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STS-26 Mission Specialist
John M. Lounge, using a beverage container, experiments with
microgravity as Commander Frederick H. Hauck (left) and MS
David C. Hilmers (right) look on. Lounge freefloats as he
closes in on a sphere of the red liquid drifting in front
of his mouth. Hauck holds a spoon while sipping from a beverage
container as he balances a meal tray assembly on his thighs.
Hilmers, partially blocked by the open airlock hatch and holding
a spoon and a can of food, pauses to watch the experiment.
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JOHN M. "MIKE" LOUNGE
NASA ASTRONAUT (FORMER)
PERSONAL DATA: Born June 28, 1946, in Denver, Colorado,
but considers Burlington, Colorado, to be his hometown. Married. Three
children. Recreational interests include jogging, chess, squash, tennis,
flying, golfing, and blue grass guitar.
EDUCATION: Graduated from Burlington High School, Burlington,
Colorado, in 1964; received a bachelor of science Academy in 1969
and a master of science degree in Astrogeophysics from the University
of Colorado in 1970.
ORGANIZATIONS: Associate fellow of the American Institute
of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
SPECIAL HONORS: 6 Navy Air Medals, 3 Navy Commendation
Medals (with Combat "V"), the JSC Superior Achievement Award
(for service as a member of the Skylab Reentry Team), three NASA Exceptional
Service Medals and 3 NASA Space Flight Medals.
EXPERIENCE: Lounge entered on active duty with the
United States Navy following graduation from the U.S. Naval Academy
and spent the next nine years in a variety of assignments. He completed
Naval flight officer training at Pensacola, Florida, went on to advanced
training as a radar intercept officer in the F-4J Phantom, and subsequently
reported to Fighter Squadron 142 based at Naval Air Station Miramar,
California. While with VF-142, he completed a 9-month Southeast Asia
cruise aboard the USS ENTERPRISE (participating in 99 combat missions)
and a 7-month Mediterranean cruise aboard the USS AMERICA. In 1974,
he returned to the U.S. Naval Academy as an instructor in the Physics
Department. Lounge transferred to the Navy Space Project Office in
Washington, D.C., in 1976, for a two year tour as a staff project
office. He resigned his regular United States Navy commission in 1978.
NASA EXPERIENCE: Mr. Lounge has been employed at the Lyndon
B. Johnson Space Center since July 1978. During this time, he worked
as lead engineer for Space Shuttle launched satellites, and also served
as a member of the Skylab Reentry Flight Control Team. He completed
these assignments while with the Payloads Operations Division.
Selected as an astronaut candidate by NASA in
1980, he completed a one year training and evaluation period, and
became an astronaut in August 1981. He served as a member of the
launch support team at Kennedy Space Center for the STS-1, STS-2,
and STS-3 missions. Following his first flight, he was assigned
to the first mission to carry the Centaur (cryogenically fueled)
upper stage (STS-61F). After the mission was canceled, he participated
in Space Station design development. From 1989 thru 1991, Mr. Lounge
served as Chief of the Space Station Support Office, representing
astronaut interests in Space Station design and operation planning.
A veteran of three space flights, Mike Lounge
has logged over 482 hours in space. He was a mission specialist
on STS-51I (August 27 to September 3, 1985) and STS-26 (September
29 to October 3, 1988) and was the flight engineer on STS-35 (December
2-10, 1990).
Mr. Lounge resigned from NASA in June 1991. He is currently Director
of Houston Operations for SPACEHAB, INC.
SPACE FLIGHT EXPERIENCE:
STS-51I Discovery, launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida,
on August 27, 1985. During that mission Mike's duties included deployment
of the Australian AUSSAT communications satellite and operation
of the Remote Manipulator System (RMS). The crew deployed two other
communications satellites, the Navy's SYNCOM IV-4, and American
Satellite Company's ASC-1, and also performed a successful on-orbit
rendezvous and repair of the ailing 15,400 lb. SYNCOM IV-3 satellite.
STS-51I completed 112 orbits of the Earth before landing at Edwards
Air Force Base, California, on September 3, 1985. Mission duration
was 171 hours, 17 minutes, 42 seconds.
STS-26 Discovery, the first flight to be flown
after the Challenger accident, launched from the Kennedy Space Center,
Florida, on September 29, 1988. During the four day mission, the
crew successfully deployed the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite
(TDRS-C), which was subsequently carried to orbit by the Inertial
Upper Stage (IUS) rocket. They also operated eleven mid- deck experiments.
Discovery completed 64 orbits of the Earth before landing at Edwards
Air Force Base, California, on October 3, 1988. Mission duration
was 97 hours, 57 seconds.
STS-35 Columbia, launched from the Kennedy
Space Center, Florida on December 2, 1990. Mike served as flight
engineer on this 9-day flight which was dedicated to astronomy.
Very exciting observations of the Universe were collected by the
ASTRO-1 ultraviolet telescope and by the Broad Band X-Ray Telescope.
Columbia completed 142 orbits of the Earth before landing at Edwards
Air Force Base, California, on December 10, 1990. Mission duration
was 215 hours, 5 minutes, 8 seconds.
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