The Borneo Post (Sabah)

John Young, who set records in space with Nasa, is dead at 87

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WASHINGTON: John Young, a legendary US astronaut who went into space six times, orbited the moon and then walked on its craggy surface, has died, Nasa announced.

He was 87 and died of complicati­ons from pneumonia, the space agency said. He lived in a Houston suburb just minutes from the Nasa Space Center.

“Nasa and the world have lost a pioneer. We will stand on his shoulders as we look toward the next human frontier,” agency administra­tor Robert Lightfoot said in a statement.

Young was a man of many firsts: the only astronaut to fly in the Gemini, Apollo and space shuttle programmes (and the first to command a shuttle flight); and the first to fly into space six times. He once held the world record for total time spent in space, Nasa said.

Young joined Gus Grissom on the Gemini 3 mission, then commanded the first space shuttle mission in what some people called ‘the boldest test flight in history.’ He commanded Gemini 10, the first mission to rendezvous with two other spacecraft during a single flight.

Young orbited the moon in Apollo 10, and made a lunar landing with Apollo 16. “In an iconic display of test pilot ‘cool,’ he landed the space shuttle (STS-9) with a fire in the back end,” Nasa said.

“He was in every way the ‘astronaut’s astronaut,’” Lightfoot said. But he was also described as a savvy engineer and a ‘test pilot’s test pilot.’

While in the navy, Young set world records for the fastest ascension from a standing start in an F-4 Phantom II jet.

Once, during an air-to-air missile test, Young and another pilot approached each other’s aircraft at a potentiall­y calamitous speed of Mach 3 (2,300 miles per hour, or 3,700 kilometres per hour), according to Young’s website.

“I got a telegram from the chief of naval operations,” Young said in his understate­d way, “asking me not to do this any more.” Fellow astronaut Charles Bolden called Young and Robert ‘Hoot’ Gibson the two best pilots he had ever known.

“Never met two people like them. Everyone else gets into an airplane; John and Hoot wear their airplane. They’re just awesome,” he said. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows US Astronauts Robert Crippen (left) and Young in the flight deck of the space shuttle Columbia before the first shuttle flight at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 12, 1981. — AFP photo
File photo shows US Astronauts Robert Crippen (left) and Young in the flight deck of the space shuttle Columbia before the first shuttle flight at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 12, 1981. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? John Young
John Young

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