shuttle Challenger today, including "some sort of control panel," and used sonar scans to search the ocean floor for more fragments of the spaceship.
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The space shuttle Discovery's countdown to blastoff began today to set the stage for launch
Countdown clocks at the Kennedy Space Center began ticking today for the shuttle Discovery's launch
Technicians found a faulty engine valve in one of the hard-luck space shuttle Columbia's engines
The City Council Tuesday unanimously approved a plan to erect a memorial to the Challenger space shuttle crew on City Hall grounds.
The two-day countdown for space shuttle Discovery's mission with Sen.
A faulty computer aboard the space shuttle Discovery has been replaced and the problem should not
These are among Southern California memorials for the Challenger crew: The Olympic torch is remaining lit above the Coliseum peristyle in Los Angeles as a silent tribute, largely because $2,700 in donations from private firms enabled the city's Coliseum Commission to keep the flame burning for another week.
The launch of space shuttle Challenger was aborted just seconds before liftoff today when computers
Challenger's astronauts interrupted their lab work today to launch a small experimental satellite to test a system for tracking Soviet missile-firing submarines under the Arctic ice pack.
In spite of Edwin Yoder's apology (Editorial Pages, March 14) for human fallibility, ergo NASA, I must agree with commission Chairman William Rogers that the process by which the decision to fly the shuttles is flawed, but not for any reason I've heard put forth to date.
I was dismayed to read your editorial.
rolling the space shuttle Atlantis to the launch pad for seven weeks of tests.
The countdown began today for a complex space shuttle science mission that will start with the liftoff of Challenger on Friday.
The launch of space shuttle Challenger, with a crew of seven that includes Sen.
Your editorial is a further example of the misinformation and indecision afflicting our nation's space program.
President Reagan is near a decision on whether to build a fourth shuttle to replace the Challenger, which was destroyed last January.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration released an ambitious shuttle launch schedule
Yoder asks: "If a comparable accident had happened in space early in the Mercury or Apollo program, would commissioner Neil Armstrong ever have set foot on the moon?"