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  STS-124: Official Flight Kit (OFK)

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Author Topic:   STS-124: Official Flight Kit (OFK)
Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42981
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 05-27-2008 09:01 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
This thread will offer details and updates concerning the contents of the STS-124 Official Flight Kit (OFK), as well as other mementos carried on-board the mission to deliver the Kibo science laboratory to the space station.

collectSPACE will present the full OFK manifest after Discovery docks with the ISS, including commentary about the mementos by the crew.

For updates about the 12-inch Buzz Lightyear action figure flown on STS-124, see: Toys in Space: Buzz Lightyear on the ISS

WAWalsh
Member

Posts: 809
From: Cortlandt Manor, NY
Registered: May 2000

posted 05-28-2008 12:43 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for WAWalsh   Click Here to Email WAWalsh     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Announced on ESPN's morning radio show Mike & Mike this morning (hey, a guy needs another interest beyond space flight). The show's hosts will conduct a live broadcast with Ken Ham during the mission. If the launch goes as scheduled, the broadcast will be on June 12 or June 13. Apparently, Ham is a sport nut and is bringing a number of sports related items with him on the mission, including Craig Biggio's final Houston Astros's uniform jersey and an Eli Manning jersey.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42981
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 05-29-2008 09:09 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
NASA:
Each crew member is permitted to carry a few small personal items that are packed into lockers before the launch. STS-124 Pilot Ken Ham is responsible for the entertainment - CDs of the ESPN Radio show "Mike and Mike in the Morning." Ham is also expected to talk to hosts Mike Golic and Mike Greenberg from space towards the end of his mission to the International Space Station.

A plastic microphone stand with the ESPN logo is also making the trip.

Discovery's crew will sport a number of athletic items as it embarks on its mission to deliver the Japanese Kibo laboratory's main module.

A yellow jersey from Lance Armstrong's record-setting seven victories at the Tour de France bicycle race, the backup jersey Eli Manning took to the Super Bowl, and the last jersey baseball's Craig Biggio wore in a game have places inside the orbiting locker room.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42981
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 05-30-2008 04:03 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Grand Forks Herald: UND alum to carry school's flag into space
Green letters, a white background and a curled orange flame.

The image has seen thousands come and go on the UND campus and traveled across the world on student and alumni T-shirts, sweatshirts and sports gear. But the school will cross another frontier this weekend when NASA astronaut and 1994 UND mechanical engineering graduate Karen Nyberg takes a flag bearing the UND logo into space.

Nyberg, 38, is scheduled to lift off Saturday on a 14-day NASA mission to deliver portions of the new Japanese-designed Kibo Laboratory to the International Space Station.

The UND flag Nyberg will carry is a standard issue 3-by-5-foot model provided by the school's facilities department, said Amanda Hvidsten, director of alumni relations with the UND Alumni Association, who made many of the arrangements.

Nyberg has signed the flag, Hvidsten said, and she believes the rest of the seven-person crew has as well. At some point, the flag will make its way back to UND to be put on display, she said.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42981
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 06-04-2008 08:06 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
collectSPACE: Astronauts share space through souvenirs
Armstrong and Buzz are in space again, though they aren't the Apollo astronauts who made history walking on the Moon.

Rather, cyclist Lance Armstrong and 'space ranger' Buzz Lightyear are sharing space aboard shuttle Discovery, now docked to the International Space Station. And they are not alone; joining them for the 14-day mission are retired Houston Astros' player Craig Biggio and New York Giants' quarterback Eli Manning.

Of course, none of the individuals (and fictional character) are themselves in space, but the crew of STS-124 chose to take items representing each of them aboard the orbiter.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42981
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 06-11-2008 11:11 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Schramsberg Vineyard release
What does Navy Commander Kenneth Ham drink after a space mission? Schramsberg. A fan of the Napa Valley winery, Ham will be the first astronaut to take Schramsberg into space -- or at least part of it. Ham will fly with labels and corks from the venerable sparkling wine producer on the Space Shuttle Discovery's STS-124 mission scheduled to launch May 31, 2008.

With over 3,700 flight hours in more than 40 different aircraft, Ham will pilot the Discovery on a mission described by NASA as, "the second of three flights that will launch components to complete the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo [Japanese for hope] laboratory". The 14-day flight will carry the largest payload to-date to the station and will include three spacewalks.

According to the facts and figures provided by NASA, the STS-124 is the 123rd space shuttle flight, the 26th flight to the station, the 35th flight for Discovery and the third flight in 2008.

This will be the first space shuttle flight for Schramsberg, and has been in the works for several months since Ham and his wife, Michelle, visited the winery last year. Each astronaut is allowed a small stash of personal items to accompany them into space, and while Ham's fellow astronauts predominantly chose sports memorabilia, Ham chose Schramsberg labels and corks.

"We are thrilled to have our labels and corks go on the space shuttle with Ken," vintner Hugh Davies says, "We love that our American sparkling wine will become a part of American history and we are all ready looking forward to Ken's next visit to the winery after his return to earth."

NavySpaceFan
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Posts: 655
From: Norfolk, VA
Registered: May 2007

posted 08-02-2008 07:47 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for NavySpaceFan   Click Here to Email NavySpaceFan     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Now that the finished article is on its way back home, I can tell the story of item 20 on the OFK manifest, the H.M.S. Association Blazer Badge. The process started in December of last year when I was put in contact with the OFK office at JSC. They passed me the regulations and procedures on how to get an article onto a flight. After obtaining a memorandum of agreement between NASA and the Association, we sent the badge (basically a fancy, gold threaded patch) in April (six weeks prior to launch) to JSC, and it was added to the flight's OFK manifest.

Post flight, the OFK office put together an amazing presentation collage that included the badge, a flown mission patch and a certificate of authenticity. The collage sketch, if you will, is shown below:

The certificate is a bit hard to read, so the text is as follows:

Presented to H.M.S. HOOD ASSOCIATION

From the National Aeronautics and Space Administration

This STS-124 Crew Patch and H.M.S. Hood Blazer Badge were flown aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery to the International Space Station during STS-124, May 31 – June 14, 2008, traveling 5,661,398 statute miles in 216 orbits around the Earth.

The actual collage will be on display at the Royal Maritime Club in Portsmouth, UK (a picture of the collage on display to follow).

My thanks go out to the great folks in the OFK office who made this process incredibly easy, astronaut CAPT Jeff Ashby, USN, who put me in contact with the proper people at JSC, and to the gentlemen of the H.M.S. HOOD Association. 67 years and one week prior to the launch of DISCOVERY, 1,418 men made the ultimate sacrifice in defense of their country. Their service, and the service of all of those who served on HOOD, are now immortalized not only in naval history, but in the history of manned space flight as well. For more information on H.M.S. HOOD and the Association, please see our website.

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