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词条 Jake Garn
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Career

  3. Savings and loan

  4. Spaceflight

  5. Personal life

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox senator
| name = Jake Garn
| image name = Jake Garn.jpg
| jr/sr1 = United States Senator
| state1 = Utah
| term_start1 = December 21, 1974
| term_end1 = January 3, 1993
| predecessor1 = Wallace F. Bennett
| successor1 = Bob Bennett
| office2 = 28th Mayor of Salt Lake City
| term_start2 = 1972
| term_end2 = December 20, 1974
| predecessor2 = J. Bracken Lee
| successor2 = Conrad B. Harrison
| birth_name = Edwin Jacob Garn
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1932|10|12|}}
| birth_place = Richfield, Utah, U.S.
| death_date =
| death_place =
| spouse = 1) Hazel Thompson (deceased)
2) Kathleen Brewerton (deceased)
| children = Jacob Garn
Susan Garn
Ellen Garn
Jeffrey Garn
Matthew Garn
Jennifer Garn
| alma_mater = University of Utah
| religion = The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon)
| party = Republican
| module =
{{Infobox astronaut
| child = yes
| image = STS-51-D crew.jpg
| type = NASA Payload Specialist
| nationality = American
| occupation = Pilot, Politician
| selection =
| space_time = 6 d 23 h 55 m
| missions = STS-51-D
| insignia =
|allegiance = United States
Utah
|branch={{flag|United States Navy}}
Utah Air National Guard
|serviceyears=1956–1960 (U.S. Navy)
1963-1979 (Utah Air National Guard)
}}

Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn (born October 12, 1932) is an American astronaut, politician, and member of the Republican Party, who served as a U.S. Senator representing Utah from 1974 to 1993. Garn became the first sitting member of the United States Congress to fly in space when he flew aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery as a Payload Specialist during NASA mission STS-51-D (April 12–19, 1985).

Early life

Born in Richfield, Utah, Garn earned a Bachelor of Science degree in business and finance from the University of Utah in 1955, where he became a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity. He also attended East High School, Clayton Middle School, and Uintah Elementary School.

Career

Senator Garn is a former insurance executive. He served in the United States Navy as a Martin P5M Marlin pilot. He also served as a pilot of the 151st Air Refueling Group of the Utah Air National Guard, where he flew the Boeing KC-97L and KC-135A. He retired as a Colonel in April 1979.[1] He was promoted to Brigadier General after his space shuttle mission.[2] He has flown more than 10,000 hours in military and private civilian aircraft.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}}

Prior to his election to the Senate, Garn served on the Salt Lake City commission for four years and was elected as the mayor in 1971, entering office in 1972. He was the last Republican to hold that office to date. Garn was active in the Utah League of Cities and Towns and served as its president in 1972. In 1974, Garn was the first vice-president of the National League of Cities, and he served as its honorary president in 1975.

Garn was first elected to the Senate in 1974, succeeding retiring Republican Wallace Bennett, father of later Senator Robert Bennett. Garn was re-elected to a second term in November 1980 with 74 percent of the vote, the largest victory in a statewide race in Utah history. Garn was re-elected a second time in 1986.

Though strongly pro-life, Garn joined U.S. Representative Henry Hyde of Illinois in resigning from the board of the United States Pro-Life Political Action Committee when the executive director of the organization, Peter Gemma, issued a "hit list" to target certain lawmakers who supported abortion. Garn and Hyde, the author of the Hyde Amendment, which limited abortions financed by Medicaid, said that "hit lists" are counterproductive because they create irrevocable discord among legislators, any of whom can be subject to a "single issue" attack of this kind by one interest group or another. Gemma said that he was surprised by the withdrawal of Garn and Hyde from the PAC committee but continued with plans to spend $650,000 for the 1982 elections on behalf of anti-abortion candidates.[3]

Garn was chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee and served on three subcommittees: Housing and Urban Affairs, Financial Institutions, and International Finance and Monetary Policy. He also was a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee and served as Chairman of the HUD-Independent Agencies Subcommittee. He served on four other Appropriations subcommittees: Energy and Water Resources, Defense, Military Construction, and Interior. Garn served as a member of the Republican leadership from 1979 to 1984 as Secretary of the Republican Conference.

His Institute of Finance has been called a "hot tub of influence peddling."[4]

Garn retired from the Senate in 1992.[5]

Savings and loan

As Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Garn was co-author of the Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, the law that partially deregulated the savings and loan industry and attempted to forestall the looming Savings and Loan crisis.

