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From: [email protected] (Jon Leech)
Newsgroups: sci.space.tech,sci.space.science,sci.answers,news.answers
Subject: Space FAQ 11/13 - Interest Groups & Publications
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Date: 17 Sep 1996 15:55:48 -0400
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   Compilation copyright (c) 1994, 1995, 1996 by Jonathan P. Leech. This
   document may be redistributed in its complete and unmodified form. Other
   use requires written permission of the author.

SPACE ACTIVIST/INTEREST/RESEARCH GROUPS AND SPACE PUBLICATIONS


   NETWORK GROUPS AND RESOURCES

   ISLAND ONE - Web pages addressing economic, political, and scientific
       issues relating to space settlement, from a libertarian perspective.

       http://www.music.qub.ac.uk:80/~amon/IslandOne/


   MMSG - Molecular Manufacturing Shortcut Group (an NSS chapter focusing
       on nanotechnology). Web page includes a description, the current
       issue of the MMSG newsletter, and membership info.

           http://www.gpl.net/mmsg/mmsg.html

   SPACE ACTIVISTS WEB PAGE - covers space-related political information
       such as space station and SSTO funding issues, political contacts,
       and mailing lists on specific issues. Contact John Lewis
       ([email protected]).

           http://muon.qrc.com/space/start.html


   GROUPS

   AAS(1) - American Astronautical Society. Professional association,
       founded in 1954. They say: "The AAS remains the only national
       professional society exclusively devoted to astronautics. Through
       our publications, meetings and symposia, such as this year's Annual
       Meeting, the AAS provides for a continuing exchange of information
       among those whose careers and interest are concerned with
       astronautics." They publish a series of technical books, _Advances
       in the Astronautical Sciences_.

       New member fee (1994) $40.

       American Astronautical Society
       6352 Rolling Mill Place
       Suite 102
       Springfield, VA 2215
       phone 703-866-0020
       FAX 703-866-3526
       (information from AAS brochure Nov. 1994)

   AAS(2) - American Astronomical Society. The major professional
       organization in North America for astronomers and other scientists
       and individuals interested in astronomy.

       American Astronomical Society
       2000 Florida Avenue, Suite 400
       Washington, D.C. 20009
       (202)328-2010; FAX(202)234-2560; Membership FAX(202)588-1351
       email: [email protected]

       http://blackhole.aas.org/AAS-homepage.html

   AIA - Aerospace Industry Association. Professional group, with primary
       membership of major aerospace firms. Headquartered in the DC area.
       Acts as the "voice of the aerospace industry" -- and it's opinions
       are usually backed up by reams of analyses and the reputations of
       the firms in AIA.

           1250 I Street NW
           Washington, DC 20005
           (202)-371-8544

   AIAA - American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
       Professional association, with somewhere about 30,000-40,000
       members. 65 local chapters around the country -- largest chapters
       are DC area (3000 members), LA (2100 members), San Francisco (2000
       members), Seattle/NW (1500), Houston (1200) and Orange County
       (1200), plus student chapters. Not a union, but acts to represent
       aviation and space professionals (engineers, managers, financial
       types) nationwide. Holds over 30 conferences a year on space and
       aviation topics publishes technical Journals (Aerospace Journal,
       Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets, etc.), technical reference books
       and is _THE_ source on current aerospace state of the art through
       their published papers and proceedings. Also offers continuing
       education classes on aerospace design. Has over 60 technical
       committees, and over 30 committees for industry standards. AIAA acts
       as a professional society -- offers a centralized resume/jobs
       function, provides classes on job search, offers low-cost health and
       life insurance, and lobbies for appropriate legislation (AIAA was
       one of the major organizations pushing for IRAs - Individual
       Retirement Accounts). Very active public policy arm -- works
       directly with the media, congress and government agencies as a
       legislative liaison and clearinghouse for inquiries about aerospace
       technology technical issues. Reasonably non-partisan, in that they
       represent the industry as a whole, and not a single company,
       organization, or viewpoint.

       Membership $70/yr (student memberships are less).

       American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
       The Aerospace Center
       370 L'Enfant Promenade, SW
       Washington, DC 20077-0820
       (202)-646-7400

   AMSAT - develops small satellites (since the 1960s) for a variety of
       uses by amateur radio enthusiasts. Several publications, supplies
       satellite tracking software, runs mailing lists, many other
       activities.

       Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT-NA)
       850 Sligo Avenue
       Silver Spring, MD 20910
       (301)-589-6062

           http://www.amsat.org/

       Lots of related amateur radio information is at

           http://www.novia.net/~pschleck/elmers/

   ARTEMIS SOCIETY - Supports "The Artemis Project," a multi-industry
       program to establish a commercial lunar base, lead by The Lunar
       Resources Company. Publishes _Pleiades_, a monthly newsletter.
       _Artemis_ magazine, a bimonthly glossy commercial magazine, will
       begin publication by early 1996. Web page has a description of the
       project, FAQ, and illustrations of the spacecraft.

       The FAQ is also available by email to [email protected]. The
       Artemis Project maintains a list server discussion - email to
       [email protected] with the body of the message containing the
       command "join artemis-list" (without the quotes) - and a large
       discussion area on the GEnie network.

       Membership $25/year (checks payable to "Lunar Resources")

       The Lunar Resources Company
       PO Box 590213
       Houston, TX 77259-0213
       email: [email protected]

           http://www.asi.org/

   ASPIRESPACE - British non-profit group working on hardware projects
       including suborbital launchers and waveriders. Publishes
       _Aspiration_.

       Membership 25 pounds sterling/year for UK and EC countries.

       AspireSpace
       c/o 16 Ashby Court
       Whitley Wood Lane
       Reading, Berkshire RG2 8PG
       UNITED KINGDOM

       email: [email protected]
       http://www.gbnet.net/orgs/aspire/

   ASRI (Australian Space Research Institute Ltd, formerly ASERA). An
       Australian non-profit organisation to coordinate, promote, and
       conduct space R&D projects in Australia, involving both Australian
       and international (primarily university) collaborators. Activities
       include the development of sounding rockets, small satellites
       (especially microsatellites), high-altitude research balloons, and
       appropriate payloads. Provides student projects at all levels, and
       is open to any person or organisation interested in participating.
       Publishes a monthly newsletter and a quarterly technical journal.

       Membership $A100 (dual subscription)
       Subscriptions $A25 (newsletter only) $A50 (journal only)

       ASERA Ltd
       PO Box 184
       Ryde, NSW, Australia, 2112
       email: [email protected]

   BIS - British Interplanetary Society. One of the oldest (1933) pro-space
       groups, BIS publishes two excellent journals: _Spaceflight_,
       covering current space activities, and the _Journal of the BIS_,
       containing technical papers on space activities from historical
       rocketry to near-term space probes to interstellar missions. BIS has
       published a design study in 1978 for an interstellar probe called
       _Daedalus_.

       Membership 38 pounds/year (US $69), 26 pounds (US $47) for ages 22
       and younger or 65 and older. Membership includes a subscription to
       either _Spaceflight_ or _JBIS_ (choose one). You may subscribe to
       both publications by adding 33 pounds ($60) to your dues.

       British Interplanetary Society
       27/29 South Lambeth Road
       Vauxhall, London SW8 1SZ
       UNITED KINGDOM
       email: [email protected]

   CSS - A federally-incorporated non-profit Canadian corporation. Inspired
       by the old L5 Society, its principal objective is to sponsor and
       promote the involvement of Canadians in the development of Space.
       This is intended to allow the group to grow in cooperation, rather
       than in competition, with other space development organizations
       (such as the National Space Society, the Space Studies Institute,
       and the British Interplanetary Society), while meeting a real need
       for an effective Canadian space-development advocacy group.

       CSS holds monthly lecture meetings on space topics at an active
       chapter in Toronto; an Ottawa chapter has been active in the past,
       and Montreal and Vancouver chapters are being worked on. CSS
       publishes a newsletter, ``The Canadian Space Gazette'' and has run
       several space conferences, the largest being the upcoming 1994
       International Space Development Conference (together with the NSS).
       CSS also has participated in several space design projects, most
       notably the development of a preliminary design of a solar sail
       racing spacecraft under the ``Columbus 500'' initiative. Annual dues
       are $25/year ($15/year for full-time students, $100/year for
       corporate members).

