![]() The other cadets carried a Zambian flag and a staff in the shape of “a crested eagle on a dinner plate atop a sawn-off broomstick.” Nkoloso said he had been inspired by his first airplane flight. Nkoloso’s dog, Cyclops, was to follow in the paw prints of Russian “muttnik” Laika. Matha Mwamba, sixteen, was headed for Mars. (They were quick to explain that these were not space suits: “No, we are the Dynamite Rock Music Group when we are not space cadets.”) Godfrey Mwango, at twenty-one, had been tasked with the moon landing. His astronauts sometimes wore green satin jackets with yellow trousers. Nkoloso wore a standard-issue combat helmet, a khaki military uniform, and a flowing cape-multicolored silk or heliotrope velvet, with an embroidered neck and festooned with medals. “But I’ll be laughing the day I plant Zambia’s flag on the moon.” “Some people think I’m crazy,” Nkoloso told a reporter for the Associated Press. Others wondered if it was “a semiserious space program” or “a useful publicity stunt.” Their interviews with Nkoloso did little to clarify whether his space program was serious, silly, or a sendup. “We do not know whether to take the announcement of this news from Lusaka seriously, or whether to conclude that Zambia somehow has been victimized by a Madison Avenue type,” one confessed. Time’ s whimsical footnote prompted a flurry of interest from foreign reporters. Already Nkoloso is training twelve Zambian astronauts, including a curvaceous 16-year-old girl, by spinning them around a tree in an oil drum and teaching them to walk on their hands, “the only way humans can walk on the moon.” He is Edward Mukuka Nkoloso, a grade-school science teacher and the director of Zambia’s National Academy of Science, Space Research and Philosophy, who claimed the goings-on interfered with his space program to beat the U.S. One noted Zambian failed to share in all the harmony. ![]()
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