NASA will award Lt. Gen. Thomas P. Stafford with the
Ambassador of Exploration Award at a ceremony attended by the astronaut's
surviving Apollo- Soyuz Test Project Russian and American crewmates.
The presentation will be hosted by the Stafford Air and Space Museum in
Weatherford, Oklahoma on July 12.
The award, which will feature a segment of moon rock
recovered during the Apollo 17 mission, will remain the property of NASA. It
will be placed on public display at the Stafford museum, alongside the
astronaut's Annapolis class ring and his Congressional Space Medal of Honor.
Thomas Stafford flew on Gemini 6, the first rendezvous
mission between two manned spacecraft, and Gemini 9; orbited the moon on Apollo
10, and commanded the U.S. command module that docked in orbit with a Soviet
craft during the Apollo-Soyuz mission.
Joining Stafford for the moon rock presentation will be
cosmonauts Alexei Leonov and Valery Kubasov of the Soyuz crew and Vance Brand,
who flew aboard Apollo. Deke Slayton, the third American ASTP crew member
passed away on July 12, 1993.
The award ceremony will begin at 1 p.m. in Weatherford.
As an Ambassador of Exploration, Stafford will help the
space agency convey the benefits of space exploration and work to inspire
students to pursue careers in science, mathematics and engineering.
The Ambassador of Exploration Award was announced last July
during the 35th anniversary celebration of the Apollo 11 lunar landing. It
recognizes the sacrifices and dedication of the Apollo, Gemini and Mercury
veterans.
Each astronaut or their surviving family will be presented
with a lunar sample, part of the 842 pounds of moon rock and soil returned
during the six moon landings from 1969 to 1972. CBS anchor Walter Cronkite is
also an honoree.