal of world conquest.
We call it things like 'Opening the Markets', 'capitalism', and 'free trade'. It wasn't really 'free market', as much as opening the markets to American business, which would frequently be favored over non-Amer
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:4, Insightful)
But of course, it's not hip these days to acknowledge that, on the whole, the US is a force for human rights, economic progress, and democratization.
Yeah go tell Central and South America that. Get off your ass , visit other countries around the world. Go see how the other 90% lives.
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Interesting)
That explains Kennedy pounding his shoe on the table at the UN as he yelled "We will bury you!". Go learn something about the USSR and its brutal repression of its people before you make invalid comparisons.
Shoe on the other foot (Score:3, Informative)
Khrushchev didn't bang his shoe while yelling, "We will bury you!" Those were two separate incidents. Since you're so keen for others to educate themselves, maybe you could read up on what really happened [wikipedia.org].
Certainly Krushchev was an aggressive leader. But today the U.S.'s stated aim is to not only maintain military supremacy, but to build up so much military strength that no other nation can even consider trying to compete [whitehouse.gov]. If you don't live in America, that sounds a lot like a plan to rule the world, to
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2)
Then do that. Stand back, get the US government to stand back, and we'll see what happens.
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2)
Ready your history. And try figuring out the difference between right and wrong.
You're not one of those appeasement types who thinks the right way to get along with someone who wants to destroy you is to be ever so nice and accommodating?
Hrmmm.... (Score:2)
That sounds awfy like whit thae *Stalinists* used tae say...
Yir no some kind o' *Communist*, are ye?
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2)
Disgusting,
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2)
You're confusing understanding with agreement and acceptance. There's an epidemic of it these days.
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Insightful)
By the way, it was clearly impossible for any Soviet to live "as well" as I do in the States. No matter how much money they had. I'm free; they weren't.
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2)
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Insightful)
The Soviets were aggressive totalitarian conquerors with no respect for freedom or human rights. You are positing the disgusting hypothesis that there was no difference between the Soviets and the democratic West. A more credible comparison is between the Soviets and the Nazis, between Stalin and Hitler, both psychopaths who murdered millions of their own citizens.
The only thing that sa
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, Russia had absolutely nothing to do with that. I believe the running thought is that Russia saved Europe from the Nazis and the US saved Europe(part of it anyway) from the Russians. Could be that the whole world would've been better off if we let Patton and Macarthur go for it. We'll never know. Will we? And of course, the truth we shall never see. All we have is each other's propaganda...sound bites taken out o
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:2)
If not for the forces he needed in the West to counter the Allies, Hitler most likely would have taken Moscow. So much, then for the Soviet army. In other words, no American presence in the war, no Soviet presence. Hitler wins.
Now, go clear your mind, turn of your AM talk radio, and learn some history. Stop wasting both our time with his simplistic cant.
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Informative)
While I despise the current trend of attempting to downplay the US's role in World War II, you really should take another look at a timeline of the War in Europe. The German advance on Moscow was halted in mid 1941, and the decisive battle of Stalingrad, which all but ended the Ger
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wasn't Paranoia (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:You are a dipshit (Score:2)
So, go do you own homework, you fatuous ass, and come back and tell the world about how the Americans killed millions of their own people on the whims of a psychopathic leader, how millions more were held in gulags, and how the Americans conquered half of Europe and annexed into their empire. Tell me how the people of Berlin tore down a wall built by Americans.
moron. contemptible moron.
Re:You are a dipshit (Score:3, Insightful)
I hear that alleged logic all the time. I simply do not understand it. We are not responsible for the actions of our ancestors.
Re:Ah the bygone days of paranoia (Score:2)
What's that little "DHS Threat Advisory" image in the top right doing there? Just a reminder that paranoia isn't a think of the past, the only thing that's changed is the thing we're supposed to be afraid of.
