Locals among 100 finalists for one-way trip to Mars

Michael Joseph McDonnell, 50, of Fairfax says living on Mars would be a dream come true.    
Laura Maxine Smith-Velazquez, 38, from Owings Mills, Maryland says it’s important for people to risk to be successful.
Oscar Matthews, 32, of Suffolk, Virginia says all he’s ever wanted to be is an astronaut.
Sonia Nicole Van Meter, 36, of Alexandria says space exploration also leads to exploring more about one’s self.
Daniel Max Carey is 52, from Annandale, Virginia, and wants to contribute to mankind’s expansion into the solar system.
Leila Rowland Zucker, 46, is an emergency room doctor at Howard University Hospital, and says she always wanted to travel in space.
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WASHINGTON — Six local would-be Mars explorers are among the 100 finalists chosen to live — and die — on the Red Planet.

Of more than 200,000 people who have applied to be part of the Dutch nonprofit Mars One project, the group has whittled the number to 100 who are still in the running for the flight, which is expected to leave Earth in 2024.

With its bold goal, and an initial projected cost of $6 billion, Mars One has received criticism, as being medically, technically, and financially implausible.

The 100 were chosen after interviews with Norbert Kraft, Mars One’s chief medical officer, based on the candidate’s devotion to the cause, and willingness to leave everything behind,  according to The Washington Post.

“The astronauts will live together in a group for the rest of their lives,” Kraft said.

Of the 50 men and 50 women remaining, 38 live in the United States.

Ten would-be participants from Washington, Virginia, and Maryland were eliminated earlier.

 

Neal Augenstein

Neal Augenstein has been a general assignment reporter with WTOP since 1997. He says he looks forward to coming to work every day, even though that means waking up at 3:30 a.m.

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