1703 lines
78 KiB
Plaintext
1703 lines
78 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: ODYSSEY ON-LINE MAGAZINE, VOL I, NO. 3 FILE: UFO1509
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±±±±±±±±Ü ÜÜÜÜÜ Ü Ü ÜÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÜ Ü Ü
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±±Ûßßß±±Û Û Û ÛÜÜÛ ÛÜÜÜ ÛÜÜÜ ÛÜ ÛÜÜÛ
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±±Û ±±Û ÜÛÜÜÛ ÜÜÜÛ ÜÜÜÛ ÜÜÜÛ ÛÜÜÜ ÜÜÜÛ
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±±Û ±±Û
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±±Û ±±Û ÜÜÜ Ü Ü ÜÜÜ ÜÜÜ Ü ÜÜÜÜ
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±±Û ±±Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û Û ÛÜ
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±±±±±±±±Û Û ÛÜÛ ÛÜÜÜ ÜÛÜ Û ÛÜÛ ÛÜÜÜ
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ßßßßßßßß
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ÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛÛ
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[The Official Fringe Science Newsletter Of Odyssey!]
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Table of Contents
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1. CLIPPINGS ................................................ 1
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Odyssey NewsWire ......................................... 1
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OO 2-01 Page 1 4 Jan 1992
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=================================================================
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CLIPPINGS
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=================================================================
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JAPAN'S SCC, ARIANESPACE AGREE ON REPLACEMENT SATELLITE
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LAUNCH
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TOKYO (NOV. 29) KYODO - SPACE COMMUNICATIONS CORP. (SCC), A
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JAPANESE COMMUNICATIONS FIRM IN THE MITSUBISHI BUSINESS
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GROUP, ANNOUNCED FRIDAY IT HAS REACHED AN AGREEMENT WITH
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THE FRENCH ARIANESPACE COMPANY FOR THE LAUNCHING OF A
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SUBSTITUTE FOR ITS ''SUPERBIRD A'' SATELLITE, WHICH WENT
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OUT OF OPERATION LAST DECEMBER.
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THE NEW SATELLITE ''A'' IS SCHEDULED TO BE LAUNCHED IN
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DECEMBER NEXT YEAR AND TO START OPERATING IN FEBRUARY 1993,
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SCC OFFICIALS SAID.
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SCC, SET BY MITSUBISHI CORP. AND OTHER MITSUBISHI
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AFFILIATES IN 1985, ALSO PLANS TO LAUNCH A SECOND ''B''
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SATELLITE NEXT FEBRUARY. IT, TOO, WILL BE LAUNCHED FROM
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FRENCH GUIANA BY AN ARIANE ROCKET. AN EARLIER ''B''
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LAUNCHING FAILED IN FEBRUARY LAST YEAR, THE OFFICIALS SAID.
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THE NEW SATELLITES WILL BE MANUFACTURED BY SPACE SYSTEMS
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LORAL OF THE UNITED STATES, THEY SAID.
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THE SATELLITES, BOTH WITH SOLAR CELL WINGS AND 34
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TRANSPONDERS EACH, WILL WEIGH 2,550 KILOGRAMS EACH AT
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BLAST-OFF AND SHOULD LAST 10 YEARS, THEY SAID.
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* Odyssey News Wire
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ARIANESPACE SIGNS LAUNCH CONTRACT WITH SPACE COMMUNICATIONS
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CORP.
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WASHINGTON (NOV. 29) PR NEWSWIRE - Arianespace today
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announced the signing of the launch contract of the
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SUPERBIRD A satellite with Space Communications
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Corporation. This spacecraft will be put into orbit at the
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end of 1992 using an ARIANE 4 launcher from the Kourou
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Space Center, French Guiana.
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Built by the Space Systems/Loral company of Palo Alto,
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Calif., its weight at lift-off will be approximately 2550
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kg (i.e. 5622 lb). From its orbital position over the
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Pacific Ocean, east of Japan, it will provide over 10 years
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of telecommunication services: telephone, telex, data and
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TV program transmission. SUPERBIRD A will be equipped with
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23 Ku-band and 3 Ka-band channels and will cover the
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Japanese islands including Okinawa.
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After the signing of the ninth contract of the year,
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Arianespace's backlog now stands at 34 satellites to be
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launched, worth 14.9 billion French francs (US$2.6
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OO 2-01 Page 2 4 Jan 1992
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billion).
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Arianespace, an industrial and commercial company, is a
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world leader in the provision of commercial space
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transportation services. Arianespace also markets and sells
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ARIANE launch services and provides launch operations from
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the Guiana space Center in French Guiana. Arianespace
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Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Arianespace, is
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responsible for marketing launch services in the United
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States; a liaison office in Tokyo assures an Arianespace
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presence in Japan and in the Pacific region.
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CONTACT: Michelle Lyle of Arianespace Inc., 202-628-3936,
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or Claude Sanchez of Arianespace S.A., (33/1)6087 60 13/14,
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or Dieter Brand of Arianespace Tokyo
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813-592-2766
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* Odyssey News Wire
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SHUTTLE ATLANTIS ASTRONAUTS FIND SPYING FROM SPACE
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DIFFICULT
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CAPE CANAVERAL, FL (NOV. 29) UPI - The ability of
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astronauts to spy from orbit is ''marginal'' at present,
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but improved equipment and better training could make
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future space fliers a definite military asset, one of the
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shuttle Atlantis's crewmen said Friday.
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Astronaut Mario Runco told reporters during a news
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conference from space Friday that his ability to
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distinguish aircraft and ships on Earth is better than he
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expected, but not necessarily good enough to provide
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reliable tactical reconnaissance from orbit.
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''I believe the astronaut can serve the military in
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space,'' he said. ''The observations I've made ... so far
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have been quite remarkable in terms of what we've
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accomplished in the past. They still have a long way to go,
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however, in terms of the equipment we use.
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''As a real-time operational asset to the military, I would
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say our capabilities would be marginal. However, that may
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not be true in the future with a little investment in some
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better equipment and some more training.''
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Runco, 39, commander Frederick Gregory, 50, co-pilot
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Terence Henricks, 39, Story Musgrave, 56, James Voss, 42,
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and Army imagery expert Thomas Hennen, 39, accomplished the
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primary goal of the 44th shuttle flight Monday with the
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successful launch of an Air Force missile early warning
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satellite.
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Since then, the shuttle fliers have been carrying out
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on-board research, including two military
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space-surveillance experiments designed to help Pentagon
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planners determine the usefulness of astronauts as
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OO 2-01 Page 3 4 Jan 1992
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space-based spies.
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Wielding special cameras, Runco and Hennen have been
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photographing and assessing a variety of ground targets
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around the world to determine what they can see and how
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they interpret the resulting images.
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''I'm surprised at what I can see,'' Runco said. ''I've
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been able to see large ships and airplanes. Whether I can
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identify those ships ... or airplanes, I haven't been able
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to do (because of camera limitations).''
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A major problem for the Atlantis's mission has been cloudy
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weather, which has prevented observations of various
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targets. Gregory and Musgrave, both shuttle veterans,
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agreed that the clarity of the atmosphere has diminished in
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recent years.
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But the weather cooperated Friday afternoon as Atlantis
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sailed over Cuba during the crew's 76th orbit, allowing
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Runco to photograph the Guantanamo Bay area and to
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distinguish the makeshift ''tent city'' set up there in
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recent days to house Haitian refugees.
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''Calypso, Calypso, this is Atlantis,'' Runco radioed
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ground participants. ''Have on (film) on peninsula within
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bay several large white structures. This might be tent city
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you referred to. Again, at least three larger white
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structures or objects on peninsula within bay to the east
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of the first two piers. Over.
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''Atlantis, this is Calypso,'' an unidentified man replied.
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''Roger, solid copy. Believe you have identified tent
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city.''
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Nearly 5,800 Haitians fleeing their country in the wake of
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a military coup have been plucked from homemade rafts and
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overcrowded boats in international waters off Haiti since
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Oct. 29. Some 1,226 are housed at Guantanamo.
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Runco, a former New Jersey Highway Patrol officer, has
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primary responsibility for an experiment called M88-1.
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Hennen, an Army image analyst, is responsible for a project
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known as Terra Scout.
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While Terra Scout is devoted to studying how astronauts
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observe targets from space, M88-1 is designed to help
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military analysts better understand what the human eye can
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see from orbit and how astronauts might be of service in a
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time of national crisis.
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''Occasionally we're going to have people up there and if
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there are world crises it would be good to know what our
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capabilities can be,'' Runco said before launch. ''It's
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kind of information of opportunity; if the asset is there,
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why not use it? Let's determine how well we can use that
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OO 2-01 Page 4 4 Jan 1992
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asset.''
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M88-1 is made up of two surveillance experiments -
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Battleview and Maritime Observation Experiments in Space,
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or MOSES - and one called Night Mist designed to evaluate
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the performance of UHF radio gear.
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Battleview involves surveillance of targets on land such as
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armored formations
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truck convoys, dust clouds and other natural phenomena.
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MOSES involves observation of ocean targets, such as ship
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wakes.
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The astronauts had hoped to use the UHF radio encrypt
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conversations with ground participants, but the radio's
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receiver is broken, forcing Runco and his crewmates to
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limit their radio traffic to unclassified material.
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Throughout the flight, Hennen has been using a computerized
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video camera with special lenses to observe a variety of
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ground targets around the world.
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''What we're trying to do is document the manner in which a
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human observes and more specifically, analyzes data,''
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Hennen said before launch. ''What we want to do is
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translate that data into computer- assisted sensing
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systems. What we want to do is make smart sensors.''
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3
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Matched keyword: SPACE...
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=START= XMT: 13:45 Fri Dec 06 EXP: 14:00 Mon Dec 09
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SPACE SYSTEMS/LORAL CHOSEN TO PROVIDE N-STAR TWO
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TELECOMMUNICATIONS SATELLITES
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NEW YORK (DEC. 6) BUSINESS WIRE - Space Systems/Loral
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Friday announced that it has been selected as the
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successful bidder by Nippon Telegraph & Telephone (NTT) to
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provide two N-Star telecommunications satellites to be
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delivered in orbit in 1995.
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With these two additional satellites, Space Systems/Loral's
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backlog reaches $1 billion, with 16 telecommunications and
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environmental satellites under contract, and options for an
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additional 14.
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This new award reinforces Space Systems/Loral's position as
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the primary provider of telecommunications satellites to
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the Japanese market.
