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China's manned space dream comes true

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by adminstrator, Oct 15, 2003.

  1. adminstrator

    adminstrator New Member

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    China launched its first manned spaceship at 9:00 am Wednesday, becoming the 3rd country in the world to send a person into orbit after the former Soviet Union and the United States. Astronaut Yang Liwei became China's first space man.

    With a column of beautiful smoke, the Shenzhou V (Divine Vessel V) craft cut across a bright northwest China sky at exactly 9 am Wednesday (9 pm Tuesday EDT) and went into orbit 10 minutes later.

    China Central Television's Channel One cut into its regular programming to announce the launch. The station later showed Shenzhou streaking into the sky and disappearing, its tracer billowing behind it.

    Minutes after the launch, a CCTV announcer said that Shenzhou 5 and 38-year-old Yang Liwei, an air force pilot since 1983, had "entered orbit at 9:10." It reported Yang was "reading a flight manual in the capsule of the Shenzhou-5 spacecraft and looked composed and at ease."

    "I feel good," Yang radioed back from space after a half-hour in flight in the earth's orbit, his face vividly seen on the watch big screen in the Beijing Control Centre, located in Haidian District, northwestern Beijing. Yang's report drew loud applause.

    General Li Jinai, commander of the country's manned space program, was quoted by CCTV as saying the spacecraft was operating normally in orbit.

    President Hu Jintao watched the launch at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in northwest China's Gansu Province.

    Hu called the launch "the glory of our great motherland and a mark for the initial victory of the country's first manned space flight and for the significant, historic step of the Chinese people in the advance of climbing over the peak of the world's science and technology."

    He said that:" The Party and the people will never forget those who have set up the outstanding merit in the space industry for the motherland,the people and the nation."

    Hu and Vice-Premier Huang Ju flew to Jiuquan Tuesday afternoon after the third plenum of the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee concluded Tuesday morning in Beijing. Premier Wen Jiabao, Vice-President Zeng Qinghong and other top Chinese leaders watched the event at the Beijing control center.

    Yang¡¯s clothing in flight consisted of 14 layers that took 15 minutes to don with the help of technicians, the general commander of the astronaut program, Su Shuangning, told Phoenix Television. Yang¡¯s space suit cost more than $12 million, Su said.

    The menu for his flight included freeze-dried shredded pork with garlic sauce and fried rice, and he brought along a sleeping bag for naps, CCTV said.

    Wednesday's launch makes China the third country to put a human into space. The former Soviet Union sent Yuri Gagarin up in 1961; the United States launched Alan B. Shepard Jr. a month later. John Glenn became the first American in orbit in 1962.



    In Washington, Pentagon spokeswoman Cheryl Irwin said, "We wish them success and for their astronaut's safe return."

    NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe also congratulated on China's first successful human space flight. "This launch is an important achievement in the history of human exploration. China, after Russia and the United States, is only the third nation to successfully launch humans into space. The Chinese people have a long and distinguished history of exploration. NASA wishes China a continued safe human space flight program." O'Keefe said.

    Referring to China's earlier unmanned space launches, an announcer on the English-language government channel CCTV-9 invoked American astronaut Neil Armstrong's words upon first walking on the moon. "If these were small steps," the announcer said, "then now we are taking a giant leap into space."


    control center in Beijing



    Security was tight around the remote Gobi Desert base, some 175 miles northeast of Jiuquan. On Wednesday morning, the only road to the launch site was crowded with traffic, including military vehicles and civilian tour buses. But private cars were turned back and phone calls to the base were blocked.

    The Shenzhou V launch came after four test launches of unmanned capsules that orbited the Earth for nearly a week before parachuting back to China's northern grasslands. Reports say the manned flight is expected to last about 22 hours.

    "The launch of Shenzhou V is long-awaited by the Chinese people," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Zhang Qiyue said Tuesday. She said the flight was a key step in the "peaceful development of space".

    CCTV released a picture of Yang Liwei, 38, a pilot since 1983, boarding Shenzhou 5 about 8 am (8 p.m. EDT) Wednesday.

