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Shuttle Launch Successful
NASA ^ | 1/16/03

Posted on 01/16/2003 7:47:04 AM PST by The_Victor

Title says it all.


TOPICS: Breaking News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: columbiatragedy; feb12003; nasa; shuttle; spaceshuttle
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To: dennisw

I'm gonna cleanse the West Bank from outer space. Hehehe.
21 posted on 01/16/2003 8:42:50 AM PST by dennisw (http://www.littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/weblog.php)
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To: Thinkin' Gal
We're Jews out in space
We're zooming along
Protecting the Hebrew race

We're Jews out in space
If trouble appears
We'll put it right back in its place

When Goyim attack us
We'll give 'em a smack
We'll slap 'em right back in the the face

We're Jews out in space
We're zooming along
Protecting the Hebrew race!

22 posted on 01/16/2003 8:54:18 AM PST by Jeremiah Jr
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To: r9etb
Not only is the feat incredibly awe inspiring, they've gotten rid of Golden (clinton's butt boy) and have someone there now who will be counting EVERY dollar spent!
23 posted on 01/16/2003 8:55:40 AM PST by OldFriend
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To: dennisw

US space shuttle Columbia STS-107 Mission Specialist US (Indian born) Kalpana Chawla smiles upon her arrival on January 12 at Kennedy Space Center, Florida to begin the countdown for launch. The seven-person STS-107 research mission is scheduled to be launched on a 16-day science mission on January 16.

This might be making araby paranoid

24 posted on 01/16/2003 8:56:53 AM PST by swarthyguy (Strategery -- Surgery for a sick world.)
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To: Falcon4.0
If people would take the time to put a post into its proper frame of referrence before tossing out accusations this website would be a much more congenial place. I was responding to a picture from a Mel Brooks movie by quoting the song that accompanied the scene. The name of the song was "Jews In Space," and it was hysterical. To Jew & Gentile alike. Loosen up bub.
25 posted on 01/16/2003 8:57:09 AM PST by WaveThatFlag
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To: Larry Lucido
}Mel Brooks reference.

Thanks.

26 posted on 01/16/2003 9:09:17 AM PST by DensaMensa
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To: WaveThatFlag; Falcon4.0; DensaMensa; dennisw; Jeremiah Jr; Yehuda; Alouette
Jews in Space (MP3, worth the wait on slow dialup connections!!!)

Too bad FOX didn't play this when they covered the launch.

27 posted on 01/16/2003 9:11:57 AM PST by Thinkin' Gal
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To: The_Victor
Cool. Don't forget to go see the Newest Space Shuttle at my website. It will be bigger than the real thing. It's really cool too.


28 posted on 01/16/2003 9:16:24 AM PST by abner (www.usflagballoon.com)
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To: WaveThatFlag
}Apparently you eggheads don't have time for Mel Brooks movies.

Good work! You qualify to take the DENSA QUIZ.

29 posted on 01/16/2003 9:19:13 AM PST by DensaMensa
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To: gas_dr
I also watched it from my back yard, but in Orlando. It was beautiful and what a perfect day for it.
30 posted on 01/16/2003 9:25:54 AM PST by inflorida
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To: inflorida
Great view from the Gulf Coast too!
31 posted on 01/16/2003 9:32:41 AM PST by NautiNurse
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To: inflorida
What's the temp down there today?
32 posted on 01/16/2003 9:36:52 AM PST by WaveThatFlag
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To: Thinkin' Gal
Up, Up, and Oy Vey!
33 posted on 01/16/2003 9:38:18 AM PST by N. Theknow
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To: WaveThatFlag
Today's high is 73 but it is supposed to cool down to the 60's in the next few days.
34 posted on 01/16/2003 9:41:22 AM PST by inflorida
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To: End The Hypocrisy
Why not privatize that $600 million-per-flight waste of taxdollars?

Unfortunately, we have built this socialist framework for anything dealing with space. Some capitalism exists around the sides, but it is socialist in its heart.

The shuttle itself is a vehicle whose only real market can only be the government.

Right now, the only identifiable large-scale market for space is tourism, and it is far too speculative for anyone to throw a couple of billion dollars at the needed launcher. No launcher NASA is going to develop before the sun goes cold will be capable of servicing that market.

The original Star Wars concept would have required a launcher close to what is needed, but that died when Clinton took office.

The single most important goal of any space related enterprise right now should be a launcher with as close to airline-like operations costs and schedule as is technically possible. Right now the people with money and initiative who are dreaming of orbital hotels and the like are stymied by the fact that there is no economical way to get there.

35 posted on 01/16/2003 9:42:23 AM PST by hopespringseternal
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To: dennisw
I watched the launch.  It was soooo cool!
 

Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon gives the thumbs up sign as he boards the space shuttle Columbia at Kennedy Space
Jan. 16, 2003
Israel's first astronaut lifts off into space
By PHILIP CHIEN, SPECIAL TO THE JERUSALEM POST

Israel Air Force Col. Ilan Ramon became the first Israeli citizen to be launched into outer space, after NASA resolved several safety concerns and cleared the space shuttle Columbia for liftoff on Thursday.

Ramon, a payload specialist, is a member of the STS-107 shuttle mission scheduled for launch late Thursday. He joins six American crewmates on the 16-day marathon science mission.

NASA kept the launch time a secret until Wednesday, in keeping with post-September 11 security measures. This flight is surrounded by even more security than usual because of Ramon's presence.

Aby Har-Even, the head of the Israel Space Agency, said when he goes to dinner he is escorted by two police, not something he's used to. He said "We were quite surprised with the very strict security [at NASA]."

About 300 Israelis attended the launch, most of them guests of Ramon and the Israel Space Agency. Excellent weather is forecast.

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon spoke to Ramon on Wednesday.

"I am very proud of the first Israeli astronaut. Congratulations to you and the whole crew,"Sharon said. "I wish you well and that you enjoy yourself and all return safely."

President Moshe Katsav sent a microfiche of the Bible the size of a credit card to Ramon to carry on his journey, Beit Hanassi said Tuesday.

"I have something else that is very meaningful,"Ramon replied, "something symbolic and exciting that I'll show you from space."

"It's a great privilege to represent the State of Israel,"Ramon added. "It's a great honor for me."

Ramon said earlier that he would take Jewish symbols or ritual objects with him that correspond to the timing of his particular mission.

"I'm going to carry special things and try to express something about the unity of the Israeli people and the Jewish community. I have some ideas,"Ramon said, "but for the time being, I will keep them deep inside of me. It will be a surprise."

One of the items Ramon is carrying into space is a pencil drawing entitled "Moon Landscape." Created by a 14-year-old boy named Peter Ginz, it shows how Earth might look if you were on the Moon and looking back at our home world. What makes the drawing so important to Ramon is that it was created while Ginz was in a Nazi concentration camp, before the boy died in 1944.

Ramon, 48, is the son of Holocaust survivors.

"I know my flight is very symbolic for the people of Israel, especially the survivors, the Holocaust survivors,"said Ramon. "Because I was born in Israel, many people will see this as a dream that is come true."

Labor Party chairman Amram Mitzna sent Ramon a letter on Monday in which he predicted that the astronaut would return to a different Israel and a different government.

"Two weeks after you blast off on what will be a decisive day for the State of Israel, we in Israel will try to do a similar thing: to blast off to a new future in which we will be able to invest in education, in science, in order to better use Israel's most precious natural resource, our quality human resources and brain power,"he wrote.

Ramon will be in space during the January 28 election and was sent an absentee ballot, but he does not intend to vote.

Although Jewish astronauts had flown in space before, most notably Judy Resnik, who was lost in the 1986 Challenger disaster, Ramon's queries caught the space agency a little off guard, but officials were able to handle the requests.

"As an Israeli and as a Jew I asked NASA if it would be possible to supply kosher food for my menu in space,"Ramon said. "I was surprised and overwhelmed with the effort NASA put in trying to accommodate my request."

"I'm sure it's going to be a very special experience,"said Ramon, who flew in the YomKippur War and has logged more than 3,000 hours in various jet aircraft and another 1,000 hours in F-16 jets alone.

Also on board will be fire, crystal, and vibration experiments. A variety of animals will be flying, rats, spiders, bees, silkworms, ants, as well as other biological specimens.

Once in space, work on the 86 payloads supporting 79 science experiments will be done around-the-clock with the crew splitting into two shifts. Ramon will serve on the red team with mission commander Rick Husband and mission specialists Kalpana Chawla and Laurel Clark.

Unlike space station missions which have to launch within a very narrow window of time to link up with the station, the STS-107 mission's launch window is constrained by lighting for the Israeli sponsored Mediterranean Israeli Dust Experiment (MEIDEX) which will monitor desert dust in the atmosphere. Engineers timed the launch window to ensure adequate lighting over the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean off Africa.

"Since I'm a pilot, when you get into a fighter you anticipate how you feel when you pull some acceleration,"Ramon said.

"Here it's the contrary, I'm anticipating how does it feel to float. The next thing I would look for, the first opportunity [to look out the window] for me would be to look for dust storms in order to have mission success for MEIDEX, as well as looking through the window and seeing Israel and Jerusalem from space."

