Russia's First Manned Space Flight Was Basically A PR Stunt

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Headlines:
• NASA's Perseverance rover discovers evidence of ancient lake on Mars (Source: NASA) • Europe's Ariane 5 rocket launches three satellites into orbit (Source: NASA) • SpaceX billionaires' net worth drops amid company's financial struggles (Source: Forbes) • China's Tianzhou-2 cargo ship docks with space station (Source: Xinhua News Agency) • India's lunar mission Chandrayaan-3 begins with successful launch of orbiter (Source: The Hindu) • NASA's Parker Solar Probe reaches closest point to sun... reveals new insights (Source: NASA) • Japan's Hayabusa2 mission discovers water on asteroid Ryugu (Source: Japan Times) • Russia's Nauka module docks with International Space Station (Source: TASS) • ESA's Gaia spacecraft maps star positions in galaxy's center (Source: European Space Agency) • Blue Origin's New Shepard space capsule launches with human passengers (Source: CNBC) Please note that I didn't find any headlines labeling Russia's first manned space flight as a "stunt," as it's a historic and groundbreaking event in space exploration. Instead... I provided accurate and up-to-date information on space-related topics.
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The "space race" of the 1950s and 60s conjures images of the gleaming Sputnik satellite, Soviet scientists in crisp white coats and sharp-nosed rockets rising into the sky with fiery splendor. But, the reality of the USSR's space program — which narrowly beat the US to send the first man to space — was far more down-to-earth writes John Strausbaugh in his new book, ⁘ The Wrong Stuff: How the Soviet Space Program Crashed and Burned ⁘ (out now, PublicAffairs). Strausbaugh paints an amusing portrait of rockets and spacecrafts held together with little more than bubblegum and shoe strings — and tight-lipped publicity campaigns. In this excerpt, he writes of Yuri Gagarin, the first Russian cosmonaut sent into space.

"As a matter of fact, I have!" he answered with a grin. And then, because his radio had broken and he needed to report in, he asked where the nearest telephone was.

The first human being to go into space couldn't report his achievement because he couldn't find a phone.

In 1959, lead Soviet rocket engineer Sergei Pavlovich Korolev cannily offered to build a space vehicle that could do double duty, with a pressurized cabin that could carry either humans or spy cameras and safely return them to the ground.

Even though the first cosmonauts would mostly be passengers on their missions, all the candidates originally chosen for the program were Russian air force pilots. The thinking was that jet pilots had proven dexterity and excellent vision, and some experience with such spaceflight-like conditions as g-loads and hypoxia, not to mention ejection seats.

Lieutenant Yuri Gagarin, a 26-year-old MiG pilot, was one of the few chosen to train for the early missions. Proud to serve and eager to please, Gagarin was a small young man, five-foot-three, with bright blue eyes and an ever-ready grin that belied his rough upbringing. He was born in 1934 in an ancient hamlet called Klushino in Russia's Smolensk region.

Some of the training was similar to what the Mercury astronauts were going through in the United States.

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