.jpg) Launch of USSR Satellite Sputnik - 50th Anniversary of the 1950's Space Race
Launch of USSR Satellite Sputnik - 50th Anniversary of the 1950's Space Race
Where
 were you fifty years ago this week? Not even born, you say, or just a 
child, perhaps? Looking back half a century ago, in October 1957, some 
interesting things were happening.
In 1957, 
Detroit had reached its zenith in automobile design. As the model year 
changed, the ultimate-classic Chevrolet Bel Air Two-door Hardtop was about to give way to the bloated and reviled quad-headlight 1958 Chevy. It was a case of   Old Energy
 (longer, lower, wider; bigger, better, more) trumping the elegance of 
the smaller, lighter, faster-looking 1957. Everyone wanted the 1957. No 
one wanted the 1958. American automotive history then started a long 
march backward that is unchecked today..jpg)
.jpg)
  In
 addition, that October, we awakened one morning to something called 
“The Space Race” in the 1950's. The USSR or “The Russians” as we liked 
to call them had launched the first human-made Earth-orbiting 
satellite. They gave it the anti-euphonious name Sputnik. We had heard 
of “Spud Nuts”, but not Sputniks. 
After 
years of hype about the “Rocket Oldsmobile” and watching spacecraft-like
 tail fins sprout on U.S. automobiles, the Russians had trumped all of 
Madison Avenue’s tricks with one rocket launch. Their rocket   and its 
satellite were real.
Detroit took several years to fight back. In 1963, Chrysler Corporation named a high-performance version of the Plymouth Belvedere the “Plymouth Satellite”. If the U.S. could not lead in technology, we could at least lead in concept co-option.
 
Detroit took several years to fight back. In 1963, Chrysler Corporation named a high-performance version of the Plymouth Belvedere the “Plymouth Satellite”. If the U.S. could not lead in technology, we could at least lead in concept co-option.
During the midterm election campaign of 2006, I had the pleasure of visiting the New Mexico Space Museum in Alamogordo, New Mexico. To my great surprise, I discovered a sparkling-clean Sputnik hanging from the ceiling of the museum. Scientists are a clubby lot. It turns out that there were several Sputniks held in reserve by the Russian Space authority. When a former museum director befriended the Russian creator of the Sputnik, the Russian responded by sending one to the Alamogordo museum as a gift.
 "Trinity”
 was the code name the project leading to the first U.S. nuclear weapon 
explosion, which was on July 16, 1945. The "Trinity Site" was located in
 the remote   White Sands Desert, near Alamogordo, New Mexico.
"Trinity”
 was the code name the project leading to the first U.S. nuclear weapon 
explosion, which was on July 16, 1945. The "Trinity Site" was located in
 the remote   White Sands Desert, near Alamogordo, New Mexico.
Some say
 that the Space Race was all about intercontinental ballistic missiles 
and   others say it was more about exploration of space, as our “last 
frontier”. I   believe that the truth lies somewhere in-between. Today, 
it is easy to forget how fearful and inferior the Russians felt as they 
contemplated the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal.
 
According
 to some experts, the U.S. later had the ability to vaporize the   
Soviet (and perhaps all) civilization at the press of a button. Mutual  
 assured  destruction
 was the term that Henry Kissinger so warmly used. In   1957, however, 
that first Russian satellite launch gave U.S. residents a     Cold War shot of anxiety like none we had ever felt before.
destruction
 was the term that Henry Kissinger so warmly used. In   1957, however, 
that first Russian satellite launch gave U.S. residents a     Cold War shot of anxiety like none we had ever felt before. 
 destruction
 was the term that Henry Kissinger so warmly used. In   1957, however, 
that first Russian satellite launch gave U.S. residents a     Cold War shot of anxiety like none we had ever felt before.
destruction
 was the term that Henry Kissinger so warmly used. In   1957, however, 
that first Russian satellite launch gave U.S. residents a     Cold War shot of anxiety like none we had ever felt before. 
After the
 1986 Chernobyl nuclear   disaster, plant life there often mutated 
spontaneously, creating some bizarre effects.    Looking at the 
accompanying photo of White Sands plants, do you suppose   that the 
Trinity nuclear blast may have caused these once-small plants grow to 
their   current towering proportions?
History can be fun. The U.S. started the “nuclear age”
 near Alamogordo in 1945. The Russians counter-punched with Sputnik 
twelve years later. The U.S. hit back hard six years later with the 
Plymouth Satellite.                                  
Meanwhile
 the Japanese, who were the unlucky recipients of the second   U.S. 
nuclear bomb at Hiroshima, were busy studying automotive technology and 
design. Biding their time, they later walked away with automotive 
supremacy. Plymouth is gone. The USSR is gone. Now we are in the “Age of
 Toyota”.  
Postscript - English Pravda.ru, October 5, 2007 Headline "Japan - Satellite Reaches Lunar Orbit", a first for an Asian nation.


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