       Canadian Space Society
       43 Moregate Crescent
       Bramalea, Ontario
       CANADA L6S 3K9
       Answering Machine: (416)-626-0505
       CSS BBS: (905)-458-5907 (8N1, up to 2400 buad)

   ERPS - Experimental Rocket Propulsion Society. Non-profit liquid fuel
       rocket engine design and test team in the San Francisco Bay Area;
       current projects include a monopropellant rocket to launch a payload
       to 100 km, a small two-man suborbital vehicle, a 20 lb to LEO SSTO
       demonstrator, a rocket-pack, and a rocket assist module for high
       performance gliders.

       email: [email protected]
       http://www.LunaCity.com/homepage/erps/

   EUROAVIA - Non-profit European aerospace student association with
       local student groups. Activities include seminars and symposia,
       publications, international visits, and a design workshop.

       email: [email protected] (Munich Local Group)
       http://fest2.tuwien.ac.at/~e8825768/euroavia.htm
       http://cc1.kuleuven.ac.be/student/euroavia.html
       http://www.tu-bs.de/studenten/euroavia/index.html

   ISECCo - International Space Exploration & Colonization Co. Non-profit
       research and developement organization building, first project is a
       Closed Ecological Life Support System (CELSS). Annual newsletter
       $10/5 years, or write for a complimentary copy.

       ISECCo
       P.O. Box 60885
       Fairbanks, AK 99706
       (907)-457-2674
       email: [email protected]

   ISU - International Space University. ISU is a non-profit international
       graduate-level educational institution dedicated to promoting the
       peaceful exploration and development of space through multi-cultural
       and multi-disciplinary space education and research. For further
       information on ISU's summer session program or Permanent Campus
       activities:

       International Space University
       955 Massachusetts Avenue 7th Floor
       Cambridge, MA 02139
       (617)-354-1987 (phone)
       (617)-354-7666 (fax)
       email: [email protected]

   L-5 Society (defunct). Founded by Keith and Carolyn Henson in 1975 to
       advocate space colonization. Its major success was in preventing US
       participation in the UN "Moon Treaty" in the late 1970s. Merged with
       the National Space Institute in 1987, forming the National Space
       Society.

   NAR - National Association of Rocketry. The largest sport rocket
       organization in the USA, the NAR promotes all aspects of flying
       model and high power sport rockets. Sponsors clubs, local and
       regional launches. Conducts two national events per year: a National
       Sport Launch (NSL) in the spring, and the National Championships
       (NARAM) in late July/early August. Provides liability insurance
       coverage for members' flying activities. Publishes "Sport Rocketry"
       magazine, bimonthly containing plans, event schedules, Assocition
       news, "how to" and technical articles. Technical Services Committee
       (NARTS) sells technical reports, plans and commerative materials.

       Membership $20/year (to age 20), $35 (21 & older).

       National Association of Rocketry
       P. O. Box 177
       Altoona, WI 54720
       715-832-1946
       http://www.nar.org

   NSC - National Space Club. Open for general membership, but not well
       known at all. Primarily comprised of professionals in aerospace
       industry. Acts as information conduit and social gathering group.
       Active in DC, with a chapter in LA. Monthly meetings with invited
       speakers who are "heavy hitters" in the field. Annual "Outlook on
       Space" conference is _the_ definitive source of data on government
       annual planning for space programs. Cheap membership (approx
       $20/yr).

           [address needed]

   NSS - the National Space Society. NSS is a pro-space group distinguished
       by its network of local chapters. Supports a general agenda of space
       development and man-in-space, including the NASA space station.
       Publishes _Ad Astra_, a bimonthly glossy magazine, and runs Shuttle
       launch tours and Space Hotline telephone services. A major sponsor
       of the annual space development conference. Associated with
       Spacecause and Spacepac, political lobbying organizations.

       Membership $20 (youth/senior) $35 (regular).

       National Space Society
       Membership Department
       922 Pennsylvania Avenue, S.E.
       Washington, DC 20003-2140
       (202)-543-1900
       email: [email protected]
       http://www.nss.org

   Planetary Society - founded by Carl Sagan. The largest space advocacy
       group. Publishes _Planetary Report_, a bimonthly glossy, and has
       supported SETI hardware development financially. Agenda is primarily
       support of space science, recently amended to include an
       international manned mission to Mars.

       Membership $35/year (ask about the unadvertised student rate).

