Missed her by that much! |
But I was able to get the OK to send my book to Clayton C. Anderson, who was a speaker at Celebrate! Innovation at Des Moines Area Community College in West Des Moines, Iowa. In addition to being my No. 168 shuttle astronaut, putting me past 200 (168+33 deceased, not counting the three who signed my book=201), my book got to see Iowa for the first time.*
In addition to my "Shuttle: 20 Years" book, I also enclosed a photo which Anderson autographed with his full signature. I was very glad for this. I've seen Anderson sign with his initials, and I've also seen other astronauts through the years shorten their signature, in one instance, with just their initials.
I Tweeted Anderson, remarking about the cold spell on the East Coast of late, and this is what he replied:
I am puzzled by the Soyuz TMA-10 reference, since Anderson did not fly nor train as backup on that mission, but his Expedition 15 crewmates, Fyodor N. Yurchikhin and Oleg V. Kotov did. Why not also include Soyuz TMA-11, which brought Peggy A. Whitson and Yuri I. Malenchenko to the International Space Station on Expeditiom 16?
Now on to the remaining 154!
*Although I have 168 shuttle signers, I have 180 total signatures. Those majority of those 12 trained but did not fly or were members of Groups 8 through 19, the shuttle era, or were otherwise active astronauts duing that time period. Those 12 include Fred Haise, who flew on the Enterprise Approach-and-Landing tests; Alan Bean, who was Chief of the Astronaut Office when John Young was training for STS-1 (and Bean was widely expected to command the first Spacelab flight); backup payload specialists; prime payload specialists whose flight was canceled following Challenger; T. J. Creamer, whose only flight was on the Soyuz rocket; and Jim Lovell, who wrote the foreword of "Space Shuttle: The First 20 Years."
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