John A. Powers | |
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1962 NASA portrait |
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Birth name | John Anthony Powers |
Nickname | Shorty Powers |
Born | August 22, 1922 Toledo, Ohio |
Died | December 31, 1979 Phoenix, Arizona |
(aged 57)
Buried at | Phoenix, Arizona |
Allegiance | United States |
Service/branch | US Air Force |
Rank | Lieutenant colonel |
Unit | 349th Troop Carrier Group (WWII) 13th Bombardment Squadron (Korean War) |
Awards | Bronze Star Air Medal Distinguished Flying Cross |
Other work | Project Mercury public affairs officer |
John Anthony Powers (August 22, 1922–December 31, 1979), better known as Shorty Powers, was an American public affairs officer for NASA from 1959 to 1963 during Project Mercury. A US Air Force lieutenant colonel and war veteran, he was known as the "voice of the astronauts," the "voice of Mercury Control," and the "eighth astronaut." He received his nickname for his 5-foot, 6-inch (1.68 m) height.
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Powers was born in Toledo, Ohio; but when he was an infant his family moved to Downers Grove, Illinois[1] where he was a cheerleader at Downers Grove North High School. After graduation, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps in 1942 and became a C-46 and C-47 pilot with the 349th Troop Carrier Group. He was one of six pilots who volunteered to learn the technique of snatching fully loaded troop gliders off the ground, and spent the end of World War II ferrying gasoline in cargo planes to Gen. George Patton's command in Germany.[2]
Powers left the service in January 1947; but was recalled to active duty in December 1948 and flew as part of the Berlin Airlift, making 185 round-trip flights. Powers later volunteered for the Korean War. He flew 55 night missions in B-26 bombers with the 13th Bombardment Squadron and received the Bronze Star, the Air Medal, the Distinguished Flying Cross and a combat promotion to major.[3]
Following Korea, Powers bounced around the Air Force, helping establish the first Community Relations Program in 1955. After being assigned to the personal staff of Maj. Gen. Bernard Schriever with the Air Research Development Command in Los Angeles, he handled the public dissemination of information related to the Air Force's ballistic missile program.
Powers' experience with public affairs caught the attention of the newly formed NASA, and he was detailed to NASA's Space Task Group in April 1959 as its public affairs officer at the request of T. Keith Glennan, NASA's first administrator.[4] Very early on April 12, 1961, John G. Warner, a UPI rewrite-man in Washington, DC, roused Powers from sleep at Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia seeking comment on the flight of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first person in space. Powers replied, in part, "We're all asleep down here," which made headlines.[5]
He served as mission commentator for the six manned Mercury flights, introducing "A-OK" into the American vocabulary to signify procedures during the missions had proceed as planned. He claimed astronaut Alan Shepard first used the expression during his Freedom 7 flight, but communication transcripts later showed he had not. In The Right Stuff, Tom Wolfe wrote that Powers had borrowed it "from NASA engineers who used it during radio transmission tests because the sharper sound of A cut through the static better than O".[6]
Powers enjoyed the limelight, and was accused of scheduling news conferences so he could appear live on national television and occasionally twisting the facts. For example, he told reporters the day before Gus Grissom's flight that the astronaut had gone fishing that day and had cooked and eaten his catch, which would have violated his pre-flight diet.[7]
Manned Spacecraft Center Director Robert Gilruth announced Powers' reassignment on July 26, 1963, reportedly following a dispute with NASA Headquarters over handling publicity for the final Mercury flight.[8] He was succeeded by Paul Haney on September 1, and Powers soon resigned.
Powers retired from the Air Force in 1964 and opened a public relations firm in Houston. He became part owner of KMSC-FM in Clear Lake, Texas (the call letters standing for the Manned Spacecraft Center), where he anchored live coverage of Gemini and Apollo flights, distributed to radio stations across the country. He also served a spokesman for products including the 1965 Oldsmobile Delta 88 (touting its "Super Rocket V-8" engine), Carrier air conditioners, Triptone motion sickness pills, and Tareyton cigarettes (which claimed to use the same charcoal-activated filter used for the astronauts' oxygen supply).[9] He lectured extensively about the space program; and in 1967, he authored a newspaper column syndicated by Field Enterprises called "Space Talk", answering readers' questions. He was married three times and was the father of three children.[10]
Powers moved to Phoenix, Arizona in 1978, and died there at his home on December 31, 1979 at age 57 from a gastro-intestinal hemorrhage related to chronic alcoholism.[11]
Powers appeared as himself in the Dennis the Menace TV episode, "Junior Astronaut", first aired on January 13, 1963. He also was the narrator for the 1966 Jerry Lewis space comedy, Way...Way Out.
He is referenced in the 1988 cult film, Miracle Mile, by actor Kurt Fuller when, as Soviet warheads appear over Los Angeles, he states, "Beam me up, Shorty Powers".
This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.