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STATION NEWS
Russian-Western crew blasts off for ISS onboard Soyuz rocket
by Staff Writers
Baikonur, Kazakhstan (AFP) May 28, 2014


A Russian Soyuz rocket carrying a Russian-Western crew blasted off Wednesday from Kazakhstan for the International Space Station, as space cooperation between Moscow and the West presses on despite their worst standoff since the Cold War.

The rocket took off from Baikonur in Kazakhstan in the night with Russian cosmonaut Maxime Surayev, and his American colleague Reid Wiseman and German Alexander Gerst onboard.

It is expected to reach the ISS in six hours' time for a mission lasting 167 days. Its return to Earth is due in November.

Surayev, who is on his second long ISS mission, is leading the team, while the other two astronauts are on their first trip.

The crew would be met at the ISS by American astronaut Steve Swanson and Russians Alexandre Skvortsov and Oleg Artemyev.

During a press conference Wednesday, the crew was asked if the current tensions between Russia and the West over Ukraine would affect their relationship. In response, they embraced each other.

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STATION NEWS
Expedition 40 all set to go
Paris (ESA) May 28, 2014
From unusual training to upholding cherished traditions, everything is being done to ensure that ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst and his crewmates arrive at the International Space Station on Thursday safely and in good health - including being flipped upside down and relieving themselves on the wheel of a bus. The crew landed at the Baikonur launch site in Kazakhstan two weeks before the 28 ... read more


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