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''The selection of Space Systems/Loral is significant not
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only because of the value of the contract, but more
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importantly because it enables us to continue our
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Press <RETURN> or <S>croll?s
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OO 2-01 Page 5 4 Jan 1992
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longstanding relationships in the Japanese satellite
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market,'' said Bernard L. Schwartz, Chairman and Chief
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Executive Officer of Loral Corp.
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The N-STAR satellites will provide fixed and mobile
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communications in Japan and have an expected life of over
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10 years. They will draw on state-of-the-art technology
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being used on the Intelsat VII bus series of
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telecommunications satellites, currently under construction
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by Space Systems/Loral.
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Space Systems/Loral, based in Palo Alto, Calif. designs and
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manufactures satellites for telecommunications and
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environmental applications.
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CONTACT: Loral Corp.,
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Joseph Tedino, 703/685-5540
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* Odyssey News Wire
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=START= XMT: 13:11 Fri Dec 06 EXP: 13:00 Sat Dec 07
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SOVIET COSMONAUTS VOLKOV, KRIKALEV CONTINUE EXPERIMENTS IN
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SPACE
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MOSCOW (DEC. 6) TASS - SOVIET COSMONAUTS ALEKSANDER VOLKOV
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AND SERGEI KRIKALEV COMPLETED ANOTHER SERIES OF EXPERIMENTS
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FOCUSING ON HYDRODYNAMIC PROCESSES UNDER CONDITIONS OF
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WEIGHTLESSNESS. THE RESEARCH WAS DONE USING HYDROLOGICAL
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STAND "VOLNA-2" AND VARIOUS FUEL TANKS FOR SPACECRAFT.
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TODAY THE COSMONAUTS WILL BE PREPARING SCIENTIFIC EQUIPMENT
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FOR NEW RESEARCH WORK.
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THE NEXT EXPERIMENT ON SPACE MATERIAL STUDY WILL BEGIN
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LATER TODAY WITH A SPECIAL DEVICE CALLED A CRYSTALLIZER.
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=END=
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=START= XMT: 12:44 Wed Dec 11 EXP: 13:00 Sat Dec 14
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ALENIA S.P.A. OF ITALY, HONEYWELL INC. TO FORM JOINT SPACE
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VENTURE
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MINNEAPOLIS (DEC. 11) PR NEWSWIRE - Alenia S.p.A. of Italy
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and Honeywell Inc. (NYSE: HON) today announced the creation
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of a joint venture to manufacture control subsystems and
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equipment for space applications.
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The joint venture, Space Controls Alenia Honeywell S.p.A.,
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will supply the European space market with reaction wheel
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assemblies, inertial measurement units, bearing and power
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transfer assemblies and antenna pointing systems. These
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products will be marketed to European manufacturers of
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spacecraft and systems for national and commercial space
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programs and for the European Space Agency.
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Honeywell owns 40 percent and Alenia owns 60 percent of the
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joint venture company, which is currently constructing
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OO 2-01 Page 6 4 Jan 1992
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manufacturing facilities in Naples, Italy, where it will be
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based. When fully operative, the company will employ 150
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people.
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Alenia, headquartered in Rome, is Italy's largest aerospace
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company. Its subsidiary, Alenia Spazio S.p.A.,
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headquartered in Turin, Italy, specializes in the study,
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design, development, manufacture, assembly, integration and
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testing of satellites and space vehicles.
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Honeywell is a leader in control subsystems and equipment
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for space applications in the U.S. market. The company's
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Space Systems Groups is headquartered in Clearwater, Fla.,
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and provides flight control equipment and engine
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controllers for the U.S. Space Shuttle program; guidance,
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navigation and control systems and data management
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electronics for the Space Station Freedom program; and data
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processing, attitude controls and antenna pointing systems
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for satellites.
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Honeywell is a global controls company that provides
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products, systems and services for homes and buildings,
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industry and aviation and space. The company employs
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58,000 people worldwide and had 1990 sales of $6.3 billion.
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CONTACT: Kevin Whalen of Honeywell, 612-870-2524
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=START= XMT: 14:46 Wed Dec 11 EXP: 15:00 Thu Dec 12
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HUBBLE GLITCH CAUSED BY "BUG" IN EARTH-BOUND COMPUTER
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PROGRAM, OFFICIALS SAY
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CAPE CANAVERAL, FL (DEC. 11) UPI - A ''bug'' in a computer
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program used on Earth to help control the Hubble Space
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Telescope knocked the satellite out of action Monday, but
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officials said Wednesday the costly observatory would be
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back in operation Thursday.
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''This is one of those cases where the spacecraft once
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again protected itself from the humans on the ground who
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wrote the software,'' Hubble project scientist Edward
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Weiler said by telephone from Washington.
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The $1.5 billion Hubble Space Telescope, the most
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sophisticated astronomical satellite ever built, was
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launched from the shuttle Discovery on April 25, 1990.
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Since then, ground controllers have struggled to overcome a
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variety of technical problems, ranging from trouble with
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the satellite's stabilizing gyroscopes to instrument
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problems and an unexpected jitter caused by solar panel
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flexing when the spacecraft passes from Earth's shadow into
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sunlight.
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The most serious problem, however, involves Hubble's main
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mirror. Shortly after launch, engineers discovered the
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mirror had been ground into the wrong shape, one that
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prevents it from bringing starlight to a sharp focus.
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NASA plans a 1993 shuttle repair mission to install
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corrective optics, new solar panels and replacement
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gyroscopes that should restore the satellite to design
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specifications.
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In the meantime, astronomers are using Hubble to make
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observations that are not severely affected by its flawed
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optical system. Science data is transmitted to Earth using
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two ''high-gain'' antennas that beam radio signals to a
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OO 2-01 Page 7 4 Jan 1992
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pair of NASA communications satellites.
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At 7:47 a.m. EST Monday, Hubble's on-board computer shut
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the telescope down, throwing the spacecraft into a form of
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electronic hibernation called a ''safe mode.'' The
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telescope is programmed to enter safe mode whenever a major
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problem is detected.
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Weiler said the problem Monday developed because of a
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software glitch on the ground that had gone undetected
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since launch.
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As Hubble orbits the Earth, its two high-gain antennas
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track the NASA communications satellite high above. When
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one such satellite disappears behind the limb of the Earth,
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computer programs on the ground calculate where the
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antennas should move to pick up the next satellite. Those
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commands then are radioed to Hubble and executed as
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required.
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Because of a bug in the ground software, Weiler said, the
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antenna was commanded to the wrong position on Monday.
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When Hubble's on-board computer checked the antenna's
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position later, it discovered the problem, ''found the
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antenna in the wrong place ... and it commanded (the
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antenna) to go over there and get there fast.''
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But safety provisions built into the telescope's on-board
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programming will not permit the antenna motors to exert
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more than a certain amount of force to prevent any possible
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damage.
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When Hubble's electronic brain attempted to correct the
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antenna problem Monday
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it caused the motor to work hard enough to violate the
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safety limits.
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''We entered what we call a soft safe mode on Monday at
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7:47 a.m.,'' Weiler said. ''The reason we entered safe mode
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is ... the sensor that senses torque on the antenna motor
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said it was up to 10 inch-ounces of torque. That is the
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limit where the software will say stop, I'm going into safe
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mode.''
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He said the ground software is made up of three million
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lines of computer programming ''and as usual when humans
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build something, they left a few bugs in it. This bug has
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been there since launch. This was not a spacecraft
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problem.''
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He said the problem was identified Tuesday and that Hubble
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would be back in full operation Thursday.
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=END=
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=START= XMT: 16:56 Fri Dec 13 EXP: 17:00 Sat Dec 14
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SOVIET COLLAPSE IS DAMAGING SPACE PROGRAM INFRASTRUCTURE,
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AVIATION WEEK SAYS
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NEW YORK (DEC. 13) BUSINESS WIRE - The chaotic state of the
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Soviet economy and accelerating disintegration of the
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||
Soviet military/industrial infrastructure is taking a
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serious toll on Soviet aerospace capabilities, according to
|
||
the December 16 edition of Aviation Week & Space
|
||
Technology.
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Soviet space launch operations have dropped to their lowest
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levels in 25 years and the evaporation of a stable central
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 8 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
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|
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government has begun to affect planning for future U.S.
|
||
space cooperation.
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||
Senior space editor Craig Covault describes the difficult
|
||
conditions facing top managers of military and civilian
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||
space operations gleaned from exclusive interviews with
|
||
high-ranking Soviet aerospace officials. Shortages of raw
|
||
materials are affecting spacecraft production, a large
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||
booster program is being terminated and a Soviet rocket
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||
recently exploded during ground tests, Covault reports.
|
||
Aviation Week & Space Technology, published weekly by
|
||
McGraw-Hill, is the leading journal for the worldwide
|
||
aviation, aerospace and defense industries. The current
|
||
issue also details the following developments:
|
||
Issue of Control Over Soviet Nuclear Arms Worries U.S.:
|
||
Central Intelligence Agency Director Robert Gates
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||
underscored grave concerns about the unravelling of central
|
||
control of Soviet military forces and nuclear weapons,
|
||
calling it a ''dangerously unstable'' situation.
|
||
He and U.S. Ambassador Robert Strauss provided a snapshot
|
||
of the Bush Administration's concerns about the deepening
|
||
political and economic crisis in the former U.S.S.R. during
|
||
a Housing Armed Services Committee hearing last week.
|
||
Senior editor John Morrocco reports that Gates predicted
|
||
continued decay and breakup of the Soviet armed forces,
|
||
while Strauss warned the panel that ''there are a lot of
|
||
dangerous forces afoot'' in the Soviet Union that could
|
||
affect the control and security of the Soviet nuclear
|
||
arsenal.
|
||
As support for a new confederation poses serious challenges
|
||
to Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's authority, the
|
||
United States faces a period of great uncertainty while
|
||
Russia sorts out who owns these weapons and creates a new
|
||
framework for their control.
|
||
What Doomed Pan Am: The demise of Pan American World
|
||
Airways closes a chapter in international aviation history.
|
||
A team of Aviation Week & Space Technology editors traced
|
||
its history and many achievements in a series of articles
|
||
detailing the impact of Delta's announcement that it would
|
||
not pump any more money into the ailing Pan Am.
|
||
The inability of Pan Am to forge a place for itself in the
|
||
changed environment of deregulation resulted in losses of
|
||
more than $2 billion in the last decade.
