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  #1  
Old 08-08-2005, 05:22 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Discovery Shuttle

Sorors has anyone been following the problems with the Discovery Shuttle? I just hope and pray that they land safety tomorrow. Soror Astronaut Joan Higginbotham is assigned to mission STS-16 which was initially scheduled to launch on April 23, 2006. Soror Higginbotham is supposed to serve as a mission specialist mission on this 12 day mission to the International Space Station. Currently, her mission launch date is under review.
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Old 08-08-2005, 08:26 PM
chrini chrini is offline
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Re: Discovery Shuttle

Quote:
Originally posted by Ms Public Service
Sorors has anyone been following the problems with the Discovery Shuttle? I just hope and pray that they land safety tomorrow. Soror Astronaut Joan Higginbotham is assigned to mission STS-16 which was initially scheduled to launch on April 23, 2006. Soror Higginbotham is supposed to serve as a mission specialist mission on this 12 day mission to the International Space Station. Currently, her mission launch date is under review.
I am not a Delta, but I am a contractor at the Johnson Space Center. I am praying just as equally hard that they land safely tomorrow, although the weather is still a threat. I met Joan while we were volunteering at a Christmas party for Sheila Jackson Lee. She is nice. Her mission will have an African-American male onboard also. I don't believe two AA have been on the same mission before. So it is a big step. I hope their mission ,as well as others, is a sucesss.
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Old 08-08-2005, 10:35 PM
btb87 btb87 is offline
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I'm hoping that the shuttle will land safely tomorrow morning here at KSC. I woke up around the time the shuttle was scheduled to land and turned on the TV, only to discover that there would be no landing. If they could have landed later in the day, it would have been a beautiful day to do so.

But those sonic booms are no joke - especially when you forget about the shuttle landing! Talk about being jolted awake!
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Old 08-09-2005, 08:34 AM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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They landed successfully.

Kudos to Soror Higginbotham and her upcoming mission. My hat is off to her.
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Old 08-10-2005, 02:52 AM
christiangirl christiangirl is offline
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I'm so glad they're back, I was overjoyed when I heard it on the radio. It's always nice to hear that somebody made it home.
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Old 03-22-2006, 04:21 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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The new launch date for Soror Astronaut Joan Higginbotham is November 16, 2006 aboard the space shuttle Endeavour for STS-116 mission.

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/higginbo.html
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Last edited by Ms Public Service; 03-22-2006 at 04:24 PM.
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Old 03-22-2006, 08:19 PM
chrini chrini is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ms Public Service
The new launch date for Soror Astronaut Joan Higginbotham is November 16, 2006 aboard the space shuttle Endeavour for STS-116 mission.

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/higginbo.html
Yeah those dates change so much. We gotta get past STS-121, which also has an AA female (Stepahie Wilson), and STS-115 first. We will be extremely lucky if we have 2 flights this year. Having three flights will be a miracle.
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Old 03-23-2006, 05:36 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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@ Chrini

I did notice that the launch dates change frequently. I think initially my Soror’s mission to the space station was supposed to take place either March or April of this year.
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Old 11-26-2006, 02:41 AM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Preflight Interview with Soror Joan Higginbotham, Astronaut

Preflight Interview: Joan Higginbotham

11.03.06

Q: This is the STS-116 crew interview with Mission Specialist Joan Higginbotham. Joan, let’s start at the beginning of your astronaut career. What made you want to do this?

A: My career plan originally did not include becoming an astronaut. What I had envisioned for myself was to get a degree, my electrical engineering degree, going on to work for IBM. It seemed like a natural fit at the time because I had interned with them for two years in college; they were a good company; and they thought I was a good employee. However, at the time I was graduating from college, they had a hiring freeze on engineers. So they offered me a position as a sales associate and would move me over to engineering once that hiring freeze came off. In the interim someone from NASA called me and had gotten a hold of my résumé and thought I’d be a real good fit in two positions that he had in his directorate. I opted to go with NASA, and about eight years into my career, after some cajoling from my then boss, I applied for the astronaut corps.

