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Cpl.BlairLyleHencratt Cpl. Branden H. Holland Pfc Michael J. Holland Lance Cpl. Hoag, Cody Cpl. Matthew P. Hopper Pvt. Brian D. Howtopat GySgt. Jill Linnet Mayfield HM5(FMF) Brian Patrick McKenna Lance Cpl. Peter J. Men- doza Sgt. Albert Miller Capt. Michael Keith Mishoe Gunnery Sgt. Tage M. Nickerson Pvt. Vance C. Nolta Cpl. Daniel R. Nosek Cpl. Devin Penner Sgt. Dustin L. Reese Cpl. Sonny Sauceda Cpl. Thomas Scott Lance Cpl. Jason L. Servera Sgt. Keith Sharp Sgt. Brad Sol Cpl. Kylee H. Stroing Gunnery Sgt. Kirk A. Sw- enson Cpl. Jonathan Turner Lance Cpl. Michael P. Turner Cpl. Nicholas R. Upton Lance Cpl. Raymond Mat- thew Walker Pfc. Jason Ward Pfc. Jeffery M. White Pfc. Henry C. Woolery Master Sgt. Jeff R. Woot- ton Master Sgt. Carson Zumalt NAVY E-5Guy Kelly Abbott E-5 CBCM Jarred S. Ables Lt. Kenneth W. Anderson E-3Franklin J. Arellano II E-5Timothy M. Barbarick ET3Kent Barron Petty Officer 3rd Class David Baxter FTSN Wesley Bogner Josh Brady QM3Kirby J. Brandon E-3James Brankov E-7Chief Petty Officer James G. Brink E-6Jeffrey Brotherton Petty Officer 2nd Class James J. Burchiel SA Jessica L. Campbell E-5Dallas Chambers E-5Stephen Colgan BM5Victoria L. Contreras E-5Gunner's Mate Ashley Cordray E-6John Vincent Crisp AM Kyle Wayne Darrow CTR1Petty Officer 1st Class Cole Davis Petty Officer 3rd Class Paul D. Davis ENFA Christopher Dilsaver Petty Officer 1st Class Jef- frey Dobson PR2(AW) Richard Duncan E-6Robert W. Dunlap III Petter Officer 3rd Class Derek James Ellis E-6Ryan Jeffrey Farrar SeaBee Chief Brent K. Forward Petty Officer 2nd Class Brian Fry Dennis Garrison MM1stSS Albert Gleesing E-5Robert James Goode EWSa Michael A. Grant Petty Officer 3rd Class Frederick Gregorio IT2Alicia Kaylene Hamill CTSA Austin Harbaugh Petty Officer 2nd Class Craig Nicholas Hemping E-7Chief Petty Officer Eric Hemping AM3Roger Horner BM3Justin D. Iiams Petty Officer 2nd Class Charles (C.W.) Jones 2nd Class CTM Nathan L. Jones Travis E. Jordan Seaman William R. Kelly Seaman Johnathon L. Kersey Fireman Nathaniel L. Kersey Logistics Specialist Jesse Kunz Seaman Recruit: Tristan Lane Kyler Fire Controlman 2nd Class Tracy Mitchell Main Chief Petty Officer Cory Mason E-3Cody D. Maxwell HM5(FMF) Brian Patrick McKenna HA E2Joshua McManus MAC (EXW) Bobby McMi- chael MA1(MWD) Logan McMi- chael Shane V. Morey PR3Walter Moskal Airman Antonio Nava Jr. YNSN Mark Neal Jr. Petty Officer Third Class Cody A. Palmer Ensign Shannon Penne Joseph Picklesimer MM2David Pollack Ensign Christopher Reed Platner E-3CTTSN Michael Dalton Raschke Seaman Jeremy C. Rice Petty Officer Third Class Michael Roach E-2Robert Rodabaugh Lt. Ryan Ross Petty Officer Stan Ross E-6Kristopher Rotter Seaman Apprentice Ryan Schaul ET-1(IDW/SW/AW/PJ) Keith Shandley Petty Officer 3rd Class Colleen Shine IT1(SW) Petty Officer Kurtis Christopher Slau- genhaupt E-2Daniel St. John Minesman 2nd Class Petty Officer John Staggs PS3Clarence S. Stevens E-5Petty Officer 2nd Class Intelligence Specialist Robert C. Stenberg Petty Officer 3rd Class Walter H. Vassar Seaman Matthew Weston AMSC (AW-SW) William H. White AT Clarissa Williams- McPherson E-5Matthew Williams Quentin Winegar Commander Cathy Wise NATIONAL GUARD Spec. 4Melissa A. Ables P2C Amanda J. Adams SSgt. Keith A. Barron Pfc. Dennis Beam Pvt. Michael M. Bennett Pvt. Lee F. Branham Pvt. Samuel Bullington Pvt. Brad Chambers Spec. Don Chambers Spec. 4Michael Chaney 1st. Lt. Brent N. Dawson Pvt. Johnathan W. Fox Pvt. Ryan Dee Freemyers Spec. Brian D. Glaser Pvt. Carl F. Hawthorne CW3Darren Henley MSgt. James Holland Pfc. Antony Holloway Spec. Stanley Holmes Tech Sgt. Jonathan Huff SSgt. Laura Jumpp Spec. Deneva Marshall Sgt. Jerald Ray Phillips, Jr. Pfc. Jake Pluim Spec. Brandon Powell Spec. Michael O'dell Pow- ers Spec. Jeffrey Neal Price Pvt. Dustin Rahming Nathan Scott Spec. Vincent Torres PV2Kevin Turner Sgt. Michael Wentzel Sgt. Jason C. Westlund Spec. Bill Wooden Spec. Candace Zepp COAST GUARD BMC Brett Bonner Petty Officer 2nd Class April M. Hambly AMT2Christopher Harris GM1Brandon P. Hayward BM2Anthony Longo E2Trevor A. Miller EM1Charly Ostrowski EM Nolan Schlereth P.O. 3 SN Jacob Schlereth ENS Trevor Siperek Petty Officer 2nd Class Harrison Stanley Richard W. Summers, Jr. Ifyouhaveamother, father, son or daughter serving in the military and would like to include the person's name on this list, call 527-2153 or send an e-mail to clerk@ redbluffdailynews. com. If this person gets discharged from the military, call and we will remove the name from the list. Military FROMPAGE6 By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. Freshfromayearinspace, NASA astronaut Scott Kelly said Friday his muscles and joints ache. His skin is so sensitive it burns when he sits or walks. And he can't sink a basketball shot. He's surprised — not nec- essarily about his basket- ball skills, but everything else. After his previous half- year space station mission five years ago, he wasn't nearly this tired or sore. "Adjusting to space is easier than adjusting to Earth for me," he said at his first postflight news confer- ence Friday. Like other astronauts, he got taller in space. He said he gained 1½ inches. But he lost it almost as soon as he stood on solid ground. Kelly returned from the