       The Planetary Society
       65 North Catalina Avenue
       Pasadena, CA 91106
       (818)-793-5100
       email: [email protected]
       http://planetary.org/tps/

   SAS - Space Access Society. Dedicated to promoting affordable, reliable
       access to space. Currently concentrating on supporting the DC-X SSRT
       project; expects to change focus to SSTO-suitable engines, and
       possibly other government X-rocket projects in parallel with and
       complementary to the existing SSRT path.

       Membership $30/year, $1000/lifetime; includes email updates. $50 for
       email plus mailed hardcopy ($25 extra outside the US).

       Space Access Society
       4855 E Warner Rd #24-150
       Phoenix, AZ 85044
       (602)-431-9283 voice/fax
       email: [email protected]

   SSI - the Space Studies Institute, founded by Dr. Gerard O'Neill.
       Physicist Freeman Dyson took over the Presidency of SSI after
       O'Neill's death in 1992. Publishes _SSI Update_, a bimonthly
       newsletter describing work-in-progress. Conducts a research program
       including mass-drivers, lunar mining processes and simulants,
       composites from lunar materials, solar power satellites. Runs the
       biennial Princeton Conference on Space Manufacturing.

       Membership $25/year. Senior Associates ($100/year and up) fund most
           SSI research.

       Space Studies Institute
       PO Box 82
       Princeton, NJ 08540
       email: [email protected]
       http://www.astro.nwu.edu/lentz/space/ssi/home-ssi.html

   SEDS - Students for the Exploration and Development of Space. Founded in
       1980 at MIT and Princeton. SEDS is a chapter-based pro-space
       organization at high schools and universities around the world.
       Entirely student run. Each chapter is independent and coordinates
       its own local activities. Nationally, SEDS runs a scholarship
       competition, design contests, and holds an annual international
       conference and meeting in late summer.

       Students for the Exploration and Development of Space
       MIT Room W20-445
       77 Massachusetts Avenue
       Cambridge, MA  02139
       (617)-253-8897
       email: [email protected]

       Dues determined by local chapter.

   SPACECAUSE -  A political lobbying organization and part of the NSS
       Family of Organizations. Publishes a bi-monthly newsletter,
       Spacecause News. Annual dues is $25. Members also receive a discount
       on _The Space Activist's Handbook_. Activities to support pro-space
       legislation include meeting with political leaders and interacting
       with legislative staff. Spacecause primarily operates in the
       legislative process.

       National Office                 West Coast Office
       Spacecause                      Spacecause
       922 Pennsylvania Ave. SE        3435 Ocean Park Blvd.
       Washington, DC 20003            Suite 201-S
       (202)-543-1900                  Santa Monica, CA 90405

   SPACEPAC - A political action committee and part of the NSS Family of
       Organizations. Spacepac researches issues, policies, and candidates.
       Each year, updates _The Space Activist's Handbook_. Current Handbook
       price is $25. While Spacepac does not have a membership, it does
       have regional contacts to coordinate local activity. Spacepac
       primarily operates in the election process, contributing money and
       volunteers to pro-space candidates.

       Spacepac
       922 Pennsylvania Ave. SE
       Washington, DC 20003
       (202)-543-1900

   TRIPOLI ROCKETRY ASSOCIATION - sponsors the use of high-power sports
       rockets starting where the NAR leaves off and going up. Membership
       includes a subscription to _High Power Rocketry_.

       Tripoli Rocketry Association, Inc.
       P.O. Box 339
       Kenner, LA 70063-0339

   UK-SEDS - United Kingdom SEDS affiliate (see above). Projects include
       sounding rockets, microsatellites, and a microlight solar sail.
       Publishes _Aurora_.

       Membership 12 pounds/year.

       c/o The SET
       The Royal Aeronautical Society
       4 Hamilton Place
       London W1V OBQ
       UNITED KINGDOM
       http://www.gbnet.net/orgs/seds/

   UNITED STATES SPACE FOUNDATION - a public, non-profit organization
       supported by member donations and dedicated to promoting
       international education, understanding and support of space. The
       group hosts an annual conference for teachers and others interested
       in education. Other projects include developing lesson plans that
       use space to teach other basic skills such as reading. Publishes
       "Spacewatch," a monthly B&W glossy magazine of USSF events and
       general space news. Annual dues:

