Buzz Aldrin was born in Montclair, New Jersey
on January 20, 1930. His mother, Marion Moon,
was the daughter of an Army Chaplain. His father,
Edwin Eugene Aldrin, was an aviation pioneer,
a student of rocket developer Robert Goddard,
and an aide to the immortal General Billy Mitchell.
Buzz was educated at West Point, graduating with
honors in 1951, third in his class. After receiving
his wings, he flew Sabre Jets in 66 combat missions
in the Korean Conflict, shooting down two MIG-15's.
Returning to his education, he earned a Doctorate
in Astronautics from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology in Manned Space Rendezvous. The
techniques he devised were used on all NASA missions,
including the first space docking with the Russian
Cosmonauts.
In October 1963, NASA as one of the early astronauts
selected Buzz. In November 1966, he established
a new record for Extra-Vehicular Activity in space
on the Gemini XII orbital flight mission. Buzz
has logged 4500 hours of flying time, 290 of which
were in space, including 8 hours of EVA. As Backup
Command Module Pilot for Apollo VIII, man's first
flight around the moon, he significantly improved
operational techniques for Astronautical navigation
star display. Then, on July 20, 1969, Buzz and
Neil Armstrong made their historic Apollo XI moonwalk,
thus becoming the first two humans to set foot
on another world. The largest worldwide television
audience in history witnessed this unprecedented
heroic endeavor.
Upon returning from the moon, Buzz embarked on
an international goodwill tour. He was presented
the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest
honor amongst over 50 other distinguished awards
and medals from the United States and numerous
other countries.
Since retiring from NASA, the Air Force, and
his position as Commander of the Test Pilot School
at Edwards Air Force Base, Dr. Aldrin has remained
at the forefront of efforts to ensure a continued
leading role for America in manned space exploration.
To advance his lifelong commitment to venturing
outward in space, he has created a master plan
of evolving missions for sustained exploration
utilizing his concept, "The Cycler",
a spacecraft system, which makes perpetual orbits
between Earth and Mars. In 1993 Dr. Aldrin received
a U.S. patent for a permanent space station he
designed. More recently he founded his rocket
design company, Starcraft Boosters, Inc., and
the ShareSpace Foundation, a nonprofit devoted
to opening the doors to space tourism for all
people.
Dr. Aldrin has continued to share his vision
for the future of space travel by authoring two
space novels that dramatically portray man's discovery
of the ultimate frontier: The Return (Forge Books,
2000) and Encounter with Tiber (Warner Books,
1996). He has also authored an autobiography,
Return to Earth and a historical documentary,
Men from Earth, describing his trip to the moon
and his unique perspective on America's space
program. His leisure time is spent exploring the
deep-sea world of scuba diving and skiing the
mountaintops of Sun Valley, Idaho.
Now Buzz, as Starcraft Enterprises - the name
of his private space endeavors - is lecturing
and traveling throughout the world to pursue and
discuss his and others' latest concepts and ideas
for exploring the universe. He is a leading voice
in charting the course of future space efforts
from Planet Earth.
Topics:
* Adventure
* Astronaut
* Leadership
* Motivation
* Team Building