Here's Where It Gets Interesting - Mayhem: The 1970s You Never Knew, Episode 1
Episode Date: October 9, 2023Welcome to our new series, Mayhem: The 1970s You Never Knew. Over the next few weeks we’ll take a journey through the Decade of Defiance, with all its scandals and secrets. As the decade devolved ...into war at home and abroad, Apollo 13 flew high above earth with the hope of landing safely on the surface of the moon. But then: disaster struck, and time was on no one’s side. Meanwhile, thousands of miles below the Apollo 13 spacecraft, a nationwide uprising among college students ended in disaster at Kent State and Jackson State Universities. With special guest Apollo 13 astronaut, Fred Haise. Writer, Host, and Executive Producer: Sharon McMahon Audio Producer: Jenny Snyder Writers and Researchers: Amy Watkin, Mandy Reid, and Kari Anton Production Coordinator: Andrea Champoux Thank you to the Kent State Shootings Oral History Project. Kent State University Libraries. Special Collections and Archives. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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We lost O2 tank 2 pressure.
Okay, we've had a problem here.
This is Houston, say again, please.
Houston, we've had a problem here. This is Houston, say again, please. Houston, we've had a problem.
Hello, friends. Welcome.
Welcome to our new series where we are set to explore a bit more than shag carpet, smiley face pins, and bell bottoms.
We're going to look at what was happening politically and socially in this decade
that brought so many advancements, setbacks, and controversies.
Writer Tom Wolfe called the 70s the me decade to point out the turn American society was taking from the more communal, countercultural nature of the 60s to the individualism of the 70s.
The baby boom was over. And Gen X,
the last generation to experience childhood without the internet, was born. Historians
sometimes refer to the 1970s as the pivot of change. If I toss out a few examples like Watergate, Vietnam, Atari, Roe v. Wade, Kent State, Star Wars, and the kidnapping of Patty Hearst, it's easy to see how what happened in the 1970s is still impacting us today.
So stay tuned as we take you through all of that and more with some fun facts sprinkled throughout. So let's
peace out and dive in. I'm Sharon McMahon, and here's where it gets interesting.
Ignition sequence start. Six, five, four, three, two, one, zero.
1970 was something of a heyday for astronauts. On April 11th, 1970, the Apollo 13 mission carried the seventh crew to fly as part of the expansive Apollo space program, which actually got off to a
heartbreaking start in 1967 when Apollo 1's launch rehearsal ended in a devastating fire that killed
all three astronauts inside. Apollo 11 would help redeem the program in 1969 by bringing Neil Armstrong all the way to the moon,
and Apollo 13 intended to continue that legacy. Apollo 13's commander, Jim Lovell,
remembers the purpose of their mission. Well, Apollo 13 was going to be the third
lunar mission. We were going to go to a place called Fra Mauro. This is going to be sort of a mountainous
type or more of a hilly type of facility than the previous two flights. And because they thought
that the material there was different than the material that had been brought back on 11 and 12.
NASA wanted not only the military's best pilots, they also wanted the best equipment
in the world, even down to the astronauts' wristwatches. NASA asked a number of watch
manufacturers to submit watches that they thought could withstand the rigors of spaceflight.
Only Hamilton, Rolex, Omega, and Longines participated. Hamilton, for some reason,
submitted a pocket watch. And since these astronauts were headed to space and not a
dusty 19th century saloon, NASA said no thanks. The remaining three watches were put through 11
different tests involving extreme
temperature changes, vibration testing at almost nine times the force of gravity, and resting in
a vacuum chamber for more than 90 minutes. The Omega Speedmaster Professional, now called the
Speedmaster Moonwatch Professional, survived it all and is still the only watch NASA certified for
extravehicular space activity. You can buy one today for the low, low price of $7,000.
This may not seem important, but the specialized shatterproof crystal on the watch
meant that astronauts were protected from flying shards of debris
should something hit their watch during the flight. Astronauts also needed extremely accurate
and durable watches to be used as a backup for timing equipment on space missions in case
of an accident like the one on the Apollo 13 mission. On April 11, 1970, at the perhaps ominous military time of
1313, Apollo 13's first stage of liftoff went like the clockwork on their Omega watches.
Commander Jim Lovell, Lunar Module Pilot Fred Hayes and Command Module Pilot Jack Swigert were heading to the moon.
