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  Teacher In Space Candidate Completes Proficiency Flight

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Author Topic:   Teacher In Space Candidate Completes Proficiency Flight
Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42988
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 03-31-2005 09:42 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
For pilot Bob Ray, it was a routine proficiency flight, but for teacher Pam Leestma, it was the flight of a lifetime and the first step toward realizing her lifelong dream of traveling into space.

Ray and Leestma, a 30-year-veteran teacher from Valley Christian Elementary School in Bellflower, California, took off from Reno Stead Field at 12:15 p.m. in a two-seat MiG-21UM supersonic jet trainer owned and operated by commercial spaceflight company X-Rocket, LLC. Leestma was selected as a spaceflight candidate in X-Rocket's Teacher in Space program.

The former Czech Air Force MiG-21UM, now dubbed Maching Bird 1, is one of the highest performance civilian aircraft in the US and the first step in X-Rocket's plan to open space to all Americans. Leestma's flight was no tourist ride, like the MiG flights sold to American tourists in Russia. "During today's flight, Pam filled important crew functions," said pilot Bob Ray, "including helping to monitor instruments and perform traffic watch."

For Pam Leestma, today's flight seems only natural. Her cousin, David Leestma, is a NASA Shuttle astronaut, and she has had a long-time fascination with spaceflight. "This is the adventure of a lifetime," Leestma said. "To see God's Earth from such a vantage point makes me think of the teachers who inspired engineers, scientists, and mathematicians to achieve things such as this. I hope to continue to inspire the next generation to find their dreams, achieve them, and make a difference in our world."

"X-Rocket's Teacher in Space program will help teachers like Pam Leestma realize their dreams," said company president Edward Wright. X-Rocket plans to operate a fleet of suborbital aerospace trainers that will serve multiple functions, from advanced test pilot training to adventure tourism experiences to Teacher in Space flights. The company's motto is "Spaceflight for the rest of us."

During the 1980s, NASA created its own Teacher in Space program, which was later replaced by the NASA Educator Astronaut program. Problems with the Shuttle program have prevented NASA from actually flying any teachers in space, however, and the planned replacement of the Shuttle with a Crew Exploration Vehicle will reduce the number of available flight opportunities for all NASA astronauts. Newspaper articles have spoken of possible layoffs in the NASA astronaut office, so opportunities for NASA to fly educator astronauts will remain scarce.

"This is where private enterprise can play a role," Wright said.

"Suborbital vehicles now under development will carry people into space much more affordably than the Shuttle or CEV. For under twenty million dollars, we could fly 200 teachers a year, four from every state in the union. Imagine thousands of astronaut teachers in schools all across the country, within the next decade. For decades, we've told students that if they studied math and science, they could grow up to become astronauts and go into space, but in reality, kids had a better chance of growing up to become NBA basketball players. What message does that send? Suppose we could turn that around, and show kids that they have a realistic chance of going into space? How cool would that be?"

X-Rocket is currently seeking sponsors to help make that happen. Today's flight is only the beginning.

"Pam Leestma has shown that America's teachers have the 'Right Stuff.' We don't intend to let them down," said Wright.

Photos and additional information available at: http://www.x-rocket.com/press.htm

DavidH
Member

Posts: 1217
From: Huntsville, AL, USA
Registered: Jun 2003

posted 03-31-2005 11:50 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for DavidH   Click Here to Email DavidH     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
This reminds me of Burt Rutan's promise to fly all of NASA NEAT Teachers (Educator Astronaut finalists) into space ... if someone else would sponsor it.

Easy to promise to do big things with somebody else's money.

Heck, I'll fly every cS member to the International Space Station, if someone will sponsor it.

------------------
http://allthese worlds.hatbag.net/space.php
"America's challenge of today has forged man's destiny of tomorrow." - Commander Eugene Cernan, Apollo 17 Mission, 11 December 1972

manilajim
Member

Posts: 256
From: Bergenfield, NJ USA
Registered: May 2000

posted 03-31-2005 02:46 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for manilajim   Click Here to Email manilajim     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
At least Burt Rutan has his own working rocket to use...
If I had a rocket, I'd fly 'em up too!!!
Jim

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