|
||
At the same time, United Airlines will probably become the
|
||
premier U.S. international carrier if it completes the
|
||
acquisition of Pan Am's routes to Latin America. A senior
|
||
financial analyst said last week that this acquisition
|
||
would make United the ''North American business travelers'
|
||
global airline.''
|
||
Market Focus: Leading gainers and losers (Thursday, 12/12
|
||
close): Continental Airlines down 29.92 percent; GenCorp.
|
||
Inc. down 11/76 percent; Racal Electronics Plc. down 9.52
|
||
percent.
|
||
For additional information and complete text of these news
|
||
stories contact Luciana Borbely or Mark Danes, telephone
|
||
212/512-3851, fax 212/512-2703.
|
||
McGraw-Hill's Aviation Week Group markets a comprehensive
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 9 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
network of publications, electronic and video services for
|
||
the multi-billion dollar aviation/aerospace/defense market.
|
||
CONTACT: McGraw-Hill's Aviation Week Group, New York
|
||
Luciana Borbely or Mark Danes, 212/512-3851
|
||
=START= XMT: 19:47 Fri Dec 13 EXP: 20:00 Sat Dec 14
|
||
|
||
SOVIET MIR ORBITING STATION FILMS EARTH SURFACE, TASS
|
||
REPORTS
|
||
|
||
MISSION CONTROL CENTER (DEC. 13) TASS - THE MIR ORBITING
|
||
STATION HAS BEEN FILMING VARIOUS REGIONS OF THE EARTH THIS
|
||
WEEK WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF A PROGRAM OF RESEARCH OF THE
|
||
EARTH'S NATURAL RESOURCES AND THE ENVIRONMENT.
|
||
|
||
ON FRIDAY THE COSMONAUTS FILMED THE SOUTH-EASTERN PART OF
|
||
THE ASIAN CONTINENT, THE INDONESIAN ISLANDS AND AUSTRALIA.
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 16:39 Tue Dec 17 EXP: 17:00 Fri Dec 20
|
||
|
||
BOEING COMPLETES KEY DESIGN MILESTONE FOR SPACE STATION
|
||
|
||
HUNTSVILLE, AL (DEC. 17) PR NEWSWIRE - Boeing Defense &
|
||
Space Group has completed the initial design phase for work
|
||
on Space Station Freedom, and received authorization today
|
||
to proceed with final hardware design from NASA, NASA's
|
||
international partners, and representatives from other
|
||
station work packages.
|
||
|
||
The authorizing certificate was signed as NASA and Boeing
|
||
completed a major design review in Huntsville.
|
||
|
||
The design review is a key milestone because Boeing now
|
||
will begin work on final engineering drawings, and will
|
||
initiate developmental and qualification tests leading to
|
||
launch of the first pressurized module -- a node -- in late
|
||
1996.
|
||
|
||
Tests already are underway at NASA's Marshall Space Flight
|
||
Center in Huntsville on about 10 major pieces of hardware.
|
||
Results of this hardware-test phase will be used to
|
||
|
||
|
||
complete final design for the space station by early 1993.
|
||
|
||
Boeing is NASA's prime contractor to build the heart of the
|
||
space station: its laboratory, living and logistics
|
||
modules, connecting node structures and on-board systems.
|
||
|
||
"Space Station Freedom is closer every day to reality,"
|
||
said Richard Grant, Boeing program manager. "The
|
||
international orbiting laboratory has turned the corner
|
||
from a strictly engineering program to a hardware program
|
||
with tests underway."
|
||
|
||
In Freedom's man-tended phase, which begins in 1996,
|
||
astronauts will visit regularly to tend experiments in the
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 10 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
unique microgravity environment of low-Earth orbit. A crew
|
||
of four will live there permanently by 1999, and over the
|
||
next 30 years scientists will conduct life- and
|
||
materials-science experiments.
|
||
|
||
"Boeing and Marshall have made substantial progress during
|
||
1991, also completing facilities and equipment for future
|
||
hardware development," said George Hopson, NASA's project
|
||
manager for Marshall's work package. "The work has
|
||
Press <RETURN> or <S>croll?s
|
||
|
||
remained on schedule and within budget.
|
||
|
||
"This progress has been made possible through the close
|
||
working relationship of the Marshall, Boeing and
|
||
subcontractor team," Hopson said.
|
||
|
||
The coming year will have an aggressive hardware testing
|
||
regimen that verifies the fundamental structural design of
|
||
the space station's pressurized modules, nodes, hatches,
|
||
windows and racks.
|
||
|
||
"The thorough design and testing effort we've embarked on
|
||
will ensure Space Station Freedom is a safe, highly
|
||
operational facility to serve this nation and its
|
||
international partners for decades to come," Grant said.
|
||
|
||
Boeing employs about 2,000 people on the program.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Brian Ames or Peri Widener of Boeing Alabama,
|
||
205-461-2805
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 10:19 Tue Dec 17 EXP: 10:00 Wed Dec 18
|
||
|
||
SOVIET COSMONAUTS TO BEGIN NEW EXPERIMENTS WITH MONOCRYSTAL
|
||
|
||
FLIGHT CONTROL CENTRE (DEC. 17) TASS - SOVIET COMSMONAUTS
|
||
ALEXANDER VOLKOV AND SERGEI KRIKALEV ARE SCHEDULED TO BEGIN
|
||
A NEW EXPERIMENT TO PRODUCE A MONOCRYSTAL OF CADMIUM
|
||
TELLURIDE WITH IMPROVED TECHNOLOGICAL QUALITIES IN ZERO
|
||
GRAVITY THIS AFTERNOON.
|
||
|
||
THE FIVE-DAY EXPERIMENT, BEING CONDUCTED UNDER THE
|
||
PROGRAMME OF SPACE MATERIAL STUDIES, WILL USE THE ZONA 03
|
||
WELDING INSTALLATION.
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
VIROMEDICS REPORTS METHOD WITH POTENTIAL FOR PROTECTING
|
||
BLOOD SUPPLY FROM AIDS
|
||
|
||
HAUPPAUGE, NY (DEC. 19) BUSINESS WIRE - Future Medical
|
||
Products Inc. (NASDAQ:FMPI) through its subsidiary,
|
||
Viromedics, which owns joint patent rights with the Albert
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 11 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
Einstein College of Medicine (AECOM) and exclusive
|
||
marketing rights to a procedure utilizing an organic
|
||
compound, which has been researched and tested at AECOM for
|
||
treatment of the AIDS virus, Thursday announced the release
|
||
of the following report as it appears in the December issue
|
||
of the journal AIDS.
|
||
|
||
"Researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine define
|
||
chemical treatment that significantly lowers HIV's capacity
|
||
to infect healthy cells.
|
||
|
||
"Scientists at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of
|
||
Yeshiva University report that an in vitro treatment of the
|
||
AIDS virus (HIV) and of HIV-infected cells with a mild
|
||
chemical can significantly interfere with HIV's ability to
|
||
further infect other cells.
|
||
|
||
"The scientists evaluated the capacity of a group of
|
||
chemicals, the alkylureas
|
||
to inhibit infectivity of free HIV and to kill the virus in
|
||
vitro in blood cells taken from AIDS patients. In
|
||
particular, one type of alkylurea, butylurea, inhibited HIV
|
||
infectivity at concentrations that have no adverse effect
|
||
on red blood cell functions. The investigators showed that
|
||
butylurea breaks the virus down to small, noninfectious
|
||
particles.
|
||
|
||
"Treatment of blood products with butylurea has the
|
||
potential, therefore, to significantly lower the risk of
|
||
HIV infection to transfusion recipients from donated blood
|
||
carrying the the AIDS virus. The use of of alkylureas in
|
||
patients will also be considered, since similar compounds
|
||
have already been administered to patients with the blood
|
||
disorder sickle cell anemia with only minor side effects.
|
||
|
||
"This work was started in 1988 by Dr. Arye Rubinstein,
|
||
professor of Microbiology and Immunology and of Pediatrics
|
||
at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. He was later
|
||
joined by Einstein researchers, Drs. Harris Goldstein,
|
||
Massimo Pettcello-Mantovani, Tobias R. Killman and Theresa
|
||
Calvelli.
|
||
|
||
"The researchers demonstrated that infectivity of HIV was
|
||
decreased by more than 95 percent following treatment with
|
||
butylurea, as measured by the activity of the virus's key
|
||
enzyme, reverse transcriptase, and the concentration of the
|
||
viral antigen p24. The current work extended preliminary
|
||
data presented by Dr. Rubinstein at the Annual Meeting of
|
||
the American Academy of Allergy and Immunology in San
|
||
Francisco last year."
|
||
|
||
Future Medical Products subsidiary Viromedics, which owns
|
||
worldwide exclusive marketing rights for the patented
|
||
procedure, further stated that the potential use for this
|
||
compound can have a significant impact toward the reduction
|
||
of HIV transmission through blood transfusions.
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 12 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
Future Medical Products Inc., is a biomedical company that
|
||
is involved in the research and development of products
|
||
that focus on drug detoxification, heart disease treatment,
|
||
genetic engineering and AIDS research. Its shares are
|
||
listed on the NASDAQ exchange and trade under the symbol
|
||
FMPI.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Future Medical Products, Hauppauge
|
||
Herb Glicksman, 516/348-0500
|
||
or
|
||
Martin Janis & Co. Inc., Chicago
|
||
Beverly Jedynak, 312/943-1100.