Just minutes after the launch, the center engine cut out.
But NASA engineers figured the ship would still make the correct orbit, even without the fifth engine.
After that, Mission Control in Houston thought they had probably gotten past the major glitch of this mission, according to NASA's records.
During the first two days, the crew ran into a couple of minor surprises, but generally, Apollo 13 was looking like the smoothest flight of the program.
light of the program. At 46 hours, 43 minutes, Joe Kerwin, the capsule communicator on duty said,
the spacecraft is in real good shape as far as we're concerned. We're bored to tears down here.
It was the last time anyone would mention boredom for a long time. Remember when I said that Apollo 13 launched at 1313? With that deliberate launch time,
it seems like someone should have guessed that something significant would happen to
Apollo 13 on April 13th. The crew aboard Apollo 13 was finishing up a TV broadcast,
not realizing that none of the major TV networks in the United States decided to pick
up the broadcast from space. That's right. No one outside of NASA and the crew's families
were watching. The first moon landing had happened less than a year prior, with a second four months
later. The war in Vietnam was still raging. Anti-war protesters were marching all over the country, and many Americans were no longer supportive of NASA's space race.
I was able to speak with Apollo 13 astronaut Fred Hayes. He is nearly 90 now, and he remembers everything about his journey.
Andy now, and he remembers everything about his journey.
The explosion caused a large bang that echoed through the spacecraft,
the boat spacecraft, the metal, metal hulls.
That impact, I guess it'd be kind of like if you were in a big tin can,
you can think of it as somebody hits it with a sledgehammer.
That kind of one big bang.
The other unusual thing going on was a small 100-pound thrust attitude rocket motors that normally hold your attitude or you can change your attitude.
Some of them were firing from the command module, service module actually, trying to hold attitude.
And Jack had already reported to houston you know houston
would have had a problem there you know what apparent what really had happened but we had a
lot about seven i think caution warning lights on and they were that was confusing because they were
in different systems that's not like modern things today airplanes are your automobile for that
interest where things are all hooked through
some little chip computer. And the one thing that was clear very quickly was looking at the
instrument gauges. Tank two had two of its needles in the gauges at the bottom, and they were
separate sensors. And normally you never have two sensors fail simultaneously. So
I was pretty sure we had lost tank two. And then I just had a sick feeling in my stomach.
I knew that constituted an abort. We were not even going to lunar orbit. I wasn't sure what
we were going to do, but I knew we'd failed the mission. We weren't going to land on the moon.
We'd failed the mission. We weren't going to land on the moon.
The crew reported a large bang just as the computers went haywire. But in the confusion, what they were saying didn't make sense.
Pilot Fred Hayes had been regularly setting off the cabin release valve, which was harmless,
but made a bang that scared his crewmates enough to make him chuckle.
Initially, everyone believed the noise they heard was Haze.
Commander Jim Lovell recalls the event clearly even 50 years later. I heard just a big sharp bang
and the spacecraft rocked back and forth. And then I looked up at Fred Haze to see if he knew
what caused the problem. And then as I got into the command module, I looked at Jack Swiker and his eyes were
white as saucers.
He didn't know what the problem was.
But the first indications that something was wrong was the fact that I noticed that one
of our fuel cells was inoperative.
And then as I started to glance around at various things, I saw that in our indicators of the liquid oxygen,
one tank was empty and one tank had the fuel oxygen going down.
And so I knew that something was desperately wrong.
Mission control in Houston thought it was an electrical glitch,
a problem that could be worked through.
But at the rate that the oxygen fuel cell was disappearing,
the ship would be out of power in hours, which meant they were also losing water and the
spaceship's propulsion system. What Jim Lovell saw venting out into space space. Roger, we copy your venting. It's a gas, no sir. What Jim Lovell saw venting
out into space was the liquid oxygen they needed to keep the command module running.
There were only 15 minutes of power left in the command module, so mission control
told the crew to power it down and get to the lunar module. The command and service module is the main body of
the spacecraft, while the lunar module is an attached vehicle designed only to descend to
the moon's surface. And sure, it seems convenient that they had a second vehicle attached to their
main spacecraft, but the lunar module was designed and equipped only for 45 hours of use by two men on the moon.
Now, it would have to support three men for as long as it took to get them all headed back towards Earth.
A moon landing was no longer a possibility.