Tell me a little bit about the path that you took academically. You touched a little on the professional path, but just what kind of things academically did you line up to get where you are?

Academically, I started out with an electrical engineering degree, undergraduate. Two weeks after graduation, I started working for the Kennedy Space Center as a payload electrical engineer. About three years into my career, I actually went back to get an advanced degree. I did it through NASA, and I got a degree in engineering management. After completing that degree, I applied for the astronaut corps in 1994 for the ’95 class. I was one of the lucky ones that got interviewed (there were only 122 of us), and ultimately I was not one of the 15 selected. After talking to some board members, they suggested I go back and get a more technical advanced degree, which is what I did. I went back to Florida Tech and got a master’s degree in space systems, reapplied for the corps in 1995 and got selected for the ’96 class.

Was it hard to go back to school at that point?

It was hard.

I’d been back two years earlier. I’d gotten a master’s degree. I’d pretty much figured that I was done. And it was hard too because I was working full time while getting both of these master’s. So I worked essentially night shift so that I could go to the school during the day and get my second degree. But obviously it paid off.

And you ended up graduating in, what was the class you are? I believe it’s ’96, was it?

It was. We were the graduating class of 1996. Class No. 16.

A lot of your classmates ended up being on the STS-107 crew.

Yes.

Were you close with many of them?

I was. It’s hard not to go through a training program like that and not become close with several people and friendly with at least everyone in the class. I did have three classmates on board STS-107. I considered every one a friend. So it was very hard that day. It was like losing family members. It was very tragic. In fact, for a long time I think I was just in a state of shock. One day I was driving in and I saw a car that KC used to drive. And I go, “Oh, there goes KC.” I had to remember that that wasn’t KC. It was a shock to get over losing such good friends.

Can you tell us a little bit about how you found out that you were selected to this crew and that you were going to make your first spaceflight? What was your reaction?

It’s a little strange because I wasn’t originally selected for this crew. I was originally selected for the STS-117 crew. I do remember the phone call, because it came the day before my birthday in the year 2002, and we were slated to fly in September of 2003. Due to the accident, of course, our mission got pushed back. But I continued to train with that crew for about two years. Then one day, just out of the blue, I got a phone call from the chief of the astronaut office, asking me to report to his office. As I was walking up the stairs, I was trying to figure out why I was being called into the principal’s office and what I had done wrong. When I got there, he told me that they had been looking at some of the crews, and they were realigning the crews, and that I had been moved up to the crew of STS-116. When he told me that I had been moved to this crew, it was basically a shock because I had been with my other crewmates for two years and I thought that’s pretty much how we’re going to launch in that crew configuration.

You said the initial crew was -117?

The initial crew was STS-117.

Basically the docked ops are very similar if I’m remembering ...

Actually, they’re not. They have S3/S4 and we have P5.

They actually have solar arrays.

Exactly.

Thank you for clearing that up for me. Tell me a little bit about the place that you consider your hometown, and what it was like growing up there.

Chicago for me is hometown. I was born and raised there, and I still have family in and around the Chicago area. So it will always be home in some manner for me. It’s a great place to grow up. There’s a lot of stuff to do. There’s a wonderful Museum of Science and Industry, a great planetarium, and a wonderful aquarium. And the lakefront in the summertime is just fabulous, and we have a wonderful skyline. I think the city itself has a lot to offer to just about anybody who goes there. I highly recommend visiting the city.

I’m going to put you on the spot here. Cubs fan, White Sox fan?

White Sox fan.

Southside.

Southside.

Speaking of sports, I know from reading your bio that you’re an avid weightlifter, a bodybuilder. Why and how you got into that.

I got into that actually when I worked at Kennedy Space Center. They had put a new gym in the first floor of our building. And two ladies who went to the gym were going to be in a bodybuilding competition. I essentially went to make fun of them because I imagined they were very petite women. So I imagined these women’s heads on an Arnold Schwarzenegger body. I just could not fathom the concept. I went to the show to see them, and I thought they just had incredible physiques. One of the trainers was sitting in the audience with me, and I asked him if he would be willing to train me. I did that show the next year and came in third place.

