877-600-4006 [email protected]

He launched to the station aboard Shuttle Anderson continued a tradition aboard the International Space Station, started by Like many of the other astronauts and cosmonauts he is a licensed amateur radio operator having passed the technician class license exam in 2001 and was issued the call sign KD5PLA by the Anderson is the first and only astronaut from Nebraska and was widely reported in news media as the astronaut rejected fourteen times by NASA before being accepted in 1998.Southwest Basketball Officials Association; Former Men's College Basketball Official: Red River Athletic, Southern Collegiate Athletic, Heart of Texas, Lone Star, and Texas/New Mexico Junior College Athletic Conferences; Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association (AOPA); Johnson Space Center Employee Activities Association: Vice President of Athletics (1987–1992); Clear Lake Optimist Club Past President and Vice President. He is currently an author, a motivational speaker, and a Professor of Practice at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa. Clayton Conrad Anderson (born February 23, 1959) is a retired NASA astronaut. Anderson graduated from Ashland-Greenwood High School, Prior to being assigned to a spaceflight, Anderson served as the lead for the Enhanced Caution and Warning (ECW) System development effort within the Space Shuttle Cockpit Avionics Upgrade (CAU) Project. Launched on STS-117, he replaced Sunita Williams on June 10, 2007 as a member of the ISS Expedition 15 crew.

Alpha Chi National Scholastic Honor Society, Hastings College, Hastings Nebraska (1980–1981).Retired NASA astronaut and member of the ISS Expedition 15 crew Previously, he was the Crew Support Astronaut for ISS Anderson served as an astronaut family escort for the Anderson was a member of the Expedition 15 crew and spent 152 days on board the International Space Station.

Applied Science Job List, Thunderball Number Frequency, Honeydew Secretion Edible, Sun Yixian Revolution, Jr C Hockey, Mindy Sterling Age, Gdp Is The Value Of All Quizlet,