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SHUTTLE NEWS
Endeavour to reach LA home in late 2012
by Staff Writers
Los Angeles (UPI) Jun 2, 2011

The shuttle Endeavour, after its recently complete last mission, is expected to arrive at its Los Angeles retirement in the latter half of 2012, officials said.

Officials at the California Science Center said they had hoped the shuttle could be in place by the end of 2011, but NASA officials have said detoxifying the space shuttle and preparing it for display will take longer.

The delay in Endeavour's final mission and preparation for the upcoming mission of the shuttle Atlantis in July have also been factors in pushing back the arrival date, officials said.

California Science Center President Jeffrey Rudolph said the museum is making progress raising the $28.8 million needed to pay for Endeavour's cleanup at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida and to transport it to Los Angeles.

"We're not there yet. But we're feeling good about it," Rudolph said of the fundraising effort.

Having Endeavour land at Edwards Air Force Base in California would have been impractical, he said, as most of the equipment to detoxify the shuttle is in Florida.

The museum will display Endeavour at a temporary home when it arrives in Los Angeles, Rudolph said, while a new permanent home is designed and constructed, a project predicted to take at least five years.

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SHUTTLE NEWS
Endeavour Lands As Atlantis Rolls Out For Final Shuttle Launch
Cape Canaveral, Florida (AFP) June 1, 2011
The space shuttle Endeavour glided home for its final landing early Wednesday and the conclusion of the next to last mission of the 30-year-old US shuttle program. Endeavour and its crew of six astronauts made a nighttime touchdown at Florida's Kennedy Space Center at 2:35 am (0635 GMT), the US space agency NASA said. "It is sad to see her land for the last time but she really has a great legacy," shuttle commander Mark Kelly said ... read more


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NASA rolls out shuttle Atlantis for final time
Cape Canaveral, Florida (AFP) May 31, 2011 - The US space agency on Tuesday sent its last shuttle, Atlantis, out to the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center so it can prepare for the final launch of the American shuttle program in July. The shuttle began its trek at 8:00 pm (0000 GMT). The familiar ritual of rolling a massive shuttle from the Vehicle Assembly Building on a slow journey along a stone-covered crawlerway was a powerful symbol to the thousands of NASA employees who gathered to watch it go.

Atlantis's mission, STS-135, is set to launch on July 8 toward the International Space Station and will be the last journey by a US shuttle before the three-decade program officially draws to a close. The end of the US shuttle program leaves Russia as the only nation capable of toting astronauts into space until a replacement US vehicle can be built, likely no earlier than 2015.

Astronaut says NASA should be replaced
Fergus Falls, Minn. (UPI) May 31, 2011 - A former U.S. astronaut says NASA has lost focus and leadership and should be dismantled and replaced with a deep space exploration agency. Jack Schmitt , who in 1972 became the last American to walk on the moon, said the existing component parts of NASA should be spread to other agencies, the Fergus Falls (Minn.) Journal reported last week. "We need a new agency to be in charge of enabling America and its partners with exploration of deep space," he said, "inherently stimulating education, technology and national focus."

Schmitt, who grew up in southern Minnesota and served one term as a U.S. senator from New Mexico, said the easiest solution would entail moving NASA space science activities, including space-based astronomical observatories, into the National Science Foundation. The only exception, he suggested, would be programs related to U.S. obligations to its partners in the International Space Station. "Creation of a new National Space Exploration Administration would be charged solely with the human exploration of deep space and the re-establishment and maintenance of American dominance as a space-faring nation," he said.




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