| NEWSWIRE From space, MacLean thanks York
MacLean at work on board the International Space MacLean (BSc ’77, PhD ’83) spent the day Sept. 19 preparing for his return to earth on the morning of Sept. 21 at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. He and the five other crew members of the Atlantis space shuttle blasted off on Saturday, Sept. 9, and linked up with the International Space Station, where they installed new solar arrays that will double the station’s electrical power. As part of the mission, MacLean took his first spacewalk and operated both Canadarms – one aboard the shuttle, the other aboard the space station. Here is MacLean’s e-mail to Marsden (the ellipses are his): “I would like to pass a message to the York community. “But more important I would like to thank the many members of the York community for my experience at York. Those years were excellent for me and I realize now that they served to shape the balanced approach that makes each and every day meaningful. York University was wonderful for me and I thank you. This was MacLean's second message to Marsden. For further stories on his mission and the York connections to it, see Ylife Sept. 11 and Sept. 18. MacLean documented his pre-launch preparations in a diary published in the Aug. 14 issue of Ylife. A direct feed from NASA is being shown in the lobby of the Computer Science & Engineering Building daily from 8:30am to 4pm for the duration of the shuttle mission. Full details and updates on the mission and its schedule, as well as NASA TV webcasts, can be seen at NASA's main shuttle page
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Astronaut and York alumnus Steve MacLean has sent a new message from space to the York community via President & Vice-Chancellor Lorna R. Marsden, thanking York for his “wonderful” experience at the University and saying of his time in space: "I find it astounding that it is possible to live so much in such a short time."
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