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BIOGRAPHICAL DATA SHEET
NAME: Frederick H. "Rick" Hauck O
RAL

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ISTORY:

20 November 2003 17 March 2004

EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND: B.S. in Physics, Tufts University, Medford, MA , 1962 M.S. in Nuclear Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, 1966 PRE-NASA EXPERIENCE: United States Navy (1962-1990) · Communications Officer and CIC Officer, USS Warrington (DD-843) (1962-1963) · Student, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA (1964) · Student, Defense Language Institute, Monterey, CA (1965) · Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA (1965-1966) · Flight Training, Naval Air Station, Pensacola Naval Air Station, Pensacola, FL (1966-1968) · Pilot, Attack Squadron 35, USS Coral Sea (CVA-43) (1968-1970) · Visual Weapons Delivery Instructor, Attack Squadron 42 (1970) · Test Pilot Training, U.S. Naval Test Pilot School, Patuxent River, MD (1971) · Project Test Pilot, Naval Air Test Center, Patuxent River, MD (1971-1974) · Operations Officer, Carrier Air Wing 14, USS Enterprise (CV(N)-65) (1974-1977) · Executive Officer, Attack Squadron 145 (1977) · Detailed to NASA (1978-1989) NASA EXPERIENCE: NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX (1978-1989) · Astronaut, Astronaut Office (1978-1989) NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC (1986-1987) · NASA Associate Administrator for External Relations (1986-1987) POST-NASA EXPERIENCE: United States Navy, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, Washington, DC (1989-1990) · Director, Navy Space Systems Division (1989-1990) International Technology Underwriters, Inc., Washington, DC (1990-1998) · President and Chief Operating Officer (1990-1993) · President and Chief Executive Officer (1993-1998) AXA Space, Bethesda, MD (1998-present) · President and Chief Executive Officer (1998-present)

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Johnson Space Center Oral History Project

Frederick H. "Rick" Hauck

M

ISSIONS

:

STS-7 (Challenger) · Crew: Commander Robert L. Crippen, Pilot Frederick H. Hauck, Mission Specialist 1 John M. Fabian, Mission Specialist 2 Sally K. Ride, Mission Specialist 3 Norman E. Thagard · Launched: 18 June 1983 at 07:33:00 A.M. EDT from Kennedy Space Center, FL · Duration: 6 days, 2 hours, 23 minutes, 59 seconds · Landed: 24 June 1983 at 06:56:59 A.M. PDT, Edwards AFB, California · Mission Highlights: This mission was historic for it was the first time an American woman flew in space and was the first time the Shuttle was flown in close proximity to a satellite. The crew deployed two communications satellites, the Anik C-2 for TELESAT Canada and Palapa-B1 for Indonesia. There were a number of experiments onboard including seven Get-Away Special canisters, ten experiments on the Shuttle Pallet Satellite, and an experiment designed to investigate space sickness. Other payloads included: the Office of Space and Terrestrial Applications (OSTA-2), the Continuous Flow Electrophoresis System (CFES), the Monodisperse Latex Reactor (MLR), and one Shuttle Student Involvement Program (SSIP) experiment. STS 51-A (Discovery) · Crew: Commander Frederick H. Hauck, Pilot David M. Walker, Mission Specialist 1 Anna L. Fisher, Mission Specialist 2 Dale A. Gardner, Mission Specialist 3 Joseph P. Allen · Launched: 8 November 1984 at 07:15:00 A.M. EST from Kennedy Space Center, FL · Duration: 7 days, 23 hours, 44 minutes, 56 seconds · Landed: 16 November 1984 at 06:59:56 A.M. EST, Kennedy Space Center, FL · Mission Highlights: The crew deployed two satellites: the TELESAT-H (Anik D2) and SYNCOM IV-I (Leasat 1). This was the first space salvage in history, as the crew retrieved two faulty satellites and returned them to Earth. Other payloads included: Diffusive Mixing of Organic Solutions (DMOS) and Radiation Monitoring Equipment (RME). STS-26 (Discovery) · Crew: Commander Frederick H. Hauck, Pilot Richard O. Covey, Mission Specialist 1 John M. Lounge, Mission Specialist 2 George D. Nelson, Mission Specialist 3 David C. Hilmers · Launched: 29 September 1988 at 11:37:00 A.M. EDT from Kennedy Space Center, FL · Duration: 4 days, 1 hours, 0 minutes, 11 seconds · Landed: 3 October 1988 at 09:37:11 A.M. PDT, Edwards AFB, California · Mission Highlights: This was the first flight after the Challenger tragedy. The crew deployed the NASA Tracking and Data Relay Satellite-3 (TDRS-3). Secondary payloads included the Physical Vapor Transport of Organic Solids (PVTOS), the Protein Crystal Growth (PCG); the Infrared Communications Flight Experiment
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Johnson Space Center Oral History Project

