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  1. Jul 21, 1998 · Houston, Texas – 21 July 1998. Wright: Today is July 21, 1998. We're speaking with Colonel Vladimir Titov as part of the Shuttle-Mir Oral History Project. Rebecca Wright, Paul Rollins, and Franklin Tarazona. Thank you again. Colonel, through your career you've experienced a series of firsts. We know that, for example, you've set a record for ...

  2. Aug 25, 2018 · Graduated from Higher Air Force College in Chernigov, 1970; graduated from Test Pilot School in Akhtubinsk, 1977; graduated from Gagarin Air Force Academy, 1987; Colonel, Russian Air Force, Ret.; was selected as cosmonaut on 23.08.1976 (TsPK -6); OKP (cosmonaut basic training): 23.08.1976 - 30.01.1979; was a crewmember of aborted mission Soyuz ...

    • 01.01.1947
    • two
    • Sretensk, Chita Oblast, Russian SFSR
    • married
  3. Vladmir G. Titov Oral History Interviews. July 21, 1998: HTML: PDF 22K: Return to JSC Oral History Website. Curator: JSC Web Team ...

  4. Vladimir Titov was born on January 1, 1947, in Sretensk, in the Chita Region of Russia. He graduated from secondary school in 1965, from the Higher Air Force College in Chernigov, Ukraine in 1970, and from the Yuri Gagarin Air Force Academy in 1987. From 1970 until 1974, Titov served at the Higher Air Force College as a pilot instructor.

  5. Vladimir Titov and Scott Parazynski performed a 5 hour, 1 minute spacewalk during which they retrieved four experiments first deployed on Mir during the STS-76 docking mission, tethered the Solar Array Cap for use in a future Mir spacewalk to seal any hole found in the hull of the damaged Spektr module, and evaluated common EVA tools which may be used by astronauts wearing either Russian or American-made spacesuits.

  6. Vladimir Titov and Scott Parazynski performed a 5-hour, 1-minute spacewalk during which they retrieved four experiments first deployed on Mir during the STS-86 docking mission, tethered the Solar Array Cap for use in a future Mir spacewalk to seal any hole found in the hull of the damaged Spektr module, and evaluated common EVA tools which may be used by astronauts wearing either Russian or American-made spacesuits. Mission accomplished in 169 orbits in 10 days, 19 hours, 21 minutes.

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  8. "Vladimir Georgievich Titov" published on by null. (1947– )Russian cosmonaut. In September 1983, he survived an emergency abort when a fire consumed the launch vehicle less than a minute before launch.