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 11:35 Thu Dec 19 EXP: 12:00 Sun Dec 22
|
||
|
||
PHILIPS MEDICAL SYSTEMS HAS NON-INVASIVE WAY TO IMAGE BLOOD
|
||
VESSELS OF HEART
|
||
|
||
SHELTON, CT (DEC. 19) BUSINESS WIRE - A new diagnostic
|
||
technique under development by Philips Medical Systems is
|
||
providing high resolution images of the heart and great
|
||
vessels with less risk and less cost than existing
|
||
technology.
|
||
|
||
The new technique, called Gated Inflow, is an enhancement
|
||
to existing magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) and
|
||
represents the latest advance in heart imaging technology.
|
||
|
||
Doctors at Emory University in Atlanta have used the
|
||
MRA-Gated Inflow technique to obtain images of heart
|
||
conditions in infants and adults. MRA-Gated Inflow has
|
||
enabled the doctors to avoid using the riskier and costlier
|
||
cardiac catheterization technique, known also as X-Ray (or
|
||
intra-arterial) angiography.
|
||
|
||
Philips plans to apply for FDA approval next year and
|
||
expects the system to be available for widespread use
|
||
within two years. Ultimately, Philips scientists and Emory
|
||
doctors predict that Gated Inflow will be used in routine
|
||
heart screenings for older adults and those at risk of
|
||
heart disease.
|
||
|
||
MRA has been used with success to image vessels and
|
||
diagnose vascular disorders throughout the body. However,
|
||
until now, it has been difficult to obtain a clear picture
|
||
of the heart and great vessels using MRA because of the
|
||
movement caused by the pumping heart. MRA Gated Inflow
|
||
solves this problem by reducing the image distortion caused
|
||
by the action of the heart cycle.
|
||
|
||
Heart problems have traditionally been diagnosed by cardiac
|
||
catheterization, which is invasive and involves the
|
||
injection of a dye, called a contrast agent
|
||
into the vessels of the heart. An X-ray of the heart will
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 13 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
detect the contrast agent and distinguish between blood and
|
||
surrounding tissue. This method is often repeated to
|
||
monitor patients with long-term conditions, subjecting the
|
||
patient to several invasive procedures.
|
||
|
||
Philips Medical Systems North America (PMSNA) is a leading
|
||
supplier of diagnostic imaging and radiation therapy
|
||
equipment to the medical community. Philips products are
|
||
backed by a worldwide network of research and development
|
||
sales and service.
|
||
|
||
Headquartered in Shelton, Conn., PMSNA is a part of North
|
||
American Philips Corp. (NAPC), one of the top 100
|
||
industrial companies in the United States. Philips makes
|
||
consumer products, lighting, electrical and electronics
|
||
components and professional equipment marketed under many
|
||
well-known brands including Philips, Magnavox, Norelco,
|
||
Philco, and Sylvania audio-video.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Philips Medical Systems, Shelton
|
||
Lynne Brown, 203/926-7084
|
||
or
|
||
Clarke & Company, Boston
|
||
Steve Brayton or Katherine McGreen, 617/536-3003.
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 16:41 Fri Dec 20 EXP: 17:00 Mon Dec 23
|
||
|
||
CHEMEX PHARMACEUTICALS COMPLETES BLOOD ABSORPTION SAFETY
|
||
STUDY FOR NEW DRUG
|
||
|
||
FORT LEE, NJ (DEC. 20) BUSINESS WIRE - Chemex
|
||
Pharmaceuticals Inc. announced Friday that the blood
|
||
absorption safety study for the new drug ACTINEX has been
|
||
completed on schedule and filed with the FDA.
|
||
|
||
The company has submitted all information and data
|
||
requested by FDA and is awaiting final FDA review of this
|
||
study and the Actinex NDA filing.
|
||
|
||
Actinex will be used for the treatment of actinic
|
||
keratoses, a pre-malignant skin disorder. Block Drug Co.
|
||
Inc. purchased Actinex from Chemex in 1990. The above FDA
|
||
filing does not trigger or accelerate any payments provided
|
||
for in the Actinex acquisition agreement.
|
||
|
||
Chemex (NASDAQ:CHMX) is an emerging pharmaceutical company
|
||
engaged in the development of ethical drugs for the
|
||
treatment of skin diseases and disorders.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Chemex Pharmaceuticals Inc., Fort Lee
|
||
Len Stigliano, 201/944-1449
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 16:23 Sat Dec 21 EXP: 16:00 Tue Dec 24
|
||
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 14 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
SPACE BIOSPHERES VENTURES CONFIRMS SUPERIORITY OF BIOSPHERE
|
||
2 SEAL
|
||
|
||
ORACLE, AZ (DEC. 20) BUSINESS WIRE - Responding to media
|
||
requests for clarification of a news release issued by
|
||
Space Biospheres Ventures on Dec. 19
|
||
Director of Systems Engineering William Dempster announced
|
||
that a successful closure has been accomplished with a leak
|
||
rate of 5-6 percent a year.
|
||
|
||
Dempster explained that an annual 6 percent loss rate,
|
||
which equals .0164 percent per day, results in a dilution
|
||
of approximately one fourth of one part per million of
|
||
carbon dioxide per day in Biosphere 2. Dempster had first
|
||
presented his data and methodology at a meeting of the
|
||
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air
|
||
Conditioning Engineers in Montebello, Calif., on Dec. 3,
|
||
1991.
|
||
|
||
Comparing the seal efficacy of Biosphere 2 with other
|
||
closed life systems, Dempster noted that the Russian closed
|
||
experiment BIOS3 had a measured yearly loss rate of 50
|
||
percent while NASA's breadboard systems measured
|
||
approximately 1,000 percent per year, making Biosphere 2 by
|
||
far the most highly sealed closed life system ever built.
|
||
|
||
In addition, these two other experiments were metal
|
||
containers whereas Biosphere 2, while employing stainless
|
||
steel for regions in contact with the earth, utilizes a
|
||
structure comprised largely of glass panes. By thus
|
||
excluding the use of artificial light in favor of true
|
||
photosynthesis, a total biospheric system response could be
|
||
measured as well as effects on individual crops and plants.
|
||
|
||
To understand the tightness of the Biosphere 2 seal
|
||
compared to an ordinary well-designed building, a 12-foot
|
||
by nine-foot by eight-foot- high closed office operating at
|
||
the EPA minimum standard of 15 cubic feet per minute will
|
||
have an annual air exchange of about 100,000 percent, or
|
||
about 20,000 times greater.
|
||
|
||
This environment will build up approximately 1,000 ppm of
|
||
CO2, although over 30 percent of new American homes and
|
||
offices operate at higher levels, according to the EPA.
|
||
|
||
The leakage tests conducted inside Biosphere 2 from the
|
||
Sept. 26 closure until December resulted in a one-time-only
|
||
atmospheric loss of about 10 percent, above and beyond the
|
||
small loss due to leakage.
|
||
|
||
At the completion of these tests on Dec. 9, this amount was
|
||
replaced so that Biosphere 2 could operate at its designed
|
||
volume of air, an important vector in the operation of the
|
||
facility because of its buffering effect.
|
||
|
||
The extra air lost in the testing during the first few days
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 15 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
following closure averaged about 1,500 ppm of CO2, so that
|
||
the 10 percent replacement on Dec. 9 diluted the relative
|
||
amount of CO2 in Biosphere 2 by approximately 110-120 ppm
|
||
from the amount in the air when taken out. This means that
|
||
it will increase the biospheric effort to raise or lower
|
||
the CO2 percentage by about 5 percent.
|
||
|
||
The restoration of the lost air also added an absolute
|
||
amount of 9.24 kilograms, or 20.4 pounds, of CO2 to the
|
||
atmosphere.
|
||
|
||
''These tests demonstrate that Biosphere 2 is operating in
|
||
a more than satisfactory manner as a sealed apparatus,''
|
||
Dempster stated. ''Our impossible target aim was 1 percent,
|
||
our management target aim was 10 percent and our scientific
|
||
upper limit was 100 percent per year leakage rate,'' said
|
||
Dempster.
|
||
|
||
''We have come in halfway between the impossible and our
|
||
management targets. On the scientific side, the safety
|
||
factor on the Biosphere 2 sealing is much more than an
|
||
order of magnitude.''
|
||
|
||
All the key factors -- CO2, ocean coral reef, plant growth,
|
||
species survival, agricultural production and leak rate
|
||
measurements -- show the Biosphere 2 system to be operating
|
||
at or better than expected levels, in spite of one of the
|
||
cloudiest seasons in the region's history.
|
||
|
||
Cloud cover affects the amount of light available for
|
||
oxygen-producing plants inside the experiment. ''The most
|
||
important thing has been the integrated response of the
|
||
entire system,'' added Dempster.
|
||
|
||
''However, to make the exact calculations required, we had
|
||
to be able to adjust to even such small amounts as a
|
||
quarter of a part per million of carbon dioxide per day,
|
||
which our leak rate has turned out to be.''
|
||
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Baker/Winokur/Ryder Public Relations,
|
||
Beverly Hills, Calif.
|
||
Larry Winokur, 310/278-1460
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 14:43 Fri Dec 20 EXP: 15:00 Mon Dec 23
|
||
|
||
PRATT & WHITNEY HIGH PRESSURE TURBOPUMPS SUCCESSFULLY
|
||
TESTED AT NASA CENTER
|
||
|
||
WEST PALM BEACH, FL (DEC. 20) PR NEWSWIRE - A pair of Pratt
|
||
& Whitney designed high pressure turbopumps has been
|
||
successfully tested in a Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME)
|
||
at NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.
|
||
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 16 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Dec. 17 test was a 1.5 second ignition test. The
|
||
turbopumps are expected to demonstrate full power operation
|
||
on additional engine firings early next year. The pumps
|
||
deliver liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellants to
|
||
the main combustion chambers of the Space Shuttle's three
|
||
main engines.
|
||
|
||
Originally, the NASA-sponsored program called for the
|
||
development and flight qualification of a set of turbopumps
|
||
that would be interchangeable with current pumps and have a
|
||
55-mission life, or approximately 7.5 hours of operation.
|
||
Declining resources recently forced NASA to defer the fuel
|
||
turbopump certification program until after flight
|
||
certification of the oxidizer pump.
|
||
|
||
Additional oxygen turbopumps are being assembled for tests
|
||
next year. The program's production phase requires
|
||
turbopumps to be delivered between 1993 and 1997. The P&W
|
||
oxidizer turbopump is planned to be used on Space Shuttle
|
||
engines beginning in 1994.
|
||
|
||
A P&W SSME oxidizer turbopump weighs the same as a V-8
|
||
automobile engine but develops 28,000 horsepower and could
|
||
empty a swimming pool in 60 seconds. Its main shaft rotates
|
||
at 24,000 rpm, compared to 3,000 rpm for an automobile
|
||
engine operating at 60 mph. The maximum equivalent
|
||
horsepower developed by the Shuttle's three main engines
|
||
combined is over 37 million, and the energy released is the
|
||
equivalent to the output of 23 Hoover dams.
