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Malenchenko and served
Malenchenko served as a mission specialist for STS-106.

Malenchenko and Soyuz
Both cosmonauts and Doctor Valeri Polyakov ( arrived on Soyuz TM-18 ) became the 16th resident crew ; many technical problems with the station arose during this mission, necessitating a previously untried manual supply dock by Malenchenko.
On July 1, 1994, Malenchenko and Talgat Musabayev lifted off to space on board the Soyuz TM-19 spacecraft with Malenchenko in command of the Soyuz.
On November 4, 1994, Malenchenko, Musabayev and Ulf Merbold returned to Earth aboard their Soyuz capsule after landing 88 km northeast of Arkalyk.
Aboard Soyuz TM-19 and Mir complex Malenchenko spent 125 days, 22 hours, 53 minutes in space.
Malenchenko with astronaut Edward Lu lifted on board the Soyuz TMA-2 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on April 26, 2003, to the ISS.
Aboard Soyuz TMA-2 and the ISS, Malenchenko spent 184 days, 22 hours and 46 minutes in space.
Malenchenko with NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson and Malaysian spaceflight participant Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor blasted off to space on October 10, 2007, on Soyuz TMA-11 from the Baikonour Cosmodrome.
The Soyuz capsule landed in Kazakhstan on April 19, 2008, bringing back Malenchenko, Whitson and South Korean spaceflight participant Yi So-Yeon.
Having been flight engineer on Soyuz TMA-2, Lu spent six months in space in 2003 as part of ISS Expedition 7, with cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko.

Malenchenko and commander
The commander is Yuri Ivanovich Malenchenko ( Russia ), and flight engineer Edward Tsang Lu ( USA ), and after docking with the ISS they exchanged with the resident crew on ISS and became the seventh station crew, called " ISS Expedition Seven ".
In January – July, 1993 Malenchenko trained as commander of the Mir-14 reserve crew.
Yuri Malenchenko, Expedition 7 commander inside the Zvezda Module of the ISS.
He was the commander of the Expedition 7, and during his stay on the station, Malenchenko became the first person to get married in space.

Malenchenko and docking
There were many problems during the mission, which finally ended with the first successful manual docking of a Progress supply ship at Mir by Malenchenko.

Malenchenko and with
Malenchenko, Musabayev and cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov became the 16th resident Mir crew, with Malenchenko in command.
Malenchenko removed and replaced a failed electrical circuit box and together with Whitson removed the active Common Berthing Mechanism cover that was located at the outboard end of Harmony.
Malenchenko and Lu were also tasked with periodic maintenance work on the station, as well as spacewalk training ( although no spacewalks were planned.

Malenchenko and ISS
As of March 2011, Malenchenko ranks tenth for career time in space due to his time on both Mir and the International Space Station ( ISS ).
Yuri Malenchenko, Expedition 16 Flight Engineer inside the Zvezda Module of the ISS.
Malenchenko joined the ISS Expedition 16 crew as Flight Engineer 1.
Malenchenko performed his third career spacewalk during the STS-106 mission to the ISS.
Lu and Malenchenko used tethers and handrails along the ISS to make their way to a point more than 100 feet above the cargo bay, the farthest any tethered spacewalker has ventured outside the shuttle.
Mission Specialist Rick Mastracchio, also a spaceflight novice, was the prime robot arm operator for the mission, using the Canadian-built arm to move Lu and Malenchenko around the ISS as they conducted their assembly work.
From Houston, ISS Spacecraft Communicator Mike Fossum informed Expedition 7 Commander Yuri Malenchenko and Science Officer Edward Lu on 15 October 2003 of the successful launch of the Long March rocket carrying the Shenzhou 5 spacecraft and Chinese astronaut Yáng Lìwěi.

Malenchenko and crew
On September 11, 2000, two members of the STS-106 Space Shuttle crew completed final connections between Zvezda and Zarya ; during a 6 hour, 14 minute EVA, astronaut Ed Lu and cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko connected nine cables between Zvezda and Zarya, including four power cables, four video and data cables and a fiber-optic telemetry cable.
The crew of Expedition 7, Commander Yuri Malenchenko ( front ) and Edward T. Lu | Ed Lu are both are wearing Sokol KV-2 pressure suits.

Malenchenko and became
During his stay on the station, Malenchenko became the first person to get married in space.
Malenchenko became the first person to marry in space, on 10 August 2003, when he married Ekaterina Dmitrieva, who was in Texas, while he was 240 miles over New Zealand, on the International Space Station.

Malenchenko and Expedition
Expedition 16 Flight Engineer Yuri Malenchenko participates in a spacewalk.

Malenchenko and .
* 2003 – Yuri Malenchenko becomes the first person to marry in space.
Yuri Ivanovich Malenchenko (; born December 22, 1961 ) is a Ukrainian-Russian cosmonaut.
Malenchenko was born in Khrushchev, Kirovohrad Oblast, Ukrainian SSR.
Malenchenko graduated from the Kharkov Military Aviation School in 1983, and attended the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy, graduating in 1993.
From December 1987 to June 1989 Malenchenko underwent a course of general space training.
From February to June 1994 Malenchenko trained for the Mir-16 mission.

served and Soyuz
Vostok 1 marked his only spaceflight, but he served as backup crew to the Soyuz 1 mission ( which ended in a fatal crash ).
He also served as backup for the Vostok 2 and Soyuz 8 missions.
The spacecraft was a refurbished Soyuz that had served as a backup for the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project ( ASTP ) mission the previous year.
He served as backup Flight Engineer to European Space Agency ( ESA ) astronaut Roberto Vittori for the Soyuz TMA-6 taxi mission to the ISS in April 2005.
The Soyuz TM-32 remained docked to the station until October ; during this time it served as the lifeboat for the crew of Expedition 2 and later for the crew of Expedition 3.
He served as the Soyuz commander.
Lonchakov served as the Soyuz commander.
Williams also served as a Flight Engineer for Expedition 21 and assumed command of Expedition 22 in November 2009 having arrived on the International Space Station with his crew mates via Soyuz TMA-16 which launched on September 30, 2009.
In 1994, Cameron served as the first NASA Director of Operations in Star City, Russia, where he worked with the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center staff to set up a support system for astronaut operations and training in Star City, and received Russian training in Soyuz and Mir spacecraft systems, and flight training in Russian L-39 aircraft.
Gidzenko served as the Soyuz commander.
Gidzenko served as the Soyuz commander for the flight.
He has served as the Astronaut Office Operations Planning Branch crew representative for Space Shuttle, Space Station and Soyuz training, and also served as Deputy ( Operations and Training ) of the Astronaut Office ISS Branch.
Also in 1971, Stafford served as a pallbearer for the crew of the ill-fated Soyuz 11.
He served as the backup to Oleg Kotov as the Commander of Soyuz TMA-10 and Fyodor Yurchikhin as Commander of Expedition 15.
The two men served as the back-up crew for Soyuz T-5 in 1982 and Soyuz T-9 in 1983.
A veteran of five missions, Titov served as commander on Soyuz T-8 and Soyuz T-10-1 in 1983 and Soyuz TM-4 in 1987, and flew on the crew of STS-63 in 1995 and STS-86 in 1997.
Tyurin served as the Soyuz commander, and after docking with the ISS they exchanged with the resident crew onboard ISS and became the fourteenth station crew, Expedition 14.
He also served as the commander of the Soyuz TMA-19 spacecraft.
He served as flight engineer aboard the Soyuz TM-14 and TM-24 missions to Mir in 1992 and 1996-7, respectively.
Vinogradov served as the Soyuz commander.

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