WASHINGTON - Former
astronaut Charles Bolden, picked by President Barack Obama to become the next
NASA administrator, told lawmakers Wednesday that the agency must re-ignite
American interest in the space program, akin to the excitement over the moon
landing and even the initial shuttle years.
During his confirmation
hearing Wednesday, Bolden said the key would be finding ways to get young
students interested in science and engineering.
"If I go to a
classroom today, it's different than when I went as an astronaut in 1980,"
he told members of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and
Transportation.
"I could ask, 'How
many of you want to be an astronaut?' Every hand went up in the class. When I
go to a school today and ask that question, I may see three hands. All of them
want to go into business."
Bolden received widespread
and effusive
support from lawmakers, indicating an easy confirmation for the retired
Marine Corps general.
He also had a large
cheering section in the audience and in a nearby hearing room set up to handle
the overflow: Several dozen of Bolden's friends and family members traveled by
chartered bus to attend the confirmation hearing.
Although he now lives in
Texas, Bolden was introduced by the two Republican senators from his home state
of South Carolina.
"The president of the
United States has chosen very wisely," said Sen. Lindsey Graham. Bolden
"is the right man at the right time, with the right skills it takes and
character."
Bolden, 62, would become
NASA's first black administrator.
He said that as he was
being raised in the segregated South, his race initially hindered his ability
to attend the Naval Academy because his congressmen refused to appoint anyone
who was black. Ultimately, Bolden met a retired federal judge who was
recruiting minorities for military academies. A lawmaker from Chicago
eventually nominated Bolden.
"If anyone represents
a characteristic that we admire - that being the characteristic of an overcomer - Charlie is that," said Sen. Bill Nelson,
the Orlando Democrat who flew with Bolden on a 1986 shuttle mission. Nelson
also lobbied the White House to pick Bolden.
Bolden's nomination comes
at a critical time for NASA. The shuttles are scheduled to be retired next
year, and a White House panel is reviewing the Constellation
program, which is slated to replace it.
"Does NASA really have
a future?" said the committee's chairman, Sen. John "Jay"
Rockefeller, D-W.Va. "People refer to what has
been done. Very few refer to what might be done.
"I need bolstering on
NASA, personally," he said. "It's drifting. I think that's
indisputable. So what do you plan to do to change this?"
Bolden said he wants the
agency to pour more resources into research and development.
The committee must still
vote on Bolden and Lori Garver, who was nominated
to be Bolden's deputy. Their names would then be forwarded to the full Senate
for a confirmation vote.
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