The 5th National Space Grant Distinguished Service Award (2007)
Captain John W Young |
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On February 28, 2007 Captain John W Young was honored as the recipient of the 2007 National Space Grant
Distinguished Service Award for for his inspiring, lifelong commitment to space exploration.
In September 1962, he was selected as an astronaut. He was the first person to fly in space six
times from Earth, and seven times counting his lunar liftoff. The first flight was with Gus Grissom in Gemini 3, the first
manned Gemini mission, on March 23, 1965. This was a complete end-to-end test of the Gemini spacecraft, during
which Grissom accomplished the first manual change of orbit altitude and plane and the first lifting reentry, and
Young operated the first computer on a manned spacecraft. On Gemini 10, July 18-21, 1966, Young, as Commander,
and Mike Collins, as Pilot, completed a dual rendezvous with two separate Agena target vehicles. While Young flew
close formation on the second Agena, Collins did an extravehicular transfer to retrieve a micro meteorite detector
from that Agena. On his third flight, May 18-26, 1969, Young was Command Module Pilot of Apollo 10. Tom Stafford and
Gene Cernan were also on this mission which orbited the Moon, completed a lunar
rendezvous, and tracked proposed lunar landing sites. His fourth space flight, Apollo 16, April
16-27, 1972, was a lunar exploration mission, with Young as Spacecraft Commander, and Ken
Mattingly and Charlie Duke. Young and Duke set up scientific equipment and explored the
lunar highlands at Descartes.
Awarded the Congressional Space Medal of Honor (1981), 4 NASA Distinguished Service Medals,
NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal (1992), NASA Exceptional Engineering Achievement Medal
(1987), NASA Outstanding Achievement Medal (1994), Navy Astronaut Wings (1965), 2 Navy
Distinguished Service Medals, 3 Navy Distinguished Flying Crosses, the Georgia Tech Distinguished
Young Alumni Award (1965), Distinguished Service Alumni Award (1972), the Exceptional Engineering
Achievement Award (1985), the Academy of Distinguished Engineering Alumni Award (1994), the
American Astronautical Society Space Flight Award (1993), Distinguished Executive Award (1998), and
the Rotary National Space Achievement Award (2000). Inducted into 6 Aviation and Astronaut Halls of
Fame, and recipient of more than 80 other major awards, including 6 honorary doctorate degrees.
He co-authored with Michael Benson The Complete Idiot's Guide to NASA, (Alpha, 2002). Tom's newest title is "Sky Walking: An Astronaut's Memoir," published in February 2006 by Smithsonian Books. Dr. Jones' awards include the NASA Distinguished Service Medal, four NASA Space Flight Medals, the NASA Exceptional Service Award, the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, Phi Beta Kappa Award, and the Air Force Commendation Medal. Dr. Jones is currently active in the debate over our nation's future space exploration policy. He consults, writes, and speaks from the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C. |
Banquet Image Gallery

The 5th National Space Grant Distinguished Service Award (2007)