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Community => Recreation Commons => Topic started by: Buster's Uncle on October 21, 2013, 10:55:15 PM

Title: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Buster's Uncle on October 21, 2013, 10:55:15 PM
Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
SPACE.com
By Robert Z. Pearlman, collectSPACE.com Editor  1 hour ago


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Cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova, who in 1963 became the first woman to fly in space, lights the 2014 Olympic Games caldron


     
Cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman to launch into space on a rocket's flame, took ahold of the Olympic flame Saturday (Oct. 19), completing a leg of the 2014 Winter Games' torch relay.

At the same time, an unlit torch to be used in the Olympic Games' opening ceremonies was being readied for its own trip, first to its launch site and then into space.

Tereshkova, who in June 1963 lifted off on the then-Soviet Union's Vostok 6 mission, becoming the first woman to fly into space, came to her home city of Yaroslavl, Russia on Saturday to receive the torch and light the town's Olympic cauldron. [Olympics Cities Seen from Space (Photos)]

"Today we have a very important day," Tereshkova said, according to a summary published by the Olympic Winter Games organizing committee. "The Olympic flame arrived in Yaroslavl — and it is a symbol of courage, purity and the struggle for the victory."

"In space, we have to hide emotions far, far away because of the responsibility," Tereshkova remarked. "Today there were emotions, but the main thing was not to let down the people who trusted me with this role."

Saturday marked the 13th day of the cross-country torch relay. The procession started on Oct. 7 in Moscow's Red Square and will continue until Feb. 7, when it will reach the Black Sea coastal city of Sochi to take part in the opening ceremonies for the 22nd Olympic Winter Games.

This was not the first time that Valentina Tereshkova participated in an Olympic torch relay. In 2008, the first woman in space ran with the torch for the Beijing Summer Games, carrying the flame through St. Petersburg, where the 2014 relay will arrive on Oct. 27.


Sochi, by way of the space station

Tereshkova said on Saturday that she would have liked to have flown with the Olympic flame into outer space, "but unfortunately that's not up to me," RIA Novosti reported.

The flame may not be headed to orbit, but a torch that will be used in the Sochi opening ceremonies is space-bound.


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The Olympic torch for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia will go where no torch has gone before


The aluminum red and silver unlit torch, which is similar to the 14,000 others being used in the terrestrial relay but for the addition of an extra tether, is arriving Monday (Oct. 21) at Russia's Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, where it will launch with the next crew for the International Space Station (ISS) on Nov. 6 (Nov. 7 local time).

"The torch is ready, it will be delivered to Baikonur on the 21st of October," Yuri Pokidov of RSC Energia told Oleg Ostapenko, the newly-appointed chief of Russia's federal space agency Roscosmos, during a tour of the launch site on Saturday.

The torch, which is arriving by cargo plane, will be packed on board the Soyuz TMA-11M spacecraft on the day of its launch, Pokidov said.


High-flying hand-off

Six hours after lifting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, the torch will be carried on board the space station by the Soyuz TMA-11M crew, cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin, NASA astronaut Richard Mastracchio and JAXA astronaut Koichi Wakata. It will be only the third Olympic torch in history to fly in space and the second to enter the orbiting complex.

Two days later, it will go where no Olympic torch has gone before.

Once handed off to space station commander Oleg Kotov and flight engineer Sergey Ryazansky, the torch will be taken on a spacewalk Nov. 9, where live video and photographs will document it floating above the Earth.

"Nobody has done this before," Dmitry Chernyshenko, the president of the Sochi 2014 Organizing Committee, said in a statement. "The spacewalk by two Russian cosmonauts with the [Olympic torch] will be a historic moment in the history of the Olympic Torch Relay."

The torch will return to Earth on Nov. 11, landing on board the Soyuz TMA-09M capsule with Roscosmos cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin, NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg and the European Space Agency's (ESA) Luca Parmitano.

Three months later, the space-flown torch will enter Fisht Olympic Stadium in Sochi to begin the Winter Games.


http://news.yahoo.com/space-bound-olympic-torch-heads-launch-cosmonaut-carries-201011455.html (http://news.yahoo.com/space-bound-olympic-torch-heads-launch-cosmonaut-carries-201011455.html)
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Valka on October 22, 2013, 06:50:57 AM
This is interesting, but I honestly can't get excited about the Sochi Olympics. There's too much political baggage attached to it this time around.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Buster's Uncle on October 22, 2013, 03:16:02 PM
This time?
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Geo on October 22, 2013, 04:28:48 PM
This time?

Indeed.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Valka on October 22, 2013, 10:16:05 PM
This time?
I realize there have been plenty of other controversial Games - China was full of cheating, among other things.

It's the anti-gay laws in particular that I'm thinking of. Any gay Canadian who travels there would be at risk, and for nothing more than being born a certain way.

George Takei has called for the Games to be moved back to Vancouver - nice idea, but an impossible solution. Sure, we've got the infrastructure AND the laws that prevent what Russia has done (Charter of Rights and Freedoms, gay marriage is legal everywhere in Canada, and our hate speech laws), but politically and financially, it's just not doable. The people of British Columbia are still paying off the 2010 games. They won't want to do it a second time, not to mention displacing the people again.

So while it's neat that an Olympic torch is going to the space station, I am not in favor of the actual Olympiad it represents.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Geo on October 23, 2013, 07:35:38 PM
..., not to mention displacing the people again.