Re:Ah the bygone days of paranoia (Score:3, Funny)
*smacks sarcasm detector, shakes, hears rattling noise*
Re:Ah the bygone days of paranoia (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ah the bygone days of paranoia (Score:3, Informative)
Unless there was another incident, I believe you are referring to the fact that the city of Portland, Oregon, stopped issuing marriage licenses to heterosexual couples last year until the legal status of same sex marriage was clarified with respect to the state constitution. The constitution offered equal protection under the law, and didn't legally define
Re:Ah the bygone days of paranoia (Score:2)
Not gone, just bye (Score:5, Interesting)
Back in the 40s and 50s, there was a lot of talk about doing things like surveillance (you can see a lot) and communications (a lot of people can see you) from orbit. One common assumption (which turned out to be correct) was that these things would be extremely important in the near future. Another assumption (which turned out to be totally wrong) was that this would be done by sending people to go live in orbit. Once there, they'd use photography, electronics, and other technology that wouldn't be much more advanced that what people were familiar with. You can see this in Arthur C. Clarke's original proposals for communications satellites [lakdiva.org] and in fiction from Clarke, Heinlen, and others.
What really happened, of course, is that rocket technology progressed relatively slowly, while electronics progressed very rapidly. So long before it was practical to a space station in orbit, it was practical to put a simple electronic gadget in orbit that would do all those chores pretty cheaply. Kind of sad, really -- if building better rockets had been more of an economic and military necessity, we'd probably be the space-going civilization that eveybody back in the 50s assumed we would be.
Then again, the need to build smaller and more reliable electronics did a lot to jump-start the computer revolution -- so we mustn't complain too much!
Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:5, Funny)
They were really advanced.. and we're lame - we just have Internets.
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:5, Informative)
There is some truth to this. The US developed *amazing* levels of space technology in the 1960s. Take a look:
8,000,000 tons from ground zero to anywhere in the Solar System [wikipedia.org]
Plenty of power for regular Moon trips [wikipedia.org]
Jets with unlimited range [wikipedia.org] (Okay, the actual design of this one was a little scary. Still, the principles are sound.)
Complete Space Station in one launch [wikipedia.org]
118 metric tons to orbit [wikipedia.org]
Now all of it has been buried and forgotten. Advancement? We've buried our collective heads in the sand. That's why Bush's CEV program [wikipedia.org] actually makes sense. He must have listened to his NASA engineers for a change, because the CEV is a staged program that is predicated on using existing technology to build a space infrastructure. No waiting for someone to invent the Starship Enterprise, we're going NOW. And to do it, we're pulling out many of the bits of technology [nuclearspace.com] that we forgot. I don't know about anyone else, but I'm excited about this program.
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Skin tight Space Suits [wikipedia.org]
As crazy as it may sound, these suits (correctly named "Space Activity Suits") were designed to actually *expose* the wearer to hard vacuum while still providing life support for the astronaut! This sort of suit would allow astronauts to have the same working freedom in the suit as the freedom enjoy inside the ship! Such a suit could make regular space construction and maintenence possible. It's also safer than regular suits as it is far less susceptible to depressurization. Perfect for environments like Mars where spacesuit damage becomes a major concern!
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Got any evidence to back that up, or are you just talking from your ass? (I'll give you a clue: You're talking out of your ass.)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
May I suggest that only watching Fox "News" does not give you the best fundament for making informed opinions about the world at large?
Google is a nice tool for searching a quality site (I'm sure other sites have quelity too) :
Bush Space Plans [zmag.org] :
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Re:Wow... the 1960's.. (Score:2)
Really? Let's go through them one by one:
1. The Orion project did testing on the concept, and developed the necessary nuclear explosives (i.e. Pulse units). The declassified test video that convinced Von Braun to support the Orion concept can be viewed here [nuclearspace.com].
2. The NERVA engines were considered ready for upper stage use despite the ablation problem. The program was only cancelled after the plans for interpl
Forgotten in a room for 30 years?? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Forgotten in a room for 30 years?? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Forgotten in a room for 30 years?? (Score:2)
Hopefully some of the missing Doctor Whos. (Score:2)
It is highly likely that in the 60s, more programs were theorized than were ever really started (eg: the Orion space program), that many that were started were abandoned as pe
someone was building a private collection... (Score:3, Interesting)
No, most likely they did. From the article:
Other historical treasures found in the room include old film canisters, one flown shuttle main landing tire, electrical equipment, and various miscellaneous boxes.
Huh. Historical treasures, that just happened to be in a room which nobody said they had a key to. Huh.
