Has Mike Griffin joined the mars society?

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chriscdc

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Nasawatch seemed surprised to see him (still) there. <br />So has he co-authored papers with them or has he given advice to them on occasion?
 
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lampblack

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Well -- before he became NASA administrator, Michael Griffin co-led a study for the Planetary Society, outlining much of the preliminary thought that resulted in the current plans for using shuttle-derived systems for launch hardware.<br /><br />I am personally unclear as to the relation between the Planetary Society and the Mars Society -- although they've always struck me as being more or less the same folks. If they're different groups, they're different groups with a huge amount of overlap.<br /><br />I'm sure this link has shown up elsewhere. But for whatever it's worth, here's the link to that early study that Griffin helped to write for the Planetary Society:<br /><br />http://planetary.org/aimformars/study-summary.html<br /> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <font color="#0000ff"><strong>Just tell the truth and let the chips fall...</strong></font> </div>
 
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radarredux

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> <i><font color="yellow">I am personally unclear as to the relation between the Planetary Society and the Mars Society -- although they've always struck me as being more or less the same folks.</font>/i><br /><br />The Planetary Society used to be anti-manned exploration, favoring instead robotic missions to various bodies in our solar system. The Mars Society has always been manned exploration and focused exclusively on Mars (duh).<br /><br />It was a big deal when the Planetary Society came out to endorse the Vision for Space Exploration because it was a fairly major break from its "pro robotics" position.</i>
 
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