|
||
|
||
Pratt & Whitney's Government Engines & Space Propulsion
|
||
(GESP) facility, headquartered near West Palm Beach, Fla.,
|
||
designs, develops and supports military jet engines, and
|
||
provides a wide variety of propulsion systems and launch
|
||
services for the U.S. space program. Other GESP units are
|
||
Chemical Systems Division, San Jose, Calif., and USBI, with
|
||
facilities in Florida, Alabama and Louisiana. Pratt &
|
||
Whitney is a unit of United Technologies Corporation (NYSE:
|
||
UTX), Hartford, Conn.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Patrick Louden of Pratt & Whitney, 407-796-6793
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 09:00 Wed Dec 18 EXP: 09:00 Wed Dec 25
|
||
|
||
ORIGINS OF MANY CHRISTMAS TRADITIONS ARE GENERALLY UNKNOWN
|
||
|
||
SEATTLE (DEC. 18) UPI - Christmas trees, mistletoe and
|
||
gift-giving are well- known holiday traditions, but their
|
||
origins are generally unknown to most Americans who go
|
||
along because ''that's the way it's always been done.''
|
||
|
||
But it hasn't ''always been done'' that way and to
|
||
investigate the origins of the holiday's traditions is to
|
||
discover a fascinating part of American and European
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 17 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
history.
|
||
|
||
Though most Americans celebrate the holiday to varying
|
||
degrees, few are aware that it wasn't until the middle of
|
||
the 19th century that Christmas was accepted into American
|
||
culture. During the 17th and 18th centuries, large groups
|
||
of colonists vehemently objected to the celebration,
|
||
calling it ''an abomination.''
|
||
|
||
The Puritans believed church government should not sanction
|
||
anything that couldn't be found in the scriptures. In 1659
|
||
in Boston, anyone found observing the holiday was fined.
|
||
|
||
But, still, the celebration was catching on.
|
||
|
||
One influence may have been separation of church and state,
|
||
established by the U.S. Constitution in 1791. Members of
|
||
the Puritan and evangelical churches were less likely to
|
||
oppose the celebration when it was no longer a symbol of
|
||
the religious and political dominance of the Church of
|
||
England.
|
||
|
||
During the 19th century, secular interest in Christmas
|
||
spread rapidly with an influx of German immigrants who
|
||
celebrated Christmas as both a religious and folk occasion.
|
||
|
||
The English colonists in America weren't accustomed to
|
||
giving gifts, not even to the children. They did, however,
|
||
give to servants and the poor, as part of their duty to
|
||
God.
|
||
|
||
Christmas presents were advertised sporadically in
|
||
newspapers in the 1820s, but for the next half century,
|
||
gifts were referred to as New Year's gifts or simply
|
||
''holiday'' gifts. The custom of gift-giving didn't catch
|
||
on until the mid 19th century, when stores were a flurry of
|
||
activity.
|
||
|
||
While firecrackers and noise-making are largely associated
|
||
with Independence Day and to a lesser extent New Year's
|
||
Eve, the old- fashioned Christmas was a cacophony of guns,
|
||
cannons and firecrackers.
|
||
|
||
The practice of making noise dates back to the notion that
|
||
loud sounds would frighten evil spirits thought to be
|
||
rampant at the winter solstice - celebrated as the point
|
||
when days started getting longer, the coming of spring and
|
||
the renewal of life.
|
||
|
||
In about 320 A.D., Rome decided to convert the pagan
|
||
solstice celebration and the Mithraic (Persian) ''Birthday
|
||
of the Unconquered Sun'' into something more suited to
|
||
their purposes. Christians believed Jesus was born on the
|
||
25th day, but couldn't settle on the month. December was
|
||
chosen and the observance became ''Birthday of the
|
||
Unconquered Son.''
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 18 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
Christmas traditions have deep roots in European folk
|
||
customs. The yule log, virtually forgotten in today's
|
||
celebrations, came from England. The log was brought home
|
||
on Christmas Eve, placed in the fireplace, lit from a piece
|
||
of the previous year's log and, to prevent bad luck, kept
|
||
burning for 12 hours.
|
||
|
||
The popularity of the Christmas tree grew out of the yule
|
||
log. As legend has it, the first Christmas tree was cut by
|
||
Martin Luther, who brought it home and decorated it with
|
||
candles to imitate the stars in the sky above Bethlehem.
|
||
|
||
The first national recognition of the Christmas tree custom
|
||
in the United States came in 1856, when President Franklin
|
||
Pierce decorated one at the White House.
|
||
|
||
Originally, the ''tree of life'' was a tabletop model. It
|
||
was decorated with apples, the symbol of man's fall, and
|
||
sacramental wafers, the symbol of man's salvation.
|
||
Eventually, the apples were replaced by glass balls, the
|
||
wafers by cookies cut in the shape of stars, angels, or
|
||
animals.
|
||
|
||
The poinsettia is perhaps the most popular of the several
|
||
plants widely used in today's Christmas decorating. The
|
||
plant with bright red ''bracts'' was brought from Mexico by
|
||
botanist and U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Joel R. Poinsett.
|
||
The ''flower of the Holy Night'' is believed to represent
|
||
the flaming Star of Bethlehem.
|
||
|
||
Holly, ivy and mistletoe are symbols of fertility. Though
|
||
ivy is largely overlooked today, in old English carols ivy
|
||
represents the female and holly represents the male. Both
|
||
were thought to have healing powers.
|
||
|
||
The legend of Santa Claus rose out of the story of St.
|
||
Nicholas.
|
||
|
||
Nicholas was born about 270 A.D. in what is now Turkey.
|
||
Tales of his charitable life and miracle-working were
|
||
passed on by word of mouth. He was considered the patron of
|
||
children and this is thought to be the reason he became
|
||
tied to Christmas.
|
||
|
||
The written description of the Santa Claus we know today
|
||
was created by Clement Moore, the New York scholar who
|
||
penned ''The Night Before Christmas.'' The visual image was
|
||
developed by illustrator Thomas Nast, a political
|
||
cartoonist who created the Democrats' donkey and the
|
||
Republicans' elephant.
|
||
|
||
Nast first drew Santa Claus for a book of poems that
|
||
included ''The Night Before Christmas.'' After the success
|
||
of the book, he drew Santa each Christmas for ''Harper's
|
||
Weekly.'' Children and adults alike eagerly awaited the
|
||
drawings, which appeared in the magazine for 23 years.
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 19 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
The appearance of Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer is quite
|
||
new, having appeared on the scene in 1939. Rudolph was
|
||
created for an advertising campaign of Montgomery Ward. The
|
||
story was used as a ''giveaway'' item for the Christmas
|
||
shopping season and it wasn't used again until 1946. In
|
||
1949 the popular song was recorded by Gene Autry and Bing
|
||
Crosby and it swept the country.
|
||
|
||
=END=
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 13:20 Tue Dec 24 EXP: 13:00 Wed Dec 25
|
||
|
||
SOVIET COSMONAUTS CONTINUE RESEARCH IN SPACE ABOARD MIR
|
||
SPACE STATION
|
||
|
||
MOSCOW (DEC. 24) DPA - Soviet cosmonauts Alexander Volkov
|
||
and Sergei Krivalev continued Tuesday their research work
|
||
on board the Mir space station, conducting an experiment to
|
||
obtain more information about the black hole 60 million
|
||
light years from earth, the Soviet news agency TASS
|
||
reported.
|
||
|
||
The two cosmonauts also refuelled the engine of the
|
||
orbiting space station, the agency said.
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 17:34 Mon Dec 23 EXP: 18:00 Thu Dec 26
|
||
|
||
USAIR IS LOOKING FOR 13 WINNERS FROM THE 1991 PSA SPACE AGE
|
||
CONTEST
|
||
|
||
LOS ANGELES (DEC. 23) PR NEWSWIRE - USAir is looking for 13
|
||
third prize winners of the PSA 1991 Space Age Contest held
|
||
20 years ago by Pacific Southwest Airlines. The
|
||
promotional contest required entrants to depict what they
|
||
thought PSA's aircraft would look like in the (far off)
|
||
year 1991. Third prize winners received a certificate good
|
||
for round-trips for two, anywhere PSA flies in the year
|
||
1991, including the moon.
|
||
|
||
R. Brooks Stover, a 23 year old Stanford student, won first
|
||
place in the contest by drawing a double-fuselaged aircraft
|
||
in which sections of the plane detach and serve as
|
||
monorails. He won an all- expense paid trip for four to
|
||
Tahiti back in 1971.
|
||
|
||
One of the 13 winners who has already been identified,
|
||
Sonia Manzo recalled, "I remember that in 2nd or 3rd grade
|
||
I thought 1991 would never arrive -- and now it's
|
||
practically over!" The PSA 1991 Space Age Contest third
|
||
prize winners will all receive two round- trips anywhere on
|
||
the USAir system.
|
||
|
||
USAir, America's fifth largest airline, flies to 38 states,
|
||
the District of Columbia and the Commonwealth of Puerto
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 20 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
Rico as well as international destinations such as Bermuda,
|
||
Bahamas, Canada, Great Britain and Germany.
|
||
|
||
Patricia Goldman, senior vice president for corporate
|
||
communications, explained, "Honoring these PSA winning
|
||
certificates is another way for USAir to demonstrate
|
||
corporate commitment to our friends and our passengers over
|
||
the years."
|
||
|
||
Winners are requested to contact USAir's Western Region
|
||
Corporate Communications office at 310-417-1294.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Agnes J. Huff of USAir, 310-417-1294
|
||
|
||
=START= XMT: 10:44 Fri Dec 27 EXP: 11:00 Mon Dec 30
|
||
|
||
CROP GENETICS AND DU PONT FORM BIOINSECTICIDES ALLIANCE
|
||
|
||
HANOVER, MD (DEC. 27) PR NEWSWIRE - Crop Genetics
|
||
International (NASDAQ: CROP) and the Du Pont Company
|
||
announced today the formation of an alliance for the joint
|
||
commercialization of Insecticidal Virus Products or IVPs.
|
||
These biological insecticides consist of naturally
|
||
occurring organisms which infect and destroy targeted
|
||
insects. Du Pont and Crop Genetics said that they formed
|
||
the alliance to develop, produce, formulate, and market a
|
||
broad range of viruses for insect control.
|
||
|
||
Crop Genetics will become the exclusive producer of virus
|
||
products for the alliance and focus its InSTARx(TM)
|
||
division on the low-cost production of IVPs. Du Pont will
|
||
become the exclusive global distributor and marketer of
|
||
IVPs for the alliance. Both companies will jointly develop
|
||
new IVPs. Under the alliance agreement, Du Pont agreed to
|
||
fund development of IVPs at Crop Genetics for up to $3.75
|
||
million over the next two years. The two agricultural
|
||
companies said they will share the profits from the
|
||
|
||
alliance under a series of sale and supply agreements which
|
||
will be negotiated as IVPs are developed.