               Charter         $50 ($100 first year)
               Individual      $35
               Teacher         $29
               College student $20
               HS/Jr. High     $10
               Elementary       $5
               Founder &     $1000+
                   Life Member

       United States Space Foundation
       PO Box 1838
       Colorado Springs, CO 80901
       (719)-550-1000

   WORLD SPACE FOUNDATION - has been designing and building a solar-sail
       spacecraft for longer than any similar group; many JPL employees
       lend their talents to this project. WSF also provides partial
       funding for the Palomar Sky Survey, an extremely successful search
       for near-Earth asteroids. Publishes *Foundation News* and
       *Foundation Astronautics Notebook*, each a quarterly 4-8 page
       newsletter. Contributing Associate, minimum of $15/year (but more
       money always welcome to support projects).

       World Space Foundation
       Post Office Box Y
       South Pasadena, California 91030-1000
       (818)-357-2878


   PUBLICATIONS

   Ad Astra - bimonthly glossy magazine published by the National Space
       Society; broad range of articles and columns on space technology,
       politics, science, law, etc. See membership info for NSS in "GROUPS"
       section above.

   Aerospace Daily (McGraw-Hill)
       Very good coverage of aerospace and space issues. Approx. $1400/yr.

   Air & Space / Smithsonian (bimonthly magazine) - A glossy magazine,
       generally light reading; the emphasis is much more on aviation than
       on space. Contains information about all events at the National Air
       & Space Museum.

       Box 53261
       Boulder, CO 80332-3261
       $18/year US, $24/year international

   Aviation Week & Space Technology - weekly aerospace trade, emphasis on
       aeronautics but usually has several space-related articles. Rates
       depend on whether you're "qualified" or not, which basically means
       whether you look at the ads for cruise missiles out of curiosity, or
       out of genuine commercial or military interest. Best write for a
       "qualification card" and try to get the cheap rate.

       1221 Ave. of the Americas,
       New York NY 10020
       (800)-525-5003 (US only, international (609)426-7070)
       $82/year US (qualified)
       $58/year if you qualify for the unadvertised student subscription
           rate - I (Jon Leech) got this rate by begging and pleading to a
           McGraw-Hill representative at the SIGGRAPH '92 conference.

   ESA (various) - The European Space Agency publishes a variety of
       periodicals, generally available free of charge, including the
       quarterly ESA Bulletin, with status reports on major projects,
       feature articles, and lists of technical papers and publications. A
       document with details is in

           ftp://ftp.cs.unc.edu/pub/users/leech/FAQ/ESAPublications

   Final Frontier (mass-market bimonthly magazine) - history, book reviews,
       general-interest articles (e.g. "The 7 Wonders of the Solar System",
       "Everything you always wanted to know about military space
       programs", etc.)

       Final Frontier Publishing Co.
       PO Box 534
       Mt. Morris, IL 61054-7852
       $14.95/year US, $19.95 Canada, $23.95 elsewhere

   Journal of the Astronautical Sciences and Space Times - publications of
       the American Astronautical Society. No details.

       AAS Business Office
       6352 Rolling Mill Place, Suite #102
       Springfield, VA 22152
       (703)-866-0020

   Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, Spaceflight -
       publications of the BIS; see their entry under "GROUPS".

   Journal of Practical Applications in Space - published by High Frontier
       Inc, and the Space Transportation Assn. Has addressed such issues as
       solar power satellites, technology and national security, cleaning
       low Earth orbit, ballistic missile defenses, space tourism and space
       propulsion. The journal was the first to publish hard numbers on the
       single-stage-to-orbit concept.

       Authors have included: Mr. G. Harry Stine, Dr. Robert Forward, Mr
       Steve Hoeser, Dr. Klaus Heiss, Dr. Philip Harris, Dr. Buzz Aldrin,
       Dr. Peter Glaser, Jerry Pournelle.

       The journal is a forum for those who use space technology "to
       provide for the common defense and promote general welfare" of our
       country, the Free World, and eventually all mankind.

       Journal of Practical Applications in Space,
       2800 Shirlington Road - Suite 405A
       Arlington, VA 22206
       (703)-671-4111
       (703)-931-6432 (fax)
       $30/year (4 issues) personal, $200/year institutions.
       Foreign add $10/year for airmail.


