http://apnews.myway.com/article/20040109/D7VV0JG00.html

President Bush will announce plans next week to send Americans to Mars
and back to the moon and to establish a long-term human presence on
the moon, senior administration officials said Thursday night.
Bush won't propose sending Americans to Mars anytime soon; rather, he
envisions preparing for the mission more than a decade from now, one
official said.

The president also wants to build a permanent space station on the
moon.

Three senior officials said Bush wants to aggressively reinvigorate
the space program, which has been demoralized by a series of setbacks,
including the space shuttle disaster last February that killed seven
astronauts.

The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Bush's
announcement would come in the middle of next week.

Bush has been expected to propose a bold new space mission in an
effort to rally Americans around a unifying theme as he campaigns for
re-election.

Many insiders had speculated he might set forth goals at the 100th
anniversary of the Wright brothers' famed flight last month in North
Carolina. Instead, he said only that America would continue to lead
the world in aviation.

House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, among others, has called for
an expansion of the U.S. space program, including a return to the
moon. The United States put 12 men on the moon between 1969 through
1972.

An interagency task force led by Vice President Dick Cheney has been
considering options for a space mission since summer.

Former Ohio Sen. John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth,
has said that before deciding to race off to the moon or Mars, the
nation needs to complete the international space station and provide
the taxi service to accommodate a full crew of six or seven. The
station currently houses two.

At the same time, Glenn has said, NASA could be laying out a long-term
plan, setting a loose timetable and investing in the engineering
challenges of sending people to Mars. The only sensible reason for
going to the moon first, he says, would be to test the technology for
a Mars trip.




xponent

Higher Farther Faster Maru

rob


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