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                    John Lynch PHILLIPS (Ph.D.)
                     ISS Flight Engineer 
                      Soyuz TMA TS Flight Engineer 
                      NASA Astronaut, USA 
                    DATE AND PLACE OF BIRTH: Born April 15, 1951 in Fort Belvoir,
                      Virginia, but considers Scottsdale, Arizona, to be his
                    hometown. 
                    EDUCATION: 
                      Graduated from Scottsdale High School, Arizona, in 1966.
                        He was the second of 906 graduators who graduated from
                        the U.S. Naval Academy in 1972 and received a bachelor
                        of science degree in mathematics and Russian. In 1974
                        he received a master of science degree in aeronautical
                        systems from the University of West Florida and a master
                        of science degree and a doctorate in geophysics and space
                        physics from the University of California, Los Angeles,
                        in 1984 and 1987 respectively. 
                    FAMILY STATUS: Married to the former Laura Jean Doell.
                      They have two children. 
                    HONORS: Within the scientific body he received 2 NASA
                      Group Achievement Awards for contributions to the Ulysses
                      Spacecraft Mission and also the Los Alamos National Laboratory
                      Distinguished Performance Award in 1996. 
                      Awarded the NASA Space Flight Medal and various military
                      awards. 
                    HOBBY: Skiing, kayaking, hiking, fitness activities and
                      family recreation. 
                    WORK EXPERIENCE: 
                      In 1972 Phillips began service in the U.S. Naval Forces
                        and in November 1974 he was designated a Naval Aviator.
                        He trained in the A-7 Corsair Aircraft at the Naval Air
                        Station Lemoore, California. Then he served in Attack
                        Squadron 155 and made combat deployments aboard the USS
                        Oriskany and USS Roosevelt. After this be was engaged
                        in navy recruiting in Albany, New York, and flied the
                        CT-39 Sabreliner Aircraft at Naval Air Station North
                        Island, California. 
                      He has logged over 4300 flight hours and performed 250
                      carrier landings. From 1982 to 2002 he served as a Navy
                      reservist, as an A-7 pilot and in various non-flying assignments. 
                      He retired in 2002 with the rank of Captain, USNR. 
                      After leaving the Navy in 1982, Phillips enrolled as a
                      graduate student at the University of California, Los Angeles,
                      where he was engaged in data processing which was obtained
                      by the NASA Pioneer Venus Spacecraft. Upon completing his
                      doctorate in 1987, he was awarded a J. Robert Oppenheimer
                      Postdoctoral Fellowship at Los Alamos National Laboratory
                      in New Mexico and in 1989 he accepted a career position
                      at Los Alamos. While there, Phillips performed research
                      on the Sun and the space environment. From 1993 through
                      1996 be was Principal Investigator for the Solar Wind Plasma
                      Experiment aboard the Ulysses Spacecraft passed over the
                      poles of the Sun. 
                      John Phillips has anthored 156 scientific papers dealing
                      with the plasma environment of the Sun, Earth, other planets
                      and comets and spacecraft as well. 
                      In April 1996 he was selected as an astronaut candidate
                      by NASA. In 1998 he completed astronaut candidate training
                      at the Johnson Space Center and was qualified as a mission
                      specialist. After this be worked at the NASA Astronaut
                      Office and was involved with systems engineering. Phillips
                      was CAPCOM for the International Space Station. 
                      On September 28, 2000 he was assigned to STS-100 crew. 
                      From April 19 to May 1, 2001 he performed his first
                      space flight as a mission specialist of STS-100 Endeavour with
                      Multi-Purpose Logistics Module Raffaello. The main flight
                      task was to deliver new equipment and cargoes to the International
                      Space Station for Expedition-2 and also to deliver and
                      install the Canadarm-2 Robotic Arm (SSRMS) at the external
                      surface of the Station. 
                      The flight duration was 11 days, 21 hours, 50 minutes and
                      00 sec. 
                      Phillips is currently training for ISS Expedition-11 as
                      ISS flight engineer and scientific specialist.                     
                    January 2005. 
                      Based on Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center data, NASA, USA. 
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