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Alan Shepard on NASA

From Alan Shepard - Last interview (1998) · · Roberto Mastri

“I think that the thing that impressed me the most about the whole NASA process is that it has worked so well over the years when you take a look at a group of civilian engineers and scientists that have to work with contractors who have paid and work for somebody else that also has to work with the military because you've got military involved and that things have really turned out remarkably well.”

Alan Shepard
Chief Financial Officer, CNX RESOURCES CORPORATION
NASAspace programengineeringcollaboration

On , Alan Shepard, Chief Financial Officer at CNX RESOURCES CORPORATION, spoke about NASA during Alan Shepard - Last interview (1998) on Roberto Mastri.

Alan Shepard - Last interview (1998)
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Alan Shepard - Last interview (1998)
Roberto Mastri
Watch on YouTube
On february 2nd, 1998 Alan Shepard was interviewed for the NASA Johnson Space Center Oral History Project by Roy Neal.
Alan Shepard

About Alan Shepard

Chief Financial Officer · CNX RESOURCES CORPORATION

In a 1998 oral history interview conducted by Roy Neal for NASA's Johnson Space Center, Alan Shepard reflected on his career as an astronaut and the broader space program. Shepard described the Apollo 1 fire as a "real shock" that "really woke everybody up" and led to a "total redesign of many of the parts of the spacecraft." He noted that President John F. Kennedy's decision to go to the moon came just three weeks after Shepard's own 15-minute suborbital flight, and he credited NASA administrator James Webb with playing that decision effectively. Shepard also commented on the competitive nature of the early space program, saying the astronauts were "in a race for space with the Russians" and that the U.S. eventually "caught up and went past them." Shepard praised the NASA organization for its long-term success, stating that "the thing that impressed me the most about the whole NASA process is that it has worked so well over the years." He credited the agency's investment in computing during the 1960s as the forerunner of modern chip technology, saying "we wouldn't have advanced to the position we are today without that tremendous impetus." Shepard also discussed the Life magazine contract, calling it "ambivalent" and noting that opinion among the astronauts was divided. The interview was conducted in February 1998; Shepard died of leukemia in July of that year.

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