Birmingham Star
BirminghamStar.com Thursday 29th July 2010 Edition 2010/210
  • More US News

  • Uncle of Chelsea Clinton's fiance not invited to wedding due to feud
  • Paris denies being paid $1 mn to party with billionaire Jho Low
  • Old Spice model makes it to Hollywood after ad success
  • Photog sues Will Smith, Jay-Z's Broadway musical FELA
  • 'I'm still paying my dues in Hollywood': Zac Efron
  • LiLo to get yoga training for recovery in rehab
  • 'Cat hoarding women put felines' health at risk'
  • Elisabeth Hasselbeck says older women turn lesbians for lack of men
  • Anna Chapman's new footage shows her social tactics
  • Gibson 'terrorized ex with 30 calls the night she left his mansion'
  • Airspace to be closed near Clinton's wedding to keep paparazzi at bay
  • Brittany Murphy's hubby 'emptied her bank accounts before his own death'
    Get US News headlines emailed to you daily.

    Cancellation of further moon landings concerns ex-astronauts
    Birmingham Star
    Saturday 13th March, 2010  


    Former astronauts who landed on the moon in the hey-day of lunar missions have voiced their concern at President Obama's decision to move back further flights.
    Last month, President Obama cancelled NASA’s Constellation Moon landings programme, which was approved by ex-President George W Bush, and at a private event at the Royal Society in London, former astronauts spoke to the BBC, voicing their concern at the move.

    The decision could have “catastrophic consequences” for US space exploration said Jim Lovell, who commanded the infamous Apollo 13 mission.

    The last man on the moon, Eugene Cernan called it “dissapointing”. He was the last man to return to the lunar module in 1972 during the Apollo 17 mission.

    "I thought we'd have gone back long before now,” he said.

    NASA has faced major budget cut backs along with many government entities in the wake of the near-crippling 2008 financial crisis.

    The significance of NASA has also been undermined by the end to Cold War hostilities. Rivalry between the US and then-USSR played a large part in the national pride that was associated with space exploration.

    NASA still hopes to send men back to the moon, but it will instead provide incentives and oversight to the private sector.

    Private sector corporations such as Virgin have established a firm footing in space travel, and the United States is no longer the only country with a viable space programme, deminishing the importance of NASA.

    China, the EU, India, and Japan are some of the countries that operate a space programme like NASA, although NASA remains the only agency to have put men on the moon.

      Email this story to a friend

    Comments on this story

    By Sheet Head, 03-13-10, 02:01 PM

    Former astronauts critical of NASA cut backs

    Maybe Guy Laliberie could get involved - he too seems to have more money than brains. Why should people want to sponsor thrill jockeys' trips to the moon when there are millions of people starving to death worldwide. The money would be better spent on providing birth control options to those in third world countries who either don’t know how to control their raging hormones, or those who are too ignorant to care that their babies often die a slow agonizing death from hunger & disease associated with the poverty they live in. They have to learn there is mor eto life than indiscriminate couplings that lead to pregnancies & disease.
    By Spreading the muse, 03-13-10, 11:21 PM

    Hoax

    They haven’t even been to the moon before. The van allens radiation belt is too deadly to pass through.
    By Anonymous, 03-13-10, 11:31 PM

    It is still better then to spare the money for making killing machine

    Agree the we should not waste money for high flying projects. But it should not be abandon as human need to explore for new idea. If these are projects affecting the human race then human race should share the burden and enjoy the fruit of success in exploration real leaders in these endeavour, people who are more open and treat other as equal.
    By Anonymous, 03-13-10, 11:34 PM

    It is still better then to spare the money for making killing machine

    Agree the we should not waste money for high flying projects. But it should not be abandon as human need to explore for new idea. If these are projects affecting the human race then human race should share the burden and enjoy the fruit of success in space exploration. The world need real leaders in these endeavour, leaders who are more open and treat other as equal, leaders who know what is it like to be underdogs.
    By Anonymous, 03-14-10, 03:24 AM
    He is more concern how to change the US States of into a socialist goverment than the space program.It i s sad ,he is not even very concern about the economic situation of the country.Change is his goal and that is the only money you will have after he is done with you.

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (optional)
    Message title
    Message