Read Neil Armstrong: A Life of Flight Online
Authors: Jay Barbree
Tags: #Science, #Astronomy, #Biography & Autobiography, #Science & Technology
Neil was convinced that once we knew how to live in space and ensure our personal survival, we would have taught ourselves how to reach Mars and more distant places in one spaceship—or a flotilla.
The question was, who should go? Will it be a global effort, or again a joint mission flown by two or three countries?
Will it be a return or a one-way trip? Will they follow the traditions of the wagon trains west in the 1800s and establish a colony, to be joined later by others, or will they return to Earth—to family and friends?
Whichever, it will be an exciting time, and Neil would have certainly liked to have been around for the twenty-first-century’s greatest adventure.
But as stated, Neil had no regrets.
There really was only one annoying item he could never be done with—stamping out an outrageously fictitious story circulating in cyberspace for years.
* * *
The story, forwarded endlessly via e-mail:
As Neil Armstrong reentered the lunar module Eagle from his walk on the moon, he made the enigmatic remark—“Good luck, Mr. Gorsky.”
Many people at NASA thought it was a casual remark concerning some rival Soviet cosmonaut. However, upon checking, there was no Gorsky in either the Russian or American space programs.
Over the years many people questioned Armstrong as to what the “good luck, Mr. Gorsky” statement meant—Armstrong just smiled.
On July 5, 1995, in Tampa Bay, Florida, while answering questions following a speech, a reporter brought up the 26-year-year-old question to Armstrong. This time Neil finally responded. Mr. and Mrs. Gorsky had died, so Neil felt he could now answer the question.
In 1938, when he was a kid in a small Midwestern town, he was playing baseball with a friend in the backyard. His friend hit the ball, which landed in his neighbor’s yard by their bedroom window. His neighbors were Mr. and Mrs. Gorsky.
As he leaned down to pick up the ball, young Neil Armstrong heard Mrs. Gorsky shouting at Mr. Gorsky: “Sex! You want sex?! You’ll get sex when the kid next door walks on the moon!”
The sad part is that millions today believe the ridiculous story to be true.
On June 7, 2012, little more than two-and-a-half months before Neil died, I wrote him:
Morning Neil:
I received this unbelievable yarn I’ve tried to knock down many times from my grandson Bryce, the football kicker you met at my 50th dinner.
I’m sure you have been pestered to death with many differing accounts of this tale.
For my kicker from your son the kicker, any comment?
Jay.
Neil replied:
Jay,
I first heard the story sometime in the 80s as told by comedian Buddy Hackett at a charity function.
As I’m sure you know the transcriptions of all the actual conversations are available on the Web at the Lunar Surface Journal.
I think there must be a secret club where they give Oscar-like awards for the most outrageous Internet scams in different categories: jokes, photographs, quotes, etc.
And there is a great deal of competition!
Best,
Neil
Rest in peace my good man. We’ll be along directly.
NOTE
TWELVE
TRAGEDIES GROUND SPACEFLIGHT
1
T. J. O’Malley was my poker buddy who nitpicked my writing severely. I made a practice of making sure what I wrote about him was precise. Believe me, the following conversations in this chapter between O’Malley and his wife, Ann, as well as with his friend, George Page, are verbatim.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Principal Storyteller
Neil Armstrong
Editor in Chief
Peter Wolverton
Thomas Dunne Books; St Martin’s Press
Associate Editor
Anne Brewer
Thomas Dunne Books; St. Martin’s Press
Editorial Assistant
Mary Willems
Associate Publicist
Katie Bassel
Management
Martha Kaplan
Science Advisor
Princeton Physicist Dr. Gene H. McCall, Ph.D.
Chief Scientist Air Force Space Command (Retired)
Senior Advisor to the Chief of Staff U.S. Air Force (Retired)
Senior Scientist and Fellow, Los Alamos National Laboratory (Active)
Literary Arts Advisor
Bob Button
Spaceflight Advisor
Retired Chief Astronaut Charlie Precourt
Project Mercury
John Glenn
Alan Shepard
Deke Slayton
Project Gemini and Apollo
Neil Armstrong
Gene Cernan
Charlie Duke
Jim Lovell
Tom Stafford
Project Space Shuttle
Robert Crippin
Franklin Chang-Diaz
Brian Duffy
Robert “Hoot” Gibson
Rick Hauck
Charlie Precourt
Research
Nicole Gail Roberts
Pictorial
Bryce Barbree Harrington, Photo Editor
Photographic Restoration—Mark H. Widick, M.D.
