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UC alumnus honored for decades of work with NASA

When John McCullough was five years old, he watched astronaut Neil Armstrong's historic moon landing on television and his lifelong fascination with space was born. As a teen, he knew that aerospace engineers worked on the NASA space program, so he set out to become one. The University of Cincinnati's well-regarded aerospace engineering program was an easy choice for his college studies. He was recently honored with the Herman Schneider Distinguished Alumni Award.

"I learned a lot about people and about team building, and about finding new ways to accomplish things," he said. "You need good plans and strategies for when things don't go exactly as expected, and there's always something to learn." 

After that, he was selected as chief of the flight director office, assigning flight directors and making final decisions on whether shuttles are ready to fly. He was there for the last chapter of the storied U.S. Space Shuttle Program, overseeing the final 13 shuttle missions. 

McCullough has held various positions in his time at NASA including seven years as the Orion Vehicle Integration Manager, enabling early test flights and the Artemis I Mission, as well as serving as the Director for Exploration at the Johnson Space Center for four years. For the last couple of years, he has served as the Deputy Associate Administrator at Headquarters for Integration of Exploration Development, working to get us back to the moon. 

Early in his career as a flight director, McCullough also played a major role in the creation of the mission control room the space station team still uses today. Years ago, he recognized that the team, with international partners and collaborators, was quickly outgrowing one of the smaller control rooms. He made a pitch to renovate a decommissioned room for this purpose, got approval, and completed it in six months.

"There's history there," he said. "It was the first room we flew Gemini missions out of in 1965 and we made sure that people understand when they come into that room, they're part of history, they're part of carrying that torch forward." 

He touts his experience and preparation at UC for playing a critical role in getting him where he is today. Because of his co-op relationships and experiences, as well as the ability to focus his education on space and orbital mechanics, McCullough was able to get his foot in the door at NASA early on and has spent his entire career there, making significant contributions to the history of U.S. space exploration. 

"I wouldn't be where I am today without my UC education. UC and the co-op program set me up with critical knowledge, exposure, and experience, developing relationships, an understanding of what it takes to work in the space program, the opportunity to ask questions, and to build a reputation for myself," McCullough said.

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