Story Musgrave brings the passion, love, vision,
and lessons of human space flight down to Earth
for all of his audiences as a professional public
speaker.
PERSONAL DATA: Born August 19, 1935, in Boston,
Massachusetts, but considers Lexington, Kentucky,
to be his hometown. Single. Six children (one
deceased). His hobbies are chess, flying,
gardening, literary criticism, microcomputers,
parachuting. photography, reading, running, scuba
diving, and soaring.
EDUCATION:
Bachelor of Science in mathematics and statistics -
Syracuse University in 1958
Master of Business Administration in operations
analysis and computer programming from UCLA in 1959
Bachelor of Arts in chemistry from Marietta
College in 1960
Doctorate in medicine from Columbia University in
1964
Master of Science in physiology and biophysics
from the University of Kentucky in 1966
Master of Arts in literature from the University
of Houston in 1987
SPECIAL HONORS: National Defense Service Medal and
an Outstanding Unit Citation as a member of the
United States Marine Corps Squadron VMA-212
(1954); United States Air Force Post-doctoral
Fellowship (1965-1966); National Heart Institute
Post- doctoral Fellowship (1966-1967); Reese Air
Force Base Commander's Trophy (1969); American
College of Surgeons I.S. Ravdin Lecture (1973);
NASA Exceptional Service Medals (1974 & 1986);
Flying Physicians Association Airman of the Year
Award (1974 & 1983); NASA Space Flight Medals
(1983, 1985, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1996); NASA
Distinguished Service Medal (1992).
EXPERIENCE: Musgrave entered the United States
Marine Corps in 1953, served as an aviation
electrician and instrument technician, and as an
aircraft crew chief while completing duty
assignments in Korea, Japan, Hawaii, and aboard
the carrier USS WASP in the Far East.
He has flown 17,700 hours in 160 different types
of civilian and military aircraft, including 7,500
hours in jet aircraft. He has earned FAA ratings
for instructor, instrument instructor, glider
instructor, and airline transport pilot, and U.S.
Air Force Wings. An accomplished parachutist, he
has made more than 500 free falls including over
100 experimental free-fall descents involved with
the study of human aerodynamics.
Dr. Musgrave was employed as a mathematician and
operations analyst by the Eastman Kodak Company,
Rochester, New York, during 1958.
He served a surgical internship at the University
of Kentucky Medical Center in Lexington from 1964
to 1965, and continued there as a U. S. Air Force
post-doctoral fellow (1965-1966), working in
aerospace medicine and physiology, and as a
National Heart Institute post-doctoral fellow
(1966-1967), teaching and doing research in
cardiovascular and exercise physiology. From 1967
to 1989, he continued clinical and scientific
training as a part-time surgeon at the Denver
General Hospital and as a part-time professor of
physiology and biophysics at the University of
Kentucky Medical Center.
He has written 25 scientific papers in the areas
of aerospace medicine and physiology, temperature
regulation, excersize physiology, and clinical
surgery.
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