TRAVEL TALES
Young Chang
Evie and Pete Compton perk up when they hear stories about Florida’s
Kennedy Space Center on the news.
The Newport Beach residents said they feel they’re almost a part of
what’s going on over there. Having seen the live blastoff in February of
the $1.4 billion laboratory “Destiny” to the International Space Station.
The couple is grateful to have gotten the “real insight.”
They felt the ground shake from a set of bleachers three miles from
the launch-pad and saw plumes of smoke form a rainbow.
“You can watch it on television and you can see it in the movies, but
when you’re there you just can’t believe you’re really there,” said Evie
Compton, a 61-year-old real estate agent.
Her husband agreed.
“On TV it’s too easy,” he said. “[Live,] you get to see how complex
and dangerous something like this could really be.”
The couple spent about four days with a VIP group touring the Space
Center grounds in Cape Canaveral, midway between Jacksonville and Miami.
They got peeks into facets of the business that regular tourists don’t
normally get.
Paul Geery, the couple’s son-in-law and a director for Boeing, which
handles the computers for the Space Station, gave the Comptons their VIP
passes.
“We had to be cleared weeks before we went,” Evie Compton said, “We
had to wear badges and they specifically told us that ‘If you lose that,
you call us immediately.’ They didn’t want an imposter picking it up and
being where they shouldn’t be.”
The couple met astronauts who’d traveled up in previous launches. The
professionals answered quirky questions for their audience about what
it’s like to live on a space shuttle and shared scoops about the training
process.
The astronauts for the “Destiny” launch were in “lock-down,” Evie
Compton said, which helps isolate them from germs.
Pete Compton, who is the vice president of a telephone company, was
most taken by the number of human hands involved in a single space
mission.
“On TV, you think of 20 people sitting in the control center, but each
has its support group,” said the 63-year-old. “There are so many people
involved -- a cast of 1000s’s.”
When they visited the sterile rooms -- rooms where representatives
from different countries gather to assemble their contributions to the
Space Station -- Evie Compton heard a buzz of foreign languages.
“We just thought it was so wonderful, all these different countries
working together to make this happen,” she said.
The after-party for the successful launch of the “Destiny” was
particularly moving.
“Everyone was patting each other on the back,” Evie Compton said.
“Some of the people were almost in tears hugging each other because they
worked so hard. We were just so excited for them.”
* Have you, or someone you know, gone on an interesting vacation
recently? Tell us your adventures. Drop us a line to TRAVEL TALES, 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa, CA 92627; e-mail [email protected]; or fax to
(949) 646-4170.
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