DISPATCHES FROM JOHNSON SPACE CENTER
Articles, written by Katie O'Toole, writer and co-host of Whats In The News, a WPSX public television show, are a series of installments about eight undergraduate engineering students working on an experiment to test modifications to exercise equipment used in space. O'Toole traveled to the Johnson Space Center with the students to test their project aboard NASA's KC-135 project, nationally known as the Vomit Comet."
#1 DISPATCH FROM JOHNSON SPACE CENTER: STUDENTS WELCOME HOME SPACE STATION CREW
Note: This article, written by Katie O'Toole, writer and co-host of Whats In The News, a WPSX public television show, is the second of a series of installments about eight undergraduate engineering students working on an experiment to test modifications to exercise equipment used in space. O'Toole traveled to the Johnson Space Center with the students to test their project aboard NASA's KC-135 project, nationally known as the Vomit Comet." For OTooles first installment, go to http://www.psu.edu/ur/2001/otoole01.html.
#2 DISPATCH FROM JOHNSON SPACE CENTER: NO PRESSURE
Note: This article, written by Katie O'Toole, writer and co-host of Whats In The News, a WPSX public television show, is the third of a series of installments about eight undergraduate engineering students working on an experiment to test modifications to exercise equipment used in space. O'Toole traveled to the Johnson Space Center with the students to test their project aboard NASA's KC-135 project, nationally known as the Vomit Comet."
Johnson Space Center--- The pressure was off me today. Literally. As part of my flight training for this weeks trip on the KC-135, I was one of nine journalists to be sealed inside the altitude chamber and taken to a simulated height of 25,000 feet.
Dispatch From Johnson Space Center: Cleared For Take-Off
Note: This article, written by Katie O'Toole, writer and co-host of “What’s In The News,” a WPSX public television show, is the third of a series of installments about eight undergraduate engineering students working on an experiment to test modifications to exercise equipment used in space. O'Toole traveled to the Johnson Space Center with the students to test their project aboard NASA's KC-135 project, nationally known as the “Vomit Comet."
Dispatch From Johnson Space Center: Countdown
Note: This article, written by Katie O'Toole, writer and co-host of “What’s In The News,” a WPSX public television show, is the fourth of a series of installments about eight undergraduate engineering students working on an experiment to test modifications to exercise equipment used in space. O'Toole traveled to the Johnson Space Center with the students to test their project aboard NASA's KC-135 project, nationally known as the “Vomit Comet."