Spaceflight

Garn asked to fly on the Space Shuttle because he was head of the Senate appropriations subcommittee that dealt with NASA, and had extensive aviation experience. He had previously flown a B-2 Spirit prototype and driven a new Army tank.{{r|walker20050414}}[6] STS-51-D was launched from and returned to land at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Its primary objective was to deploy two communications satellites, and to perform electrophoresis and echocardiograph operations in space in addition to a number of other experiments. As a payload specialist, Garn's role on the mission was as a congressional observer[7] and as a subject for medical experiments on space motion sickness.[8] At the conclusion of the mission, Garn had traveled over 2.5 million miles in 108 Earth orbits, logging over 167 hours in space.

The space sickness he experienced during the journey was so severe that a scale for space sickness was jokingly based on him, where "one Garn" is the highest possible level of sickness.[9] Some NASA astronauts who opposed the payload specialist program, such as Mike Mullane, believed that Garn's space sickness was evidence of the inappropriateness of flying people with little training.{{r|unl2011}} Astronaut Charles F. Bolden, however, described Garn as "the ideal candidate to do it, because he was a veteran Navy combat pilot who had more flight hours than anyone in the Astronaut Office".[10] Fellow 51-D payload specialist Charles D. Walker—who also suffered from space sickness on the flight despite having flown before—stated that

{{quote|he worked out extraordinarily well, and quite frankly, I think the U.S. space program, NASA, has benefited a lot from both his experience and his firsthand relation of NASA and the program back on Capitol Hill. As a firsthand participant in the program, he brought tremendous credibility back to Capitol Hill, and that's helped a lot. He's always been a friend of the agency and its programs.[11]}}

The Jake Garn Mission Simulator and Training Facility, NASA's prime training facility for astronauts in the Shuttle and Space Station programs,[12] is named after him.

Upon his return, he co-authored a novel entitled Night Launch. The book centers around terrorists taking control of the Space Shuttle Discovery during the first NASA–USSR space shuttle flight. It was published in 1989.

Personal life

Garn married Hazel Rhae Thompson in 1957.[13] Together, they had four children: Jacob, Susan, Ellen, and Jeffrey.[13] Hazel died in an automobile accident in 1976.[13][14] In 1977, Garn married Kathleen Brewerton, who had a son, Brook, from a previous marriage.[13] Jake and Kathleen had two children together, Matthew and Jennifer.[13]

In February 1980, Garn was honored by the Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, along with U.S. Ambassador Shirley Temple Black, actor James Stewart, singer John Denver, and Tom Abraham, a businessman from Canadian, Texas, who worked with immigrants seeking to become U.S. citizens.[15]

Jake Garn in 1986 donated a kidney to his 27-year-old daughter, Susan Garn Horne, who was experiencing progressive kidney failure as a result of diabetes.[16]

