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Bush to announce new missions to moon
Posted 1/8/2004 8:43 PM PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — President Bush will announce plans next week to send Americans to Mars and back to the moon and to establish a long-term human presence on the moon, senior administration officials said Thursday night. Bush doesn't plan to send Americans to Mars anytime soon; rather, he envisions preparing for the mission more than a decade from now, one official said. The president also wants to build a permanent space station on the moon. The initiatives are part of a broad, new commitment to manned space flight, three officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. They said Bush wants to aggressively reinvigorate the space program, which has been demoralized by a series of setbacks, including the space shuttle disaster last February that killed seven astronauts. The officials said Bush's announcement would come in the middle of next week. Bush has been expected to announce a major space initiative, and some thought he do so at the 100th-anniversary celebration of the Wright brother's first flight last month in North Carolina. Instead, he only pledged the United States would continue to lead the world in aviation. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, has called for an expansion of the U.S. space program, including a return to the moon. McClellan spoke with reporters accompanying Bush on a trip to Tennessee and Florida. http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/...ush-moon_x.htm |
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In article ,
Rusty Barton wrote: PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — President Bush will announce plans next week to send Americans to Mars and back to the moon and to establish a long-term human presence on the moon, senior administration officials said Thursday night. Which "senior administration officials" are these, exactly? The same ones who said he'd make an announcement at Kitty Hawk, and then a week later denied that any such announcement was ever under consideration? The initiatives are part of a broad, new commitment to manned space flight, three officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Oh. Yes, *those* officials. ,------------------------------------------------------------------. | Joseph J. Strout Check out the Mac Web Directory: | | http://www.macwebdir.com | `------------------------------------------------------------------' |
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In article ,
Rusty Barton wrote: Bush to announce new missions to moon Posted 1/8/2004 8:43 PM PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — President Bush will announce plans next week to send Americans to Mars and back to the moon and to establish a long-term human presence on the moon, senior administration officials said Thursday night. Bush doesn't plan to send Americans to Mars anytime soon; rather, he envisions preparing for the mission more than a decade from now, one official said. The president also wants to build a permanent space station on the moon. The initiatives are part of a broad, new commitment to manned space flight, three officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity. They said Bush wants to aggressively reinvigorate the space program, which has been demoralized by a series of setbacks, including the space shuttle disaster last February that killed seven astronauts. The officials said Bush's announcement would come in the middle of next week. Bush has been expected to announce a major space initiative, and some thought he do so at the 100th-anniversary celebration of the Wright brother's first flight last month in North Carolina. Instead, he only pledged the United States would continue to lead the world in aviation. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, has called for an expansion of the U.S. space program, including a return to the moon. McClellan spoke with reporters accompanying Bush on a trip to Tennessee and Florida. Judging from the fine print, I'm not sure everyone will be happy: "Sources said Bush will direct NASA to scale back or scrap all existing programs that do not support the new effort." --http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040107-123930-1532r I note the word "all". Would that be including unmanned programs, both mooted and/or inflight (eg JIMO, Cassini etc), as well as manned ones? -- Stephen Souter http://www.edfac.usyd.edu.au/staff/souters/ |
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"Rusty Barton" wrote in message
... Bush to announce new missions to moon Posted 1/8/2004 8:43 PM PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) - President Bush will announce plans next week to send Americans to Mars and back to the moon and to establish a long-term human presence on the moon, senior administration officials said Thursday night. Bush doesn't plan to send Americans to Mars anytime soon; rather, he envisions preparing for the mission more than a decade from now, one official said. The president also wants to build a permanent space station on the moon. If a lunar space station precedes a manned Mars mission, then the Mars mission won't occur until many years after Bush leaves office. He can talk about a Mars mission, but it will be just talk that has no real meaning. |
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Mike Rhino wrote:
If a lunar space station precedes a manned Mars mission, then the Mars mission won't occur until many years after Bush leaves office. A crash mission to Mars wouldn't come to fruition in any conceivable Bush administration. At best he has 5 years left; ain't getting there in that length of time. -- Scott Lowther, Engineer Remove the obvious (capitalized) anti-spam gibberish from the reply-to e-mail address |
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![]() "Scott Lowther" wrote in message ... Mike Rhino wrote: If a lunar space station precedes a manned Mars mission, then the Mars mission won't occur until many years after Bush leaves office. A crash mission to Mars wouldn't come to fruition in any conceivable Bush administration. At best he has 5 years left; ain't getting there in that length of time. But does he have a son? |
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Stephen Souter wrote:
Judging from the fine print, I'm not sure everyone will be happy: "Sources said Bush will direct NASA to scale back or scrap all existing programs that do not support the new effort." --http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040107-123930-1532r I note the word "all". Would that be including unmanned programs, both mooted and/or inflight (eg JIMO, Cassini etc), as well as manned ones? My reading of other on-line news reports indicate that the "all" refers to the science programs for the space station. I would think most of the unmanned efforts - certainly the Mars probes, the space telescopes, the Discovery missions - would continue, but would they cut the more expensive deep space missions such as Pluto Express or to Mercury or Jupiter? I hope not, but we shall see. The next several weeks will be interesting. Alan Figgatt |
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"Neil Gerace" wrote in
u: "Scott Lowther" wrote in message ... Mike Rhino wrote: If a lunar space station precedes a manned Mars mission, then the Mars mission won't occur until many years after Bush leaves office. A crash mission to Mars wouldn't come to fruition in any conceivable Bush administration. At best he has 5 years left; ain't getting there in that length of time. But does he have a son? Two daughters, both too young to run. But he has two brothers, one (Jeb) in politics (governor of Florida), and Jeb has at least one son. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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Alan Figgatt wrote:
My reading of other on-line news reports indicate that the "all" refers to the science programs for the space station. I would think most of the unmanned efforts - certainly the Mars probes, the space telescopes, the Discovery missions - would continue, but would they cut the more expensive deep space missions such as Pluto Express or to Mercury or Jupiter? I'd hope not... but then, I'd gladly trade a robotic camera to the great beyond for giving mankind a real future in space again... -- Scott Lowther, Engineer Remove the obvious (capitalized) anti-spam gibberish from the reply-to e-mail address |
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![]() "Alan Figgatt" wrote in message ... Stephen Souter wrote: Judging from the fine print, I'm not sure everyone will be happy: "Sources said Bush will direct NASA to scale back or scrap all existing programs that do not support the new effort." --http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040107-123930-1532r I note the word "all". Would that be including unmanned programs, both mooted and/or inflight (eg JIMO, Cassini etc), as well as manned ones? My reading of other on-line news reports indicate that the "all" refers to the science programs for the space station. I would think most of the unmanned efforts - certainly the Mars probes, the space telescopes, the Discovery missions - would continue, but would they cut the more expensive deep space missions such as Pluto Express or to Mercury or Jupiter? I hope not, but we shall see. I would hate to see Pluto Express get scrapped. I would like to see a close-up snapshot of Pluto in my lifetime. |
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