Huh? People had to move during the games?
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Buster's Uncle on October 23, 2013, 07:55:52 PM
They always do.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Geo on October 23, 2013, 08:08:38 PM
Oh, I was thinking temporary. But I suppose you mean due to construction of the Olympic Village and other related facilities.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Valka on October 24, 2013, 03:12:23 AM
..., not to mention displacing the people again.
Huh? People had to move during the games?
Yep. A lot of homeless and low-income people were kicked out of their areas so stuff could be built. Of course they had a hard time finding anywhere else to go.

All that Olympic glitter and glory usually comes with a hefty social price - one that keeps on taking for decades.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Geo on October 26, 2013, 09:01:36 AM
I take it they were kicked out with no or insufficient reimbursement?
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Valka on October 26, 2013, 09:12:49 AM
That's correct.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Geo on October 26, 2013, 09:21:16 AM
Did a quick lookaround. Couldn't find any info related to expelled people.
I'm a bit surprised at that. Especially because this happened in a country where free press should be present.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Valka on October 26, 2013, 09:32:30 AM
As with any project the size and scope of the Olympics, there is a lot of building going on. In Vancouver's case, they reconstructed a whole friggin' highway, and had to blast part of a mountain to do it. The Olympic Village, space for officials of various kinds, parking, and other venues all have an impact on the people who live where these things happen. If people are in the way, the people have to move.

It wasn't as blatant as in some countries (ie. China), but it did happen.
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Geo on October 26, 2013, 09:48:00 AM
I did find out the former Olympic village is inhabited. I suppose it has become a 'rich-men' area?
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Valka on October 26, 2013, 10:06:32 AM
It's residential. According to the sources I found, part of it is "affordable housing" and the rest is "modest housing". But given the prices in Vancouver, you still have to be richer than a lot of low-income people to afford it. I see by the photos that there are a lot of windows and it touts itself as a "green" community. Pity about all the birds that must smack themselves on the glass because they can't tell it's glass...
Title: Re: Space-Bound Olympic Torch Heads to Launch Site as Cosmonaut Carries Flame
Post by: Buster's Uncle on October 31, 2013, 01:23:47 AM
Bach: Putin gives assurances of no discrimination
Associated Press
5 hours ago


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Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach meet at the Bocharov Ruchei residence at the Black Sea resort of Sochi, southern Russia, Monday, Oct. 28, 2013. Making his first trip to Sochi since being elected head of the IOC last month, Bach met Monday with Russian President Vladimir Putin to inspect the host city. Bach told Putin he was deeply impressed with the amount of work Russia has done for the Feb. 7-23 games. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, Pool)



MOSCOW (AP) — IOC President Thomas Bach is confident that all athletes and visitors at the Winter Olympics in Sochi will be treated equally regardless of "race, gender or sexual orientation."

Bach said Wednesday he received new assurances from Russian President Vladimir Putin that gays will not be discriminated against in Sochi.

Preparations for the Feb. 7-23 games have been overshadowed by criticism of a recent Russian law outlawing "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations among minors." Many worry the law may apply to gay athletes and visitors.

Bach, making his first visit to Sochi since being elected president of the International Olympic Committee last month, discussed the issue with Putin.

"All visitors travelling to Sochi for the games regardless of race, gender or sexual orientation will be welcomed here equally — this has been made very clear by the Russian authorities," Bach said. "The games themselves are open to all, free of discrimination, and that applies to spectators, officials, media, and, of course, athletes. This is a principal pillar of the Olympic Movement that will be upheld in Sochi."


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In this image taken Monday Oct. 28, 2013 Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, and International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach, left


Human rights and gay rights groups have accused the IOC of not doing enough to pressure Russia to repeal the law. The IOC says it has no authority to influence laws in a sovereign nation.

Earlier Wednesday, Russian gay activists said Bach refused to meet with them while visiting Sochi.

The rights group LGBT Network said Bach turned down their invitation to sit with activists during his trip, offering instead to meet at an unspecified date in Lausanne, Switzerland. Activists say they have been asking for a meeting for more than two weeks.

The IOC said it was arranging a meeting with the group in Lausanne.

"The IOC remains committed to dialogue," IOC spokesman Mark Adams said. "We offered Russian LGBT leaders to meet with the new president this week in Lausanne in the IOC headquarters, and we look forward to welcoming them there."


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Volunteers jubilate as the countdown clock shows 100 days left until the start of 2014 Winter Olympics


With Sochi marking the 100-day countdown to the games, Bach said Russian organizers should brace themselves for the tough preparation period ahead.

Bach, who toured Olympic venues with Putin on Tuesday, said Russia would deliver "excellent, unique and a perfect stage for the athletes to perform at their best."

"The progress the organizers have made since winning the right to host the games seven years ago is tremendous, but more importantly, they have delivered on their commitment to place the athletes at the heart of these games," Bach said in a statement Wednesday on the third day of his four-day visit to the Black Sea resort.

Russia is spending $51 billion to deliver the games, making it the most expensive Olympics in history.


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http://news.yahoo.com/bach-putin-gives-assurances-no-discrimination-201617259--spt.html (http://news.yahoo.com/bach-putin-gives-assurances-no-discrimination-201617259--spt.html)
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