VETERAN COSMONAUT NOMINATED TO FLY ON FINAL SHUTTLE/MIR MISSION
January 21, 1998
Debra Rahn
Headquarters, Washington, DC
(Phone: 202/358-1639)
Eileen M. Hawley
Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX
(Phone: 281/483-5111)
Release: H98-10
Veteran Cosmonaut Nominated to Fly on
Final Shuttle/Mir Mission
The Russian Space Agency has nominated veteran cosmonaut Valeriy
Ryumin, Ph.D., to fly as a mission specialist on STS-91, set for a
May 1998 launch on Discovery.
Ryumin, the Program Manager, Russian Phase I Mir-Shuttle Program, is
training with the STS-91 crew at the Johnson Space Center, Houston,
TX. He is a space flight veteran, having spent 362 days in space over
three missions. He was the flight engineer on the Soyuz 25 mission,
then flew on the Soyuz 32 mission to Salyut 6, spending 175 days
there from Feb. 25 to Aug. 19, 1979. Ryumin's last space flight came
as a member of the Soyuz 35 mission, on which he spent 185 days in
space from April 9 to Oct. 11, 1980.
STS-91 will mark Ryumin's first Space Shuttle flight and first visit
to the Mir space station. Already named to the crew are Commander
Charles J. Precourt (Col., USAF), Pilot Dominic L. Gorie (Cmdr. USN),
and Mission Specialists Wendy B. Lawrence (Cdr., USN), Franklin
Chang-Diaz, Ph.D., and Janet Kavandi, Ph.D.
Mission Specialist Andrew Thomas, Ph.D., will join the STS-91 crew as
he returns from a four-month research mission on Mir. Thomas'
departure from Mir will bring to an end more than two years of a
continuous U.S. presence on Mir, beginning with Shannon Lucid in
March 1996. Thomas will arrive on Mir as a member of the STS-89 crew.
The Phase I Shuttle/Mir Program is a precursor to the International
Space Station, maintaining a continuous American and Russian presence
in space and developing the procedures and hardware required for an
international partnership in space.
For complete biographical information on the STS-91 crew, or any
astronaut, see the NASA Internet biography home page at URL:
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/
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