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Craig Fink wrote:
stmx3 wrote: Craig Fink wrote: Hallerb wrote: Barbara Morgan on NBC tonight. She still want's to go, even after an accident and a disaster. The big difference between then and now, she knows what buttons to push now, instead of what buttons not to push. Bad idea if theres another accident. NASA is flying a research vehicle not a operational vehicle. Worst idea, what if there is another accident and she hasn't flown yet. It would really reflect badly on our society. As the song goes, "the land of the free and the home of the brave." But *why*? Why do you think she should fly? I'd really like to see what her lessons are like, what kind of demonstrations she has and what the interaction with students on the ground is like. It has great potential, and it'll be interesting to see how it turns out. Is it because NASA has dangled a potential flight in front of her for so long? No, more because of her quite persistence all these years. To close the circle left open from the loss of Christa McAuliffe? Very much so, I've alway felt she should have flown on STS-26, or at least been offer a position on the crew. To show that teachers belong in space? That too, and really anyone else who want to have the experience. To open doors? Yes... All of the above? I agree with you, that it should be treated as a research vehicle, but Barbara Morgan knows this and is still willing to fly on it. If she is brave enough to fly, she should be free to do so. Barabra Morgan in 2004!!!! Craig Fink It was your posts about Barbara Morgan that led me to start the "Relevance of the Educator Astronaut" thread. Unfortunately, it degenerated (and I'm partially to blame) into something else. I don't like the "classroom in space" image you portray, although I know she'll have her plate full with other things. And I would like to think that sending a teacher to space would open doors for other professions. I've listed pros and cons elsewhere and had relatively few comments. Personally, I'm still on the fence, but I do have one foot on the opposing side from you (expensive, needlessly risky, questionable benefit, etc.) But, I appreciate your enthusiasm, your campaign manager style, and all those exclamation marks!(!!) |
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In article , stmx3 wrote:
But *why*? Why do you think she should fly? Is it because NASA has dangled a potential flight in front of her for so long? To close the circle left open from the loss of Christa McAuliffe? To show that teachers belong in space? To open doors? Alternately, because she's - to the best of my knowledge - a perfectly competent, experienced and qualified member of the astronaut pool who was assigned to STS-118 before anything happened with Columbia. Admittedly, she got into the astronaut corps through an unusual recruitment program, but I honstly fail to see how that's relevant to put her on a different flight to the one she's been training for, because someone has a bright idea that there might be PR value in it, or that someone nebulously "should" be on this flight or that. [Crew assignments have been shuffled a bit since I last checked, though, so she might not be flying exactly then. But the point still stands...] -- -Andrew Gray |
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On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 20:49:31 -0500, "Jorge R. Frank"
wrote: Not going to happen in 2004. Barbara's still on 118. The new 114 crewmembers have been named, and Barbara isn't one of them. NASA must be keeping the news to itself. I've seen nothing about the new STS-114 (or STS-121) crews in the usual Space news sites this week. Brian |
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Brian Thorn wrote in
: On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 20:49:31 -0500, "Jorge R. Frank" wrote: Not going to happen in 2004. Barbara's still on 118. The new 114 crewmembers have been named, and Barbara isn't one of them. NASA must be keeping the news to itself. I've seen nothing about the new STS-114 (or STS-121) crews in the usual Space news sites this week. NASA hasn't announced it yet. Oberg posted a link to the names yesterday on Alan Boyle's blog: http://www.msnbc.com/news/750150.asp?0dm=T29BT -- 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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Andrew Gray wrote in
: In article , stmx3 wrote: But *why*? Why do you think she should fly? Is it because NASA has dangled a potential flight in front of her for so long? To close the circle left open from the loss of Christa McAuliffe? To show that teachers belong in space? To open doors? Alternately, because she's - to the best of my knowledge - a perfectly competent, experienced and qualified member of the astronaut pool who was assigned to STS-118 before anything happened with Columbia. Admittedly, she got into the astronaut corps through an unusual recruitment program, but I honstly fail to see how that's relevant to put her on a different flight to the one she's been training for, because someone has a bright idea that there might be PR value in it, or that someone nebulously "should" be on this flight or that. [Crew assignments have been shuffled a bit since I last checked, though, so she might not be flying exactly then. But the point still stands...] Right. In particular, a combination of factors (HST flight moving earlier in the manifest, installation of 3-string GPS on OV-105 pushing back Endeavour's return-to-flight) could result in the need to move the ISS crew rotation currently scheduled for 119/15A up to 118/13A.1. In that case, the three ISS crewmembers would bump the two non-EVA MSes on 118 (Nowak and Morgan) to 119. -- 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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On 23 Oct 2003 23:48:35 GMT, "Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
Andrew Gray wrote in : [Crew assignments have been shuffled a bit since I last checked, though, so she might not be flying exactly then. But the point still stands...] Right. In particular, a combination of factors (HST flight moving earlier in the manifest, installation of 3-string GPS on OV-105 pushing back Endeavour's return-to-flight) could result in the need to move the ISS crew rotation currently scheduled for 119/15A up to 118/13A.1. In that case, the three ISS crewmembers would bump the two non-EVA MSes on 118 (Nowak and Morgan) to 119. Not only that, but 3/4 of the crew that was announced for STS-121 (Lindsey, M. Kelley, and Noriega) had previously been assigned to STS-119: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/archives/sts-119/ Nobody has mentioned that Gernhardt was left off the reassigned crew. Based on historical precedent, it is in all likelihood due to his familiarity with the EVA procedures for the S6 array install on 15A. The EV MSs are often assigned way ahead of the other orbiter crewmembers so they can get early EVA training. When we see a new STS-119 crew, Gernhardt will be on it along with a new CDR, PLT, MS, and Expedition crew. -- Michael R. Grabois # http://chili.cjb.net # http://wizardimps.blogspot.com "People say losing builds character. That's the stupidest thing I ever heard. All losing does is suck. " -- Charles Barkley, 9/29/96 |
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