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Docs Clear Lance Bass For Space Ride

The world’s next would-be space tourist, Lance Bass of boy band ‘N Sync, said Friday that Russian space doctors have cleared him for a flight to the International Space Station aboard a Russian rocket, a journey he hopes to make this fall.

Bass, 23, shrugged off questions about the dangers of space flight. “I like to be positive, I’m an optimist,” he told reporters in Moscow. “I know physically I can do it, I know mentally I can do it.”

The Russian Aerospace Agency said earlier this week that it hadn’t yet received commercial proposals from Bass or his representatives and warned that there is little chance he can complete training in time for the next Soyuz rocket launch in October.

Bass did not comment on financial details of his bid. The world’s second space tourist, South African Mark Shuttleworth, returned to Earth this month after a weeklong trip that cost him $20 million – the same sum the world’s first space tourist, Dennis Tito, paid last year.

Bass said Friday he still hopes to go to space in the fall. He said the October flight would ideally suit his band’s busy schedule, and added that other band members were “very supportive” of his adventure.

Bass said he and another would-be space tourist, former NASA official Lori Garver, spent weeks passing grueling tests to qualify for the mission, with 48 doctors certifying their fitness at Russia’s premier space medicine center, the Institute for Medical and Biological Problems.

Bass was found to have an irregular heartbeat, and although it was not necessarily a hindrance to a space mission, he had it corrected by a medical procedure back in the United States.

Bass said he had long dreamed of going to space and hoped his mission would serve educational purposes through a documentary he would make in space.

“We’re doing final negotiations right now with a major network to air this,” he said. “It makes me feel like a great spokesperson for these space programs.”

Bass said he loved Russia and was looking forward to studying Russian – a requirement for landing a seat on a Soyuz. “It’s going to be very difficult, but something I’m looking forward to,” he said.

Fort Worth, Texas-based RadioShack Corporation financed Bass’ medical screening and also provided support to Garver, who hopes to make her space flight next April.

“I’m more patient,” Garver joked, saying she would be training alongside Bass as his backup at the Russian Star City cosmonaut training center outside Moscow while working to gather financial support for her own mission.

Bass hailed Garver as a great expert and excellent companion. “She’s so brilliant and so dedicated to this project… She is like a human encyclopedia when it comes to space,” he said.

Both Bass and Garver are in discussions with additional sponsors and television networks to expand their financial support beyond RadioShack.

Jeffrey Manber, president of the Amsterdam-based MirCorp company that is helping Bass and Garver, said he was conducting talks with Russian space officials.

The Interfax news agency quoted Aerospace Agency spokesman Sergei Gorbunov as saying Bass should take “extremely energetic measures” to quickly wrap up commercial talks and start training. But Gorbunov voiced doubts the singer would manage to secure a seat on October’s flight.

 
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