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Creamer, who is making his maiden voyage to space, has promised to keep people back on earth up-to-date via Twitter. In a message posted from his mobile device just hours before the launch he wrote, "Will tweet soonest. Happy & Safe holidays to all!" Noguchi is heading back to space for his second time and has become the first professional Japanese astronaut to fly aboard the Soyuz. The first space station crew arrived in 2000, two years after the first part was launched. Until this year, no more than three people lived up there at a time, although there were as many as six people aboard for short periods when a space tourist would go up with one crew, spend a week or so aboard and come back with another crew. With the U.S. shuttle fleet set to be grounded soon, NASA and other international partners will have to rely on Russian Soyuz spacecraft to ferry their astronauts to the space station and back. ___ On the Net:
[Associated
Press;
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