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Beth Schmid
Headquarters, Washington, DC                 December 15, 1998
(Phone:  202/358-1760)
RELEASE:  98-223
NASA IN THE NEWS IN 1998
     Aeronautics and space got noticed in '98 -- with the return 
of John Glenn to earth orbit, the start of International Space 
Station construction, and the discovery of ice on the moon.   
Background information is available to news media to illustrate 
the top 10 NASA stories of the year via the World Wide Web at the 
URLs listed.  The video to accompany these stories will be 
available on NASA TV at noon today.
John Glenn Returns to Space  
     Senator John Glenn was named as a payload specialist last 
Jan. 16, and assigned to the crew of the Space Shuttle Discovery, 
which was launched Oct. 29, 1998, on a nine-day mission.
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/glenn-j.html
First International Space Station Assembly
     Phase II -- construction in orbit -- began with the first 
station elements launched in 1998:  Zarya in November and Unity in 
December.  Next, the first wholly Russian contribution, a 
component called the Service Module, will be launched from Russia 
in 1999.  http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/
Hubble Takes Image of Possible Planet Around Another Star  
     NASA's Hubble Space Telescope gave astronomers their first 
direct look at what is possibly a planet outside our solar system 
-- one that apparently has been ejected into deep space by its 
parent stars.  http://oposite.stsci.edu/1998/19
Most Powerful Gamma Ray Burst since Big Bang 
     A cosmic gamma ray burst detected this year released a 
hundred times more energy than previously theorized, making it the 
most powerful explosion since the creation of the universe in the 
Big Bang. 
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/newhome/headlines/ast06may98_1.htm
Lunar Prospector Discovers Ice on Moon 
     There is a high probability that water ice exists at both the 
north and south poles of the Moon, according to initial scientific 
data returned by NASA's Lunar Prospector this year. 
    ftp://ftp.hq.nasa.gov/pub/pao/pressrel/1998/98-038.txt
NASA Studies La Nina 
     Research scientists using data from the Tropical Rainfall 
Measuring Mission (TRMM), SeaWiFS and TOPEX/POSEIDON missions are 
shedding new light on the phenomenon known as La Nina.  The images 
show changes in sea-surface temperature, and ocean current 
movement and the dissipation of El Nino.  While it is too early to 
draw definite conclusions, the results to date appear to confirm 
the onset of La Nina-type conditions. 
     http://topex-www.jpl.nasa.gov/discover/el_nino.html
Antarctic Ozone Hole 
     In late 1997, larger levels of ozone depletion were observed 
over the Arctic than in any previous year on record.  In 1998, 
using climate models, a team of scientists reported why this may 
be related to greenhouse gases.
   ftp://ftp.hq.nasa.gov/pub/pao/pressrel/1998/98-058.txt
Magnetar 
     A neutron star, located 40,000 light years from Earth, is 
generating the most intense magnetic field yet observed in the 
Universe, according to an international team of astronomers led by 
scientists at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL.
http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/newhome/headlines/ast20may98_1.htm
Pathfinder Airplane
     NASA's remotely piloted, solar-powered Pathfinder-Plus flying 
wing reached a record altitude of more than 80,000 feet during a 
developmental test flight Aug. 6 in Hawaii.  The altitude is the 
highest ever achieved by a propeller-driven craft and surpasses 
the official record altitude of 71,530 feet for a solar-powered 
aircraft set by an earlier version of the Pathfinder last summer.
  http://www.dfrc.nasa.gov/PAO/PressReleases/1998/98-64.html
Eileen Collins Named First Woman Shuttle Commander 
     First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton announced from the White 
House in early 1998 that astronaut Eileen Collins (Lt. Col., USAF) 
would become the first woman to command a Space Shuttle when 
Columbia launches on the STS-93 mission in March 1999.
      http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/collins.html
                      - end -
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