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						The right stuff: first 
						jobs of America's astronauts 
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		 [April 07, 2017] 
		By Chris Taylor 
 NEW 
		YORK (Reuters) - While many dream about what is beyond our horizon on 
		Earth, some actually get to see outer space up close.
 
 For the latest in the Reuters "First Jobs" series, we talked to a few of 
		America's foremost astronauts, who have undertaken missions to the 
		International Space Station and on the now-discontinued Space Shuttle.
 
 Before they ended up global, they started local.
 
 Anna Fisher
 
 First job: Candy scooper
 
 I used to work in the candy section of Newberry's, which was a 
		department store back in the day in San Pedro, California. I used to 
		scoop up treats like popcorn and gummy bears and put them in little bags 
		for customers. I remember how scared I was, not wanting to make any 
		mistakes.
 
 That was actually one of the only times in my life that I got a paycheck 
		and paid Social Security taxes, because as an astronaut, I am in the 
		retirement system for civil servants. So the few Social Security credits 
		I do have come from that old candy job.
 
 That store doesn't exist anymore, but I still drive by that shopping 
		center when I go back to San Pedro. Since then I have gone on to more 
		complicated jobs, like launching and retrieving satellites on the 14th 
		Shuttle flight. But I still look back fondly on my first job - and I 
		still love candy today.
 
		
		 
		Butch Wilmore
 First job: Stonemason
 
 I grew up in middle Tennessee, and worked for a rock mason who built 
		stone chimneys and walls. We had a real hard-driving kind of boss, who 
		always made sure we were on the clock and never taking any breaks.
 
 I started at $3.65 an hour, and pretty soon graduated to driving the 
		dump truck. I used to go into the Tennessee backwoods and buy old stone 
		chimneys from homeowners, or find old rock walls built back in the 
		1800s.
 
 It was such dirty work. I came home from work every day, and my mom 
		would have to hose me off in the backyard, because I was literally 
		covered head to toe in soot. My claim to fame was that the musician 
		Charlie Daniels, who sang "The Devil Went Down to Georgia," had a log 
		cabin in the area - and I built his chimney.
 
 Working a backhoe isn't that different from working robotics, actually. 
		You are operating in three dimensions, just like in spaceflight.
 
 Chris Cassidy
 
		
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			NASA astronaut Barry "Butch" Wilmore, Commander of Expedition 42 is 
			caught by the camera as the Earth's surface passes by in the 
			background on the International Space Station, in this handout photo 
			taken February 21, 2015, provided by NASA. REUTERS/NASA/Handout 
            
			 
First 
job: Corn picker
 This was in southern Maine, and there was a corn farmer who lived only a couple 
of miles from my house. One day when I was 12, I went up to his farmstand and 
asked if they needed help, and they told me to show up the next morning.
 
 I didn't particularly enjoy it, because there were a lot of big, mean 
16-year-olds there, who used to mess with me and put grease on the seat of my 
bike. What I really remember is the early wakeup at 5:30 a.m. That was a real 
shock to my system, riding my little bike there in the pitch dark.
 
 
That 
was some real work. Picking corn, grinding it out with hands and sweat - that 
was a good foundation for me.
 Rex Walheim
 
 First job: KFC cook
 
 I worked for a couple of years at the Kentucky Fried Chicken in Redwood City, 
California. I believe it was for $2.75 an hour, prepping the chicken and then 
putting it in the deep fryer. I remember I had to dump the chicken into a 
marinating tub with the secret herbs and spices, and I used to get totally 
coated in flour.
 
 I liked the chicken, but after working there and having it so much, it took a 
long while before I could start eating it again. My family loved it, though, 
because after work I got to bring home extra chicken and they would put it all 
in the freezer.
 
 That job gave me motivation to get out of there and go to college, because what 
I really wanted to be was an Air Force pilot. Eventually I became an astronaut 
and went on three shuttle missions. I may be the only KFC worker to have been in 
space - I haven't heard of any others yet.
 
 (Editing by Beth Pinsker and Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
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