Frederick H. "Rick" Hauck

(IRCFE), the Aggregation of Red Blood Cells (ARC), the Isoelectric Focusing Experiment (IFE), Mesoscale Lightning Experiment (MLE), the Phase Partitioning Experiment (PPE), the Earth-Limb Radiance Experiment (ELRAD), the Automated Directional Solidification Furnace (ADSF), and two Shuttle Student Involvement Program (SSIP) experiments. AWARDS & CITATIONS: · Two Department of Defense Distinguished Service Medals · NASA Distinguished Service Medal · NASA Medal for Outstanding Leadership · Defense Superior Service Medal · Legion of Merit · Distinguished Flying Cross · Nine Air Medals · Navy Commendation Medal with Gold Star and Combat V · Three NASA Space Flight Medals · Astronaut Hall of Fame · National Associate of the National Academies · Navy Outstanding Test Pilot Award · Presidential Cost Saving Commendation · AIAA Haley Space Flight Award · Lloyd's of London Silver Medal for Meritorious Service · Two AAS Flight Achievement Awards · Federation Aeronautique Internationale (FAI) Yuri Gagarin Gold Medal · Two FAI Komarov Diplomas · Tufts University Presidential Medal · Tufts University Light on the Hill Award · Delta Upsilon Distinguished Alumnus Award · Who's Who in America SELECT PUBLICATIONS & PATENTS: R. L. Crippen and F. H. Hauck, "Orbiter operations in close proximity to free-flying satellites or formation flying in space," (Houston: NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 1983). F. H. Hauck and D. A. Gardner, "Space salvage ­ A report on Shuttle mission STS 51-A," (Houston: NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 1985). U.S. Department of Transportation Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee Task Group, Report on Soviet Entry into the World Space Market (Washington, DC: Department of Transportation, 1992). NASA External Independent Readiness Review Team for the Second Servicing Mission to the Hubble Space Telescope, Final Report (Washington, DC: NASA, 1996).

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Johnson Space Center Oral History Project

Frederick H. "Rick" Hauck

National Research Council Committee on Space Shuttle Meteoroid/Debris Risk Management, Protecting the Space Shuttle from Meteoroids and Orbital Debris (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1997). National Research Council, Safe on Mars: Precursor Measurements Necessary to Support Human Operations on the Martian Surface (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2002). REFERENCES: "AXA Index Main," AXA Space Homepage, Online, IndexMain.htmm (Last Updated n.d.; Accessed 12 March 2002).

http://www.axaspace.com/

Douglas B. Hawthorne, Men and Women of Space (San Diego: Univelt, 1992), 312, 314. Frederick H. "Rick" Hauck, interview, May 1983, Transcript, Oral History Collection, NASA History Office, NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC. "Frederick H. `Rick' Hauck NASA Biographical Data Sheet," Astronaut Biographies Homepage, Online, http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/hauck-fh.html (Last Updated 18 February 2002; Accessed 6 March 2002). "STS 51-A," Kennedy Space Center Historical Archive Homepage, Online, http://science. ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/missions/51-a/mission-51-a.html (Last Updated 29 June 2001; Accessed 11 March 2002). "STS-7," Kennedy Space Center Historical Archive Homepage, Online, http://science.ksc. nasa.gov/shuttle/missions/sts-7/mission-sts-7.html (Last Updated 29 June 2001; Accessed 19 December 2001). "STS-26," Kennedy Space Center Historical Archive Homepage, Online, http://science. ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/missions/sts-26/mission-sts-26.html (Last Updated 29 June 2001; Accessed 11 March 2002). BIOGRAPHICAL
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