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He did confide that he slipped out to Atlantis' launch pad over the weekend and spent a few hours by himself, soaking it all in one last time. Like so many others, Leinbach was inspired by the space shuttles. He applied to NASA in 1984, three years after Columbia made the first shuttle flight. Also like so many others at Kennedy, he's disturbed that the future of human spaceflight is still so murky. NASA was supposed to aim for the moon after shuttle, but President Barack Obama scrapped his predecessor's plan in favor of expeditions to asteroids and Mars. That's still years away, though. So are the astronaut ferry flights to the International Space Station planned by commercial companies. While things are going to be "significantly different" around the launch site in the months ahead, it won't be the same either for the millions of people who grew up with the space shuttles, Leinbach said. "Anyone under the age of 30 has always had the shuttle program as a part of Americana, and we won't have that anymore," he said. If Atlantis gets off Friday, landing is planned for July 20 at Kennedy Space Center. The early shuttle flights landed at Edwards Air Force Base in California, which is still the backup touchdown site. Atlantis will go on display at the Kennedy visitor complex. Discovery and Endeavour will head across the country to museums. "I think I speak for everyone at KSC," Leinbach said Wednesday in a parting shot, "that it will really stink if we landed out west this time."
[Associated
Press;
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