The Apollo 13 astronauts had very limited battery and electrical power, very limited water to keep them hydrated, rapidly decreasing cabin temperatures, and no extra space for moving around
or sleeping. Back in Houston's Mission Control, lead flight director Gene Kranz was no stranger to adversity. Kranz
earned an aeronautical engineering degree and flew fighter planes before leaving the Air Force to
become a test flight engineer. He was the flight director for 17 NASA missions during his career,
and he'd already dealt with Apollo 13's struggles before it even left the ground.
It was partially Kranz's call to remove astronaut
Ken Mattingly from the crew of Apollo 13 only three days before it was scheduled to launch.
Mattingly was exposed to German measles and hadn't been vaccinated yet. They could not risk him
getting sick during the mission, so he was replaced by Jack Swigert, who trained with the crew as a
backup. If you've seen the film Apollo 13, you heard actor Ed Harris, who played Gene Kranz,
speak the famous line, failure is not an option. But Gene Kranz never actually said exactly that.
What Kranz actually said to the flight control crew in 1970 was,
when you leave this room, you must leave believing that this crew is coming home.
Flight control will never lose an American in space. You've got to believe, your people have
got to believe, that crew is coming home. Now let's get going. Mission Control figured out a trajectory
that would take the spacecraft around the moon and kind of slingshot it back to Earth before it ran
out of electricity or water. Here in Mission Control, we're looking, now looking towards an
alternate mission, swinging around the moon and using the
lunar module power systems because of the situation that has developed here this evening.
This is Apollo Control Houston. All of these decisions were made less than an hour after the
initial explosion. Kranz signed off of his shift one hour and 10 minutes after the
explosion, writing later that it had been the longest hour of his life. But although Kranz
was officially off the clock, he didn't go home. He and his team headed to a meeting room to
continue their work. Now that they'd solved the immediate problems, they needed to devise a plan to keep
their astronauts alive without expected amounts of power, water, or heat, all things needed to
fuel both the men themselves and the spacecraft they piloted. Mission control drew up a rest
schedule for the crew in hopes the astronauts could stay functional, though sleep was difficult
to come by with most of the electrical systems turned off, which reduced temperatures inside
the spacecraft to 38 degrees Fahrenheit. Soon, Houston learned that they needed to guide the
Apollo 13 crew in building a device to remove the carbon dioxide that was filling their lunar module.
And if that wasn't enough, Gene Kranz and others had to navigate several cigarette and coffee-fueled press conferences
as the American, and indeed the international public, was suddenly riveted by the troubles in space.
No one had cared at liftoff, but now the whole world was watching. A few months before Apollo 13 left Earth, 14-year-old Marianne Vecchio
ran away from her sometimes turbulent home in Opelika, Florida. Marianne and her five siblings would
scatter when their parents fought, and Marianne started getting in trouble for skipping school
and smoking pot. Police had told her that if she skipped school one more time, she would be
arrested. So she left Florida with nothing, not even shoes on her feet.
Marianne hitchhiked her way around the country, making friends and even getting a pair of sandals from someone, working odd jobs and having an adventure.
She said that her travels weren't about defying her parents and she wasn't involved in any protesting against Vietnam.
She said, I just wanted to be anywhere
that wasn't Opelika. Protesting on college campuses wasn't new in 1970. Students around
the country had spoken against national and world events for decades by then, including protests
against McCarthyism in the 1950s, when professors at some universities
were targeted as communists. In the 50s, college students protested against nuclear proliferation.
The fallout from atomic bombs dropped in Japan in 1945, combined with the dangers of the new
Cold War with the Soviet Union, led many college students to speak against government and authority
in new ways. Add to all of that the civil rights movement and leaders like Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. and Malcolm X sharing ideas about how to achieve goals of equality and justice, and it's
easier to see how the Vietnam protests did not emerge fully formed out of nowhere.
They were right in line with the student voices that had been raised for over a decade already.
When Marianne arrived in Kent, Ohio in May, she headed to the Kent State campus and happened to walk alongside a 20-year-old college student named Jeffrey Miller.
And they struck up a conversation.
Jeff was a drummer and a radio DJ who traveled around following Sly and the Family Stone.
He'd just transferred to Kent State in January of 1970.
Maybe they talked about Nixon's announcement just a few days earlier on April 30th, 1970,
when he said that the Vietnam War would expand into Cambodia.
