NASA Deputy Administrator Visits Interns From Ball Aerospace And United Launch Alliance In Colorado

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July 25, 2011

Sarah Ramsey 
Headquarters, Washington                                    
202-358-1694 
sarah.ramsey@xxxxxxxx 

Roz Brown 
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colo. 
303-533-6059 or 720-581-3135 
rbrown@xxxxxxxx 

Chris Chavez 
United Launch Alliance, Denver 
303-269-5550 or 303-332-6416 
chris.s.chavez@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M11-154

NASA DEPUTY ADMINISTRATOR VISITS INTERNS FROM BALL AEROSPACE AND UNITED LAUNCH ALLIANCE IN COLORADO

Companies Give Interns Hands-On Experience For Jobs Of The Future 

WASHINGTON -- NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver will visit Ball 
Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo., on Tuesday, July 
26, to meet with summer interns from Ball and United Launch Alliance 
(ULA). Garver will view demonstrations of student-built rockets and 
payloads and discuss how hands-on experience for students is critical 
to developing experience for science and technology-related jobs of 
the future. 

Reporters are invited to attend the demonstration and speak with 
Garver at 2:30 p.m. PDT on Tuesday. Those wishing to attend should 
contact Roz Brown at 303-533-6059 or rbrown@xxxxxxxx to be badged and 
escorted to the event's location. 

Over the last seven weeks, more than 100 high school and college 
interns built the high-power rockets and a variety of multi-faceted 
payloads as part of their experience at the two companies. This is 
the third year the Ball Intern Rocket Scientist Team (BIRST) has 
partnered with ULA to offer students a chance to work through an 
entire program's life cycle from design to launch. The students will 
launch six student-built rockets with 20 payloads on July 30. Four of 
those payloads were built by the BIRST participants. 

All the rockets were built by ULA summer interns -- dubbed SPIRIT (Sky 
Piercing Intern Rock-It Team) -- in Denver, Decatur, Ala., Harlingen, 
Texas, Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, and Cape Canaveral, 
Fla. This is the fourth year ULA interns have built and launched 
high-power rockets as a summer project. 

Ball Aerospace works with NASA on many critical science missions, 
including the James Webb Space Telescope and the NPOESS Preparatory 
Project satellite, scheduled to launch on Oct. 25. United Launch 
Alliance partners with NASA to launch payloads to space, including 
the Aug. 5 launch of the Juno mission to Jupiter. ULA and NASA 
recently signed a new agreement to share data on the potential for 
human rating a ULA Atlas V launch vehicle as part of the Commercial 
Crew Development program. 

For information on the United Launch Alliance, visit: 



http://www.ulalaunch.com 


For more information about Ball, visit: 



http://www.ballaerospace.com 


For information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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