From MAILRP%ESA.bitnet@ICINECA.CINECA.ITSat Nov  4 15:49:10 1995
Date: Sat, 4 Nov 1995 15:34:34 EST
From: MAILRP%ESA.bitnet@ICINECA.CINECA.IT
Reply to: ESAPRESS list <ESAPRESS@VMPROFS.ESOC.ESA.DE>
To: Multiple recipients of list ESAPRESS <ESAPRESS@VMPROFS.ESOC.ESA.DE>
Newsgroups: 'sci.space.news'
Subject: SUBJECT

N  47-95 - Paris, 3 November 1995
EUROMIR 95 crew expecting shuttle visitors
ESA astronaut Thomas Reiter and his Russian crewmates,
Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Avdeev, are preparing to receive
house guests in their orbiting home, the Mir space station.
The five-man crew of the American shuttle Atlantis (*) are
due to meet the mixed Russian/ESA crew on Mir later this
month. This will be the first contact with the rest of
humanity for the three men since they bade farewell to the
previous Mir crew on 11 September.

Atlantis is due to lift off from NASA's Kennedy Space
Center, Florida, on 11 November. If all goes according to
plan, the shuttle will dock with Mir on 14 November at
around 0900 h CET (Central European Time). The two
crews will work together for three days.

This historic moment in the story of manned spaceflight
will give an early taste of the new space station era, as for
the first time American, Canadian, European and Russian
astronauts will be working together aboard the same
spacecraft. They represent the partners which, along with
Japan, are building the international space station, for which
Europe is providing the Columbus laboratory module, the
Automated Transfer Vehicle  and other equipments.

The Atlantis astronauts will bring the Mir crew a selection
of fresh food, including steak, vegetables and ice cream.
They will also bring gifts of flowers and sweets, and a
collapsible classical guitar. The main goal of the shuttle
mission is to attach a special adapter for docking with Mir's
Kristall module, which will be used by all visiting shuttles
in future.

As part of their training, the EUROMIR 95 crew visited the
Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, to familiarise
themselves with the space shuttle. The two crews will be
able to move freely between each other's spacecraft.

Members of the press will have an opportunity to question
the Mir and shuttle crews in space during a news
conference, linked  to ESA Headquarters in Paris, the
Russian mission control centre (TsUP), NASA's centres and
the Canadian Space Agency. This event is tentatively
scheduled for 16 November. Further details and the time
will be announced in a later press release.

Atlantis will leave Mir on 17 November carrying a bounty



of results from EUROMIR 95 experiments. The 20
kilograms of ESA cargo will include frozen medical
samples, experimental materials processed using furnaces
aboard the station and scientific data recorded on videotape
and computer disk. The shuttle is due to land on 19
November at the Kennedy Space Center, where ESA
officials will be on hand to collect the cargo.

Thomas Reiter has now been in space longer than any other
West European astronaut. His journey to the space station
began on 3 September and he will remain on board until 29
February 1996. ESA and RSC Energia recently announced
an extension of the flight and the addition of a second
spacewalk for Reiter. On 20 October the German-born
astronaut became the first ESA astronaut to walk in space.

(*) The shuttle crew is led by mission commander Kenneth
Cameron. The pilot is James Halsell. The mission
specialists are Chris Hadfield, of Canada, Jerry Ross and
William McArthur.