If when the chips are down, the world's most powerful nation, the United States of America,
acts like a pitiful, helpless giant,
like a pitiful, helpless giant.
The forces of totalitarianism and anarchy will threaten free nations and free institutions
throughout the world.
It is not our power,
but our will and character
that is being tested tonight.
The question all Americans must ask and answer tonight is this.
Does the richest and strongest nation in the history of the world have the character to meet a direct challenge by a group which rejects every effort to win a just peace, ignores our warning, tramples on solemn agreements, violates the neutrality of an unarmed people, and uses our prisoners as hostages. Critics and scholars have said that if
Nixon had emphasized the operation's goals of faster troop withdrawal from Vietnam instead of
noting its importance to keeping the U.S. a world power, people may not have responded so passionately and poorly. As it was, though,
on May 1st, just hours after Nixon's announcement, almost 900 college campuses participated
in the first nationwide student strike in the history of the United States. If you were a male
college student in early 1970 and your grades were high enough to put you in the history of the United States. If you were a male college student in early 1970,
and your grades were high enough to put you in the top half of your class,
chances are you were granted a deferment from the draft. But many college students saw graduation
looming in the near future, meaning that they would not just be free of homework, but they or their loved ones
would be left wide open to the draft process. Things were even more tense for people from lower
socioeconomic backgrounds as they had less opportunity to pay for college or gain the
types of jobs that would earn deferments. Between 1954 and 1964, as the Korean War ended and the Vietnam
War gained steam, 1.4 million American men were drafted. Peacetime drafts had been signed into
law in 1940 by President Roosevelt, as the U.S. anticipated joining World War II. So despite the fact that
the conflict in Vietnam was never officially declared a war, 120,000 young men were pulled
into service every year. College-aged people in 1970 had lived nearly their entire lives with the
threat of themselves or someone they loved being
drafted into a conflict that was either just starting to happen or fully escalated in a
faraway country for reasons that many people disagreed with. The first lottery drawing for the draft since 1940 occurred in December 1969.
Young men born between 1944 and 1950 watched TV or listened to the radio as blue plastic capsules,
each containing a different day of the year, were drawn one by one.
If the first date drawn happened to be your birthday, you would be in the first
group called to serve. It's easy to imagine lots of American young men between 19 and 25,
as well as all their loved ones, walking around with sweaty hands, waiting for their numbers
to be called. Add to all of that the knowledge that what was happening
in Vietnam seemed very confusing to many Americans. Some felt that this was not America's fight,
and that the country should not be sacrificing American lives for a cause
that so many Americans did not understand or support. October 15, 1969 had seen the moratorium to end the war in Vietnam,
when over 2 million people across the country participated in marches, speeches, and ceremonies.
By that time, 39,000 Americans had been killed in Vietnam.
One month later, there was a second moratorium to end
the war in Vietnam, attracting even bigger crowds across the country. Half a million people marched
in Washington, D.C. alone. All of this tension had been building for so long that by April 1970,
for so long that by April 1970, when Nixon announced what sounded like an escalation of the war, college students were poised to protest in record numbers. Many college students saw the
choice as really that simple, protest and risk arrest or beatings, or watch the war continue
and end up dead.
On the morning of May 1st, Nixon spoke to a group of civilian employees at the Pentagon,
referring to student protesters as bums blowing up campuses, which was the strongest language he'd used publicly when
talking about the issue. At noon, around 500 students at Kent State University gathered to
protest. After they'd buried a copy of the Constitution to symbolize their belief that
it was dead thanks to Nixon, they conducted a peaceful rally. That evening,
a fight broke out at a local bar between students and locals. Windows were broken in town and a few
people were arrested. The mayor declared a state of emergency and mobilized the town's entire police
force. The students were forced back toward the campus and things finally calmed down around 2.30 a.m.
The mayor ordered a dusk to dawn curfew but was still nervous. Sometime very late on the night of
May 1st, the mayor contacted the governor and asked that the National Guard be sent in to keep things calm.
More than 1,000 Ohio National Guard troops were sent in and told that there could be machine guns brought in by outside militants.
The governor compared the student protesters to the brown shirts of Nazi Germany
and vowed to rid the community of the problem.
On the evening of May 2nd, a fire started in the back of the ROTC building on the Kent State campus.
