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While researching a magazine article on Tereshkova and Vostok 6, I've
been studying comtemporary newpapers and thought some of my findings might be of interest on this group. When I began researching this subject several years ago, I gained the impression that the flight of a woman cosmonaut on Vostok VI had caught the rest of the world, and especially America by complete surprise. However, having studied contemporary press reports, it's clear that this wasn't the case, and the Soviets had leaked information over the previous six months or so, to prepare the world for what they were planning. On 13th January 1963, while attending celebrations to mark the anniversary of the revolution in Cuba, cosmonaut Pavel Popovich remarked, 'The world will soon know about the first female cosmonaut.' And it seems this comment was widely reported. A couple of months later on 21st March, UPI in Moscow mentioned in a dispatch about Soviets space plans in general, ‘There have been rumours in Moscow that a woman is being trained as a cosmonaut.' In reports of the return to earth of American Mercury astronaut Gordon Cooper, in May 1963, several US papers suggested that ‘the Soviets are believed to be planning a new space spectacular, probably involving the launching of a woman into space.' By early June, speculation mounted further and on 12th, the New York Times reported another UPI dispatch under the headline ‘Soviets reported ready to put woman into space', and the following day, the Washington Post added detail with ‘The Soviet Union was reported tonight to be on the verge of launching into space the first woman astronaut – said to be an attractive unmarried woman in her 20's……………..at least two and possibly three girls are believed to be trained for a space trip. It was not clear whether two would be put up together, as some reports have suggested.' After the launch of Vostok V on 14th June, the speculation reaches it's peak, and all the major news agencies and newspapers have their own version of what would happen next. Recording Bykovsky's launch, the Washington Post reports ‘Reliable sources have confirmed that the 'cosmonette' – an attractive unmarried pilot in her early twenties - is standing by, ready for launch.' UPI's Geneva office were even more certain :- ‘The Soviet Union will definitely send a young woman into space tomorrow, Communist sources said tonight. Everyone in Moscow knows that the launching of a Soviet woman into the Cosmos is imminent.' Associated Press had more detail in their release :- ‘While the Soviet Union's fifth cosmonaut circled the earth Friday night, unofficial Moscow sources said a woman would follow him into space Saturday, or later. Both Soviet and sources from other Communist countries said a girl named Ludmilla, 25, moderately pretty, was ready to take off from a launching pad in central Siberia. There was no official confirmation, but the reports said the Moscow newspapers already had biographical sketches of Ludmilla ready for use either Saturday or later in the course of Bykovsky's flight.' The following day, the Washington Post recycled the story, adding their own speculation on who the woman might be explaining that ‘… a dozen names different were circulating in Moscow, ranging from Ludmilla to Solovyeva……' Obviously, this is interesting, because Solovyeva was very nearly correct, although her name did not reappear until 25 years later. The following day, Tereshkova was launched, and the real story could be reported. |
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Tony, thanks for reprising the research and results that I published in 1981
in "Red Star in Orbit". Sorry you started with the wrong impression, instead of the correct one you would have gotten from that book. Throughout 1962 and early 1963, public statements by touring cosmonauts and private news leaks to Western jour*nalists alerted the world to the coming flight: "We will pave the road into space together," cosmonaut Popovich told one women s club in early 1963. The women of the world were ready. "Tonyq" wrote .. While researching a magazine article on Tereshkova and Vostok 6, I've been studying comtemporary newpapers and thought some of my findings might be of interest on this group. When I began researching this subject several years ago, I gained the impression that the flight of a woman cosmonaut on Vostok VI had caught the rest of the world, and especially America by complete surprise. However, having studied contemporary press reports, it's clear that this wasn't the case, and the Soviets had leaked information over the previous six months or so, to prepare the world for what they were planning. |
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On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 11:46:51 GMT, "Jim Oberg" wrote:
Throughout 1962 and early 1963, public statements by touring cosmonauts and private news leaks to Western jour*nalists alerted the world to the coming flight: "We will pave the road into space together," cosmonaut Popovich told one women s club in early 1963. The women of the world were ready. And still waiting... ![]() Dale |
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On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 11:46:51 GMT, "Jim Oberg"
wrote: Throughout 1962 and early 1963, public statements by touring cosmonauts and private news leaks to Western jour*nalists alerted the world to the coming flight: "We will pave the road into space together," cosmonaut Popovich told one women s club in early 1963. The women of the world were ready. ....Actually, the Soviets leaked a *lot* of their surprises with veiled hints -and- outright "we're going to do this really, really soon" statements. It's a classic test of how awake/unawake the news media can be at times, and the results were very much the same as when George Lucas admitted during a major convention lecture two years before "Empire Strikes Back" that Darth Vader was really Luke's father. He'd done that just to see how far the word would spread, and not *one* *single* report was spread in the sci-fi print rags of the time. In fact, nobody remembered it until after *the* scene in ESB premiered, and those who were present at the lecture - especially the one or two reporters - went 'Holy ****! He wasn't lying!' Of course, if the journalists believed everything they heard, Geo would be on the lecture circuit with the J-C Bros... OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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