Apollo 12 Astronaut Dies at 88
He was not on the list.
Dick Gordon, an astronaut who helped pilot the Apollo 12
mission to the moon in 1969, has passed away. He was 88 years old.
“NASA and the nation have lost one of our early space
pioneers. We send our condolences to the family and loved ones of Gemini and
Apollo astronaut Richard Gordon, a hero from NASA’s third class of astronauts,”
NASA Administrator Robert Lightfoot said in a statement.
Gordon is one of only 24 people that have ever made it to
the moon. Before deciding on becoming an astronaut, Gordon had dreams of
becoming either a priest or a professional baseball player. His ambitions
changed upon entering Navy flight school.
“Once I found out what that airplane could do for me or I
could do forit, it was love at first sight,” he said, according to the New York
Post.
In a 1999 interview, Gordon said that going to the moon felt
like he and the other Apollo astronauts felt like they had discovered planet
Earth.
“From 240,000 miles away, it’s very beautiful...a very
delicate planet sitting out there in the blackest — it’s the blackest black
you’ll ever see! It’s just devoid of any color whatsoever. And it’s been
described like a Christmas tree ornament hanging out there. You can’t see how
it’s suspended or anything. It’s — philosophically you could emote about it,
I’m sure, for quite some time. But it is a startling picture to look at the
Earth coming back from being around the moon," he said, according to NBC.
Gordon is survived by six children and two stepchildren
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