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NASA Langley wants Mars money

Virginia Business
March 2004

Excitement at NASA’s Langley Space Center in Hampton over President Bush’s proposal to send manned missions to the moon and eventually Mars is tempered by the fact that nobody really knows what that means for Langley.

Bush wants to add $12 billion to NASA’s budget over the next five years, and presumably some of that money will come to Langley and its 3,800 government and private-sector employees. Details of the plan, which still has to get through Congress, won’t be known for several months. “Langley is poised to support the president and the agency,” Center Director Roy D. Bridges Jr. said after Bush’s announcement.

Langley’s advantage: more than half its research involves aeronautics, and Bush’s proposal would continue funding of that type of research. Langley has links to past missions to the moon and Mars. One of 10 NASA centers, it’s where the Viking missions to Mars were managed, and astronauts from the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions trained there.

Virginia Business - March 2004