AMEN!!!!

 

Black is the new black. :) 

On Sat, May 23, 2009 at 3:53 PM, ravenadal <ravena...@yahoo.com> wrote:

Second African-American Playmate.  First African-American NASA Chief.  Is this 
a great country, or what?

~rave!


--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "Tracey de Morsella" <tdli...@...> wrote:
>
> HOUSTON - The nation's turbulent space program will be run by one of its
> own, a calming well-liked former space shuttle commander.
>
>

> <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/05/23/charles-bolden-obamas-pic_n_207043

> .html> President Barack Obama on Saturday chose retired astronaut Gen.

> Charles Bolden to lead NASA. He also named former

> <http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/05/23/charles-bolden-obamas-pic_n_207043

> .html> NASA associate administrator Lori Garver as the agency's No. 2. If

> confirmed, Bolden, who has flown in space four times and was an assistant
> deputy administrator at one point, would be the agency's first black
> administrator.
>
> Bolden would also be only the second astronaut to run NASA in its 50-year
> history. Adm. Richard Truly was the first. In 2002, then-President George W.
> Bush unsuccessfully tried to appoint Bolden as the space agency's deputy
> administrator. The Pentagon said it needed to keep Bolden, who was a Marine
> general at the time and a pilot who flew more than 100 sorties in Vietnam.
>
> "Charlie knows NASA and the people know Charlie; there's a level of
> comfort," especially given the uncertainty the space agency faces, said
> retired astronaut Steve Hawley, who flew twice in space with Bolden.
>
> Bolden likely will bring "more balance" to NASA, increasing spending on
> aeronautics and environment missions, working more with other nations in
> space, and emphasizing education, which the president often talks about when
> it comes to space, said former Johnson Space Center Director George Abbey, a
> longtime friend.
>
> "He's a real leader," Abbey said Saturday. "NASA has been looking for a
> leader like this that they could have confidence in."
>
> Bolden's appointment came during the tail end of the space shuttle Atlantis'
> mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope one final time. He was the
> pilot on the flight that sent Hubble into orbit in 1990.
>
> Bolden, 62, would inherit a NASA that doesn't look much like the
> still-somewhat-fresh-from-the-moon agency he joined as an astronaut in 1980.
> NASA now "is faced with a lot of uncertainty," Abbey said.
>

> Story continues below http://www.huffingtonpost.com/images/v/darr.gif

>
> Bush set in motion a plan to retire the space shuttle fleet at the end of
> next year and return astronauts to the moon and then head out to Mars in a
> series of rockets and capsules that borrows heavily from the 1960s Apollo
> program. The shuttle's replacement won't be ready until at least 2015, so
> for five years the only way Americans will be able to get in space is by
> hitching a ride on a Russian space capsule. And some of NASA's biggest
> science programs are over budget.
>
> Earlier this month, the White House ordered a complete outside examination
> of the manned space program. The Obama administration hasn't been explicit
> about its space policy, with White House science adviser John Holdren saying
> the policy would come after a NASA chief was named.
>
> "These talented individuals will help put NASA on course to boldly push the
> boundaries of science, aeronautics and exploration in the 21st century and
> ensure the long-term vibrancy of America's space program," Obama said of
> Bolden and Garver in a statement.
>
> Bolden, a native of Columbia, S.C., and his wife donated $750 to the Obama
> campaign in 2008.
>
> At NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, where Bolden spent about a
> decade, his impending appointment was quietly cheered on all week long.
>
> The diminutive salt-and-pepper haired Bolden, who lives only a few miles
> from the space center, on Saturday morning said he couldn't talk until after
> Senate confirmation. He was busy answering congratulatory e-mails from home.
> He has his own consulting firm in Houston and sits on corporate boards.
>
> Those who have flown or worked with Bolden can't praise him enough.
>
> Retired astronaut Franklin Chang-Diaz interviewed to become an astronaut the
> same week as Bolden, was picked at the same time, and they flew together on
> their first flights.
>
> Soon after that much-delayed launch of the space shuttle Columbia in January
> 1986, Chang-Diaz looked at his friend Bolden and saw that the shuttle pilot
> had a "big, big smile... we were kind of like kids in a candy store."
>
> Hawley and then-U.S. Rep. Bill Nelson were also aboard that 1986 flight.
> Nelson, now the chairman of the Senate subcommittee on space that will
> oversee Bolden's nomination and one of the people pushing Bolden's
> nomination to the White House, commented: "I trusted Charlie with my life -
> and would do so again."
>
> Kathryn Sullivan was the payload commander on the 1992 flight of Atlantis,
> which was Bolden's first of two shuttle commands. She said Bolden has all
> the aspects of leadership that a good chief requires. That includes
> experience, wisdom and the ability to listen to all sides. She called him
> "one of the finest people I've ever known."
>
> "Charlie's a great leader," Chang-Diaz agreed. "He takes care of his team."
>
> ___
>
> On the Net
>
> Bolden's NASA biography: http://tinyurl.com/2eln82
>




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