International Space Sta- tion on Wednesday, ending a 340-day mission that set a U.S. record. It took him a full day to get back home from the landing site in Ka- zakhstan to Houston. That's when the aches and pains set in — this from the guy who hopped out of his space capsule and later promptly jumped into his backyard pool. Initially, he felt better than last time, but that quickly changed. The 52-year-old astro- naut said because his skin hasn't had significant con- tact with anything for so long — in space, clothes just float around you — "it's very, very sensitive. It's almost like a burning feeling wher- ever I like sit or lie or walk. I'm not wearing these shoes all the time," he said, kick- ing up his right foot, which sported a shiny black dress shoe. "I just wore them for you guys." Thick running shoes are his preference these days; they make his feet "feel a little bit better." As for the culture shock of being back on Earth, Kelly expects that will hit soon. "From having so lit- tle on the space station and so few choices about what you're going to do every day, what's available to you, to basically having just about anything," he told report- ers. His first food back on Earth? A banana he found on his bed aboard the plane. He didn't realize the irony until he ate half of it; he cavorted around the space station a few weeks ago in a gorilla suit, a gag gift from his identical twin, Mark, a retired astronaut. The genetic doubles — one in space, one on the ground — took part in med- ical studies throughout the flight. NASA wants to know how the body and mind ad- just to long periods in space before sending astronauts to Mars; expeditions are planned for the 2030s. NASA's chief space sta- tion scientist, Julie Robin- son, said she'd ideally like 10 or 12 astronauts to spend extra-long periods in space to know what all the risks might be. Johnson Space Cen- ter physiologist Dr. John Charles said he was im- pressed Kelly managed to complete all his physical exercises — standing up suddenly, walking heel-to- toe, navigating an obstacle course — immediately af- ter touchdown. He'd likely fare well on Mars, scram- bling to get out of a space- craft on his own, taking a fast spacewalk and settling in, according to Charles and Mark Kelly. "He'd be a good exam- ple of somebody who could probably make that trip to Mars for six months and then in a short period of time, do some reasonable work," observed Mark Kelly. Round trip, a Mars mission would last 2½ years. Kelly's companion for the entire space journey, cosmonaut Mikhail Korn- ienko, 55, is back home in Star City, Russia, dealing with his own adjustments to gravity. Many of their blood, urine and saliva samples are still up on the space station, frozen. NASA must wait until its commercial shipper SpaceX is deliver- ing back and forth again — following a launch acci- dent last summer — to get the scientific treasure trove, hopefully in May. Charles expects it will take the next year to analyze all the data. During his year in space, Kelly sent back dazzling photos of Earth and chron- icled his space days on Twit- ter, attracting more than 1 million followers. He part- nered with his girlfriend, Amiko Kauderer, a pub- lic affairs representative at Johnson, to set social me- dia ablaze. Kelly holds the U.S. re- cord for total days in space — 520 days over four mis- sions. NASA ASTRONAUT One-year spaceman: Tired, achy, can't sink basketball PAT SULLIVAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, le , and his twin Mark get together before a press conference on Friday in Houston. Scott Kelly set a U.S. record with his a 340-day mission to the International Space Station. By Malcolm Ritter The Associated Press NEW YORK A lab study has found that Zika can infect embryonic cells that help form the brain, adding to ev- idence that the virus causes a serious birth defect. The mosquito-borne vi- rus, which is spreading in Latin America and the Ca- ribbean, normally causes only mild symptoms, if any in adults. But scientists are alarmed by indications that when it infects a preg- nant woman, her baby may be born with a small head and a brain that hasn't de- veloped properly. Researchers suspect Zika infection causes the con- dition, called microceph- aly, but are still trying to prove it. Reports have doc- umented traces of the virus in the brains of babies with microcephaly who'd died soon after birth, and in fetal brain tissue after abortion. The new work provides experimental evidence that once the virus reaches the developing brain, it can in- fect and harm cells that are key for further brain devel- opment, said Hengli Tang of Florida State University, a lead author of the work. Results were released Friday by the journal Cell Stem Cell. The study found that in- fection can harm these cells in two ways: killing some outright and damaging the ability of others to di- vide and grow in number. The cells, when healthy, help build the part of the brain that is affected in mi- crocephaly, Tang said. So it would make sense that the damaging effect of Zika on those cells may bring on that condition, he said. But he stressed that his study does not prove that Zika causes microcephaly, nor that it works by that route. 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