galacticjourney: (Default)
[personal profile] galacticjourney
I admit it. I splurged last night.

I'm not the poorest of people, but I am thrifty. Last night, however, I took a detour on the way home. I ended up at my favorite cafe off Grand Avenue in downtown Escondido. They sell pizza, which I've noticed is becoming as commonplace as burgers these days. I ordered a slice pepperoni, a salad, and I washed it down with a beer. Then I sauntered down to a local coffee shop and enjoyed a day-old brownie and a cuppa joe. For dessert, I had a new 35 cent Ace Double (novel, that is).

The night set me back 16 bits, but all of the week's stress washed away. It beats a head shrinker, right?

Now, you might expect that this is a lead-in to a review of the Double, but I haven't finished it yet, so you'll just have to wait. In the meantime, here's an exciting Double Dose of Space News.



Remember Little Joe? It's that cluster of rockets with a Mercury capsule on top designed to test out the abort systems on the spaceship. That little tower on top has rockets that will propel a Mercury and its pilot to safety if something goes wrong during booster launch. The first flight was a total bust.

Since then, there have been two missions, the first of which was not entirely successful. Little Joe 1-A, launched November 4, seemed to go off okay, but the escape rocket went off too late, and the pressure on the capsule was far too low to make a good test of the system.

December 4 saw the next flight, Little Joe 2. NASA decided to go for broke with this one and fully equip the capsule with a host of biological specimens. One minute into the flight, the escape rocket blasted the Mercury and its contents, including seeds, bugs, cell samples, and a rhesus monkey named "Sam," at Mach 6 to an altitude of 53 miles. Sam experienced a good three minutes of weightlessness during the flight. All occupants were recovered several hours later, safe and sound.



The flight was a complete success, but it was not as strenuous a test as it might have been. The next mission will feature an abort rescue at "max q," or the craft's strongest acceleration. If the escape system works then, it will be probably be rated safe for actual use. Exciting stuff!

Next up: 1959's Galactic Stars awards!

Note: I love comments (you can do so anonymously), and I always try to reply.

P.S. Galactic Journey is now a proud member of a constellation of interesting columns. While you're waiting for me to publish my next article, why not give one of them a read!







(Confused? Click here for an explanation as to what's really going on)

Date: 2014-12-06 06:16 am (UTC)
laurose8: (Shiveria)
From: [personal profile] laurose8
Great picture. Of the rocket, too, of course.

Glad to hear about Sam surviving, and the general good news.

I'm sure pizza will never equal pie in Antipodean favour.

Date: 2014-12-06 04:21 pm (UTC)
laurose8: (Shiveria)
From: [personal profile] laurose8
Both, but mainly the first. Meat pie (much as a vegetarian hates to admit it) is usually the main course, and, if not pavlova, often apple for dessert.

Hardboiled

Date: 2014-12-06 05:10 pm (UTC)
victoria_silverwolf: (Default)
From: [personal profile] victoria_silverwolf
Kind of off the topic, but I wanted to note that your first three paragraphs reminded me a lot of the writing style of the recently deceased Raymond Chandler. (Hmmm. He lived not too far away from your neck of the woods, didn't he?)

Re: Hardboiled

Date: 2014-12-06 07:18 pm (UTC)
victoria_silverwolf: (Default)
From: [personal profile] victoria_silverwolf
Indeed. I've read all his novels (even the recent, not particularly good "Playback") and several of his stories, as well as the essay "The Simple Art of Murder." I certainly prefer his elegantly cynical style to what little I've seen of the bestselling Mickey Spillane.

(Have you read "The Night He Cried" by Fritz Leiber? It was in the first of Pohl's "Star Science Fiction Stories" paperbacks. It's a pretty hilarious spoof of Spillane.)

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