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    Shuttle program's final 4 astronauts riding high

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Four astronauts are taking space shuttle Atlantis for one last spin — the very last one of the 30-year space shuttle era.

    It's the smallest crew since the early shuttle flights — usually there are six or seven. The size was necessitated by the need to use Russian Soyuz capsules in case commander Christopher Ferguson and his crew get stranded aboard the International Space Station.

    With the other two shuttles already retired, there isn't another one left to rescue the Atlantis astronauts if their ship were severely damaged in flight.

    Joining Ferguson on the 12-day flight are co-pilot Douglas Hurley, Rex Walheim and Sandra Magnus, experienced space fliers all.

    "We all want to be able to remember this," Ferguson said. "We want to be able to pass to our children and our children's children that we were fortunate enough to be a part of the space shuttle."

    A brief look at the crew:

    With only four on board, commander Christopher Ferguson likes to point out that this is a retro astronaut crew. NASA hasn't had such a small space shuttle crew since the sixth flight in 1983.

    That explains the black suits that the astronauts wore for their formal preflight news conference. Ferguson couldn't resist, especially given his co-pilot's Project Mercury-throwback flattop cut. (Pilot Douglas Hurley's a Marine.)

    "No solemnity with this event," Ferguson insisted. "It's a celebration. Thirty years."

    He scoffs at those who said they shunned NASA's last shuttle launch because they perceived it as a funeral. But he acknowledges it's like mourning a friend.

    "We personify the shuttle. It's a living, breathing entity to a lot of us. They have their quirks," he said.

    "You hate to let your first car go because it meant so much to you, and it hurts to let the space shuttle go."

    Ferguson, 49, grew up in Philadelphia, delivering the daily Inquirer as a boy. He joined the Navy and became a fighter pilot, attending the famed Topgun school. From there, it was on to test pilot training.

    NASA chose him as an astronaut in 1998. This is his third space shuttle flight. The retired Navy captain wants to stick around NASA to help with the next step in human exploration, whatever it may be.

    "Space business is in my blood," he said. He would love to see astronauts go to Mars, "the Holy Grail in the near term."

    Wife Sandra — "a closet space geek," according to her husband — is a full-time mom to their three teenage children.

    ___

    Pilot Douglas Hurley says there have been a series of "lasts" in the nine months of training leading up to this final flight of the space shuttle program.

    "It's a little bit sobering to really think that, yeah, we're done flying shuttles after July," he said.

    Hurley, 44, a colonel in the Marines and former fighter pilot, is making his second spaceflight since becoming an astronaut in 2000.

    He's married to astronaut Karen Nyberg, who is training for a six-month mission at the International Space Station in another two years. Their son is 17 months old.

    Hurley said he's considering a space station stint himself further down the road.

    In the off chance that Atlantis was damaged seriously at launch, Hurley would be the one to camp out at the orbiting outpost for a year, awaiting a ride home in a Russian capsule. He was chosen to be last because of his robotic arm-operating and spacewalking skills.

    Once back on Earth, Hurley wants to help with the new rocketships that will replace the shuttles, either the commercial variety intended to fly to orbit or NASA's proposed heavy launchers that could lift crews and cargo to an asteroid or Mars.

    "People talk about this period of transition, but there's a lot of potential with where we're going," he said.

    Hurley calls Apalachin, N.Y., home. He enjoys hunting and cycling, and is wild about NASCAR. His cousin is married to NASCAR crew chief Greg Zipadelli.

    ___

    Flight engineer Rex Walheim knows Atlantis inside and out. Every time he rockets into space — this is the third — it's on Atlantis.

    He enjoys taking a whiff when he climbs aboard. "It smells like Atlantis ... it feels good to be home."

    An experienced spacewalker, Walheim will direct the single spacewalk planned for this mission, from inside the International Space Station. The two Americans living at the outpost will be the ones to venture out, in a departure from past shuttle visits.

    Walheim, 48, a retired Air Force colonel, got his start inside Mission Control. He worked as a flight controller and operations engineer at Johnson Space Center in the late 1980s, following the Challenger launch disaster.

    By the early 1990s, Walheim was studying flight engineering at the Air Force test pilot school and a few years later, teaching there. NASA picked him as an astronaut in 1996. It seemed a miracle to this San Carlos, Calif.-bred son of a B-17, World War II-era pilot. He'd been rejected as a military pilot because of a heart murmur, only to learn years later he was fine.

    "I'm a window seat kind of guy. I love riding in a window seat in an airline to this day," Walheim said. "Boy, the best window seat in the world is the space shuttle window."

    His graphic artist wife Margie designed the mission patch, which features the Greek letter omega, symbolic of finality.

    They have two sons, ages 13 and 14.

    "I really want to be upbeat and I want it to be a celebration instead of sad," he said of the shuttle's closing chapter. "The way I like to look at it is that the legacy of the space shuttle lives on. So instead of just looking at the shuttle stopping, you look at what it's done."

    ___

    Astronaut Sandra Magnus hates whenever someone points out she's the last woman to fly on the space shuttle.

    "It's kind of a soft, little milestone, right? The last woman on the space shuttle," she said. "But I'm not the last woman to fly in space, ever."

    Magnus, 46, a scientist from Belleville, Ill. is one of eight women who have lived on the International Space Station, with more to come even as the shuttle program ends. Her 4½-month mission straddled 2008 and 2009.

