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 The ISS crew of U.S.
space tourist Gregory Olsen (L), astronaut William McArthur of the U.S.
(R) and cosmonaut Valery Tokarev of Russia waves after donning space suits
at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan October 1, 2005. (Reuters
photo) | MOSCOW, Oct. 1
(Xinhuanet) -- A Russian spaceship with a three-men crew blasted off Saturday
morning from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, launching the world's third
space tourist Gregory Olsen and two astronauts to the International Space
Station (ISS).
Olsen rode aloft aboard the Soyuz TMA-7 ship, which
lifted off at 0755 Moscow time (0355 GMT), along with the 12th crew for the ISS
-- Russian cosmonaut Valery Tokarev and NASA astronaut William McArthur.
The Mission Control outside Moscow said all systems
worked fine during liftoff and the ship entered the orbit at 8:03 a.m. Moscow
time (0403 GMT). The crew reported all was going well onboard. The Soyuz is
scheduled to hook up with the space station two days later.
 A Russian Soyuz TMA-7
spacecraft blasts off from the launching pad at Baikonur cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan October 1, 2005. (Reuters
photo) | Olsen's family
members and friends watched from a viewing platform at Baikonur as the Soyuz
carrying the US millionaire scientist climbed faultlessly away from Kazakhstan,
trailing blindingly bright yellow and pink flames.
Also at Baikonur were NASA Administrator Michael
Griffin and his Russian counterpart Anatoly Perminov.
With the help of the crew, Olsen, 60, will perform
some 10 scientific experiments on the station, including crystal growth
experiments in conditions of weightlessness, studies of the response of the
human body in weightlessness, and measure of air humidity on Earth surface
through spectrum.
 U.S. space tourist Gregory Olsen
interacts with his grandson Justin at the Baikonur cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan, Friday, Sept. 30, 2005. (Xinhua/AFP
photo) | Olsen, holder of
advanced degrees in physics and materials science, rejected the "space tourist"
label on him, preferring to see himself as a private science researcher.
"Tourist doesn't do justice to all the work I've put
in, or thework that the people at the Gagarin center (outside Moscow) put
inpreparing us," Olsen said at a pre-flight news conference on Friday.
Olsen is preceded by American Dennis Tito and South
African Mark Shuttleworth, who had spent a few days on the ISS in 2001 and2002
respectively after paying 20 million US dollars apiece for the tour. Olsen is
reported to have paid the same price for his space travel.
 An Orthodox priest blesses
International Space Station expedition participants U.S. space tourist
Gregory Olsen, left, Russian cosmonaut Valery Tokarev and U.S. astronaut
William McArthur, right, at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan,
Saturday, Oct. 1, 2005.(Xinhua/AFP
photo) | After a 10-day
tour in space, Olsen will return to Earth with Russian cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev
and US astronaut John Phillips, who have been working on the station since
mid-April, in a Soyuz ship that will touch down on Oct. 11 in Kazakhstan's
northern steppes.
Russia's space program has been the ISS' lifeline for
more thantwo years since the suspension of US shuttle flights after the Columbia
shuttle disintegrated on Feb. 1, 2003, as it returned to Earth. All seven
astronauts aboard Columbia perished.
The US shuttle Discovery briefly visited the orbiting
lab in July but concerns over the foam insulation on the shuttle's external fuel
tank prompted NASA to keep the shuttle fleet grounded. Enditem
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