Lousma was one of the 19 astronauts selected in
NASA Astronaut Group 5 in April 1966. He served as a member of the astronaut support crews for the
Apollo 9,
10, and
13 missions. He was the pilot for Skylab-3 from July 28 to September 25, 1973, and was commander on STS-3, from March 22 until March 30, 1982, logging a total of over 1,619 hours in space. Lousma also spent 11 hours on two
spacewalks outside the Skylab space station. He served as backup docking module pilot of the United States flight crew for the
Apollo-Soyuz Test Project mission, which was completed successfully in July 1975.
STS-3 Lousma was originally selected as the pilot of the two-man crew of
STS-2, alongside commander
Fred Haise. This was a planned mission scheduled to launch in mid-1979, which was intended to use the
Teleoperator Retrieval System to boost the orbit of Skylab, to allow for the space station's potential further use. This mission was eventually scrubbed, owing to the delays in getting the Shuttle system ready for flight. As a result, following Haise's decision to leave NASA, Lousma was named as commander of STS-3. STS-3, the third orbital test flight of Space Shuttle
Columbia, launched from the
Kennedy Space Center,
Florida, on March 22, 1982, into a circular orbit above the Earth. Lousma was the spacecraft commander and
C. Gordon Fullerton was the pilot on this eight-day mission. Major flight test objectives included exposing
Columbia to extremes in thermal stress and the first use of the
Remote Manipulator System (RMS) to grapple and maneuver a
Payload in space. The crew also operated several scientific experiments in the orbiter's cabin and on the OSS-1 pallet in the payload bay.
Columbia responded favorably to the thermal tests and was found to be better than expected as a scientific platform. The crew accomplished almost all the mission objectives assigned, and after a one-day delay due to bad weather, landed on the lake bed at
White Sands, New Mexico, on March 30, 1982, the only shuttle flight to land there.
Columbia traveled during 129.9 orbits and mission duration was 192 hours, 4 minutes, 49 seconds. Lousma left NASA on October 1, 1983, and retired from the Marine Corps on November 1, 1983. == Political experience ==