What is it about that sport that really floats your boat basically?

It is the discipline that it takes. The working out is not the hard part. It’s the eating correctly that makes you what you are once you get up on stage. So it’s the aspect of the discipline. I just really wanted to see if I could do it.

How would your best friend describe you, if I were to have a conversation with that person?

I think she would describe me as willful, determined, kind-hearted, and sometimes generous to a fault to my friends and family and those people who I keep in my core circle.


I also read that you like doing motivational speaking. What is it about that? Why do you feel the need to do that? Some people who don’t know you might think [you] have the Charles Barkley attitude, “I’m not a role model.”

It’s not so much that I think I’m a role model. It’s more of that I think I’ve been incredibly blessed as an individual, and I had wonderful parents and family and friends who just encouraged me to be the best that I could. I think that’s why I am the person I am today and where I am today. I just feel a sense of responsibility to do the same for people who are coming up. I think nowadays there are a lot of children who weren’t as blessed as I am. They don’t come from homes where families encourage them to do things. I think if I can maybe help them and encourage them to do whatever it is -- not necessarily become an astronaut -- just encourage them to do their best and expect nothing but the best from themselves, I think that I’m doing something good.

Let’s talk about the mission. Could you summarize the main goals of ISS assembly mission 12A.1? What is your main responsibility as a mission specialist?

We have a couple of different roles that we are fulfilling with this mission. The first one is to install the P5 truss. One of the other major tasks is to retract the solar arrays on the P6 truss. One of the hugest tasks that we’re doing on this mission is to electrically reconfigure the space station. We then have transfer to accomplish between shuttle and station, and we’re going to rotate one of our crew members out. Suni Williams will be staying on station and we’ll be bringing Thomas Reiter home. My primary tasks in this mission are to act as robotics arm operator on the space station along with Suni. I am the load master, the person in charge of transfer. I also am in charge of deploying some small satellites once we undock from space station.

You mentioned the electrical power system reconfiguration. Why is that being done?

We are trying to put our electrical system in a near-assembly-complete state. To do that, we are now going to run our primary power through our main bus switching units (or MBSUs). And, like I said, that’s basically the final configuration that we’re going to leave the station in.

For the two EVAs on which the power reconfig will take place: about half of the station at each day is going to have to be powered down. What kind of risks does that pose to systems and hardware? Are there plans in place to mitigate those risks?

The risk is not necessarily powering down the equipment as long as you do it in what we call a graceful manner. To that end the flight controllers have worked very hard and tirelessly to come up with a very detailed procedure of what equipment to power down when and how long each piece of equipment can stayed powered off. The biggest risk that we have there is leaving certain pieces of equipment unpowered for a long period of time. To mitigate all these risks essentially is all in the choreography of powering things down and powering things up.

There’s a time issue then?

There is a time issue there. If for some reason things do not go according to our nominal plan, we do have contingency procedures in our hip pocket that we can actually use to back out the configuration if needed or do whatever the situation, the scenario calls for.

This is the first shuttle-based semi-crew exchange, one person up, one person down, since before Columbia. What does it mean to you, as an American astronaut, to get that at least partially back on track?

It means to me that we, as NASA, are getting back to the task of accomplishing the goals that we have set, and that is completion of the space station. Personally it means that I have this really unique opportunity to serve my country in this manner. I feel extremely honored and blessed to have that opportunity.

The primary piece of hardware that you’re bringing up, as you mentioned, is the P5 short spacer truss segment, or truss. In relation to the other parts of the truss that’s up there, it’s a relatively small piece of hardware. Why is it so important to ISS though?

It is important because, as you mentioned in the name, the short spacer, it provides space between the P6 and the P4 array, and that’s essential because each one of those trusses (the P6 and the P4) have solar arrays. Basically the P5 will now allow those arrays to operate and rotate without interfering with one another. Also, it acts as a conduit (it’s going to have cables running through it) that’s going to transmit power and data from the P6 segment to the other segments on the station.