No one has ever been able to verify how the fire started.
Hundreds of students were drawn to the fire despite their curfew.
When fire trucks arrived to try to put the fire out,
some of the students cut the hoses with knives, hampering the firefighters' efforts.
The ROTC building burned to the ground. It was fully engulfed just as the Ohio National Guard arrived on campus.
Around 1,000 rounds of.22 caliber ammunition exploded within the burning building, adding to the mayhem.
Using bayonets, rifle butts, and tear gas, the National Guard cleared the students from the smoldering scene.
Martial law was declared and another curfew imposed until classes were in session. While the students were stuck inside, they planned their next move. At noon on May 4th, when between 1,000 and 2,000 students
had gathered in a parking lot and grassy area on campus called the Commons, they found themselves
facing a line of Ohio National Guardsmen.
The National Guard ordered the demonstrators to leave.
When the students refused and threw rocks at the guardsmen,
the National Guard used tear gas to try and disperse the crowd.
Ellis Burns, a Kent State student, recalled these moments.
It was at that point then that they started to lob some tear gas.
I remember seeing some of the protesters, some of my colleagues, if you will,
some of the protesters starting to throw the tear gas back. And then another National Guard picked up some tear gas canister, threw it back,
and then another person threw it back.
After several rounds of having their tear gas canisters thrown back at them,
the guardsmen drove the protesters over the hill behind the commons.
Carol Merman, a student protester at Kent State,
was in the Prentice Hall parking lot.
She remembers.
So the guard were in a crouching position with their guns out to shoot,
like you would think the Continental
Army was. I mean, they were literally in that kind of a position. It was a shock. I thought
they would shoot tear gas, but they didn't. And the next thing I knew from where I was,
and there weren't that many of us in the parking lot, the guard was not surrounded at that point.
There's pictures to show it. There's lots of lies about that. Now, that's not to deny that those
people, those guardsmen that were down there didn't feel surrounded, didn't feel threatened, weren't tired,
weren't in all kinds of other circumstances. But the reality, the physical reality was not that.
When a group of the guardsmen got to the top of the hill behind the commons,
they spun around and opened fire. Some National Guard members discharged their weapons into the air
or on the ground, but some opened fire on the protesters, firing between 61 and 67 shots in 13
seconds. So by about 12.30 p.m. on May 4th, only about 25 minutes after they first met, Mary Ann knelt on the ground with her hands in the air
and anguish on her face as Jeffrey Miller lay dead in front of her.
A student photographer had taken a picture of another student
waving a black flag in the space between the students and the guardsmen
a moment before the shots were fired.
Then he hit the ground like everyone else. Denny Benedict, a Kent State student, remembers
the immediate aftermath. Now, so after the shooting, of course, we didn't know it was
live ammunition. We didn't, you know, we got up and it was long. it was, man, that was unbelievable.
There was smoke.
And then there was just like a quiet.
And then you heard people scream.
And then people, we need a doctor, we need an ambulance,
and we're going, something's wrong here.
So we look around and you notice in a parking lot in the area,
some of the kids weren't getting up.
And it's just amazing.
It's just life-changing in an instant.
Some people, their lives change when maybe they get married
or the first time they see their kid.
And mine changed that second I realized that people were shot.
The smoke cleared,
and the photographer saw Jeffrey Miller's body in the parking lot with a girl kneeling beside it.
He said, I knew the boy was dead, but I could tell she didn't know.
Marianne remembers crying out, doesn't anyone see what just happened here?
Why is no one helping him?
see what just happened here? Why is no one helping him? As the soldiers approach their guns at the ready, she recalls asking them a question that countless others across the country would soon
ask as well. Why? Why did you do this? And that photo that we all know, the one featured in magazines that would win 21-year-old John
Filo a Pulitzer Prize, captured the moment. Four students were killed that day, 19-year-old
Allison Krauss, 20-year-old Sandy Scheuer, 19-year-old William Schroeder, and 20-year-old
Jeffrey Miller. Nine more students were injured, one of them permanently paralyzed.
Some of the students killed or wounded were not involved in the protest. They were just walking
to class. Kent State students were given two hours to pack their things and leave campus.
The school was shut down for the rest of the spring semester. In the very early hours of Saturday, May 9th,
being unable to sleep,
President Nixon decided to go to the Lincoln Memorial,
which he knew was surrounded by over 100,000 anti-war protesters.
