Tag Archives: Going Solo

To NASA and beyond: the Glenn Research Laboratory

story and photos by Kayte Deioma

You’re traveling out of Cleveland or you have a long layover between flights and you find yourself with a couple hours to kill at Cleveland Hopkins Airport. Sure, you could sit in an airport bar for a couple hours but you’ll be sitting plenty once you get on the plane. Why not head over to the NASA Glenn Research Center, just a five minute cab ride across the airport? Even if you’re a local and not flying anywhere, it’s a good way to pass the time on a rainy day.

Model space craft from John Glenn's space missions at the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.The NASA John H. Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field specializes in power, propulsion, communications and microgravity science for NASA’s various projects. The Lab has been conduction aero-space technology research since 1941 under various names. From 1958 to 1999 it was known as the Lewis Research Center, honoring the contribution of aeronautics engineer George W. Lewis. It was renamed in 1999 to honor Ohio’s own astronaut legislator John H. Glenn.

The John Glenn Gallery at the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.The Visitors Center at NASA Glenn is a gem of a space museum tucked away on the far side of the Cleveland Hopkins Airport where most visitors or locals wouldn’t think to look for it. The 6000 square foot museum inside the research compound encompasses six themed gallery spaces including one focusing on the accomplishments of its current namesake, John Glenn. The John Glenn Gallery includes models of space craft from his journeys into space as well as replicas of his silver Mercury space suit and his orange Shuttle launch and Apollo Command Module used on Skylab 3, on display at the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.entry space suit. A multimedia kiosk provides historical and biographical information.

In addition to these replicas, you can get an up close look at artifacts from real space missions. One highlight of the collection is the actual Apollo Command Module used on Skylab 3, a two-month space mission in 1973. You can really see what close quarters the astronauts traveled in. The space suit that Jim Lovell wore on Apollo 8 is also on display, as well as a piece of moon rock.

A model of the Mars Rover, Sojourner on exhibit at the NASA Glenn Research Center.The Space Exploration area contains models and photos of celestial objects with data from NASA’s planetary missions. Two different models of Mars Exploration Rovers are on display, the Sojourner, carried by the Mars Pathfinder and a model of the Spirit/Odyssey rovers that are still working away on Mars long past their expected expiration dates.Carol tries out the flight simulator at the NASA Glenn Research Center.In the Aero Adventure Gallery, interactive exhibits allow you to sit in the pilot’s seat of a jet and choose which aircraft you want to fly on the flight simulator. In the Wonders of Flight and Seeking Solutions interactive multimedia displays, you can also explore the different types of aircraft and the new technologies NASA Glenn is developing to make them quieter, more energy efficient and more economical.

The Microgravity Laboratory Exhibit at NASA Glenn.Other exhibits include the Combustion Module 2 Crew Trainer, dedicated to the crew of the Columbia STS-107 mission. The training module has been enhanced to allow visitors to perform some of the tasks astronauts perform, with film footage from actual experiments conducted in space. A nearby Space Module is used by the NASA Glenn Amateur Radio Club Station N8VC, whose members broadcast from here. The Microgravity Laboratory simulation shows how experiments are conducted in a weightless environment.

The Visitors Center includes an auditorium where you can see a 16 minute documentary film of the space shuttle STS 105 on a mission to deliver supplies and a new crew member to the International Space Station. In addition to great space footage, the humorous film illustrates the challenges of eating, sleeping exercising and going to the bathroom in zero gravity.

A Satellite exhibit at NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.The first Saturday of each month, NASA Glenn Research Center offers tours of different parts of the research facility. Check the website or call for the schedule to see which facility is being toured. NASA Glenn Research Center is located at 21000 Brookpark Road, west of the Cleveland Hopkins International Airport. Due to security issues, only U.S. citizens may visit NASA Glenn at this time. Be prepared to have your car or cab searched when you come onto the Research Center campus. The Visitors Center is open Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday and holidays 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Sunday 1 to 5 p.m. For more information, visit www.grc.nasa.gov or call (216) 433-2000.