Records show that official ownership of this suit was transferred by NASA to the Smithsoni
Re:someone was building a private collection... (Score:5, Funny)
I don't know about that. I work at a certain military facility, and in the building where I used to work there was a room way in the back of the basement, through two sets of locked doors, that used to contain a computer system I was responsible for and still had parts and manuals and such. I found out about it from someone who used to work there, and when I went to get access it was determined that not only did no one have access, but no one was even declared as being responsible for the area.
And this wasn't just a matter of not knowing who had the key. All the doors were tied into the central entry control system and there simply weren't any prox keys issued with access, aside from some master keys used by maintenance.
Keep in mind that this is a military base, and very few active duty types stick around for more than a few years in one assignment. The room in question was run by contractors, and hadn't been used over the span of a couple of contract transitions.
I did finally get access and found a whole rack of modems (1200 or 2400 baud, I forget) still powered up and ready. A power line monitor had run itself out of recording tape years before but kept going. To this day there are still racks of VAX spares and tape reels down there.
Oh, and it turned out at least one portion of that area WAS being accessed. Turns out the maintenance guys had figured out no one ever came down there and had turned an adjacent office area into their private lounge.
Anyway, never underestimate the ability of the government to lose things. Portions of buildings included.
Re:someone was building a private collection... (Score:4, Interesting)
The aircraft carrier USS Independence (CV-62) was originally named the USS Constellation. But there was something that held up on the original Independence's shipbuilding process, so the original Constellation was completed as the Independence... sometime later, there was a fire on the Independence's forecastle, and when the layers of grey paint were burned off, there was the logo for the USS Constellation!
Many years later, during a refit some engineers were going over the ship's blueprints, and "discovered" a compartment along the midship line, down in the ship. The compartment was opened (it had no doors or hatches into it, so they had to cut through a bulkhead), and the shipyard workers discovered a complete machine shop - the drill presses and lathes still covered in original preservative grease.
Apparently, during the ship's original construction, someone had walled up the machine shop.
So yes, the gov't can occasionally misplace things...
what was the stuff doing there? (Score:2)
I understand, and believe you. However, the VAX and its modems were most likely put there for a reason. Which is exactly my point- how did this seemingly random collection of objects get there in the first place?
First thing that pops to mind is someone building a private collection to sneak off-site piece at a time or something. They should have just pretended to have given up, slapped an alarm on
Re:what was the stuff doing there? (Score:2)
Hell, I've heard they've still got the Ark of the Covenant somewhere in one of those warehouses.
Re:Forgotten in a room for 30 years?? (Score:2)
Re:Forgotten in a room for 30 years?? (Score:2)
Men
Concept Picture (Score:3, Interesting)
In particular, i'm wondering about the following:
What do people think those pulsese going down to the planet are in a weird curly line?
That thing above the hurricane that appears to be shooting something into it ? What's that ?
The guy standing on the right side of the picture in the MOL who appears to be "fishing" for the incoming spacecraft... with a what.. a big magnet on a tether ?
Re:Concept Picture (Score:2)
I think a more interesting question is : What is that thing above the hurricane that appears to be shooting something through it and down into Cuba?
Remember, this
wbs.
Re:Concept Picture (Score:2)
Could be a big mirror...Maybe it's the prototype for the heat absorbing tile inspection. Just another NASA project that got cancelled.
wbs.
Why is this news? (Score:3, Informative)
Also, how about adding some better links for contect? It took about 2 seconds to find this: http://www.deepcold.com/deepcold/dyna_main.html [deepcold.com]
Why not sell that junk on ebay? (Score:4, Interesting)
On a slow news day, nobody can hear you scream (Score:2)
The fact that they have a suit labeled "007" allows them to put "James Bond" in the headline, booting it up to page 7 of the newspaper and page 1 of the newspaper for nerds (even if it's hardly "news that matters".)
Space Cowboys... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Space Cowboys... (Score:2)
Some clarifications (Score:5, Informative)
A Titan IIIC booster with a 'Blue Gemini' atop would launch with the space station afixed, they would do their observation, then the Gemini would detach and land. Later missions could dock with the existing observation platform when feasible.
The launches would have taken place from Vandenburg Air Force Base in California. This is needed to efficiently put spacecraft into polar orbit without overflying populated land during boost.
A launch site was created at Vandenburg to handle manned spacecraft launches, but the program was cancelled as the article says. What it doesn't say is that the same complex was refurbished in the 1980s as part of the effort to launch the Space Shuttle into polar orbit for military missions. That program was cancelled as well (following the Challenger destruction).
