Sally Ride - First American Woman in Space has died

Sally Ride - First American Woman in Space has died

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Discussion

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,098 posts

266 months

Monday 23rd July 2012
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perdu

4,884 posts

200 months

Monday 23rd July 2012
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Sad news

RIP Sally

frown

marksx

5,052 posts

191 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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RIP Sally.

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,098 posts

266 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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Why did I type "Sale" in the title - must have been tired.

Mods - can the thread title be altered to "Sally"?

(I wish we had the ability to edit thread titles).

z4me

303 posts

170 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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Ride's office said she is survived by Tam O'Shaughnessy, her partner of 27 years and a co-founder of Sally Ride Science; her mother, Joyce; her sister, Bear, a niece; and a nephew.


Bear Ride ?

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,098 posts

266 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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No more unusual than Bear Grylls.

z4me

303 posts

170 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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Gets worse, you reckon her sister was called Edward Ride then? biggrin

SkinnyBoy

4,635 posts

259 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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RIP Sally Ride.


Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,098 posts

266 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
Can we keep the jokes off this particular thread please?

Sally Ride was a formidable lady and paved the way for a whole generation of female space scientists and female astronauts - some of whom have actually commanded important space missions and who now hold important posts in NASA.

Don't forget, as well as being a scientist and astronaut, she was also a key member of the commission that investigated the Challenger accident and her interogating of the various NASA and contractor personnel was pretty tough and uncompromising.

z4me

303 posts

170 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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You're right, sorry.

Ayahuasca

27,427 posts

280 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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I see she has 'come out' posthumously.


Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,098 posts

266 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
I don't suppose it was ever something she consdiered to be anybody else's bnusiness I suppose. Funny thing privacy.

jeremyc

23,554 posts

285 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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Eric Mc said:
Why did I type "Sale" in the title - must have been tired.

Mods - can the thread title be altered to "Sally"?

(I wish we had the ability to edit thread titles).
Done. smile

Jasandjules

69,960 posts

230 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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A true pioneer.

Ayahuasca

27,427 posts

280 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
Jasandjules said:
A true pioneer.
A remarkable woman certainly but only a pioneer for the Americans; the Soviets had already put a couple of women into space.

TheHeretic

73,668 posts

256 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
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Eric Mc said:
No more unusual than Bear Grylls.
'Bear' isn't his real first name.

Jasandjules

69,960 posts

230 months

Tuesday 24th July 2012
quotequote all
Ayahuasca said:
A remarkable woman certainly but only a pioneer for the Americans; the Soviets had already put a couple of women into space.
Sure but look at what else she did.

Jimbeaux

33,791 posts

232 months

Wednesday 25th July 2012
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Eric Mc said:
No more unusual than Bear Grylls.
he was here with our wildlife agents doing a "reality" show. I lost any respect for him, but that is another story. Rest in peace Sally.

Jimbeaux

33,791 posts

232 months

Wednesday 25th July 2012
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Ayahuasca said:
Jasandjules said:
A true pioneer.
A remarkable woman certainly but only a pioneer for the Americans; the Soviets had already put a couple of women into space.
Some of them may still be there. smile

Eric Mc

Original Poster:

122,098 posts

266 months

Wednesday 25th July 2012
quotequote all
The difference between Sally Ride's first place is that Sally was the first from a selected team of 7 girls hired in 1978 who were all there on merit as scientists or engineers - and who were only the first female selections for the agency.

Since 1978 dozens of female flight crew have been used by NASA - including pilots as well as mission specilaists. Indeed, one of the top astronauts of them all is Eileeen Collins who was given the job of leading the first Shuttle mission after the Columbia accident. You don't give a mission like that to someone as any form of tokenism.

As for the Russians, there is no doubt that Valentina Thereskova's Vostok flight in 1963 was pure propaganda. The Soviets were so reluctant to use women that it was almost 20 years before another one flew in one of their spacecraft (Svetlana Savitskaya - 1982).
Since then, only a tiny number of Russian females have flown aboard Soyuz missions. The Russian programme is still very much male dominated.