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Word: missilemen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Haggard from seemingly endless days of overwork, 200 missilemen reported in at Florida's Cape Canaveral missile test center one murky night last week to give the Atlas its final preening before flight. In a blockhouse a few hundred feet from the launching pad, physicists and engineers started radioing to foremen the long lists that comprised the exquisitely detailed ritual of inspection. Fitted together in the great steel bird's innards were some 300,000 parts, and a failure in one of them could cause a misfire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: Death of the Big Bird | 10/7/1957 | See Source »

...nearly 3 p.m. when the hollow-eyed, unshaven missilemen finally had the Atlas, biggest bird in the U.S.'s missile aviary, ready for launching. Men inside the blockhouse listened in tight-lipped silence to the final countdown. At zero, a finger pressed a red button in a control panel, and the missile, rising slowly and majestically, started on history's second Atlas flight (see color pages opposite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: Death of the Big Bird | 10/7/1957 | See Source »

...miles. But Atlas I, launched at Cape Canaveral last June, flew erratically, lived only 22 seconds before a safety officer pressed a button to destroy it. Atlas II started off promisingly. In its straight-up flight, lasting 20 seconds or so, it seemed to be, in the missilemen's term, "programing" perfectly, i.e., doing what its makers and tenders expected. But as it arched into its southeastward course, the tail fire glowed too dark, and the bird faltered. The turbine pumps were failing to feed the right mixture of fuel, and because among those 300,000 delicately tooled parts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: Death of the Big Bird | 10/7/1957 | See Source »

...uninitiated watchers the flight seemed a total failure-but not to missilemen. During those awesome 35 seconds, cameras and telemetering devices were recording valuable flight data on miles of film and tape. "As the surgeons say," a sad-eyed missile scientist said bravely, "the operation was a success but the patient died. We got data on the three miles of flight. The next big bird that flies may live a while longer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: Death of the Big Bird | 10/7/1957 | See Source »

...cloak around the Atomic Energy Commission, missile-beat reporters from California to Canaveral are forced to cultivate what one of that band calls an "espionage system with a conscience." Some reporters estimate that a good 10% of the missile information that is leaked to them would materially aid Soviet missilemen if printed. But the Pentagon's security regulations are designed to keep even the most innocuous news from the missile-beat reporters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Bird Watchers | 9/30/1957 | See Source »

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