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NASA Clears Glenn For '98 Shuttle Ride


Washington, DC July 15, 1997 -

Washington, DC July 15, 1997 - Under prodding by the Clinton White House, NASA space officials have given the green light for U.S. Sen. John H. Glenn, Jr. (D-OH.) to fly as a crew member of a space shuttle mission in late 1998, SpaceCast has learned from sources in both Washington and Cape Canaveral. Glenn has reportedly been manifested on the STS-95 space shuttle crew set for a fall, 1998 launch. If Glenn passes his medical review, the 76 year old former Project Mercury astronaut and 1984 Presidential candidate would become the oldest person ever to fly into space. Glenn will be leaving his Senate office in January, 1999. He was first elected in 1974, having left NASA service a decade earlier to pursue a political career.

Washington sources told SpaceCast that Glenn made a personal appeal to President Clinton to "clear the way" for a final approval decision by NASA Administrator Daniel S. Goldin, who sources say reluctantly approved the move. Glenn's launch into space as a non-astronaut crew member will require an exemption to a rule imposed following the 1986 Challenger disaster that banned civilian space participants on the U.S. spacecraft. Goldin has repeatedly stood by the rule, which has grounded such persons as journalists and teachers from flying aboard the shuttles, which were deemed as too risky for nonprofessional flight crew participants. New Hampshire teacher Christa McAulliffe was killed in the Challenger explosion shortly after launch on January 28, 1986. In the wake of the accident her backup, Barbara Morgan, who was also awaiting a space mission was denied flight status. Many members of the original 1986 Teacher in Space program have urged NASA administrators to allow Morgan to fly and complete the lessons from space that McAuliffe was to teach during her flight. Sources in Washington say that the decision, when announced, will likely cause an uproar from the teachers awaiting future flight opportunities.

On February 20, 1962 Glenn was launched aboard an Atlas rocket sealed inside the Friendship 7, a bell-shaped space capsule, the third manned spaceflight in U.S. history. Glenn orbited the Earth three times before parachuting into the Atlantic Ocean safely, completing the first American orbital mission. Prior to joining NASA in 1958 Glenn was a record-breaking Marine Corps. fighter pilot.

A Democrat associated with President John F. Kennedy and the Kennedy family, Glenn was reelected to the Senate in 1980, 1986, and 1992. He ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 1984, but was defeated in the primaries by former Vice President Walter Mondale and Colorado Senator Gary Hart. Mondale, who went on to win the nomination was defeated by President Ronald Reagan in a landslide in November, 1984. Glenn announced last may that he would not seek another term in the Senate. He has since indicated a desire to return to space to study the effects of weightlessness on the elderly. The idea was considered remote -until Washington politicians began hearing from Glenn that he was in fact serious about the prospect of another, last space mission.

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Hill Ambush Awaits NASA Bill
Washington DC - July 11, 1997 -

Washington DC - July 11, 1997 - NASA's FY98 spending bill is headed for a Congressional ambush later this month, as the Chairman of the House Space Subcommittee is planning to mount an attack on the spending provisions for the Russian Space Station. Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA.) will attempt to add a series of amendments to the Appropriations Committee mark for the bill that would fully fund a second "X" vehicle research spacecraft, with funds now planned for the Russian station cost overruns.

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