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		NASA unveils spaceship hatch 50 years 
		after fatal Apollo 1 fire 
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		 [January 28, 2017] 
		By Irene Klotz 
 CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - NASA on 
		Friday marked the 50th anniversary of its moon program's fatal Apollo 
		launchpad fire with the first public display of the scorched hatch that 
		trapped three astronauts inside their spaceship during a routine 
		pre-launch test.
 
 NASA astronauts Virgil "Gus" Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee 
		died when thick smoke filled the crew module of the Apollo 1 capsule on 
		Jan. 27, 1967, in what was the first deadly accident in the space 
		agency's early days.
 
 The men were unable to open the capsule's three-part hatch before being 
		overcome by smoke. Emergency rescue teams rushed to battle the fire at 
		the launchpad, located at what is now Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, 
		but were too late.
 
 The hatch has now been taken out of storage and incorporated into a new 
		display at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex to honor the fallen 
		astronauts and serve as a reminder of the risks of spaceflight.
 
 "Had that accident occurred in space, we'd have never known exactly what 
		had happened," former Gemini and Apollo astronaut Tom Stafford said at a 
		ceremony to mark the exhibit's opening.
 
 The deaths of these "three great heroes ... helped save at least one 
		other in flight, maybe two," he added.
 
		 
		Investigators discovered several problems with the Apollo capsule design 
		that led to the fire, including an electrical wiring issue, a 
		pure-oxygen environment and flammable materials throughout the crew 
		cabin.
 NASA made dozens of changes and resumed flying in October 1968, setting 
		the stage for the historic Apollo 11 lunar landing in July 1969.
 
 Grissom, aged 40 and one of the original Mercury 7 astronauts, became 
		the second American in space in a suborbital flight that preceded John 
		Glenn's landmark first U.S. orbital space flight. White, who was 36, 
		became the first American to walk in space as pilot of the Gemini 4 
		mission in June 1965. Chaffee, 31, was a rookie astronaut with no 
		previous spaceflight experience.
 
		Friday's ceremony was one of several events this week in which NASA also 
		paid tribute to the Space Shuttle Challenger crew, killed during launch 
		on Jan. 28, 1986, and the Shuttle Columbia astronauts, who died when 
		that spaceship broke apart as it re-entered the Earth's atmosphere on 
		Feb. 1, 2003.
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			Astronauts, from the left, Gus Grissom, Ed White II and Roger 
			Chaffee stand near Cape Kennedy's Launch Complex 34 during training 
			for Apollo 1 in January 1967. NASA/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 
			At twilight, the families of the Apollo 1 astronauts gathered at the 
			base of the seaside launch complex where Grissom, White and Chaffee 
			had been testing their capsule when the fire broke out.
 “It's really important that we come together and we don’t forget who 
			they were and what they sacrificed. Even more important we remember 
			that we don’t ever want to have it happen again,” Kennedy Space 
			Center director and former shuttle astronaut Bob Cabana told the 
			families.
 
 Cabana said the new exhibit was intended to highlight the importance 
			of a work culture where people feel free to voice concerns. 
			Management and communications problems contributed to both space 
			shuttle accidents, investigators found.
 
 NASA is preparing to turn over crew flights to the International 
			Space Station to privately owned SpaceX and Boeing Co <BA.N> as 
			early as 2018.
 
 “The lessons learned from Apollo 1 are critical to our future 
			success and I don’t ever want them forgotten,” Cabana said. “We got 
			to the moon not in spite of Apollo 1, but because of Apollo 1.”
 
 (Reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Leslie 
			Adler)
 
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