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LIVE FROM MARS: Educators Classroom Connection
Third Grader: Katie Herleman
Third Grader: Katie Herleman shares the experience of viewing
the Mars Pathfinder lift-off.
My name is Katie Herleman. I'm nine years old and am in third grade at Pineview School in
Sarasota, Florida. I love rockets and my dream is to some day work at NASA as a scientist.
I went to the Kennedy Space Center to see the Mars Pathfinder launch. It was one of the most
exciting times of my life. I often think that in the years to come, as we continue to
explore the planets and the universe, I will always remember that I was there during a very
big moment in NASA history, watching the launch.
I look forward to going to many more launches and I hope to go to space camp this summer.
My dream is to go to the Air Force Academy, become a pilot and then ON TO NASA!
When I got to see the Mars Pathfinder liftoff, it was one of the most exciting experiences
in my life. It was like one big party at the Kennedy Space Center, and even in the nearby
town of Cocoa Beach and Cape Canaveral, where everybody seems to be a space exploration
addict.
I have seen photos of launches but they are nothing like the real thing. When the
Pathfinder took off, I felt like jumping out of my seat, it was so exciting. Even from a
distance, the noise and the light were amazing. I felt almost like I was going up with it.
All of us sitting in the bleachers, jumped up together and cheered.
I had a chance the people who make the space program happen, and they were all really,
really nice to me. They gave me pins and souvenirs and stuff, including a great t-shirt that
showed a martian and the Sojourner Rover that says "The Earthlings are coming. There goes
the neighborhood !"
I even met Buzz Aldrin, one of the most famous astronauts of all times. Wow, what a neat
man! And real friendly to everybody. Mr. Hugh Harris of the Public Relations Department at
the Kennedy Space was my hero. He introduced me to all sorts of people working with NASA and
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. A nice man named Dan Woods from the Washington, D.C. NASA
office made me feel so special, too.
I have never seen a launch with real astronauts, but I can tell you this. I will go back
to Cape Canaveral every chance I get. It's wonderful to be a part of history - even a tiny
little part.
Just think... the rocket I saw take off will reach Mars on July 4th, 1997 if all goes
well! We are planning a Mars Pathfinder party out in the country where we moved to so I can
launch my rockets and build experiments without the neighbors calling my parents very time I
shoot off rockets in the backyard. I got a telescope for my birthday and we live out where
you can see the stars so clearly.
I fell in love with the Sojourner Rover and learned a lot about it at speeches and press
conferences I was invited to when I got to go to the Kennedy Space Center. I am working very
hard on making Sojourner rover for my school science fair. It is an annual science fair and
I won a big prize last year for my experiments with rockets where I found a lot of fun
experiments and information that NASA had on the Internet. I made a hero engine out of coke
cans, a balloon rocket car and match stick rockets where I tested Newton's Third Law of
Motion. My school was very proud that a second grader could win a big science contest like
I did and they are looking forward to my entry this year to represent our school.
Now that I am older and in third grade I think my trip to NASA and all of the neat
engineers I got to sit with at the Mars Pathfinder liftoff have helped me come up with my
science project. I actually met the real-live engineers who put the Mars Pathfinder into
orbit and who built Sojourner.
Katie won 1st Place again this year in the Sarasota County Elementary
science fair for her model of Rover and solar energy power experiments.
I am studying solar energy and I think I can build a small demonstration of the Sojourner
Rover after seeing what I saw at the Kennedy Space Center. Plus, I found some really good
information on the Internet to help me with the dimensions for Sojourner.
I also found a nice engineer named Geoffrey Landis at the NASA Lewis Research Center who is
an expert on solar energy and even invented the dust measurement device that is attached on
the Sojourner Rover. Who knows? Someday I might even be at NASA, too - and some kid could
watch me take off and say to her parents, I want to be an astronaut just like Katie when I
grow up!
I got to meet Donna Shirley who works at the JPL and Wesley Huntress at the Beach party I
was invited to at Patrick Air Force Base. They gave me their personal pins...Donna gave me
her Sojourner Rover pin and Mr. Huntress gave me his Mars Pathfinder pin. I have a coat from
the U.S. Space Camp gift store I got as a memory for my most favorite trip in the world to
the NASA and to see the Mars Pathfinder liftoff. I got patches on the coat and I put those
special pins from Donna and Mr. Huntress on my jacket.
At my school they call me "Rocket Girl" and "NASA girl" because I wear mostly NASA shirts to
school and I write all of my reports about NASA. We had a contest at our school called the
Nobel Prize Competition and I won the Physics prize for my project on rockets. I am so glad
that I got to go to the Mars Pathfinder lift-off. It is my goal to see a manned lift-off
someday at the Kennedy Space Center. I wish all kids could see a lift-off, too. I will
never be the same!