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Artemis II crew ‘go’ where no one has gone before
Updated On: 12 April, 2026 07:57 AM IST | Mumbai | Team SMD
Artemis II is hardly the first spacecraft with toilet troubles. Post its safe return on Saturday, journalist Gulu Ezekiel recalls a conversation with US astronaut Dr Mary L Cleave, who’d jettisoned waste water from the Atlantis shuttle, resulting in a streak that was dubbed ‘Cleave’s Comet’. Talk about trailblazers!

An autographed photo of Dr Mary L Cleave gifted to the writer in 1987
The launch of Artemis II onboard the Orion rocket on April 1 and its safe return on Saturday brought back memories of the golden age of space flight in the 1960s which fired up the imagination of youngsters around the world. This was the first crewed space flight to leave Earth’s orbit and enter the Moon’s orbit since the last of the manned Apollo missions (Apollo 17) in December 1972.
The glitches in Artemis’ on-board toilet also reminded me of my meeting with a Space Shuttle astronaut in Chennai (then Madras) in December 1987, when I was a reporter with a national daily.

