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The Prime Crew for the N.A.S.A.’s First Manned Skylab Mission Meet the Press in a Final Briefing Prior to Isolation for the Coming Launch of Skylab II
After over 6 years in orbit, Skylab, NASA’s first manned space station, fell back to Earth on July 11, 1979. Shown here is a press photo of the Skylab II mission crew:

HOUSTON, TEXAS — The prime crew for the N.A.S.A.’s first manned Skylab mission meet the press in a final briefing prior to isolation for the coming launch of Skylab II scheduled for launch no earlier than May 15, 1973 from Launch Complex 39-B, Cape Kennedy, Florida, with a Saturn I-B vehicle.  The astronauts are (L. to R.) Charles Conrad, Jr., Commander, Paul J. Weitz, Pilot, and Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin, Science Pilot.  The mission will be of 28 days duration in a near-circular orbit at an altitude of 432 kilometers (270 nautical miles) and at an inclination of 50 degrees from the equator performing scientific, medical, and technological experiments.

From the Series - Photographs of The Skylab Project, Record  Group 306: Records of the U.S. Information Agency
What are your memories of the Skylab project?
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The Prime Crew for the N.A.S.A.’s First Manned Skylab Mission Meet the Press in a Final Briefing Prior to Isolation for the Coming Launch of Skylab II

After over 6 years in orbit, Skylab, NASA’s first manned space station, fell back to Earth on July 11, 1979. Shown here is a press photo of the Skylab II mission crew:

HOUSTON, TEXAS — The prime crew for the N.A.S.A.’s first manned Skylab mission meet the press in a final briefing prior to isolation for the coming launch of Skylab II scheduled for launch no earlier than May 15, 1973 from Launch Complex 39-B, Cape Kennedy, Florida, with a Saturn I-B vehicle.  The astronauts are (L. to R.) Charles Conrad, Jr., Commander, Paul J. Weitz, Pilot, and Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin, Science Pilot.  The mission will be of 28 days duration in a near-circular orbit at an altitude of 432 kilometers (270 nautical miles) and at an inclination of 50 degrees from the equator performing scientific, medical, and technological experiments.

From the Series - Photographs of The Skylab Project, Record Group 306: Records of the U.S. Information Agency

What are your memories of the Skylab project?

Source: arcweb.archives.gov

    • #NASA
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    • #Space Station
    • #astronaut
    • #space exploration
    • #space
    • #N.A.S.A.
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    • #orbit
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  1. 1stclasspilotromero reblogged this from todaysdocument
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  8. crookedindifference answered: I have a little place in my heart for Skylab. I wrote a 70+ page research analysis on the program.
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