 

Day Trip to Salem:The Peaboby Essex Museum

by Nancy Kalajian, photos by Kayte Deioma

The Peabody Essex Museum, in Salem, MA, is a gem. Located north of Boston, it has been recently transformed into a splendid showcase featuring exceptional artistic and cultural collections from Asia, Asia Export, and Africa, as well as Native American, American, Oceanic, Maritime, and Photography exhibits. The museum is sprawling, and contains parks, gardens and 24 historic properties.

Entering the spacious, glass-filled, atrium main lobby can somewhat brighten an otherwise dreary day. The museum’s displays, descriptions/interpretations, and lighting are quite up to date, and most inviting to visitors. One very special feature is a 200 year old house from China, the only example of Chinese domestic architecture – from the Late Qing Dynasty – on display in the US. Experiencing this home gives one insight into family life long ago and far away.

Many traveling exhibitions also visit the Museum. The Kingdom of Siam, The Art of Central Thailand, 1350 -1800, is on display until October 16, 2005. Eighty treasures from Ayutthaya, a kingdom that flourished for more than 400 years, are displayed in their magnificence. The exhibit includes gold, bronze and stone Buddha images, Hindu sculptures, temple furnishings, jewelry and illustrated manuscripts. These priceless pieces are from collections in Thailand, Europe, and the US.

There are four rooms to peruse; exhibited items are spaced appropriately so that viewers can give each object ample reflection time. The short film shown in the back of the first room in periodic intervals serves as a good introduction to the exhibit. Curators lead guests to Thailand to view ruins of Ayutthaya, and bring understanding of this religious, architectural, diplomatic and trading center

The third room in the exhibit has a very comfortable section with couches and informative reading materials – in case you need to rest and contemplate the majestic exhibit. The last room centers on architecture, temples and furnishings. The miniature temple buildings are fascinating. On a nearby wall is a large fragment from a full-size temple’s gable decoration with Vishnu, a Hindu deity, mounted on Garuda, the manbird, being surrounded by numerous demonic figures. Mother-of-pearl inlay, seen in a door and cabinet, attest to the high artistic achievement from this period. The catalog, prepared for this exhibit, is remarkable.

Make sure to put the Peabody Essex Museum on your to-do list.

For more information, including hours and directions from Boston, visit www.pem.org or call toll free (866) 745-1876.

The Peabody Essex Museum is included in the Go Boston Card.


Hatchard’s: 200 years of literary tradition

by Patricia Herbig

Photo Š Hatchard'sWhen I have some time on my own, I tend to make my way to a bookshop. Not only are they usually warm, dry and usually not too crowded, but they offer a certain comfort that you don’t often get from other kinds of shops. Of course there is always a Waterstone’s – the huge, find-every-book-that-you-could-dream-of-wanting bookshop. There’s one in Picadilly, just off Picadilly Circus. But there is another very special bookshop just down the street, which, despite being owned by Waterstone’s has retained its olde worlde charm. Hatchard’s, at 187 Picadilly, comes by its charm honestly from being open since 1782. They have been offering the reader or browser a wonderful selection of books for over 200 years.

Hatchard’s books range over a multitude of topics and over several floors. The Ground Floor offers bestsellers, an extensive biography selection and travel-related books. The Lower Ground Floor has an excellent choice of nautical and military fiction (if you haven’t read the Hornblower series, it’s highly recommended – it’s a chance to read sea stories without having to deal with details of how to tie knots) and of course, the somewhat racy but very funny Flashman series. There is also a huge range of paperback fiction, crime novels, science fiction and classics.

The Second, Third and Fourth Floors cover such topics as wine and cooking, textiles and antiques, art and art theory, photography, gardening, sailing, hunting and golf. The children’s area is located on the top floor, and is lovely – hardback books of classics and old favourites as well as popular fiction for younger readers and early teens.

The staff is knowledgeable and nice and they actually read the books they work with all day, so they are happy to make recommendations. If they can’t find something for you, they’ll find a colleague who can!

For more information visit www.hatchards.co.uk.