Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




RUSSIAN SPACE
Russia fetes 50th anniversary of first woman in space
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) June 16, 2013


Russia celebrated Sunday the 50th anniversary of the maiden flight of the first woman in space -- a Soviet national hero who went by the call name "Seagull" and captured the imaginations of girls around the world.

Valentina Tereshkova, now a lawmaker for Russia's ruling party, blasted off in a Vostok-6 spaceship two years after Yuri Gagarin's historic first manned flight in 1961.

The 76-year-old remains the only women to have ever made a solo flight in space.

"The importance of this event is impossible to overestimate in the history of Russian and world space travel," Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said in a congratulatory message to Tereshkova.

State television celebrated by running documentaries about Tereshkova's life while the former cosmonaut herself spent the day commemorating a new space museum in her native region of Yaroslavl.

"You have to love your country -- love it so hard that your heart is ready to stop," Tereshkova said in a documentary aired on Russia's state rolling news channel.

Soviet authorities in April 1962 had initially whittled down their list to five prospective candidates as they competed against the United States for space supremacy during the Cold War.

Their choice eventually settled on textile factory worker Tereshkova -- the child of a peasant family and a Communist Youth (Komsomol) leader who had already performed 90 parachute jumps.

Tereshkova was not allowed to confide even in family members. They only learned of her exploits when Moscow announced it to the entire world.

She circled Earth 48 times during her three-day mission.

In the past few years, press speculation has said that she was space sick for much of this time and unable to perform some basic functions or respond to commands from ground control.

But Tereshkova blamed everything on mistakes with how the computer software had been programmed and denied feeling ill during the flight.

"A problem appeared on the first day of the flight," Tereshkova told a press conference last week.

"Due to a technical error, the spaceship was programmed not for a landing but for taking the ship into a higher orbit," she said.

Tereshkova's adventures did not end in space.

She also was nearly killed when a failed assassin opened fire in January 1969 on a limousine that he thought was carrying the late Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev.

The car was actually taking Tereshkova and three of her fellow cosmonauts to a Kremlin event.

"A few of the bullets whizzed by under my feet," Tereshkova told the Komsomolskaya Pravda daily.

More than 40 women from the United States have gone into space since Tereshkova but only one other Russian has made it -- Yelena Kondakova in 1994 and 1997.

.


Related Links
Station and More at Roscosmos
S.P. Korolev RSC Energia
Russian Space News






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








RUSSIAN SPACE
Near-cosmonaut outlines why few women in Russia's space program
Moscow (UPI) Jun 14, 2013
Sexism played a role in the paucity of Russian women going into space, Yelena Dobrokvashina, who trained as a cosmonaut but never flew, said Friday. Dobrokvashina said Russian woman rarely go into space because Russian men fear their antics would be diminished if shared with women, RIA Novosti reported. Since the Soviet Union sent the first woman into space 50 years ago, only two ... read more


RUSSIAN SPACE
INSAT-3D is delivered to French Guiana for Arianespace's next Ariane 5 launch

A dream launch for Shenzhou X

Mitsubishi Heavy and Arianespace conclude MOU on commercial launches

Sea Launch IS-27 FROB Report Complete

RUSSIAN SPACE
Mars Water-Ice Clouds Are Key to Odd Thermal Rhythm

Marks on Martian Dunes May Reveal Tracks of Dry-Ice Sleds

UH Astrobiologists Find Martian Clay Contains Chemical Implicated in the Origin of Life

Mars Rover Opportunity Trekking Toward More Layers

RUSSIAN SPACE
LADEE Arrives at Wallops for Moon Mission

NASA's GRAIL Mission Solves Mystery of Moon's Surface Gravity

Moon dust samples missing for 40 years found in Calif. warehouse

Unusual minerals in moon craters may have been delivered from space

RUSSIAN SPACE
Planning Accelerates For Pluto Encounter

'Vulcan' wins Pluto moon name vote

Public to vote on names for Pluto moons

The PI's Perspective: The Seven-Year Itch

RUSSIAN SPACE
Sunny Super-Earth?

Kepler Stars and Planets are Bigger than Previously Thought

Astronomers gear up to discover Earth-like planets

Stars Don't Obliterate Their Planets (Very Often)

RUSSIAN SPACE
Students and Teachers Become Rocket Scientists at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility

Laser and photon propulsion improve spacecraft maneuverability

Sierra Nevada Corporation Begins Dream Chaser Main Hybrid Rocket Motor Testing

Production of Key Equipment Paves Way for NASA SLS RS-25 Testing

RUSSIAN SPACE
China's Naughty Space Models

China's space dream crystallized with Shenzhou-10 launch

China astronauts enter space module

China to send second woman into space: officials

RUSSIAN SPACE
Chile observatory discovers 'comet factory'

Radar Movies Highlight Asteroid 1998 QE2 and Its Moon

ALMA discovers comet factory

New Camera At WIYN Images An Asteroid With A Long Tail




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement