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Tracking hurricanes
This 2005 Atlantic hurricane season has a been a record-breaker. Satellite imagery since June 1 has been compiled into this movie to track the 21 named storms as they formed and traveled, many making landfall.

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Hurricane Wilma
International Space Station cameras captured this incredible video of Hurricane Wilma and its well-defined eye from an altitude of 220 miles. Wilma was packing winds of 175 miles an hour as a Category 5 storm when the station flew overhead.

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Hubble examines moon
NASA has used the Hubble Space Telescope for scientific observations of the Earth's moon in the search for important oxygen-bearing minerals -- potential resources for human exploration. Scientists held this news conference on October 19 to discuss their investigations.

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Fuel tank leaves KSC
Space shuttle external fuel tank No. 120 is moved out of Kennedy Space Center's Vehicle Assembly Building and loaded onto a barge for transport to the Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans. Once there, the tank will undergo modifications prior to being returned to Florida for a future launch.

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Boeing's rocket schedule hit by looming union strike
BY SPACEFLIGHT NOW
Posted: October 25, 2005

Boeing aerospace workers across the country are preparing to strike next week, a move that would halt the company's Delta rocket launch schedule at Cape Canaveral and Vandenberg Air Force Base.

The planned November 7 launch of NASA's CloudSat and CALIPSO environmental satellites has already been impacted by the battle between Boeing and its workforce. The two spacecraft were supposed to move from a processing building to the launch pad for attachment atop a Delta 2 rocket earlier this week, but officials scrubbed those plans due to the looming strike.

NASA said it didn't want the satellites sitting on Vandenberg's Space Launch Complex-2 West pad if technicians went on strike.

Other launches facing uncertainty are the Delta 4 rocket from Cape Canaveral with the civilian GOES-N weather satellite and an Air Force mission using a Delta 4 from Vandenberg with a classified spy satellite. Both missions have been encountered significant delays for technical problems.

The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers voted to reject Boeing's latest contract offering. Union leaders cited the lack of retiree medical benefits for new employees, vacation and insurance costs as unacceptable parts of the proposed contract.

"Perhaps all our brothers and sisters at the launch sites should start sharing that information with the launch customers, NASA, NRO, U.S. Air Force, etc.," a posting on the union's Web site says. "They might want to know how long their launches are going to slip!"

"The IAM informed us that our employees who they represent rejected our contract offer," a Boeing statement said. "We are open to any ideas that the union might bring to us to come to an agreement, however we feel we have given them the best offer we possibly can."

The union includes 365 workers at Boeing's Huntington Beach facility, 288 at Cape Canaveral and 100 at Vandenberg.

The workers are critical to launch activities, meaning their strike would prevent any liftoffs from occurring, Boeing said.