References

1. ^{{cite web |title=Payload Specialist Astronaut Bio: Jake Garn |publisher=National Aeronautics and Space Administration |url=http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/garn-j.html |date=May 1985 |accessdate=2011-02-16}}
2. ^{{cite web |title=Newsmakers |publisher=Kentucky New Era |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=yPsrAAAAIBAJ&sjid=SG0FAAAAIBAJ&pg=5307,5559881&dq=jake-garn+senator+brigadier&hl=en |accessdate=2011-02-16}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1981/06/07/weekinreview/the-nation-congressmen-draw-the-line-at-new-hit-list.html|title=THE NATION; Congressmen; Draw the Line at; New 'Hit List'|date=June 7, 1981|publisher=The New York Times|accessdate=May 24, 2016}}
4. ^{{cite news |last1=Jacobsen-Wells |first1=JoAnn |title=Demo Chief Chides Owens for Defending Garn |url=http://www.deseretnews.com/article/73835/DEMO-CHIEF-CHIDES-OWENS-FOR-DEFENDING-GARN.html?pg=all |accessdate=October 13, 2014 |publisher=Desert News |date=November 24, 1989}}
5. ^{{Citation |first=Laurie Snow |last=Turner |contribution=Garn, Jake |contribution-url= http://www.uen.org/utah_history_encyclopedia/g/GARN_JAKE.html |editor-last= Powell |editor-first= Allan Kent |year=1994 |title=Utah History Encyclopedia |location=Salt Lake City, Utah |publisher=University of Utah Press |isbn=0874804256 |oclc=30473917}}
6. ^{{cite book |title=Realizing Tomorrow: The Path to Private Spaceflight |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |last1=Dubbs |first1=Chris |last2=Paat-Dahlstrom |first2=Emeline |last3=Walker |first3=Charles D. |pages=79–80 |year=2011 |isbn=0-8032-1610-6}}
7. ^{{cite book |last=Evans |first=Ben |title=Space shuttle challenger: ten journeys into the unknown |year=2006 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-0-387-46355-1 |oclc=131057274 |pages=168–169}}
8. ^{{cite news |last1=Lamar |first1=Jacob V., Jr. |last2=Hannifan |first2=Jerry |title=Jake Skywalker: A Senator boards the shuttle |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,966871,00.html |accessdate=April 13, 2011 |newspaper=Time |date=April 22, 1985}}
9. ^{{cite web |title=Oral History 2 Transcript |url=http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/StevensonRE/RES_5-13-99.pdf |work=Johnson Space Center Oral History Project |publisher=NASA |accessdate=April 22, 2011 |pages=13–35 |date=May 13, 1999 |quote=[Dr. Robert Stevenson:] Jake Garn was sick, was pretty sick. I don't know whether we should tell stories like that. But anyway, Jake Garn, he has made a mark in the Astronaut Corps because he represents the maximum level of space sickness that anyone can ever attain, and so the mark of being totally sick and totally incompetent is one Garn. Most guys will get maybe to a tenth Garn, if that high. And within the Astronaut Corps, he forever will be remembered by that}}
10. ^{{cite interview |title=Charles F. Bolden |date=2004-01-06 |accessdate=January 6, 2014 |last=Bolden |first=Charles F. |subjectlink=Charles F. Bolden |interviewer1=Johnson, Sandra|interviewer2=Wright, Rebecca|interviewer3=Ross-Nazzal, Jennifer |work=NASA Johnson Space Center Oral History Project |location=Houston, Texas |url=http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/history/oral_histories/BoldenCF/BoldenCF_1-6-04.htm}}
11. ^{{cite interview |title=Oral History Transcript |date=2005-04-14 |last=Walker |first=Charles D. |interviewer=Johnson, Sandra |work=NASA Johnson Space Center Oral History Project}}
12. ^{{cite web |title=Jake Garn Simulator and Training Facility |url=http://crgis.ndc.nasa.gov/historic/Jake_Garn_Simulator_and_Training_Facility |work=NASA Cultural Resources (CRGIS) |publisher=NASA |accessdate=April 22, 2011}}
13. ^"Edwin Jacob Garn." Contemporary Authors Online. Detroit: Gale, 2001. Gale Biography In Context. Accessed July 11, 2011.
14. ^The Daily Herald, Provo, Utah, August 20, 1976
15. ^"Tom Abraham to be honored by Freedoms Foundation Feb. 22", Canadian Record, February 14, 1980, p. 19
16. ^"Senate: A Father's Special Gift, Time, September 22, 1986

External links

{{Portal|United States Air Force}}
  • {{congbio|G000072}}
  • NASA biography of Garn
  • Spacefacts biography of Jake Garn
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20080319002604/http://quest.arc.nasa.gov/neuron/team/oman.html Page with true origin of "Garn scale"]
  • {{C-SPAN|edwingarn}}
{{s-start}}{{s-off}}{{s-bef|before=J. Bracken Lee}}{{s-ttl|title=Mayor of Salt Lake City | years=1972–1974}}{{s-aft|after=Conrad B. Harrison}}{{s-bef|before=William Proxmire}}{{s-ttl|title=Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee | years=1981–1987}}{{s-aft|after=William Proxmire}}{{s-par|us-sen}}{{U.S. Senator box | state=Utah | class=3 | before=Wallace F. Bennett | after=Bob Bennett | years=1974–1993 | alongside=Frank Moss, Orrin Hatch}}{{s-ppo}}{{s-bef|before=Clifford Hansen}}{{s-ttl|title=Vice-Chairman of the Senate Republican Conference | years=1979–1985}}{{s-aft|after=Thad Cochran}}{{s-end}}{{SLCMayors}}{{USSenUT}}{{SenBankingCommitteeChairmen}}{{Authority control}}{{Use American English|date=January 2014}}{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2015}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Garn, Jake}}

14 : 1932 births|American astronauts|American astronaut-politicians|Latter Day Saints from Utah|Living people|Mayors of Salt Lake City|United States Air Force generals|United States Navy officers|United States Senators from Utah|University of Utah alumni|Utah Republicans|Republican Party United States Senators|Organ transplant donors|People from Richfield, Utah

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