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I have to give a "persuasive" presentation on why it is impoprtant to
support the space program despite the various dumb mistakes, tradgedies, and other mishaps. Does anyone know of a place where I can find a complete listing of all STS missions since day one?? I have dug around all over NASA's site, and had little luck. the closest thing I have found is a year by year breakdown. I would like an entire list. And as if that weren't enough, I would also like to know exactly how many STS missions there are total. though, I suppose that could be gathered from the complete list... Anyway, any help would be appreciated.... thanks, -- ------------------------------------------- Sean G. Who is neither nasty, tricksy, nor false! |
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"Sean G." wrote:
Does anyone know of a place where I can find a complete listing of all STS missions since day one?? Sean -- I have what you're looking for on my website. Specifically: http://space.balettie.com/ShuttleHistory.html Each flight also has a link to a NASA PAO page with more info. Roger -- Roger Balettie former Flight Dynamics Officer Space Shuttle Mission Control http://www.balettie.com/ |
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On Tue, 15 Jul 2003 21:41:05 -0500, "Sean G."
wrote: I have to give a "persuasive" presentation on why it is impoprtant to support the space program despite the various dumb mistakes, tradgedies, and other mishaps. ....Use my favorite one: if you're against space exploration, you're an anti-American Godless heathen communist ******* deserving of a painful death followed by hanging your carcass from a tree to provide food for the buzzards. Oh, and you'll go to Hell for denouncing NASA, too. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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![]() "Lefty Skywalker" wrote in message ... Sean G. wrote: I have to give a "persuasive" presentation on why it is impoprtant to support the space program despite the various dumb mistakes, tradgedies, and other mishaps. Does anyone know of a place where I can find a complete listing of all STS missions since day one?? I have dug around all over NASA's site, and had little luck. the closest thing I have found is a year by year breakdown. I would like an entire list. And as if that weren't enough, I would also like to know exactly how many STS missions there are total. though, I suppose that could be gathered from the complete list... Anyway, any help would be appreciated.... Hey, this sounds like something to discuss! 1. Why go to space? a. "Because it's there." It's big and interesting and there's lots of stuff out there we don't know a thing about. a. Space contains vast quantities of resources, especially metals and sunshine. 2. Why send people to space? a. People can do things robots can't, from mechanical, cognitive, and political perspectives. Perhaps most interestingly, people can claim territory - especially if launched from a nation that hasn't signed any of those silly 1960s treaties. b. There's no lightspeed delay to the robot when you're actually on Mars. Hence, no silly boulder-collision incidents, an opportunity to catch kilos-to-pounds conversion mistakes, etc. c. Space is interesting. If you can walk outside on Titan with a heated parka and a breather, isn't that worth doing? (And if you can also strap on a set of wings and fly, well hell!) If there's life on Europa or Ganymede, shouldn't a person be there to see it first? 3. Is NASA the right way to do it? (Cover your eyes, Bill.) a. NASA was subverted out of NACA to do the moon shots. They've been dicking around in LEO ever since. b. NASA's shuttle program is an abject failure, at least compared to what they said they were going to do. c. Every attempt to replace the shuttle gets canceled a few years after it starts. Meanwhile, the three remaining airworthy shuttles are nineteen, eighteen, and eleven years old, respectively. They are textbook hangar queens, going a year between flights. d. NASA wasted nearly a decade and billions of dollars on "Faster, Cheaper, Better", which resulted in the loss of Mars Observer, Mars Climate Orbiter, Mars Polar Lander and Deep Space 2, and the cancellation of missions to Europa, Pluto and the Kuiper belt. e. NASA reports to the President and is mainly a prestige toy for American politicos. Dems build it up in the wrong direction with boondoggle products, then the GOP slashes the budget and takes credit for what got done. So Nixon cancells Apollo, Reagan slashes the Shuttle, and Shrub slashes the Station f. Ah yes, the station. Built on 1970s Russian hamster-tube technology, the station is almost worthless. Due to the budget cuts by Shrub, there is zero chance of meaningful science taking place there. It's in a Russian-style orbit so the Shuttle can't lift nearly as much to it as it could to an American orbit. Columbia, which was an early, heavy iteration of the Shuttle design, couldn't make it to the Station at all with a worthwhile payload. With the Shuttle down and out, the crew is forced to rely on Russian capsules which haven't changed design since even longer than the Shuttle has been around. g. Let's not even talk about Columbia. What's happened since is far worse than the accident itself. The real outcome, however, is to showcase what a mess the Shuttle program is in the first place. -- Daniel O. Miller "The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science. Whosoever does not know it and can no longer marvel, is as good as dead, and his eyes are dimmed." - Albert Einstein WWYD? (hotmail addy is a red herring; I'm at em see aych ess aye) Suggestions for improvement then?? I think some good common sense folk in amongst the nerds at NASA would be a great help.... *dream sequence Monday AM at Kennedy, the water cooler* Bill the nerd: "I have been tasked with finding a ballpoint pen that will write in zero-grav applications, for further use in space! Isn't that exciting?!" Sean G the normal guy (slightly hung over and praying for less humidity): "Umm, yea Bill great. Will you use the millions of dollars worth of grant money to fix the masking tape on