Let’s move on to flight day-specific duties. What are the key activities that are slated to take place on flight day two?

On flight day two, we are essentially checking out hardware that we need to get ready for our rendezvous and docking. I specifically will be checking out the handheld laser, which is a laser, a box, that we use. We point it towards the station and shoot at it, if you will, and this will tell us how far we are, the range, from the station and the range rate which is the rate at which we are closing in on the station. We use all that data to dock with our space station, to come in according to the different velocities at which we’re supposed to be tracking at different distances, as we’re closing in. The EVA crews are going to be checking out some of the hardware that they’re going to use on the first spacewalk.

On flight day three after the shuttle docks to ISS it’ll be about time to get the robotics operation under way, to get P5 out of the payload bay and into position for that day. Tell me how that’s going to proceed.

There is a ballet, is what I call it, that’s going to have to happen to get the P5 truss out. On the shuttle side, we’ll have Nick and Mark operating the shuttle robotic arm, and they will grapple P5 and pull it out of the payload bay and essentially position it on the portside of the shuttle, a little bit forward on the portside. Suni and I will be on the space station; we will already have the robotic arm in place. We will also grapple the P5 truss. So at one time we will have two arms grappled to the truss. Once we are sure that we have a good hold on the truss, Nick and Roman will back away, release the truss, back away to a clearance position, and the P5 truss will remain there overnight.

The following day the truss is out there parked overnight. That day, EVA-1 is set to get under way. Take me through that day starting from where the truss is and where it’s going to go, and the rest of the EVA.

Starting that day, we, Suni and myself, start the robotic operations before the EVA crew gets out the door. We are doing a series of maneuvers to position the truss from the overnight park position, which is on the portside of the shuttle, all the way to 200 centimeters just shy of where it’s going to mate with the P3/P4 truss. At that point, we will just hang out. Christer and Beamer will come out and they will do a couple configurations. Then they will come over to where the truss is, and they will give Suni and me verbal cues as to how to move the truss in. The reason we need them out there is because on that portside of the truss, there are very few camera views. We can use another two set of eyes to help verbally GCA us in, as what we call it. So, once they get out there, they will maneuver us in to about 20 centimeters out. They’ll take off some hardware at some launch lock removals, and once that is done we’ll get into good alignment where we think we are with mating with the P4 truss, and they will verbally guide us in into a good mated position.

From there, what will the EVs do? How will the P5 get hard docked?

At that point, they will go and physically bolt P5 to P4.

There’s also a camera that needs to be replaced. Will you be doing anything for that? How’s that going to happen?

There are no robotic arm ops included in the camera R&R. What’s going to happen is: We are actually flying up that replacement camera in the Spacehab. It will be assembled on the space station side. During the EVA, Christer will come back to the airlock, retrieve that new camera, go out to the starboard side of the truss, and he and Beamer will replace the old camera with the new camera. They'll bring the camera back inside.

Let’s move on to EVA-2 which is the first part of the power reconfig. Can you tell us how that’s going to proceed?

As I said earlier, the flight controllers are going to power down some of the channels of the space station. The EV crew will go out and demate some connectors from where they were currently routed and route them through our main bus switching unit. That in a nutshell is basically what’s going to happen. Once all those new connections are made, then the ground controllers will begin to power up that equipment that had been powered down for the connections.

If I understand the timeline correctly, while the ground is going through that power-up procedure, the EVs are going to be busy doing something else. Can you talk to me about that?

They are. We are going to relocate both of our CETA carts, which are currently on the S1 truss. One of the reasons is in case we need to replace one of the main bus switching units, in case one doesn’t work correctly, we need to reposition that CETA cart to get that main bus unit there. The other reason we’re moving that CETA cart is to pre-position it for one of our upcoming missions. They need it in a certain area, and while we’re out there maneuvering one we might as well get the second one.

Can you tell us a little bit about the thermal insulation that’s going to be installed on the station robotic arm?

