USA 7s D2: Cup Quarters- Fiji 12-5 Wales (FT), Kenya 14-19 Samoa (FT), South Africa 24-5 Argentina (FT), NZ 12-7 England (FT), Bowl Quarters- Canada 29-0 Uruguay (FT), Scotland 14-15 Japan (FT),  France 5-21 USA (FT), Australia 31-0 Brazil (FT). Pool play- Argentina 14-12 USA (FT), NZ 12-5 Samoa (FT), France 5-33 South Africa (FT), Kenya 7-7 England (H2), Fiji 19-10 Canada (FT), Australia 10-7 Japan (FT), Wales 28-7 Uruguay (FT), Scotland  33-5 Brazil (FT).
Suva, Fiji
Temp: 79 °F / 26.1 °C
Wind: 0.0 KMH
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
November 22, 2009 01:09:24 PM

Shuttle Atlantis astronauts began the second of their mission's three spacewalks Saturday to maintain and install more high-tech gadgets on the International Space Station.

The sortie was delayed by over an hour after false depressurization alarms earlier rang through the orbiting outpost and jolted mission specialists Mike Foreman and Randy Bresnik awake after just two hours of sleep, rattling preparations.

Bresnik, venturing out into space for the first time, was most likely already restless as he awaited the birth of his daughter back on earth.

His wife Rebbeca Burgin was due to give birth to the couple's second child on Friday. If the baby is born during the Atlantis mission, Bresnik would be only the second person to become a father in space.

But he was forced to set aside family concerns and concentrate on the task at hand, as the second exterior work effort of the shuttle's 11-day mission got underway more than an hour late, at 1431 GMT. It was shortened by 30 minutes due to the false alarms and set to last six hours.

Despite the shortened spacewalk, they were "well ahead" of schedule and planned to get all of their tasks completed, NASA said.

The pair installed a cargo attachment system on the space-facing side of the station's Starboard 3 truss and set up a wireless video system to transmit images to the station and relay them to Earth.

During a separate mission next year, the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer will be installed at the attachment point.

Foreman and Bresnik were also tackling a task that had been planned for the third spacewalk -- deploying the final attachment system on the Earth-facing side of the truss, where a logistics carrier will be installed next year.

They were also due to transfer a 14,000-pound (6,350-kilogram) cargo pallet that contains spare parts to help extend the life of the station, install two antennas on a Columbus European lab assembly to track ships on Earth, and relocate a floating unit that measures electric charges on the station.

Aboard the ISS, mission specialist Robert Satcher was managing the spacewalkers' activities and coordinating communication between them and mission control in Houston, Texas.

The false depressurization and smoke detector alarms had sounded around 0253 GMT, forcing Bresnik and Foreman to exit the Quest airlock, where astronauts "camp out" before spacewalks to purge nitrogen from their bloodstream to prevent decompression sickness.

The alarm originated from the Russian Poisk Mini-Research Module -- which astronauts delivered to the ISS on November 12 -- with the station's automatic response shutting down ventilation systems, thus setting off two smoke detectors.

It took about an hour for everything to return to normal on the station.

After Atlantis returns home, just six space missions will remain in the shuttle program before the fleet's three orbiters are retired.

NASA's shuttle program is due to be mothballed next year, but the White House could still decide to extend it through 2011 to reduce America's future reliance on Russia for transporting astronauts to the space station.

The shuttle remains the only spacecraft that can carry heavy, bulky equipment that is key to maintain the ISS, itself set to remain operational until 2020.

Sixteen countries participate in the ISS program, at a cost of 100 billion dollars with most financing coming from the United States.

The US human space flight program, which swallows up 10 billion dollars of NASA's 18-billion-dollar annual budget, is at great risk of being grounded.

A panel set up by President Barack Obama and tasked with assessing its future has said an additional three billion dollars per year is needed for NASA to meet its goals.

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