NASA gave the final clearance for the shuttle on Wednesday after a small crack was found on a stainless steel ball, about the size of the tennis ball, on another shuttle. The ball permits propellant lines to vibrate back and forth without breaking during launch. NASA reviewed paperwork and put a test ball through the stresses equivalent to 140 shuttle flights to assure that even if one of the balls on Columbia was damaged during launch, it would not harm the mission.

When Ramon was selected as an astronaut in 1997, he was told that he could fly in two years. But NASA had to find a suitable mission for MEIDEX's science requirements. The crew was officially announced in 2000 for a planned June 2001 launch date. But a variety of different technical problems, management decisions, and higher priority flights resulted in a total of 18 delays.

"I have a lot of patience and to be with these magnificent crew members is a pleasure,"Ramon said. "I don't want to be delayed again, but I'm sure we'll have a wonderful time together as we have in the last two and a half years of training."

In contrast with his intense training, the past days have been a time for Ramon and his crewmates to relax. A week before launch, they entered isolation and only came in contact with people who had been medically cleared. They were allowed to see their spouses, and the day before launch they went flying in high performance aircraft.

Ramon was born June 20,1954 in Tel Aviv. He and his wife Rona have four children.
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36 posted on 01/16/2003 9:42:55 AM PST by Catspaw
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To: dennisw
"First Israeli in space"

And he is carrying this picture aboard:

:

Holocaust-era Art from Yad Vashem’s Collection to be sent into Space with Israeli Astronaut

Israel’s first-ever astronaut, Colonel Ilan Ramon, is to be launched into space on January 16, 2003 with Holocaust-era art from Yad Vashem’s Art Museum.

Ilan Ramon, a colonel in the Israeli Air Force, contacted Yad Vashem requesting a Holocaust related item to take with him on his launch into space on the shuttle Columbia, due to the significance of the Holocaust to him as a Jew and as an Israeli. On a personal level, the Holocaust is even more meaningful to Ramon as his mother is an Auschwitz survivor, and his grandfather and other members of his family perished in the death camps.

Yad Vashem chose “Moon Landscape”, created by Petr Ginz, a 14-year-old Jewish boy, during his incarceration in the Theresienstadt ghetto. Petr Ginz was multi-talented and had, at a young age, already written stories, articles and poetry, and continued to do so after being sent to the ghetto in 1942. During his incarceration Ginz traveled to places near and far within the depths of his imagination, and with great longing, he visited Prague, the city of his birth, in a poem written from behind the ghetto walls. In 1944 Ginz was killed in Auschwitz.

Full story here.

37 posted on 01/16/2003 9:50:41 AM PST by No Truce With Kings
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To: hopespringseternal; Centurion2000; The_Victor
>>>The single most important goal of any space related enterprise right now should be a launcher with as close to airline-like operations costs and schedule as is technically possible. Right now the people with money and initiative who are dreaming of orbital hotels and the like are stymied by the fact that there is no economical way to get there.<<<


NASA got into the central planning approach to bringing about such a replacement, and with the predictable results of cost overruns and an overall lack of success (as the X-33 demonstrated). What NASA is being prodded into (reluctantly) doing now is simply offering a competitive prize for private industry to do it (and beyond the mere bloated contractors of Boeing & Lockheed too):


http://www.spaceprojects.com/prizes
38 posted on 01/16/2003 9:55:47 AM PST by End The Hypocrisy
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To: dennisw; richardtavor
First Jew in space!

Was it Judith Resnick?

39 posted on 01/16/2003 10:51:51 AM PST by onedoug
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To: swarthyguy
DOES this not look like a photo of the Israeli and Indian astronauts?

.

FILE--STS-107 Payload Specialist Ilan Ramon, of Tel Aviv, Israel, smiles as he takes part in a pre-launch press conference Dec. 20, 2002 at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Ramon, Israel's first astronaut, will be taking along kosher food and observing the Sabbath during the 16-day science mission. Columbia and her crew of seven are scheduled to liftoff Thursday morning Jan. 16, 2003. (AP Photo/File, Peter Cosgrove)
Wed Jan 15,10:18 AM ET

FILE--STS-107 Payload Specialist Ilan Ramon, of Tel Aviv, Israel, smiles as he takes part in a pre-launch press conference Dec. 20, 2002 at the Kennedy Space Center (news - web sites) in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Ramon, Israel's first astronaut, will be taking along kosher food and observing the Sabbath during the 16-day science mission. Columbia and her crew of seven are scheduled to liftoff Thursday morning Jan. 16, 2003. (AP Photo/File, Peter Cosgrove)

40 posted on 01/16/2003 10:54:29 AM PST by dennisw (http://www.littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/weblog.php)
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