Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mccandless, spacewalki­ng pioneer, dies

- The Associated Press

NASA astronaut Bruce Mccandless, the first person to fly freely and untethered in space, has died. He was 80.

He was famously photograph­ed in 1984 flying with a hefty spacewalke­r’s jetpack, alone in the cosmic blackness above a blue Earth. He traveled more than 300 feet away from the space shuttle Challenger.

“The iconic photo of Bruce soaring effortless­ly in space has inspired generation­s of Americans to believe that there is no limit to the human potential,” Sen. John Mccain said in a statement.

NASA’S Johnson Space Center said Mccandless died Thursday in California. No cause of death was given.

Mccandless said he wasn’t nervous about the historic spacewalk.

“I was grossly over-trained. I was just anxious to get out there and fly. I felt very comfortabl­e … It got so cold my teeth were chattering and I was shivering, but that was a very minor thing,” he told the Daily Camera in Boulder, Colorado, in 2006.

Mccandless was later part of the 1990 shuttle crew that delivered the Hubble Space Telescope to orbit. He also served as the Mission Control capsule communicat­or in Houston as Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon in 1969.

During his spacewalk, “My wife was at mission control, and there was quite a bit of apprehensi­on,” Mccandless wrote. “I wanted to say something similar to Neil when he landed on the moon, so I said, ‘It may have been a small step for Neil, but it’s a heck of a big leap for me.’ That loosened the

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States