Chicago Native to Discuss Role on NASA's Next Shuttle Flight

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Oct. 17, 2006

Katherine Trinidad
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-3749

James Hartsfield
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M06-163

CHICAGO NATIVE TO DISCUSS ROLE ON NASA'S NEXT SHUTTLE FLIGHT

Joan Higginbotham, a NASA astronaut who will fly aboard the Space 
Shuttle Discovery in December, will be available for interviews by 
satellite from 7:15 to 9 a.m. EDT on Friday, Oct. 20.

To participate in the interviews, media should contact Stephanie Stoll 
at 281-483-9071 or by pager at 713-508-0581 by 5 p.m. EDT, Thursday, 
Oct. 19. 

Higginbotham will be making her first spaceflight aboard Discovery on 
STS-116, an 11-day mission to the International Space Station to 
rearrange the complex's power and cooling systems. During the flight, 
Higginbotham will operate the station's robotic arm, oversee 
experiments and act as the primary coordinator of cargo transfer 
between the shuttle and station.

The systems' changes will bring online electricity generated by a 
second giant set of solar panels added to the station during a 
September shuttle flight. The changes will almost double the 
electrical power available to the station's systems. Discovery also 
will bring a new crew member to the station to begin a six-month stay 
and bring home a station resident who has been in orbit since July.

Higginbotham was born and raised in Chicago, and she received a 
bachelor's degree from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 
Ill. She also has two master's degrees from the Florida Institute of 
Technology, Melbourne, Fla. Before her selection as an astronaut in 
1996, Higginbotham spent nine years working at NASA's Kennedy Space 
Center, Florida, overseeing various stages of preparing shuttles for 
launch.

Higginbotham will be joined aboard Discovery by STS-116 Commander Mark 
Polansky, Pilot Bill Oefelein and mission specialists Bob Curbeam, 
Nick Patrick, Suni Williams and Christer Fuglesang, a European Space 
Agency astronaut. Williams will remain aboard the station for six 
months. European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Reiter, currently 
aboard the station, will return to Earth on Discovery.

For Higginbotham's biographical information, visit: 

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/higginbo.html

Higginbotham's interviews will be carried live on the NASA TV analog 
satellite AMC-6, at 72 degrees west longitude; transponder 5C, 3800 
MHz, vertical polarization, with audio at 6.8 MHz. B-roll video of 
her training for the mission will air at 6:30 a.m. EDT. For NASA TV 
downlink, schedules and streaming video information, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

For more information about STS-116 and its crew, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle

	
-end-



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