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Old May 10th 06, 08:49 PM posted to sci.space.history
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Default News: The Starry-eyed lineup for Virgin Galactic's visionary space trips

Countdown to liftoff inches closer
The starry-eyed lineup for Virgin Galactic's visionary space trips

http://www.dailynews.com/antelopevalley/ci_3796208

Article Launched: 05/08/2006 12:00:00 AM PDT

BY JIM SKEEN, Staff Writer - Los Angeles Daily News

When a Virgin Galactic rocket plane zooms into space from Mojave
Airport, among its first passengers will be rich British marketing whiz
Trevor Beattie.

Beattie, who has worked on ad campaigns for clients ranging from
Victoria's Secret to British Prime Minister Tony Blair's Labour Party,
has already put up $200,000 for a ride on the rocket plane now being
built in secret in Mojave.

"When I was a kid, I wanted to be Buzz Aldrin," Beattie said. "Now I'm
a fully grown adult, with a company and being forced to conform - and I
still want to be Buzz Aldrin."

British tycoon Sir Richard Branson is partnering with maverick
aerospace designer Burt Rutan to build the spaceliner, which will use
technologies proven in the suborbital spaceflights of Rutan's
SpaceShipOne rocket plane in 2004 from Mojave Airport.

The first flights are planned out of Mojave: The company had initially
planned for operations in 2008, but it is not talking about timelines.

"I'm not going to tell you when we are operating," said Alex Tai, the
company's vice president of operations. "It's coming to a spaceport
near you soon."

Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo will carry between six and nine people
in a cabin large enough to allow them to float in weightlessness and
equipped with numerous windows, but officials are saying little more
about it.

The spacecraft is also expected to fly higher than 90 miles up, well
over the 67-mile mark set by SpaceShipOne and high enough for the blue
sky to turn into the black of space and to see the curvature of Earth
for thousands of miles.

"We want you to have the ability to float up to the nearest window and
enjoy the view," Tai said.

In discussions with Rutan, Virgin Galactic officials said they asked
him to make the spacecraft safe and to maximize the experience for
their passengers. They said they told Rutan to take as long as he needs
to achieve those goals.

"We are going to go ahead and let Burt do it the way he knows best,"
Tai said, speaking last week in Los Angeles at the International Space
Development Conference.

The company has hired a chief medical officer and is drawing up medical
guidelines for its passengers.

The company is planning to make sure its passengers experience G-forces
and weightlessness, and spin them on a centrifuge through special
aircraft flights prior to their actual spaceflight. The goal is to
protect the passengers from sensory overload and allow them to fully
enjoy the experience of space.

"It's not a 4-minute experience, it's a 3-day experience," Tai said.

For the experience, passengers will pay $200,000 each. Despite the
hefty price tag, the company has set up a group called the Virgin
Galactic Founders that features 100 people who have already paid
upfront for the right to be among the first passengers, said Stephen
Attenborough, head of astronaut relations for the company.

Besides Beattie, the group includes a couple that plans to honeymoon on
a spaceflight and actress Victoric Principal, whom Attenborough said
has been a wonderful ambassador for the company in attracting female
passengers.

"She's showing that space travel is not just for the boys,"
Attenborough said.

Beattie said one of the key attractions for him was the involvement of
Rutan. Beattie said he believes Rutan will make a safe spacecraft that
will provide a great ride.

"I'm an evangelist for this because I totally believe," Beattie said.

To accommodate Virgin Galactic's initial operations, the Mojave
Airport, with the aid of state Sen. Roy Ashburn, R-Bakersfield, is
seeking an $11 million state loan to build a hangar and passenger
terminal.

Virgin Galactic has announced that it plans eventually to move its
space flights to a spaceport being developed by the state of New
Mexico.

james.skeen@dailynews