our glasses?" Bill: "No WAY, wow, that would be like, misappropriation of government fund and stuff, I could NEVER do that." Sean G: "So beer and lap dance lunches at the Pink Palace are out from now on, huh? Damn. Your turn to buy too. All because of a pen." Bill: "You know about that?!" Sean G: "I started the tradition. That and a few others around here..." Bill: "I can't wait to get to work on defying the laws of gravity that restrict use of ballpoint pens in space. I wonder how I'm going to figure the physics of the whole thing." *mind starts churning* Sean G: "Straightening your tie and getting rid of the flood pants, and pocket protector might help." Bill: "Like, wow, I wonder who will be on my R&D team? How long you think we'll have until deadline?" Sean G: "Bill, I think you should hire a Russian consultant. He could solve you problem in about thrity seconds, and we could then get back to the covert work of misappropriation we were discussing earlier." Bill(shocked): "A Ruusky?! How the hell could a Russian solve my problem that fast?! Have they figured it out? When??" Sean G: "The Russians use pencils in space, Bill." *end dream sequence* AS I understand it, something closely akin to this happened. We waste vast amounts of money overthinking simple problems, while often, the solution is basic. An example would be the metric conversion mars debacle. That is my suggestion...get some common sense folk in amongst the nerds. I bet it would work wonders. -- ------------------------------------------- Sean G. Who is neither nasty, tricksy, nor false! |
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"Sean G." wrote in
: Bill(shocked): "A Ruusky?! How the hell could a Russian solve my problem that fast?! Have they figured it out? When??" Sean G: "The Russians use pencils in space, Bill." *end dream sequence* AS I understand it, something closely akin to this happened. Nope, everything you wrote above was horse****. NASA didn't develop the "space pen". The Fisher Pen company did, using its own funds, then sold pens to NASA and the public. Pencils in micro-g are a bad idea. They shed graphite dust that can be inhaled by the crew, and can float into sensitive electronics. The Russians wised up and started using Fisher Space Pens years ago. That is my suggestion...get some common sense folk in amongst the nerds. I bet it would work wonders. This is my suggestion: study actual history instead of fiction and urban legends. -- 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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"Roger Balettie" writes:
Specifically: http://space.balettie.com/ShuttleHistory.html Just so you know, Roger's site is a good place to go for this info. He's not saying this just because it's his site. Jeff -- Remove "no" and "spam" from email address to reply. If it says "This is not spam!", it's surely a lie. |
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"jeff findley" wrote:
Just so you know, Roger's site is a good place to go for this info. He's not saying this just because it's his site. Thanks Jeff... ![]() Actually, I just made an update on the history page (http://space.balettie.com/ShuttleHistory.html)... I had the STS-98 payload mistakenly listed as "Unity", rather than "Destiny"... a cut-and-paste error! It's been corrected (thanks Julian!). Roger -- Roger Balettie former Flight Dynamics Officer Space Shuttle Mission Control http://www.balettie.com/ |
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![]() "Roger Balettie" wrote in message . .. Actually, I just made an update on the history page (http://space.balettie.com/ShuttleHistory.html)... I had the STS-98 payload mistakenly listed as "Unity", rather than "Destiny"... a cut-and-paste error! It's been corrected (thanks Julian!). Roger, Just an idea... How about adding a link to this page he http://members.aol.com/WSNTWOYOU/mainmr.htm That would make your page the handiest & most complete individual mission reference site on the Internet, I think. ![]() |
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In news:Sean G. typed:
It was half meant to be a joke. I think I realize the implications of pencil shavings floating around sensitive electronics. But that doesn't really explain the footage of astronauts playing with food then does it? My god what a catastrophe a wayward zero-g banana would cause if what's his name didn't actually catch it with his mouth that time and it whizzed past him and into the big red button or something. Oh, and yeah, microscopic graphite is REAL hazardous...better get them schoolkids using those Fisher-Price pens instead. Wrote your congressman on the hazards of microscopic graphite dust right away. You should be a little MORE uptight...really, you should. Hey rube, and what turnip truck did you just fall off of? What a maroon. -- Mike __________________________________________________ ______ "Colorado Ski Country, USA" Come often, Ski hard, Spend *lots* of money, Then leave as quickly as you can. |
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![]() "Mike Speegle" wrote in message ... In news:Sean G. typed: It was half meant to be a joke. I think I realize the implications of pencil shavings floating around sensitive electronics. But that doesn't really explain the footage of astronauts playing with food then does it? My god what a catastrophe a wayward zero-g banana would cause if what's his name didn't actually catch it with his mouth that time and it whizzed past him and into the big red button or something. Oh, and yeah, microscopic graphite is REAL hazardous...better get them schoolkids using those Fisher-Price pens instead. Wrote your congressman on the hazards of microscopic graphite dust right away. You should be a little MORE uptight...really, you should. Hey rube, and what turnip truck did you just fall off of? What a maroon. -- Mike __________________________________________________ ______ "Colorado Ski Country, USA" Come often, Ski hard, Spend *lots* of money, Then leave as quickly as you can. Rube?? That supposed to be me?? -- ------------------------------------------- Sean G. Who is neither nasty, tricksy, nor false! |
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