    "I will not disappoint the who Chinese people and the motherland. I will complete each movement with total concentration. And I will gain honor for the People's Liberation Army and for the Chinese nation," Yang took an oath before before boarding.

    Yang, who is 5 feet, 6 inches tall, was born in 1965 in Youzhong County in Liaoning province, an industrial area in China's northeast. His older sister said he was an athletic child who enjoyed swimming and ice skating. He works for the Aviation Military Unit of China's People's Liberation Army.

    [​IMG]
     
  2. Asspirin

    Asspirin Member

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    OMG he's still reading the freakin' manual!
     
  3. The Voice of Reason

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    Dont you think the American astronauts would have been reading the manuel too. Well if it were'nt always written in chinese.

    ;)
     
  4. The Voice of Reason

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    now seriously,

    I am glad China is pushing forward into space exploration. concidering all the things we waste money on i think the Space program is the most positive. I hope this jumpstarts our program and quickly.

    NASA and JPL are responsible for so many tech advances that it boggles the mind. if we actually funded ouur agency would would not be still lagging behind where we were 30 years ago. I would much rather we discover new tech in the science of travel and exploration than in the science of death and destruction.
     
  5. codell

    codell Member

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    adminstrator

    Junior Member
    Posts: 1
    Joined: Oct 2003
    Member: #14384


    ------------------------

    Heh heh. You could have at least spelled administrator right when trying to pass yourself off as something that you aren't. :p
     
  6. bigtexxx

    bigtexxx Member

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    Yup. The Chinese have no problem putting a man into space, but when it comes to spelling, forget about it!!!
     
  7. DaDakota

    DaDakota Balance wins
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    Good for them, hopefully the competition will heat up Nasa.

    Glad to see them there....but we were there 44 years ago !!!

    :)

    DD
     
  8. ashinningpig

    ashinningpig Member

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    China's manned space plan costs 2,400 million dollars.
     
  9. michecon

    michecon Member

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    What if he spelled that wrong INTENTIONALLY to avoid the confusion?

    ....It's not like he's an American or British after all.


    Or is he?
     
  10. nyquil82

    nyquil82 Member

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    I think tex is spelled with only one x, bigtexxx, but i can understand that if you don't come from America....jk
     
  11. bigtexxx

    bigtexxx Member

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    I'm not serious about Chinese and their spelling. Their English is certainly better than my Chinese.

    By the way - Was your screename intended to be "Michigan"? Looks like you misspelled that one!! ;)
     
  12. Supermac34

    Supermac34 President, Von Wafer Fan Club

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    China just now put somebody in space?

    So they are only 4 decades behind America and Russia?

    Oh no!
     
  13. michecon

    michecon Member

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    Naw, I spell it right----just not in the language you know of. ;) :D
     
  14. adminstrator

    adminstrator New Member

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    At first , I am not from China.
    Secondly, I want to be administrator if it possible :D
     
  15. adminstrator

    adminstrator New Member

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    It is not misspelling, if I spell it correctly, does the administrator will pass me off???
    I have try "webmuster" once, and have registered successfully, but I have not been passed off up till now.
    That is absurd & ridiculous, very ,very.
     
  16. ashinningpig

    ashinningpig Member

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    Where are you from?
     
  17. whats up

    whats up Member

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    There is a member with the moniker Administrator and he/she bans people and locks threads. Having been here longer than me, shouldn't you know? :p
     
  18. underoverup

    underoverup Member

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    Where are you live? ---- ;)
     
  19. A-Train

    A-Train Member

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    China has a LONG way to go...I mean, we've already blown up TWO shuttles and killed 14 people!
     
  20. treeman

    treeman Member

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    Question to our resident peaceniks/Democrats/liberal "peace activists":

    When China starts putting weapons, conventional and unconventional, into space, are you still going to oppose American militarization of space?

    It is a virtual guarantee that the Chinese are going to militarize their space program to the extent that they will use space-based weapons platforms (it is already a PLA program). Are we going to respond in kind?

    We are so far behind where we should be in this respect, it is not even funny. We should be twenty years ahead of everyone else, but we have pissed away the past thirty years' of opportunity to gain a lead. We are going to have to play catch-up with China, for God's sake.
     

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