    This is her third spaceflight.

    She's the transfer czar, as her crewmates call her, responsible for making sure all the supplies carried up aboard Atlantis get onto the space station, and all the junk ends up on Atlantis for the trip home. She'll rely on a color-coded system for the hundreds of items that need to be moved: yellow for sun and staying aloft, green for Earth and coming home, blue for food.

    She also will also be one of the prime robot arm operators.

    Magnus said she has no idea whether she'll sign on for another long-term space station mission or whether she'll even stay with NASA after Atlantis returns in two weeks.

    "I've always wanted to be an astronaut. I grew up and now I'm an astronaut. And so now that I'm an astronaut, the whole idea of what I want to do when I grow up comes back full circle. It's like, 'Oh my gosh, I can't think about that now,' " she said with a laugh.

    She became an astronaut in 1996 after working for McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Co. as an engineer specializing in radar and stealth aircraft systems.

    She loves to cook and created her own specialties during her space station tenure, using available foods. Her male crewmates devoured her Christmas cookies and Super Bowl salsa.

    ___

    Online:

    NASA: http://www11.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/

     

    9 comments

    • LAST CALL  •  10 mths ago
      remember this day. the next astronuats to go into space on an AMERICAN space craft have not even been born yet.
      • Space Tycoon 10 mths ago
        SpaceX is hiring engineers and scientists, check out their website. The Falcon9/DragonLab will house 7 Astronauts and be available for non-ISS flights---> to the Moon and to Mars, finally! SpaceX for the win!
    • justsayin  •  10 mths ago
      Sam asks
      "Why not dream bigger , build a space craft large enough to travel in and visit other plantes and support life onboard. "

      Because with current technology it is just a dream. If you think a manned Mars mission would be expensive, the cost of an interstellar mission would blow your mind. An interstellar flight using current technology would require a multi-generational mission and a spacecraft larger than an aircraft carrier that was almost entirely fuel storage, atmosphere processing, and food producing compartments to support a crew of only ten to twenty astronauts. Even with the will and the money to build such a craft it would be foolish to do so, because in the 150+ year two-way voyage of such a white elephant technology will have either advanced to the point of not needing such measures to reach other solar systems, or we will have abandoned the idea altogether.
    • justsayin  •  10 mths ago
      It is a grim time for the US space program. Manned space flight is not something that you can start and stop at will. The amount of physical infrastructure as well as all of the trained scientists and technicians don't have much of a shelf life. The equipment becomes outdated alarmingly fast, and only constant bit-by-bit upgrades keeps the staggering cost from becoming overwhelming. Same thing with the people. Highly trained specialists are not going to sit around for years while their savings are depleted and their homes foreclosed on waiting for the manned program to start up again, they're going to find other tech jobs that allow them to keep supprting their families. Allowing the retiring of the shuttle fleet, without either building new shuttles, or having a replacement vehicle in service will end NASA's use of reuseable spacecraft for an absolute minimum of ten years. More likely it will be twenty years or more. In fact, we may be witnessing the last NASA manned space mission utilising reuseable spacecraft.

      I can only hope that the private sector space research vehicles pan out, because it seems that they are the only people with the will to keep the dream of manned space exploration alive. If anyone had predicted 15 years ago that the the day would come when the Chinese would be landing men on the moon while the US had no manned space program anymore, I'd have laughed at them. Anyone predicting such a thing today has a pretty good chance of seeing that prediction come true.
    • Jimbo  •  10 mths ago
      the left has allways hated the space program, it is a great loss to the US in not having a replacement for for the shuttle, In the 60's the left tired to abort the moon flights, if it wasn't for NASA alot of the modern electrionics would not be around yet, are even the medical helps would have been delayed, it is a shame that we will have to spend billions to russia instead of keeping it in our own econ.
    • dennis  •  10 mths ago
      1.6 billion per flight sure is best that its the last. The reason we are in debt is we live way beyond our budget and it took this long to shut down something that waste this much money.I have respect for whoever shut it down .
    • Greg  •  10 mths ago
      They always have one women and 3 men on these fights. I guess all holes need to be filled.
    • AF  •  10 mths ago
      Thank you to all the hardworking men and women who worked on the shuttle all these years. I'm not a particularly emotional or overly patriotic person, but watching a shuttle launch was one of the events in American life that could really make me sentimental and emotional about my country. Thank you, thank you, thank you to all who contributed. Though I understand why the program is ending, it still makes sad to think I won't have that reminder for at least a few more years .
    • Sam  •  10 mths ago
      Why waste billios of dollars to live on a hostile plant like Mars,when the least mistake will cost you your life? Why not dream bigger , build a space craft large enough to travel in and visit other plantes and support life onboard. Mars is not going to help us understand more about space, its going to cost lives and alot of money!!!
      • BringBackNeroCaesar 10 mths ago
        It takes 3 years to get to mars. It will take 70 years at LIGHT SPEED to get to the closest planet that is similar to Earth. Whoever gets there will be dead by then.
      • Space Tycoon 10 mths ago
        Correction: It only takes 3 days to get to the Moon, and only 8 months to get to Mars. The Russian Energia can haul space cargo, while the SpaceX Falcon9/DragonLab can carry 7 Astronauts to the Moon or Mars.
    • ronald  •  10 mths ago
      Thanks a heap Obama for grounding the Space Shuttle and Orion moon missions.Too bad you weren't a no term president.
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