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Multi Page Editorial
timely page breaks means more page views
...continued from page 2

A pilot astronaut must have a minimum of 1,000 hours pilot-in-command time in jet aircraft. Although experience as a military test pilot is not a written requirement, to date no one has been selected as a pilot astronaut who does not have this military training.

Chez Widgets
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Your genes will determine whether or not you meet the physical requirements, but how you meet the academic requirements is entirely up to you. Some astronauts in the past have been aeronautical engineers, geologists, doctors and chemists, just to name a few. Space shuttle mission STS-90, the Neurolab mission that flew in April, carried a crew of only seven. But if you count their degrees, on board were two aeronautical engineers, one Naval engineer, two doctors, one electrical engineer, one biologist, one psychologist, one physiologist, and one veterinarian. Does one of these fields of study sound like fun to you? If not, just follow your interests. NASA is going to need many different types of scientists in the future.

Where do I sign up?
There may be many different career paths to become an astronaut, but they all lead to the same place- the Astronaut Selection Office. About every two years this office at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas announces that it is accepting applications for the Astronaut Candidate Program. Thousands of people complete the 13-page application, but most receive a polite no-thank-you note. If you are one of the 100 or so who make the first cut, you will get to travel to Houston for a week of interviews, physicals, and orientation. This is where the competition will really get tough.

Dr. W. A. Gustafson, associate head of Purdue University's School of Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering and professor to nine current and former NASA astronauts, knows why this part of the process is so difficult. He explains, The people of that final 100...they are pretty well qualified in most every respect and it would be hard to pick one out over the other one on paper. They (NASA) bring them down to Houston and they try to determine how well they function living in small quarters and how well they get along with other people because ultimately that's the kind of life they have to lead. If they can't function in that environment, they're not going to be very good astronauts.

...continued on page 4
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