Blue Gemini Americans know NASA's Gemini program as a followup to the Mercury manned orbital missions. Few know about a shadow effort, Blue Gemini, that sought to recruit NASA technology and astronauts to fly military missions. At first, NASA warmed to the idea of sharing launch costs in exchange for allowing Air Force officers to fly as copilots. Documents suggest the military had offered NASA as much as $100 million. But as senior officers began laying out the details of their proposed operations, administrators of the civilian agency became less and less enamored with the idea of using astronauts as high-flying military observers. As with the proposed Operation BRAVO attack on China's nuclear weapons plant, State Department reservations would eventually quash the plans to militarize NASA's manned space flight. Blue Gemini would never fly. Doomsday Hotel Beginning in the 1970s, curious tales began to emerge from Washington, D.C., about a "doomsday hotel." Located near the nation's capital, it was said to be the ultimate fallout shelter. But only for the well-connected. In congressional testimony, military officials acknowledged the shelter-called Mount Weather?existed, but refused to disclose its whereabouts, lest it be targeted by a Soviet ICBM. With everyone's ICBMs now targeted at the open sea, the location of Mount Weather (right) has been revealed to be in Berryville, Virginia, about 75 miles from Washington. Today it houses the computer and phone-system hubs for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. In 1995, the existence of a second doomsday hotel, located beneath the Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, was revealed. It is now open to group tours. |