Nixon and a minimal security team arrived before sunrise
to talk to some of the movement's leaders.
As I had tried to explain in the press conference,
my goals in Vietnam were the same as theirs,
to stop the killing, to end the war, to bring peace.
Our goal was not to get into Cambodia by what we were doing,
but to get out of Vietnam.
There seemed to be no, they did not respond.
I hope that their hatred of the war, which I could
well understand, would not turn into a bitter hatred of our whole system, our country and
everything that it stood for.
But by mid-May, students across the country were not only protesting the escalation of
the Vietnam War, they were also protesting what had
happened at Kent State and what had happened at Jackson State College in Mississippi just 10 days
after the fatal protests at Kent State. Jackson State, a historically Black college, had the added
layer that students knew that young Black men were being sent to Vietnam in disproportionate numbers.
Students knew that young Black men were being sent to Vietnam in disproportionate numbers.
Police opened fire on student protesters at Jackson State, firing 150 rounds in 30 seconds,
killing law student Philip Gibbs and high school student James Green, and wounding 12 others.
At both Kent State and Jackson State, authorities involved claimed that they were being fired upon by snipers before opening fire. These claims were later debunked by investigating commissions.
The surge of anti-war protests after the Kent State and Jackson State shootings were larger
than any that had come before. More than four million students attending hundreds of universities, colleges, and high schools
joined in a national student strike. In May 1970, 30 ROTC buildings burned or were bombed,
and there was violence between students and police at 26 schools. Vice President Spiro Agnew called the Ohio National Guard's actions an over-response,
and President Nixon established the President's Commission on Campus Unrest, sometimes known as
the Scranton Commission, to investigate both the Jackson State and Kent State events.
On October 16th, a grand jury in Ohio decided that 25 students should be charged with deliberate criminal conduct in connection to the killings at Kent State.
The grand jury was made up of local townspeople, no students or professors.
In fact, no students were allowed to testify during the proceedings, only professors and National Guardsmen.
allowed to testify during the proceedings, only professors and National Guardsmen.
A Gallup poll at the time found that 58% of Americans blamed the Kent State students for their own deaths. Only 11% blamed the National Guard. None of the National Guardsmen were
prosecuted because the grand jury decided that they fired their weapons in the honest and sincere belief
and under circumstances which would have logically caused them to believe that they would suffer
serious bodily injury had they not done so. Jeffrey Miller's father was shocked by the
grand jury's decision. He said, holy mackerel, you mean you can get away with murder in this country? It's ridiculous.
They can't exonerate the National Guard after students are maimed for life and killed. These
kids are dead. They're gone. My life is worthless. I live in an empty house.
The grand jury in Ohio stated that the university administration shouldered
most of the responsibility for what happened on May 4th. They accused Kent State's administration
of allowing an attitude of laxity over indulgence and permissiveness between the faculty and the
students. This conclusion was in contrast to the conclusion reached by the commission ordered by President Nixon.
The Kent State investigation was released on October 4th and called the use of M1 machine guns against the students unjustifiable and inexcusable.
But they also criticized the students' actions as reckless and irresponsible.
More than a year of investigations followed the Ohio grand jury's
charges against the 25 students. Meanwhile, the 25 students who were charged joined almost three
dozen faculty members from Kent State in filing lawsuits claiming that the grand jury had violated
their constitutional rights and gone beyond the scope permitted. In January of
1971, a U.S. District Court judge agreed that the rights of these faculty and students had indeed
been violated and ordered that the Ohio Grand Jury Report be destroyed. But that did not mean
that all of the charges against the students would be dropped.
The first of five trials began in November 1971 and ended with the defendant being found guilty of a minor charge.
The next two trials ended with guilty pleas, and the last two defendants were acquitted and dismissed for lack of evidence. In early December, the prosecutor held a press conference to say that
he was dropping the charges against the remaining 20 individuals. The official story was that their
cases were dropped for a lack of evidence. In 1979, those injured at Kent State won a civil suit
in which the Ohio National Guard was ordered to pay the injured
parties a total of $675,000. That's just over $2.8 million today.
Miles above Earth in a freezing cold cabin, the lunar module that was meant to keep two men alive for around three days needed to keep three men alive for four days.
They rationed everything they could, knowing that they were still likely to run out of water hours before re-entering the Earth's atmosphere.
