WiNaDeYo
05-05-2009, 11:08 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/30/AR2009043003118.html
NASA aims for May 11 launch of Hubble mission
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- NASA has chosen May 11 as the launch date for its last repair mission to the Hubble Space Telescope, not seen up close for seven years.
Space shuttle Atlantis is set to blast off then on the highly awaited 11-day flight, considered one of the most challenging yet.
Senior managers met Thursday at the Kennedy Space Center and concluded that the shuttle and Hubble teams could meet a launch date that was one day earlier than planned. Liftoff had been targeted for May 12, but NASA wanted an extra day to get off the ground before a weeklong military operation gets under way May 14.
Atlantis' crew will conduct five spacewalks to replace and repair science instruments at Hubble, and install new equipment that should keep the orbiting telescope running for another five to 10 years.
The mission had been scheduled for last fall, but a breakdown at the telescope delayed everything for seven months. ...
But...
http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/tre54000i-us-space-shuttle-layoffs/
NASA to begin layoffs as shuttle retirement nears
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida, Apr. 30, 2009 (Reuters) The U.S. space agency NASA plans to eliminate 900 manufacturing jobs over the next five months as it prepares to retire its space shuttle fleet in 2010, NASA officials said on Thursday.
The first 160 layoff notices go out on Friday, primarily to contractors producing the space shuttle fuel tanks outside New Orleans and the shuttle solid rocket boosters in Utah...
And Yet...
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124104302283670451.html
Budget Authorizes $2.5 Billion for NASA Shuttle Fleet
House and Senate leaders have agreed to authorize $2.5 billion to keep the U.S. space shuttle fleet flying through 2011, if such an extension is necessary to complete currently planned missions to the international space station.
But then again...
http://www.wesh.com/news/19331679/detail.html
Old Mission Control To Be Demolished
It was the mission control that watched over the launches of Alan Shepard and John Glenn.
Glenn's mission appeared doomed. But behind the consoles at mission control, flight controllers found a way to save the astronauts.
The building is now an old shell; its glory faded to darkness...
But NASA has made the decision, and after years of efforts to save the building, it now must go.
"In certain areas, it's beginning to slowly cave in, and with that leaking, of course, there's mold," NASA representative Brian Graf said.
"It takes a lot of money to do that, and we didn't have the funds at the time," NASA historian Barbara Naylor said...
Peace and Good Will!
NASA aims for May 11 launch of Hubble mission
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- NASA has chosen May 11 as the launch date for its last repair mission to the Hubble Space Telescope, not seen up close for seven years.
Space shuttle Atlantis is set to blast off then on the highly awaited 11-day flight, considered one of the most challenging yet.
Senior managers met Thursday at the Kennedy Space Center and concluded that the shuttle and Hubble teams could meet a launch date that was one day earlier than planned. Liftoff had been targeted for May 12, but NASA wanted an extra day to get off the ground before a weeklong military operation gets under way May 14.
Atlantis' crew will conduct five spacewalks to replace and repair science instruments at Hubble, and install new equipment that should keep the orbiting telescope running for another five to 10 years.
The mission had been scheduled for last fall, but a breakdown at the telescope delayed everything for seven months. ...
But...
http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/tre54000i-us-space-shuttle-layoffs/
NASA to begin layoffs as shuttle retirement nears
CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida, Apr. 30, 2009 (Reuters) The U.S. space agency NASA plans to eliminate 900 manufacturing jobs over the next five months as it prepares to retire its space shuttle fleet in 2010, NASA officials said on Thursday.
The first 160 layoff notices go out on Friday, primarily to contractors producing the space shuttle fuel tanks outside New Orleans and the shuttle solid rocket boosters in Utah...
And Yet...
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124104302283670451.html
Budget Authorizes $2.5 Billion for NASA Shuttle Fleet
House and Senate leaders have agreed to authorize $2.5 billion to keep the U.S. space shuttle fleet flying through 2011, if such an extension is necessary to complete currently planned missions to the international space station.
But then again...
http://www.wesh.com/news/19331679/detail.html
Old Mission Control To Be Demolished
It was the mission control that watched over the launches of Alan Shepard and John Glenn.
Glenn's mission appeared doomed. But behind the consoles at mission control, flight controllers found a way to save the astronauts.
The building is now an old shell; its glory faded to darkness...
But NASA has made the decision, and after years of efforts to save the building, it now must go.
"In certain areas, it's beginning to slowly cave in, and with that leaking, of course, there's mold," NASA representative Brian Graf said.
"It takes a lot of money to do that, and we didn't have the funds at the time," NASA historian Barbara Naylor said...
Peace and Good Will!