Showing posts with label life magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

PHOTOGRAPHY OF DOROTHEA LANGE | AN AMERICAN ARCHIVE– HARD TIMES

Originally posted at The Desk of Brian: www.DeskofBrian.com -- read it here: http://sites.google.com/site/thedeskofbrian/state-of-the-nation/photographyofdorothealangeanamericanarchive%E2%80%93hardtimes


Remembering the Great Depression, face to face, should help us understand the gravity of a weakened America. Our rising debt will dwarf those from World War II and the 1930's.

Are we to prepare? If so, how?

Thanks to Steve Beasley, a friend in New Zealand, who I hope to meet face to face someday.












California, February 1936.
”Destitute peapickers in California; a 32 year old mother of seven
children.” This iconic image has become known as “Migrant Mother” is one of a series of photographs that Dorothea Lange made of Florence Owens Thompson and her children in Nipomo, California. Lange was concluding a month’s trip photographing migratory farm labor around the
state for what was then the Resettlement Administration.














February 1939. Calipatria,
Imperial Valley. Car on siding across tracks from pea packing plant.

Twenty-five year old itinerant, originally from Oregon. “On the road eight years, all over the country, every state in the union, back and
forth, pick up a job here and there, traveling all the time.”






















November 1936. “Daughter of migrant Tennessee coal miner. Living in American River camp near Sacramento, California.”






























December 1935. “Resettled farm child. From Taos Junction to Bosque Farms project, New Mexico.”







See all of the photos with descriptions here:

http://theselvedgeyard.wordpress.com/2009/12/06/photography-of-dorothea-lange-an-american-archive-hard-times/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email

Saturday, March 27, 2010

1965: Gus Grissom & "Gemini 3" really Launched the Space Program

Originally posted at The Desk of Brian, www.DeskofBrian.com: http://sites.google.com/site/thedeskofbrian/pop-culture-other-topics/1965gusgrissomgemini3reallylaunchedthespaceprogram?pli=1


March 23, 1965 Major Virgil Grissom and Lt. Cdr. John Young completed the world's first maneuverable manned spacecraft through a near-perfect flight of four hours and 54 minutes.
Gemini 3 blasted off from Cape Kennedy as America's first two-person space flight.
This was truly the beginning of a whole new era in man's travel into space.

Check out this photo gallery from "Life":
"Molly Brown", as the craft was named, flew nose forward, backward, upside down -- all on their three-orbit journey. The spacecraft's maneuverability was integral to the space program's development and freedom from total control on earth of basic operations.

From the debriefing:

"Molly Brown" lifted off so smoothly that neither Grissom nor Young felt anything. Their real cues were seeing the mission clock on the instrument panel start running and hearing Cooper announce it from mission control. There was less noise than they had heard on the moving-base simulator in Dallas. When the first-stage engine cut off two and a half minutes later, acceleration plunged from six gravities to one. The second-stage engine ignited, bathing the spacecraft in a flash of orange-yellow light that disconcerted Young for the moment it took him to realize that this was a normal product of fire-in-the-hole staging - that is, second-stage ignition before, instead of after, separation. The launch vehicle had slightly exceeded its predicted thrust, but a warning from Cooper prepared the pilots for the larger than expected pitchdown when the second stage took over the steering. Young, who had never been in space before, was entranced by his view of Earth's horizon and the sense of rapid motion as second-stage thrust built up.


It reads better than most novels or the dribble excreted by Hollywood these days.

John Young smuggled a corn beef sandwich aboard, an incident that resulted with the crewmen being reprimanded when they returned to Earth and subsequent crews were warned against pulling similar stunts. Evidently, there was concern that bread crumbs from the sandwich could be harmful to the electronics aboard Molly Brown.

"Oh boy," Commander young said to President Johnson by radiophone from the aircraft carrier after pickup from the Atlantic. "The only thing wrong with it was it didn't last long enough."
Cape Kennedy NASA officials bragged how the Gemini did things that the Russians had never said they could do with their Vostok and Voshkod craft.

  • First time a manned spacecraft had used rocket power for real alterations of its flight path

  • First time re-entry into the earth's atmosphere had been controlled (Essential to the Apollo Project)




The nickname he gave the capsule is a reference to the musical "The Unsinkable Molly Brown." After Major Grissom's first ride in space on July 21, 1961 -- and he is the only man to do it twice -- his Liberty Belle 7 capsule sank in the Atlantic.

After a rust-colored cloud of smoke and steam flashed from the tail of the two-stage rocket and the first manned Gemini flight was airborne.

Three minutes later, Maj. L. Gordon Cooper Jr., who almost two years ago made the nation's last manned flight, said from his communicator's position in the control center:
"You're on your way, Molly Brown!"

"Yeah, Man," Major Grissom replied.

45 years later: "Yeah Man" still feels like the appropriate response. In an era where astronauts were heroic icons, this larger than life launch set the table for a climactic decade of space travel.


Sure seems like light years from where we are today.



Last summer we remembered the first moon walk in my old CFB "State of the Nation" column (at the bottom): http://sites.google.com/site/thedeskofbrian/state-of-the-nation/state-of-the-nation-from-crazed-fanboy-may-oct-2009/sotn-week-07-13-09


http://www.nytimes.com/learning/general/onthisday/big/0323.html#article





See also: "GT-3 Debriefing," pp. 3-2 through -6; "GT-3 Flight Crew Self-Debriefing," NASA Program Gemini working paper No. 5026, 3 June 1965, pp. 2-1, 3-2; "GT-3 Mission Report," pp. 7-11, -20, -21; "Air-to-Ground Voice," p. 3; Grissom and Young, "Molly Brown was OK," p. 41.