|
||
|
||
Frank W. Owen, global product manager for insecticides at
|
||
Du Pont Agricultural Products said that the safety and
|
||
effectiveness of IVPs have been known for years but that
|
||
success of IVPs has been limited because of relatively high
|
||
manufacturing costs. "The production and purification
|
||
methods created by Crop Genetics' InSTARx(TM) scientists
|
||
hold the promise of permitting large scale production of a
|
||
range of IVPs at competitive prices." Owen said, "The
|
||
alliance will broaden Du Pont's product offering of
|
||
biological insecticides and demonstrates a commitment by
|
||
both companies to provide growers with effective,
|
||
environmentally compatible products for integrated pest
|
||
management programs."
|
||
|
||
Crop Genetics International is developing biological
|
||
OO 2-01 Page 21 4 Jan 1992
|
||
|
||
|
||
pesticides systems to control insects, diseases, and weeds
|
||
in agriculture and forestry. The company's research is
|
||
focused on the creation of novel crop protection products
|
||
that are effective and compatible with the environment. The
|
||
company's InSTARx division is developing low-cost
|
||
manufacturing processes for viral insecticides; the
|
||
company's X-tend(TM) group is focused on developing weed
|
||
control systems that combine biological and synthetic
|
||
herbicidal agents; its InCide(TM) technology is designed to
|
||
use genetically-engineered plant inoculants to protect
|
||
corn, rice, and other row crops from insects and fungi; and
|
||
its Kleentek(R) business markets disease-free sugarcane
|
||
seed.
|
||
|
||
Du Pont is a diversified chemicals, energy and specialty
|
||
products company. Du Pont markets agricultural products in
|
||
125 countries, has production facilities on five continents
|
||
and is one of the largest suppliers of crop protection
|
||
products in the U.S., offering more than 60 insecticides,
|
||
fungicides and herbicides.
|
||
|
||
CONTACT: Joseph W. Kelly, chief executive officer of Crop
|
||
Genetics International, 410-712-7170; Trish Williams of Du
|
||
Pont Agricultural Products, 302-992-6810; or Anthony Russo
|
||
of Noonan/Russo Communications, 212-979-9180, for Crop
|
||
Genetics.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
* Animal Mutilation Update
|
||
|
||
This file was provided to the ParaNet<sm> Information Service by
|
||
UFO Magazine. All rights are reserved. You may distribute this file
|
||
freely as long as this header remains intact.
|
||
|
||
Date prepared: 4/18/91
|
||
Contributed by: Staff UFO Magazine
|
||
|
||
=================================================================
|
||
UFO Magazine Vol. 5 No. 4 ( Coping With Abduction )
|
||
|
||
The `Harvest' Continues
|
||
ANIMAL MUTILATION UPDATE
|
||
by Linda Moulton Howe
|
||
|
||
In 1989, there were so many cattle mutilations in southern Idaho
|
||
that Bear Lake County Sheriff Brent Bunn told me, "We haven't seen
|
||
anything like this since the 1970s." Sheriff Bunn sent me 16
|
||
neatly-typed "Investigation Reports" about cattle mutilations that
|
||
had taken place in his county between May and December. Over half
|
||
occurred in a remote valley called Nounan. Only eighty people live
|
||
there. Ranching is their main income source, and cattle are
|
||
precious. Disease and predators are old and well-understood
|
||
enemies.
|
||
|
||
What descended on Nounan, Idaho in the summer and fall of 1989
|
||
was not understood-and it scared people. Bloodless and precise
|
||
cuts-that's what bothers people. Officer Gregg Athay wrote in his
|
||
mutilation report, "There were no visible signs of the cause of
|
||
death. It appeared that only the soft tissues (nose, lips and
|
||
tongue) were gone off the head and four nipples off the bag. Again
|
||
there was no blood on the hair and ground."
|
||
|
||
No veterinarian report was made on that cow. But a month earlier,
|
||
Dr. Charles Merrell at the Bear Lake Animal Hospital examined a
|
||
dead Hereford cow. Dr. Merrell wrote after his examination: "Some
|
||
time between approximately 8 p.m. (August 31, 1989) and 7 a.m. 1
|
||
September, the anus, vagina to include uterus and ovaries and all
|
||
four teats (one teat deeply incised, the others shallow cuts) were
|
||
removed by knife cuts around these tissues. There were no signs of
|
||
injury and no blood to be found on the ground. " A neighbor,
|
||
Bernice Laughter, said she saw lights in that area about 2 a.m. on
|
||
September 1.
|
||
|
||
Disks reported
|
||
|
||
Throughout the history of animal mutilations, since 1967, there
|
||
have been numerous eyewitness accounts of large, glowing disks or
|
||
"silent helicopters " over pastures where dead animals are later
|
||
found. One Waco, Texas rancher said he encountered two four-foot
|
||
tall, light green-colored "creatures " with large, black, slanted
|
||
eyes, carrying a calf which was later found dead and mutilated. In
|
||
1983, a Missouri couple watched through binoculars as two small
|
||
beings in tight-fitting silver suits worked on a cow in a nearby
|
||
pasture. The alien heads were large and white in color. Nearby, a
|
||
tall, green-skinned "lizard man" stood glaring with eyes slit by
|
||
vertical pupils like a crocodiles's. Several hypnosis sessions with
|
||
various UFO abductees have produced information suggesting that the
|
||
alien intruders are using the tissues and blood fluids for genetic
|
||
experimentation and sustenance.
|
||
|
||
One Missouri woman, who has experienced repeated encounters with
|
||
small grey beings that have large, black eyes, said the creatures
|
||
told her, "We use substances from cows in an essential biochemical
|
||
process for our survival." In the 1989 continuing harvest, over
|
||
half of the Idaho mutilations were young calves. One mutilated
|
||
calf, found December 24, north of Downey, Idaho, was found lying on
|
||
its back with the navel, rectum and genitals neatly cut out of the
|
||
steer's white belly. No blood was found anywhere. (See photo, p.
|
||
18.) This steer calf was taken for an autopsy to Dr. Chris Oats,
|
||
D.V.M., at the Hawthorne Animal Hospital. Dr. Oats checked all the
|
||
vital organs and was unable to determine the cause of death. During
|
||
the autopsy, a sharp cut was found in the right chest area, and Dr.
|
||
Oats discovered that a main artery had been severed under the chest
|
||
wound.
|
||
|
||
She was surprised that "the steer had lost a large amount of
|
||
blood, but [she] could not understand where it went to. " There was
|
||
no blood on the steer or on the ground. Dr. Oats also determined
|
||
that the steer had not been dragged by the neck or tied up around
|
||
the feet.
|
||
|
||
Residents of southern Idaho weren't alone in their fear and con-
|
||
fusion about the mutilations. William Veenhuizen woke up on July
|
||
17, 1989 to find his finest cow mutilated about 100 yards from his
|
||
farmhouse in Maple Valley, Washington, southeast of Seattle. The
|
||
six-year-old female was due to calve in about three weeks. But
|
||
mutilators had cut away a smooth oval section of the cow's mouth,
|
||
removed a section of jaw with teeth, excised the tongue and cut out
|
||
the entire udder, vagina and rectal area. The calf was still inside
|
||
the belly.
|
||
|
||
Something woke Mr. Veenhuizen up around I a.m. that day, he
|
||
remembers. He even put his shoes on and went outside, but he
|
||
couldn't see or hear anything out of the ordinary. He was so upset
|
||
after the mutilation, he started keeping the rest of his animals
|
||
inside the barn. "A neighbor said to me that coyotes did it," he
|
||
said, "but I said the coyotes don't have that sharp a knife."
|
||
|
||
--- XRS! 4.50+
|
||
* Origin: Absence of Evidence is not Evidence of Absence (Quick 1:19/19.19)
|
||
SEEN-BY: 10/45 19/19 105/605 123/19 140/10 202/502 238/300 363/29 42 95
|
||
SEEN-BY: 363/107 373/9 1000/210 3607/20 3800/8
|
||
PATH: 19/19 363/29 3607/20
|
||
|
||
Message number 4692 in "Odyssey UFO Echo"
|
||
Date: 12-14-91 00:18
|
||
From: John Powell
|
||
To: Jerry Woody
|
||
Subj: Mutilations 2/2
|
||
|
||
EID:1013 0130cb90
|
||
MSGID: 1:19/19.19 2949943e
|
||
Other farms hit
|
||
|
||
Bill Veenhuizen wasn't the only farmer in Maple Valley,
|
||
Washington having mutilation problems. On Sunday, November 11, two
|
||
female sheep were found with their sexual organs removed. The
|
||
Hicks-Raburn King County Police found small holes on the carcasses
|
||
that they concluded might be BB gun pellet wounds, but no pellets
|
||
were found.
|
||
|
||
Mystery technology
|
||
|
||
Another major question: Had the blood been drained from all those
|
||
animals without cutting them? If alien life forms are responsible,
|
||
and blood is a fluid they need for sustenance, do the aliens have
|
||
a technology which can transfer molecules of blood from within a
|
||
living system and leave mysteriously dead animals behind having no
|
||
cuts at all: The same question might apply to the hundreds of wild
|
||
horses which were found dead in Nevada in 1989.
|
||
|
||
In November, 1989, in Red Cloud, Nebraska, rancher Ron Bartels
|
||
found a large, 1,000 lb. Chianina cow dead and mutilated. The
|
||
Franklin County Sheriff Department investigated, and veterinarian
|
||
Carl Guthrie, D.V.M., was asked to do a necropsy. In his report, he
|
||
stated that a four-inch straight incision had been made over the
|
||
cervical trachea. Beyond that cut inside the animal, over eight
|
||
inches of trachea and esophagus had been surgically removed- "The
|
||
skin over the abdomen was removed in a clear, demarcated line-no
|
||
musculature disturbed," he noted. And the rectum and vagina were
|
||
cored out.
|
||
|
||
Predators discounted
|
||
|
||
Dr. Guthrie concluded: "There were definite signs of suspicious
|
||
acts to the body of this cow-the nature in which the skin was
|
||
severed and removed was not characteristic of a predator strike."