For people interested in MOL, go check out the X-20 Dynasoar. It was a related program that would have had a reusable spaceplane 15 years before the shuttle.
Re:Some clarifications (Score:2)
Re:Some clarifications (Score:2)
Huh? [ltv-vwc.org.uk]. There's ample room for dozens of people!
Re:Some clarifications (Score:3, Interesting)
Bond. James Bond. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Bond. James Bond. (Score:2, Funny)
Man. THAT would take some explaining if Mars was already occupied...
"We must control the high ground!" (Score:5, Interesting)
So they had the Manned Orbiting Laboratory program, the Dyna-Soar program, and the USAF Space School. None of those survived the 1960s, although they were all good, workable ideas. The MOL incorporated the Gemini spacecraft, the best space flying machine to come out of NASA. (Mercury was the "man in a can" capsule, and Apollo was less maneuverable.)
As for the blue MH-7 suit, there's one of those on display at Wright-Patterson AFB. [af.mil]
Ghost Spooks (Score:2)
Spending money on space (Score:4, Interesting)
This does raise the question again about what Space exploration is for. With George W stating that its about going to the Moon, then Mars and putting people on planets this is a lesson in how easy it is to put people into Orbit (but how much more expensive to get to the moon, Gemini v Apollo).
With elements like Hubble being decomissioned despite its achievements, and a lack of long range probes being planned the question has to be asked.
Is NASA a marketing campaign for US Military "dominance" of earth and space. Or about futhering Mankind. In the 60s the president gave a target of something that just seemed right (landing on the moon). In the 21st Century the best we aim to achieve is... what JFK wanted us to do in the 60s.
Imagine what MIT, Berkley, Cambridge, Moscow, Paris and a bunch of other top Universities could do in terms of pushing human achievement forwards if they had the budget that NASA gets.
Re:Spending money on space (Score:2)
I got news for you
There will be no exploration without protection (Score:3, Interesting)
Now the reason I like GW's listed goal is that we have been parked in orbit for 40+ years and haven't budged except once to the moon. Sure we send probes out there but probes are not going to advanced space exploration in any meaningful array other than to say "hey, neat rocks here".
Establishing a presence on the moon will do much more than parking ourselves in a tincan in o
Re:There will be no exploration without protection (Score:2)
Re:Spending money on space (Score:2)
Mankind is quickly depleting the natural resources of Earth, growing fast enough that overcrowding might be a problem in a few centuries, and is highly vulnerable to a "planet killing" event like a large meteor or nuclear war. While conservation, population controls, and Bruce Willis can protect us for now, their usefulness wi
How do you "forget" a room ? (Score:2)
Or did it have a 'dont not disturb' sign on it all these years? And no one noticed until it fell off due to dry rot..
It just sounds fishy...
Re:How do you "forget" a room ? (Score:2)
The soviets actually did this (Score:3, Interesting)
The USSR also had some other scary space plans [k26.com] for military space stations. I mean, it even LOOKS sinister, painted black and all...
MOL: A Victim Of Automation (Score:3, Interesting)
The Soviets eventually came to the same conclusion, only after blowing the big rubles on Almaz and military Salyuts.
Incidentally, the first successful US launch after Challenger was an SDI experiment [skyrocket.de]
DeepCold (Score:2)
Another interesting military/space connection (Score:2)
Simpsons Quote (Score:2)
oh, wait...
LOOK!!! Space Fighters!!! (Score:2)
They must be kinda crusty. (Score:4, Funny)
NASA Discovers Space Spies From the 60's
No, NASA discovers SPACE SUITS from the 60's. It's not like there were a bunch of astronauts tucked away in a closet somewhere waiting for the "go" signal.
Re:Sadly (Score:4, Funny)
I think you mean, they were so desiccated from staying at their positions until they died of thirst.
Re:what else have NASA lost? (Score:2)
Re:what else have NASA lost? (Score:2)
Sounds like you've never worked for a large company. Or a medium sized company. Or a university. Or a school. Or even a church. I've worked for all of them, and I can easily believe this sort of thing would have happened in each of those places.
Re:Actually, it was the Vacuum Force... (Score:2)
Re:Actually, it was the Vacuum Force... (Score:2)