   GPS World (semi-monthly) - reports on current and new uses of GPS, news
       and analysis of the system and policies affecting it, and technical
       and product issues shaping GPS applications.

       GPS World
       859 Willamette St.
       P.O. Box 10460
       Eugene, OR 97440-2460
       (503)-343-1200

       $59/year US.

   Innovation (Space Technology) -- Free (request by email to
       [email protected]). Published by the NASA Office of Space
       Access and Technology. A revised version of the NASA Office of
       Commercial Programs newsletter.

   Planetary Encounter - in-depth technical coverage of planetary missions,
       with diagrams, lists of experiments, interviews with people directly
       involved.
   World Spaceflight News - in-depth technical coverage of near-Earth
       spaceflight. Mostly covers the shuttle: payload manifests, activity
       schedules, and post-mission assessment reports for every mission.

       Henry Spencer comments: WSN and PE have recently (mid-92) mutated
       into much more expensive weekly newsletters, filled mostly with
       stuff that's already available to most sci.space readers in
       sci.space.news. There is still interesting content at times, but the
       signal/noise and benefit/cost ratios have deteriorated pretty badly.
       I can no longer recommend them.

       Box 98
       Sewell, NJ 08080
       $30/year US/Canada
       $45/year elsewhere

   Quest - Described by Thomas J. Frieling
       ([email protected]) as "a worthwhile attempt at a
       space history magazine for informed readers (not mass market a la
       Final Frontier) Write to Glen Swanson for a press kit and sample
       issues."

       Glen Swanson
       CSPACE Press
       PO Box 9331
       Grand Rapids, MI   49509-0331
       (616)-452-5500

   Russian Space News (biweekly newsletter) - English translation of the
       Russian publication. Daily Mir reports, coverage of launches from
       Baikonur & Plesetsk, news from the Cosmonaut training center,
       coverage of civilian & military unmanned spacecraft. Free sample
       copies on request.

       Tranquest Corporation
       PO Box 30208
       Cleveland, OH 44130
       (800)-929-8953 (US only, international (216)-962-3400)
       (216)-888-3992 (fax)
       email: [email protected]

       $75/year US/Canada/Mexico (individual), $90 elsewhere
       $175/year (institutional, everywhere)


   SETIQuest (quarterly magazine/email) - News, technical information, and
       tutorials devoted to bioastronomy and its subset, SETI (Search for
       Extraterrestrial Intelligence). Free sample issue on request to:

       SETIQuest Inquiries, Department EX
       Helmers Publishing
       174 Concord Street
       Peterborough, NH  03458-0874
       (603)-924-9631
       (603)-924-7408 (fax)
       email: [email protected]

   Space (bi-monthly magazine)
       British aerospace trade journal. Very good. $75/year.

   Space Calendar (weekly newsletter, available by fax only)
       Parker Publications Ltd.
       42 Keephatch Road
       Wokingham
       Berks RG11 1QD
       UNITED KINGDOM

   Space Daily/Space Fax Daily  (newsletter)
       Short (1 paragraph) news notes. Available online for a fee
       (unknown).

   Space Technology Investor/Commercial Space News -- irregular Internet
       column on aspects of commercial space business. Free. Also limited
       fax and paper edition.

           P.O. Box 2452
           Seal Beach, CA 90740-1452.

   Space News (weekly magazine) - covers US civil and military space
       programs. Said to have good political and business but spotty
       technical coverage.

       Space News
       6883 Commercial Drive
       Springfield VA 22159-0500
       (703)-642-7330
       $89/year US, $130 Canada, $155 elsewhere. May have a student
       discount and discounts for NSS/SSI members.

   Space Power: Resources, Manufacturing & Development - technical journal
       focusing on Solar Power Satellites.

       Council for Economic and Social Studies
       1133 13th NW
       Washington, DC 20005
       (202) 371-2700 Voice (x1523 Fax)

   All the following are published by:

       Phillips Business Information, Inc.
       7811 Montrose Road
       Potomac, MD 20854

       Aerospace Financial News - $595/year.
       Defense Daily - Very good coverage of space and defense issues.
           $1495/year.
       Space Business News (bi-weekly) - Very good overview of space
           business activities. Recently merged with Space Exploration
           Technology and Space Station News. $595/year.

NEXT: FAQ #12/13 - How to become an astronaut