They cut down to six ounces of water each per day, surviving mostly on fruit juice and
hot dogs. The dehydration that resulted set unfortunate records. The crew lost a total of
31.5 pounds, nearly 50% more than any other crew. Usually procedures take weeks, if not months, to develop and test. In this situation, NASA had hours to simulate the situation and test the procedures before relaying instructions up to Apollo 13.
A measles-free Ken Mattingly came back to mission control to run tests that would get the Apollo 13 crew home with their very limited power supply.
get the Apollo 13 crew home with their very limited power supply. In order to position the limping spacecraft for re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, the crew was forced to do
a series of precisely timed engine burn maneuvers. These were planned to position the spacecraft
so that it was in line with the Earth's gravitational pull, and at the correct angle so that no one side of the craft
would be facing the sun for too long. But because they had shut down most of the equipment inside
the lunar module to preserve power, the only way to time these engine maneuvers was by using,
To time these engine maneuvers was by using, you guessed it, their watches.
On April 17th, Apollo 13 began its procedures to re-enter Earth's atmosphere.
Part of that procedure involved disconnecting the lunar module from the command module. As the crew detached and watched it float
away, they took photos of the damage and were left to wonder if the heat shield had also been
destroyed. A damaged heat shield could mean that they would burn up upon re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, but they couldn't know for sure, and they had no way
to fix it. This three-man crew had already been through several life-threatening events in just
a few days, and they now had to strap into their seats and watch out the window as they hurtled toward Earth, turning into a ball of fire that may or may not kill them.
Getting these three men home, a goal that so many had lost sleep to achieve,
might now be the very thing that took their lives. Flight controller Gene Kranz once said that a
flight controller's job is never over until the crew is plucked from the water and on the Air Force carrier.
But as soon as the parachutes opened and the capsule with the three living crew members inside dropped safely into the Pacific Ocean, he found himself weeping at his console. After five days, 22 hours, 54 minutes, and 41
seconds of flight, traveling 622,268 miles, the Apollo 13 mission was finally over.
Here again is Lunar module pilot Fred Hayes.
The thing I was really surprised at was how the mission had been accepted.
Really frankly, at least in the back of my mind,
I was worried that this failure, even recovering, was a loss of a mission.
And to not accomplish what we'd set out to do.
And I frankly was worried that we might have something to do affecting the, to cancel the Apollo program. As it turned out,
I was very happy to see it. It was looked at for what it was, that it was a great challenge.
At a press conference after the safe landing, Commander Jim Lovell was asked whether he would
want to take another spaceflight.
He got excited and thought he'd better jump at the chance for NASA to hear his enthusiasm so
publicly. But then he saw a hand go up at the back of the crowd and give an emphatic thumbs down.
It was Jim's wife, Marilyn, letting him know that his two space flights had been more than
enough. So Jim answered the reporter's question with a polite no and said it was time to give
some others a chance. None of the Apollo astronauts ever went back into space again.
Of course, we don't have time to cover all of the fascinating
things that happened in 1970, but we want to give you glimpses of the rest of the year.
In August 1970, members of the American Indian Movement occupied an abandoned naval air station
outside of Minneapolis to protest the station's presence on treaty land, as well as the lack of educational
and housing opportunities for Native Americans in the Twin Cities area. In October of 1970,
the Organized Crime Control Act was signed into law. You may have noticed that recently,
the RICO statute has been in the news quite a bit. RICO is part of the Organized Crime Control Act and stands for Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations.
RICO's purpose is to stop criminal organizations from using legitimate businesses as fronts for criminal activities.
And did you know that Elvis showed up at the White House in December of 1970 not to perform?
He literally went to the White House gates and asked to see President Nixon.
Elvis expressed admiration for the president and concern for the country's increasing drug culture.
He suggested that he could help combat these things by being appointed a federal agent at large.
Nixon declined making that appointment and instead gave Elvis a commemorative badge.
And that is it for 1970.
1970. Join us next time when we learn more about the year 1971 and a party in the desert that is truly, I kid you not, beyond your wildest imagination. I'll see you then.
The show is written and researched by Sharon McMahon, Amy Watkin, Mandy Reed, and Kari Anton.
Our audio producer is Jenny Snyder, and it is executive produced and hosted by me, Sharon McMahon.
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