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Displaying 91—100 of 1000 matches for query "Elliot_See" retrieved in 0.001 sec with these stats:
- "elliot" found 47 times in 36 documents
- "see" found 6252 times in 2287 documents
... was working on this project with you?
'''Bourland:''' At that time we had—let’s see. Well, in the beginning we had
Glenda Lawrence phonetic was the dietitian. Had Gerald Swaney ... called biostereometrics.
They were measuring volume. They were mostly interested in the leg
volume, to see if there would be any changes in the volume after they
come back. They measure ... of,
right now, anyway.
'''Ross-Nazzal:''' Okay. Well, we sure appreciate you coming out and seeing us.
'''Bourland:''' Okay. You’re welcome. It’s been fun recalling the old stories.
Category ...
... can do
it.” I said, “Well, I’d have to come out to see your plant and see
whether we can reach some kind of an agreement.” The time was getting
shorter ... , the processing strips or
the control strips, as we called it, were processed first to see if we
should change our techniques or what techniques were necessary to create
good images ...
now so many of these pictures are on the Internet. How do you feel about
seeing this accessible through the Internet now?
'''Brinkmann:''' These that are taken now, you say?
'''Bergen ...
...
Communications Officer console that day, everybody's telemetry data
went berserk and they couldn't see anything, just garbage, but John
Aaron recognized a pattern that he had seen once before ... your years back previously.
'''Brooks:''' It was fun.
'''Butler:''' It must have been interesting to see some of the changes
around the center.
'''Brooks:''' It was. Every time I would go ... never met the guy. I never
saw him."
'''Butler:''' Really.
'''Brooks:''' "He never came to see me." That's incredible to me.
'''Butler:''' That is incredible.
'''Brooks:''' Yes, it is. But ...
... , and it didn't come into the
program until downstream.
Telephone interruption
'''Carlton:''' Let's see. Where was I?
'''Rusnak:''' Well, you had just arrived at NASA and were talking about ... why. But I saw the explosion.
We had a bunch of transducers, and I could see the explosion hit this
transducer. It popped out. Milliseconds later, this transducer popped
out. Milliseconds ... tell you what a dummy you were.
"Why, anybody can see that," you know. Now that you can see it, anybody
can see that. We used to have a saying, "Hindsight, that's ...
... you now know
where you're going to land, the dust keeps you from really seeing much
of anything, because it just scatters horizontally in all directions.
You effectively take what ... political, cultural, religious
differences we somehow create as well as the environmental problems that
we see, many of which we indeed are probably creating. Now I know you're
not going ... it's the first time.
'''Wright:''' Well, I'm sure you're looking forward to seeing the next crew
go back. Are you involved with Constellation? Are you lending support?
'''Cernan ...
... Branch with Tom Chambers and a
Simulation Branch. Also, an Aerodynamics Branch with Bruce Jackson.
See, back at Langley I had been very active in analog computer
simulations, of which there ... name?
'''Rusnak:''' Henry O. Pohl.
'''Chilton:''' Yes, Henry Pohl. Henry Pohl once told me that—see, the
hydraulic system, unlike an electrical system, posed a lot of difficult
problems. For example ...
... . So you never knew when you launched it whether you were going to see what you expected to see, and that was very frustrating to the design people in St. Louis. This ... listen.
'''Hobokan:''' Yes. And you know about the Charles A. Bassett II and Elliott M. See Jr. disaster?
'''Butler:''' Not very much.
'''Hobokan:''' Did Tom Stafford brief you guys on that ... you.
'''Rusnak:''' Okay.
'''Butler:''' Well, we’ll be sure to ask him.
'''Hobokan:''' Let’s see. Anything else?
'''Rusnak:''' No, those are all the question I had. Thank you.
'''Butler:''' Thank ...
... that they would make, depending on altitude, velocity, or whatever, and we would look and see what kind of conditions would give us problems, like during powered flight, what kind of ... cross over land. Well, we built a program that the crew could actually see the ground track and see where they’re flying by putting a vector in it, and they could ... Presidential Commission investigating the Challenger accident . And the flow process panel, we went out and see—a lot of things were done here, and then some were done here, and they ...
... had the pattern of other astronauts by that time—
'''Duke:''' Right.
'''Ward:''' —so you could see what constituted getting selected.
'''Duke:''' Yeah. I knew I needed graduate school, which I volunteered ... real that one of the things, when I wanted to look north, was to see if I could see that set of tracks.
'''Ward:''' Well yeah. laughs
'''Duke:''' Well of course there ... lunar module would last longer than the Rocky Mountains.
'''Duke:''' Yeah. laughs Well, we’ll see about that, you know.
'''Ward:''' I understand.
'''Duke:''' You know, that’s—you know, I ...
... then. So I continue my liberal education on my own.
'''Rusnak:''' It’s good to see, though, that you do have that broader interest to keep you intellectually stimulated.
'''Harlan:''' Sure ... the war. I think that’s the way it’s looked at.
'''Rusnak:''' Did you see this management style as early as your first involvement with the Gemini Program?
'''Harlan:''' It ... Rockwell International , and they’d go through and do just tremendous amounts of analysis to see whether the spacecraft, it was acceptable to use a spacecraft in that method. So Glynn ...
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