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- BUSINESS, Page 59Business NotesAEROSPACEDollar Signs In the Heavens
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- All talk, no liftoff: that was what skeptics said about the
- U.S. private space industry as it crept to the launch pad
- during the past three years. But at Cape Canaveral last week,
- McDonnell Douglas launched the first commercial payload to be
- put into orbit atop a privately owned U.S. rocket. One of the
- company's Delta three-stage boosters, originally developed for
- Government use, hurled a 2,700-lb. Marcopolo I satellite toward
- a geostationary perch 22,300 miles above the Atlantic Ocean.
- From there the $150 million satellite will beam TV programs
- across the United Kingdom for the British Satellite Broadcasting
- company. A second, identical satellite will be launched next
- summer. Total fee to McDonnell Douglas for the two launchings:
- $100 million.
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- The new American space entrepreneurs have some catching up
- to do. In the wake of the Challenger disaster, when President
- Reagan banned most commercial payloads from the shuttle, the
- private space industry has been dominated by Arianespace, the
- West European consortium that now accounts for about half the
- 25 commercial satellite launches scheduled each year.
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