Baikonur Cosmodrome Roof Collapses 22
A user writes: "The roof of the 260-foot-tall Baikonur Cosmodrome collapsed today in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The hangar, used to store the Buran space shuttle (Russia's abandoned shuttle program), was built in the 1960s and used for the Soviet moon program. Could this delay the Buran auction? More can be found at Yahoo!."
baikonur (Score:2, Insightful)
Delay the auction? (Score:1)
No, Timothy, it just killed eight people. I imagine most of them didn't read slashdot, so it's easy to understand why you don't give a fuck.
Re:Delay the auction? (Score:2)
Perhaps Timothy should have picked a different submission, but it's really not his job to remove words from a chosen submission.
Re:Delay the auction? (Score:1)
Ouch (Score:1)
Erm (Score:2)
Re:Erm (Score:2)
I also thought that Buran was a name like Soyuz or Apollo - applied to all ships of the class. That's different that our shuttles, which have unique names.
Re:Erm (Score:2)
It wasn't an auction of Buran, or any of the other shuttles, but of a test shuttle, not only not space capable but also 1/8th the size.
No. Buran is the name of the first shuttle that was completed and space-flight tested (it did an unmanned orbit and return - quite a feat, something the US shuttles have never done).
I believe number two, which was almost completed was called Pitchka, meaning "Little Bird", the remaining ones were not officially named (they were only partially completed).
Re:Erm (Score:2)
Re:Erm (Score:3, Informative)
No. Buran was the name of the entire shuttle program (Buran-Energiya). The first orbiter was named Buran, too. (The Buran part of the program was kinda nameless while in development, and then they named it Baikal, but renamed it Buran at the last minute.) If it would ever come to multiple craft, I speculate they would just call them Buran-1, 2, and so on. They didn't have a history of naming units in a series with their own names.
Re: (Score:1)
Yuri started from there (I think) (Score:1)
Russian health care (Score:1)
[...]
> Russia would not allow Kazakh rescuers to approach the building
[...]
> There was no information about the condition of the eight workers, he said
[...]
> A special Russian rescue team left Moscow for Baikonur [...]
> The plane was to arrive three hours later, or 13 hours after the accident took place.
They don't know what happend to the construction crew. If someone was lucky enough to survive the accident and is lying badly injured in the rubble now he has to wait for 13 hours because of Russian politics.
Reminds me of the Kursk disaster..
Re:Russian health care (Score:1)