There are things called force moment sensors on each end effector on the space station robotic arm. Right now the engineers on the ground have not been able to get a good calibration on those sensors due to the harsh thermal gradients. So the theory is: If we go ahead and put more multilayer insulation on those end effectors that it will protect those sensors from the different thermal gradients and they can get a good calibration on the ground.

There’s been much made about how difficult the rest of assembly of the ISS from this point on is going to be. What are the challenges that poses to actually getting it complete and continuing on?

The missions are really complex now. The arm operations are really complex. We have very tight tolerances between the arm and different structures. For example, on our mission, as we’re putting the P5 truss into position, we are coming within inches of a box. That’s unheard of. You always want to stay two feet away from structure. So two feet and two inches is a big difference. The spacewalks are really complicated. They have a lot of content in them. It’s really crucial that we execute these missions as well as we can. That's the big thing: When we go back to the moon and on to Mars, I don’t think those operations are going to be any less complex than the ones that we are doing now. So it’s essential for us to master these skills now for us to continue with our exploration.

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sh...ginbotham.html
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Old 11-26-2006, 03:17 AM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Interview with Soror Joan Higginbotham, Astronaut on 11/15/06

Her Time for Discovery

11.15.06

During her nine-year tenure as an engineer at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Joan Higginbotham actively participated in 53 space shuttle launches -- an impressive accomplishment for anyone. But when she returns to Kennedy for the launch of Discovery on STS-116, she'll take "participation" to a whole new level: as astronaut Joan Higginbotham on her first shuttle mission.

The Chicago native's planned vocational path didn't initially point to the space program. "My career plan originally did not include becoming an astronaut," she explained. "What I had envisioned for myself was to get a degree -- my electrical engineering degree -- and go on to work for IBM."

But an engineering hiring freeze at the industry giant coupled with an offer from NASA changed all that. Two weeks after her graduation from Southern Illinois University in 1987, Higginbotham arrived in Florida and began her career at the space center as a payload electrical engineer. Over the ensuing years, she held a number of positions in the shuttle program, even working in the firing room -- the launch control "nerve center" during the shuttle countdown and liftoff.

In those first years at Kennedy, Higginbotham earned an advanced degree in engineering management from nearby Florida Institute of Technology. After that, at the urging of one of her bosses, she applied to join the astronaut corps in 1994.

When she didn't make the cut on her first try, Higginbotham returned to Florida Tech, this time earning a master's in space systems while continuing to work full time at the space center.

"It was hard. I'd been back two years earlier. I'd gotten a master's degree. I'd pretty much figured that I was done," said Higginbotham. "I worked essentially night shift so that I could go to school during the day and get my second (master's) degree. But obviously, it paid off."

That payoff came when she applied a second time to become an astronaut. Her hard work was rewarded and she headed for Houston as part of the 1996 astronaut class.

Since then, her assignments have spanned various aspects of the shuttle and International Space Station programs. After originally training as part of the STS-117 crew, she was assigned instead to the STS-116 mission, where she will operate the station's remote manipulator system.

"My primary task in this mission is to act as robotics arm operator on the space station along with Suni (Williams). I am the load master, who is the person in charge of transfer, and I also am in charge of deploying some small satellites once we undock from the space station," Higginbotham said.

"The arm operations are really complex. We have very tight tolerances between the arm and different structures," she explained. "As we're putting the P5 truss into position, we are coming within inches of a box, and that's unheard of. You always want to stay two feet away from a structure. So, two feet and two inches is a big difference!"

But while this mission and those to come are extremely complex, she sees them as challenges that will give the astronauts the experience they need for future exploration planned by NASA.

"When we go back to the moon and on to Mars, I don’t think those operations are going to be any less complex than the ones that we are doing now, so it's essential for us to master these skills now for us to continue with our exploration."

And despite the fact that she'll be back at Kennedy where she participated in scores of shuttle launches in the past, this time will be different. When the main engines ignite, the solid rocket boosters thunder, and Space Shuttle Discovery roars off the launch pad, Higginbotham will be strapped into her seat on Discovery's middeck for the ride of her life.

