John Logsdon is the founder and from 1987 to 2008 was the director of the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University.[1] (wikipedia)
My guess is that he'll have some parachutes involved that will slow it down before it lands. It's not such a radical idea.
It's not clear yet whether the 2007 budget will allow a CEV by 2012. There is a complex interplay between the fiscal 2007 budget in particular, the date for initial CEV availability and the potential for accelerating return to the Moon.
You might tap an initial pool of people with lots of money and nothing better to do,
The emphasis is on achieving goals rather than elegance, ... It has several elements to it. One is to say that the people who did Apollo were pretty smart.
The emphasis is on achieving goals rather than elegance.
You can't start talking about space until you set an overall policy. Our space relationship gets to a basic question of whether the United States tries to contain an emerging China or engage it.
It has several elements to it. One is to say that the people who did Apollo were pretty smart,
We think the days of going out on New Year's Eve to a big party such as at a hotel have come and gone.
It's a schedule that is as much political as it is technical. It reflects the partners' concern about the shuttle because they've moved the launch of the partners' modules up to the earliest time.
Most recommendations are coming out of the VA.