This morning's launch of the space shuttle Atlantis marked the last shuttle launch NASA's foreseeable future. The craft launched successfully, but still had plenty of folks nervous for the safety of the crew. Of course, our concern this morning was nothing compared to the emotional rollercoaster that viewers felt in 1981, when the first shuttle went careening into space.
PM Video: The Launch that Started it All
Author Mary Roach Boldly Goes to UW's Bookstore
The term “gonzo science writer” is apt when applied to author Mary Roach, who has made a name for herself by writing funny and fascinating explorations of human corpses, the science of sex, and the mysteries of the great beyond. Her newest endeavor, Packing for Mars, tackles the mundanities of an astronaut’s life on the road—er, in space—such as bodily functions, culinary quirks, and workplace personality conflicts. (As if anything about floating in zero gravity a gajillion miles from Earth is mundane.) Roach meticulously delves into the research behind astronaut selection, machinery testing, and the psychology of living in cramped quarters for extended periods under unusual circumstances. Turns out the weakest link in the chain of technology that would allow exploration to faraway places like Mars may be the limitations of the human body and mind. Roach’s insights are surely just as wryly humorous and enlightening in person—if not more so—so be sure to catch her at UW’s bookstore on the Ave this evening.
NASA to Test New Lunar Vehicle in Washington State
To the average damp Seattle dweller, life in eastern Washington's Moses Lake--complete with rodeos, farms, and arid landscape--may very well seem like a different world. But NASA believes that Moses Lake and its surrounding landscape better mimics life on the moon. That's why NASA has decided to test a prototype of a lunar vehicle near Moses Lake this summer.