|
||
|
||
In addition to those cuts described by Dr. Guthrie, the neat
|
||
circular patch of skin removed around the cow's eye, along with the
|
||
eyeball, has been one of the hallmarks of animal mutilations since
|
||
the 1970s. Rancher Ron Bartels told me, ". . . after several days,
|
||
there had been no predation, and with the number of coyotes we now
|
||
have in this area, they completely strip a carcass very quickly."
|
||
But nothing touched the strangely cut cow. How are the cuts made:
|
||
In my book An Alien Harvest, published in 1989, I show for the
|
||
first time that tissue gathered from mutilator cuts in Arkansas on
|
||
March 11, 1989, revealed the following characteristics under
|
||
microscopic examination:
|
||
1) The line is pinpoint thin;
|
||
2) The line was subjected to high heat, probably 300 degrees
|
||
Fahrenheit or above, leaving a hard and darkened edge;
|
||
3) The cuts were made rapidly, probably in two minutes or less,
|
||
because there is no inflammatory cell destruction which typically
|
||
begins in a few minutes after any trauma to tissue
|
||
(See contrasting photomicrographs).
|
||
|
||
In addition to the 1989 mutilation reports in Idaho, Washington,
|
||
Nebraska and Arkansas, there have been other cases in Colorado,
|
||
Oklahoma, Missouri and Florida. Further, over 800 wild horses in
|
||
Nevada have died mysteriously, about 70 domestic cats have been
|
||
found dead and bloodlessly mutilated in Tustin, California and 30
|
||
more cats in the East Bay of San Francisco. A city employee in
|
||
Setauket, Long Island, NY, has reported to me that about a dozen
|
||
raccoons, opossums, dogs and cats have been found in Percy Rayner
|
||
bloodlessly mutilated with cuts similar to cows. I have also
|
||
received calls about mutilations in Canada, but have no firm
|
||
photographs or reports.
|
||
|
||
After An Alien Harvest was released in June of 1989, I received
|
||
a letter from a security guard in Denver, Colorado. He described a
|
||
night in August when he was patrolling the grounds of a large
|
||
corporation west of the city. From his truck, he could see a large
|
||
circle of lights in the dark sky. The lights remained stationary
|
||
over a pasture a few hundred feet from the security guard. He was
|
||
afraid to report the unidentified flying objects, because UFOs
|
||
meant ridicule and he didn't want to lose his job. But he felt
|
||
guilty about not reporting it, because the next morning he watched
|
||
a farmer gather up a couple of dead and mutilated cows from the
|
||
pasture where the lights had hovered overhead. He asked me, "What
|
||
kind of technology are we talking about? I never took my eyes off
|
||
those lights. There was no beam, no sound, nothing. How did they do
|
||
it?"
|
||
|
||
That's a question which has haunted ranchers and law enforcement
|
||
since the first worldwide reported mutilation of a horse in 1967.
|
||
Not only how-but why? If alien life forms are intruding on this
|
||
planet and harvesting from animals and humans, is a program of
|
||
genetic experimentation and sustenance the answer? Or only part of
|
||
a larger alien need? Will the 1990s finally bring humans face to
|
||
face with an alien intelligence that has secretly used earth life
|
||
for eons? As we become more conscious of its presence, will we
|
||
learn that the alien intent is simply to survive without human
|
||
help? Or is there some larger and more complex alien scheme which
|
||
could challenge the future of human existence?
|
||
|
||
-Linda Moulton Howe-
|
||
-+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Thanks, take care.
|
||
John.
|
||
|
||
--- XRS! 4.50+
|
||
* Origin: Absence of Evidence is not Evidence of Absence (Quick 1:19/19.19)
|
||
SEEN-BY: 10/45 19/19 105/605 123/19 140/10 202/502 238/300 363/29 42 95
|
||
SEEN-BY: 363/107 373/9 1000/210 3607/20 3800/8
|
||
PATH: 19/19 363/29 3607/20
|
||
A
|
||
* Earthquake Watch
|
||
|
||
-------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Article 1255 of sci.geo.geology:
|
||
From: andy@pangea.Stanford.EDU (Andy Michael USGS Guest)
|
||
Newsgroups: sci.geo.geology,ca.earthquakes
|
||
Subject: N. CA, USA, and World Quake Report 12/19-25/91
|
||
Message-ID: <1991Dec28.011258.3626@morrow.stanford.edu>
|
||
Date: 28 Dec 91 01:12:58 GMT
|
||
Sender: news@morrow.stanford.edu (News Service)
|
||
Organization: Stanford Univ. Earth Sciences
|
||
Lines: 221
|
||
|
||
DISCLAIMER -- THIS IS NOT AN EARTHQUAKE PREDICTION OR WARNING!
|
||
The commentary provided with these map(s) is for INFORMATIONAL
|
||
USE ONLY, and SHOULD NOT be construed as an earthquake prediction,
|
||
warning, or advisory. Responsibility for such warnings rests with
|
||
the Office of Emergency Services of the State of California.
|
||
PLEASE REMEMBER -- THIS IS PRELIMINARY DATA
|
||
Releasing these summaries on a timely basis requires that the
|
||
data, analysis, and interpretations presented are PRELIMINARY. Of
|
||
necessity they can only reflect the views of the seismologists who
|
||
prepared them, and DO NOT carry the endorsement of the U.S.G.S.
|
||
Thus while every effort is made to ensure that the information is
|
||
accurate, nothing contained in this report is to be construed as
|
||
and earthquake prediction, warning, advisory, or official policy
|
||
statement of any kind, of the U.S. Geological Survey, or the
|
||
U.S. Government.
|
||
FOR QUESTIONS CONCERNING THIS REPORT
|
||
Send e-mail to andy@pangea.stanford.edu
|
||
|
||
Seismicity Report for Northern California,
|
||
the Nation, and the World for the week of
|
||
December 12 - 18, 1991
|
||
|
||
Data and text prepared by
|
||
Steve Walter, Barry Hirshorn, and Allan Lindh
|
||
U.S. Geological Survey
|
||
345 Middlefield Rd. MS-977, Menlo Park, CA 94025
|
||
Graphics by Quentin Lindh
|
||
|
||
San Francisco Bay Area
|
||
|
||
Seismicity remained low throughout the Bay Area during the past 7
|
||
days. Once again, the creeping section of the San Andreas was the most
|
||
active with minor activity along the Calaveras fault system in the East
|
||
Bay. The most notable earthquake of the past week was a M2.7 event that
|
||
occurred Tuesday morning on the Hayward fault about 3 miles northwest of
|
||
Berkeley. It was felt in the immediate area.
|
||
During the 7-day period ending at midnight on Wednesday, December 18,
|
||
1991 the U.S. Geological Survey office in Menlo Park recorded 23
|
||
earthquakes of magnitude one (M1) and greater within the San Francisco
|
||
Bay area shown in Figure 1. Four were as large as M2 including one M3.2
|
||
event along the San Andreas fault, about 13 miles southeast of Hollister
|
||
(#1/1). This compares to 21 earthquakes greater than M1 that were
|
||
recorded during the previous 7-day period, only one of which was as large
|
||
as M2.0.
|
||
|
||
Northern California
|
||
|
||
Seismicity also remained at low levels throughout the rest of northern
|
||
California during the past week. The only exception to this was a pair of
|
||
M3 events that occurred early Sunday morning in the central Gorda Plate
|
||
about 110 miles offshore of Crescent City (#3/2). Both events occurred in
|
||
the same vicinity as an active sequence last August that included two M6
|
||
earthquakes and a number of M4 aftershocks. Neither of the recent M3
|
||
events was reported felt.
|
||
A pair of M2 earthquakes occurred near the Cape Mendocino triple
|
||
junction later in the week (#8/2), both in the vicinity of the Petrolia
|
||
earthquake swarm that shook this area in mid-August. A M2.2 earthquake
|
||
occurred last Saturday evening in the southern Cascades, 19 miles north of
|
||
Lassen Peak (#2/2). Two M2 earthquakes occurred in this same location on
|
||
December 11.
|
||
In eastern California, two M2.3 earthquakes occurred beneath the
|
||
northwest shore of Mono Lake on Monday (#5/2). Both were probably
|
||
aftershocks to a M5.7 earthquake that occurred here on October 23, 1990 and
|
||
that was felt as far away as San Francisco.
|
||
The creeping segment of the San Andreas fault was somewhat more active
|
||
than it has been in recent weeks with activity seen at both the north and
|
||
south ends. Several M2 earthquakes occurred at the north end between
|
||
Paicines and Bitterwater, the largest a M2.7 event on Saturday morning
|
||
(#1/2). Slack Canyon, at the south end, produced a M2.6 event Monday
|
||
evening (#6/2). The next adjacent segment to the south, the Parkfield
|
||
segment, was also active, with a M2.6 earthquake occurring beneath the
|
||
Middle Mountain area 6 miles northwest of the town of Parkfield (#9/2).
|
||
|
||
Long Valley Caldera
|
||
|
||
The only earthquake of note in the Long Valley caldera was a M2.9
|
||
event that occurred Sunday evening in the southeast corner of the caldera,
|
||
near the northern end of the Hilton Creek fault (#2/3). This was the area
|
||
that was most active during the previous week, having produced six M 2
|
||
earthquakes and a number of smaller events.
|
||
Two M1 earthquakes occurred at the west end of the south moat, about
|
||
two miles southeast of Mammoth Lakes. Several M1 earthquakes occurred in
|
||
the Sierra Nevada terrane south of the caldera.
|
||
|
||
USA Seismicity
|
||
|
||
The National Earthquake Information Center recorded one notable
|
||
earthquake within the contiguous United States during the past week, a M2.8
|
||
event that occurred last Friday morning in northeastern Arkansas (#1/4).
|
||
This is part of the New Madrid Seismic zone that stretches across the
|
||
central Mississippi Valley and produced three M7 earthquakes during the
|
||
years 1811-1812.
|
||
|
||
The Planet Earth
|
||
|
||
The most active zone worldwide during the past week was in the Kuril
|
||
Island region of the western Pacific (#2/5). After producing several M5
|
||
earthquakes during the previous reporting period (see last week's summary),
|
||
the Kurils were rocked by four M6 earthquakes during the past week, the
|
||
largest a M6.6 event early Thursday morning (UTC). A total of 17
|
||
earthquakes of M5.0 or larger have occurred here within the past week.