"Personally, it means that I have this really unique opportunity to serve my country in this manner," she reflected, "and I feel extremely honored and blessed to have that opportunity."

You can learn more about what makes Joan Higginbotham tick. Meet her and other astronauts in our interactive Astronaut Flight Lounge.

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sh...m_profile.html
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Old 11-26-2006, 03:25 AM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Astronauts Flight Lounge for NASA STS-116 Mission

Sorors attached is the link to the Astronauts Flight Lounge for NASA STS-116 mission. If you select Soror Joan Higginbotham name from the menu, you can listen to an interview she conducted.

http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/afl/afl_noaccess.swf
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Old 12-04-2006, 03:37 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Three Days to Go

Three Days to Go



The STS-116 crew arrived Sunday at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida to begin final preparations for launch on the STS-116 mission, a construction flight to the International Space Station.

At Launch Pad 39B, Space Shuttle Discovery is safely enveloped by the pad's rotating service structure, which protects the shuttle assembly from the elements while providing access for technicians. The structure will be rolled back to the "park" position early Thursday morning, revealing the shuttle poised for launch.

The countdown is set to begin tonight at 11 p.m., with the clock starting at the T-43 hour mark. There are 27 hours, 36 minutes of hold time built into the countdown, leading to a preferred liftoff time at 9:35 p.m. EST.
+ Countdown 101

Primary payloads on the 12-day mission are the P5 integrated truss segment, SPACEHAB single logistics module and an integrated cargo carrier. This will be the 20th flight to the station.

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sh...ain/index.html

Countdown 101


Follow along with the countdown! The Virtual Launch Control Center is the only place online to get breaking information directly from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Live countdown coverage will begin about six hours prior to launch and will conclude about 10 minutes after liftoff, when orbit insertion is complete. Coverage includes frequent updates on the countdown status and videos of key events.

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sh...ntdown101.html
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Old 12-04-2006, 10:59 PM
MeezDiscreet MeezDiscreet is offline
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I got an email today from my Soror Aunt. Soror Joan Higginbotham is in Bay Area Houston Alumnae (BAHA) Chapter and they are asking all sorors who can to come out in our crimson and cream to come to the airfield
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Old 12-06-2006, 09:56 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Prayer Request for Astronaut Higginbotha

December 5, 2006

Dear Soror,

Many of you have recently circulated or received the email note about our Delta Soror Joan E. Higginbotham, a NASA Astronaut, who will be a member of the Space Shuttle team that will launch on this Thursday, December 7, 2006. I am writing to ask a very special request. I ask that you join Deltas throughout the world as we lift, in prayer, Soror Higginbotham and all the astronauts and scientists involved with this space mission. We pray that they experience a safe and successful voyage. Soror Higginbotham has been in constant communication with me over the past few months and is taking a banner featuring our National Presidents into space with her.

The Space Shuttle is scheduled to launch at 9:35 p.m. EST from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday to embark upon a 12-day mission. Traveling aboard the “Discovery” spaceship, the Space Shuttle Mission STS 116 is scheduled to return on December 19, 2006 at 4:35 p.m.

Let your prayers begin now and continue until God’s guiding light returns the space crew safe and sound, bringing them home in time for a joyous holiday. Thank you, sorors, for your earnest response to this important request.

Sisterly and sincerely,
Louise A. Rice
Louise A. Rice, Ph.D.
National President
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The Delta Homeownership Challenge
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  #15  
Old 12-07-2006, 10:45 PM
btb87 btb87 is offline
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Unhappy

No launch tonite.

Skies here are too cloudy. About 10 minutes or so before launch, the weather was more acceptable, but the clouds dropped to well below their "allowable" limit.

Next opportunities:

Tomorrow, 9:13 pm
Saturday, 8:47 pm
Sunday, 8:25 pm
Monday, 7:59 pm

One reason why it's cloudy here is because a cold front is moving through, and the weather is expected to be worse tomorrow night, so they may just make the decision later to not even attempt launch tomorrow and wait until Saturday.
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