The Phnom Penh Post

Mourners remember life of astronaut John Glenn

- Paul Vernon and Nova Safo

MOURNERS gathered at a memorial service for groundbrea­king astronaut John Glenn on Saturday in his home state of Ohio, capping two days of remembranc­es for the first American to orbit the Earth.

Glenn, who later in life also became the first senior citizen in space, was remembered as a national hero who believed in selfless service to his country.

He died last week at the age of 95, after a lifetime spent in the US Marines, the American space programme, the Senate, and as a university professor.

At the public memorial service in the state capital Columbus, Vice President Joe Biden said Glenn exemplifie­d America’s view of itself as a “country of promise, opportunit­y, always a belief for tomorrow”.

“He knew from his upbringing that ordinary Americans can do extraordin­ary things,” said Biden, who served in the US Senate with Glenn.

“If you’re looking for a message to send for our time here on Earth, and what it means to be an American, it’s the life of John Glenn.”

The former astronaut, who was born in a small town in Ohio, enlisted in the Marines following Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941.

He served in World War II and the Korean War as a pilot, and later became a military test pilot.

Glenn was one of the “Original Seven” pilots recruited into America’s nascent space program in 1959. The pilots’ saga was recounted in the classic movie The Right Stuff.

The state of Ohio held ceremonies over two days, complete with full military honours, ending with the memorial service held at a 2,500-seat auditorium on the Ohio State University campus home to the Glenn College of Public Affairs.

The memorial service was attended by dignitarie­s, high-ranking government officials and members of the public who got tickets.

The service included a platoon of 40 Marines who marched 4.8 kilometres to accompany the hearse carrying Glenn’s body from the Ohio Statehouse to the auditorium.

Glenn’s flag-draped coffin lay in state at the Statehouse rotunda on Friday, allowing thousands of visitors to pay their final respects in an honour granted to only eight others in Ohio’s history.

At the memorial, speakers – including his adult children Lyn and David – remembered Glenn’s long career in public service.

“The potential for government to do good was something he never forgot. This was not an abstract concept to him. This was real life,” Lyn Glenn said, recounting that her father was a child of the Great Depression and remem- bered the positive effects of Franklin D Roosevelt’s New Deal programs.

In 1962, Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth, one year after Russia’s Yuri Gagarin became the first person ever do so.

After his 23-year career in the US military and space program, Glenn entered the US Senate as a Democrat, and made two unsuccessf­ul tries for the party’s presidenti­al nomination.

In 1998, Glenn made history again when he returned to space at the age of 77, becoming the oldest astronaut ever.

A frail Annie Glenn was in attendance at the memorial service, sitting in the front row of the auditorium next to Biden.

“John made us look up, not only to the sky . . . but toward a higher purpose that we as a country are always striving to achieve,” Biden said.

Glenn died surrounded by family at a Columbus hospital on December 8. He had been in declining health and had spent more than a week in hospital.

 ?? BILL INGALLS/NASA/AFP ?? This image released by NASA shows Marines carrying the casket of former astronaut and US senator John Glenn during a ceremony to celebrate his life, on Saturday at Ohio State University’s Mershon Auditorium in Columbus.
BILL INGALLS/NASA/AFP This image released by NASA shows Marines carrying the casket of former astronaut and US senator John Glenn during a ceremony to celebrate his life, on Saturday at Ohio State University’s Mershon Auditorium in Columbus.

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