|
||
Elsewhere in the world there was a M5.6 earthquake in the New Britain
|
||
region (#1/5), a M5.3 on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao (#3/5),
|
||
a M5.1 in the northern Argentinean province of Jujuy (#4/5), a M5.6 in
|
||
southern Peru just west of Lake Titicaca (#5/5), and a M5.5 along the
|
||
spreading ridge offshore of Vancouver Island, British Columbia (#6/5).
|
||
|
||
Table 1. Central California Seismicity (M>2.0)
|
||
|
||
--ORIGIN TIME (UT)-- -LAT N-- --LON W-- DEPTH N N RMS ERH ERZ DUR
|
||
YR MON DA HRMN SEC DEG MIN DEG MIN KM RD S SEC KM KM REMKS MAG
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 12 1309 59.22 36 25.89 120 59.70 4.01 29 .12 .4 1.6 BIT 2.2
|
||
91 DEC 13 1148 11.55 36 41.10 121 18.32 3.90109 1 .17 .2 .4 STN 3.2
|
||
91 DEC 13 2152 49.54 36 53.91 121 37.15 2.99 27 .16 .3 .6 SJB 2.1
|
||
91 DEC 14 350 50.73 38 50.90 122 48.85 1.61 29 .12 .2 .9 GEY 2.2
|
||
91 DEC 14 812 49.39 37 22.96 121 44.30 6.58 76 .09 .2 .6 ALU 2.1
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 14 1348 21.55 36 28.09 121 2.20 4.54 87 .15 .2 .4 BIT 2.7
|
||
91 DEC 14 1352 34.54 36 28.07 121 2.41 5.24 34 .09 .3 .6 BIT 2.1
|
||
91 DEC 15 21 24.69 36 11.90 120 18.81 10.24 21 .18 .8 1.1 COA 2.0
|
||
91 DEC 15 656 9.87 40 45.86 121 30.63 6.75 11 .13 1.6 2.0 SHA 2.2
|
||
91 DEC 15 949 42.08 41 30.45 126 27.13 2.42 25 .3314.428.4 PON - 3.7
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 15 950 40.12 41 27.01 126 0.04 4.94 11 .2910.523.1 PON - 3.1
|
||
91 DEC 15 1424 15.28 39 13.55 122 42.04 6.55 21 .10 .3 1.8 BAR 2.1
|
||
91 DEC 15 1600 55.65 38 44.00 122 43.12 2.14 23 .13 .3 .9 NAP 2.3
|
||
91 DEC 16 435 29.48 37 37.20 118 49.72 4.57 38 .13 .3 .5 HCF 2.9
|
||
91 DEC 16 659 3.36 37 34.28 118 26.90 8.04 19 1 .08 .4 .6 CHV 2.0
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 16 839 43.83 36 2.70 121 32.89 0.36 27 .13 .8 5.7 SUR 2.0
|
||
91 DEC 16 957 13.66 38 3.34 119 7.02 12.99 21 .11 .7 1.1 MOL 2.3
|
||
91 DEC 16 2113 16.61 39 27.30 122 52.94 5.00 14 .09 .311.4 BAR - 2.0
|
||
91 DEC 16 2255 22.80 38 1.56 119 7.78 5.35 7 1 .09 2.8 9.2 MOL - 2.3
|
||
91 DEC 17 218 50.39 35 37.83 119 16.90 10.90 9 .11 .8 2.2 BAK 2.1
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 17 356 17.06 36 4.55 120 38.47 1.35 50 .18 .3 1.6 SLA 2.6
|
||
91 DEC 17 1555 9.53 35 45.22 118 19.26 6.59 15 .08 .4 1.1 WWF 2.9
|
||
91 DEC 17 1813 40.17 37 55.55 122 17.62 5.63 84 .16 .2 .4 HAY 2.7
|
||
91 DEC 18 121 7.14 36 21.36 120 33.66 16.37 29 .22 .6 1.2 CRV 2.3
|
||
91 DEC 18 139 32.94 38 47.45 122 44.47 1.71 16 .13 .3 .8 GEY 2.0
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 18 249 41.03 40 12.72 124 7.88 13.63 9 .11 .5 .6 MEN 2.6
|
||
91 DEC 18 1442 19.69 35 57.85 120 31.02 10.92 51 .13 .3 .4 MID 2.6
|
||
91 DEC 18 1619 20.21 39 2.95 123 4.84 0.88 17 .17 .4 1.3 MAA 2.0
|
||
91 DEC 18 2043 10.27 40 22.33 124 19.22 29.18 9 .05 2.3 2.2 MEN 2.2
|
||
91 DEC 19 646 17.04 36 36.09 121 12.66 0.52 11 .22 1.3 4.9 CM 2.0
|
||
|
||
91 DEC 19 646 17.32 36 34.80 121 14.04 0.37 65 .35 .6 .8 CR 2.4
|
||
|
||
Notes: Origin time in the list is in GMT, in the text and on maps
|
||
it is in local time.
|
||
N RD: is the number of readings used to locate the event.
|
||
N S: is the number of S waves in N RD.
|
||
RMS SEC: is the root mean squared residual misfit for the
|
||
location is seconds, the lower the better, over 0.3
|
||
to 0.5 seconds is getting bad, but this is machine,
|
||
not hand timed, data.
|
||
ERH: is the estimated horizontal error in kilometers.
|
||
ERZ: is the estimated vertical error in kilometers.
|
||
N FM: is the number of readings used to compute the magnitude.
|
||
REMKS: obtuse region codes that denote the velocity model
|
||
used to locate the event.
|
||
DUR MAG: is the magnitude as determined from the duration of
|
||
the seismograms, not the amplitude. Sort of like
|
||
going to echo canyon and measuring how loud your
|
||
yell is by counting echos.
|
||
FIG: denotes the figure/event number in the maps posted separately.
|
||
|
||
Table 2. Worldwide Seismicity
|
||
Data from the USGS National Earthquake Information Center
|
||
|
||
UTC TIME LAT LONG DEP GS MAGS SD STA REGION AND COMMENTS
|
||
HRMNSEC MB Msz USED
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
DEC 12
|
||
003536.4* 66.708N 147.649W 33N 1.2 8 ALASKA
|
||
022743.7 36.410N 140.923E 54 5.0 1.0 37 NEAR EAST COAST-HONSHU, JAPAN
|
||
024253.2* 33.379S 70.007W 10G 0.4 10 CHILE-ARGENTINA BORDER REGION
|
||
052458.3* 60.888N 147.581W 33N 0.6 6 SOUTHERN ALASKA
|
||
070139.4* 33.378S 70.026W 10G 0.3 9 CHILE-ARGENTINA BORDER REGION
|
||
092100.1? 32.63 S 71.72 W 5G 0.7 8 NEAR COAST OF CENTRAL CHILE
|
||
130841.0 63.302N 151.139W 33N 0.9 12 CENTRAL ALASKA
|
||
145449.5* 61.822N 150.209W 33N 1.5 8 SOUTHERN ALASKA
|
||
154128.5* 4.998S 152.661E 33N 5.6 0.9 33 NEW BRITAIN REGION
|
||
215921.0? 10.55 N 63.09 W 33N 3.9 1.5 8 NEAR COAST OF VENEZUELA
|
||
223434.2* 12.597N 141.960E 53* 5.0 0.9 16 SOUTH OF MARIANA ISLANDS
|
||
DEC 13
|
||
001256.6 7.469S 128.743E 173* 5.7 1.1 39 BANDA SEA
|
||
023351.4 45.310N 151.583E 33N 6.2 6.5 0.9 121 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
025104.5? 45.46 N 151.60 E 33N 5.0 0.5 20 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
032439.8? 45.56 N 151.90 E 47D 4.9 0.5 18 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
033501.4? 45.35 N 151.83 E 33N 4.9 1.1 12 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
040852.5? 45.32 N 151.80 E 33N 4.9 1.3 17 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
054530.6* 45.664N 151.624E 33N 5.6 5.4 0.7 71 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
070613.4? 45.54 N 150.91 E 33N 5.0 0.6 14 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
080010.1* 45.667N 151.881E 33N 5.4 0.9 50 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
103206.3* 7.445N 124.712E 33N 5.3 1.6 11 MINDANAO, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
|
||
114145.6 35.828N 90.082W 5G 0.4 6 ARKANSAS. MD 2.8 (GS).
|
||
154448.7* 44.878N 151.967E 33N 5.2 1.2 25 KURIL ISLANDS REGION
|
||
185908.3 45.498N 151.684E 33N 6.3 6.1 0.8 109 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
192127.8* 45.490N 151.720E 45D 5.4 0.7 42 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
195507.3 45.292N 151.290E 33N 5.5 6.0 0.9 97 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
195823.3* 45.628N 151.592E 49D 6.1 0.7 62 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
203938.2* 44.946N 151.987E 33N 5.0 1.1 23 KURIL ISLANDS REGION
|
||
224512.8* 44.840N 152.020E 33N 5.0 1.1 17 KURIL ISLANDS REGION
|
||
DEC 14
|
||
000752.5? 22.63 S 66.33 W 150G 5.1 0.6 40 JUJUY PROVINCE, ARGENTINA
|
||
001439.0? 45.37 N 151.33 E 33N 5.0 0.7 16 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
103011.3* 27.464N 56.464E 33N 4.6 1.0 11 SOUTHERN IRAN
|
||
213845.3 41.184N 15.128E 10G 1.0 18 SOUTHERN ITALY. MD 3.4 (ROM).
|
||
DEC 15
|
||
063637.2? 29.72 S 178.13 W 33N 5.4 5.4 0.6 38 KERMADEC ISLANDS
|
||
101701.6* 45.307N 151.532E 52D 5.8 0.9 57 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
185611.4? 16.50 S 70.75 W 103D 5.6 0.7 58 SOUTHERN PERU
|
||
214700.6* 45.421N 151.882E 46D 5.1 4.3 0.9 40 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
DEC 17
|
||
063816.9* 47.334N 151.774E 150D 5.9 0.5 65 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
DEC 19
|
||
013341 Q 45.4 N 151.3 E 33N 6.6 1.0 84 KURIL ISLANDS
|
||
044407 Q 48.9 N 129.1 W 10G 5.5 1.3 43 VANCOUVER ISLAND REGION
|
||
|
||
--End of Article--
|
||
|
||
Don
|
||
**********************************************
|
||
* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
|
||
********************************************** |