Photographs
J. L. Pickering
Pictorial Research
Mike Gentry
Research Librarian, Johnson Space Center
Maggie Persinger
Research Librarian, Kennedy Space Center
With special thanks to contributors
Howard Benedict
Associated Press Aerospace Writer and Historian
Tom Brokaw
NBC News Space Anchor
David Brinkley
NBC News Apollo Anchor
Bob Button
Gemini and Apollo Spokesman
Martin Caidin
aerospace writer and space historian
Gene Cernan
last on the moon,
Apollo 17
commander
Colonel Bill Coleman
astronaut affairs, office of the secretary of the Air Force
Tom Costello
NBC News space correspondent
Walter Cronkite
CBS News anchor and space historian
David DeFelice
community and media relations, Glenn Research Center
Brigadier General Charlie Duke
Apollo 11
CapCom and
Apollo 16
moonwalker
John Glenn
first American in orbit and veteran U.S. Senator
Herb Gold
NBC space group’s associate producer, Gemini and Apollo
Hugh Harris
director, NASA’s public affairs and voice of Launch Control
Ed Harrison
chief of information, NASA’s KSC
Jim Hartz
NBC News space anchor and
Today
show host
Lester Holt
NBC News space anchor and
Today
show host
James Holten
NBC News space producer and management
Chet Huntley
NBC News space anchor
Bob Jacobs
NASA deputy associate administrator, communications
Jim Kitchell
executive producer, NBC space coverage
Jack King
NASA
Apollo 11
commentator
Matt Lauer
NBC News space anchor and
Today
show host
Jim Lovell
Neil Armstrong’s
Apollo 11
backup commander and commander of
Apollo 13
Scott MacLeod
Korean War F9F Panther carrier pilot and Grumman lunar module instructor
Lisa Malone
director of media affairs, NASA’s KSC
Ralph Morse
Life
magazine’s photographer of the astronauts
Frieda Morris
NBC News management of spaceflight
Danny Noa
NBC News space producer
Charlie Precourt
chief astronaut (retired)
Alan Shepard
first American in space and commander of
Apollo 14
Deke Slayton
chief astronaut and director of flight crew operations
Lt. General Tom Stafford
commander of
Apollo 10
and Apollo/Soyuz
Russ Tornabene
NBC News space producer and management
Manny Virata
television networks press site coordinator
Bob Watkins
Grumman lunar module team
Harold Williams
NBC News Manned Spacecraft Center
Brian Williams
NBC News space anchor
INDEX
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
abort mode
aeronautical engineering
Agena rocket
chased by
Gemini 8
docking with
as target rocket
undocking from
Gemini 8
in emergency
Agnew, Spiro T.
aircraft carriers, launches from
Aitken basin, on the moon
Alarm!
Albrook Air Force Base, Panama
Aldrin, Buzz
and
Apollo 8
on
Apollo 11
flight
with
Apollo 11
in background
background of
chosen for
Apollo 11
on the Eagle
EVA skill of
on
Gemini 12
landing on moon
in lunar module simulator
on Neil’s personality
in quarantine
recruited as astronaut
return to Earth
science experiments on the moon
scientific credentials of
training for Apollo missions
weather report from space
Aldrin, Joan
American flag on the moon
Anders, Bill
animals in space
antenna
Apollo 1,
launchpad fire that killed three
Apollo 7
Apollo 8
crew of
in flight
heading for launch
interior of
lunar orbit
mission of
outdoes the Soviet effort
reentry
scouting the landing approach for
Apollo 11
White House ceremonies for astronauts
Apollo 9
mission of
Apollo 10
Charlie Brown command module
mission of
scouting the landing approach for
Apollo 11
Snoopy lunar module
Apollo 11
backup crew of
components of
crew of
crew of called “Misfits”
dominating the news
life aboard (eating, sleeping)
mission of
plan for lunar landing
training for
—Columbia command module
flight around moon
undocked from Eagle
—Eagle lunar module
camera and photography
descent to moon
discarded in lunar orbit
discarded items from, photographed from space
docking with
“the Eagle has landed”
“the Eagle has wings”
flight around moon
inspection for damage
landing legs
at launch
on the moon
return to Columbia
TV broadcast from
—the flight