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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

U.S. billionaire back from space adventure


Russian space agency officials carry U.S. space tourist Charles Simonyi after his return to Earth  on Saturday from a two-week trip to the International Space Station. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Maria Danilova Associated Press

KOROLYOV, Russia – An American billionaire who won a junior cosmonaut contest as a child returned Saturday from a dream voyage to the International Space Station, riding a Russian capsule to a soft landing on the Kazakh steppe.

Charles Simonyi, a 58-year-old native of Hungary who helped design Microsoft Word and Excel, smiled and chatted with rescuers who helped him gingerly out of the Soyuz capsule and appeared energized by his $25 million, two-week trip.

The capsule carrying the space tourist, a Russian cosmonaut and a U.S. astronaut touched down after a more than three-hour return trip from the orbital station.

Simonyi looked delighted after rescuers helped him from the rounded capsule, which lay askew on the bleak grassland, and into a chair covered with fur for warmth. He smiled, grinned broadly and spoke animatedly with members of a support crew who greeted him with hugs and handshakes.

Asked about his first impressions back on Earth, a smiling Simonyi said in Russian, “The sun is shining, the weather is good,” in footage broadcast on state television. Simonyi had studied Russian in school in his native Hungary and took another language course in preparation for the flight.

Cosmonaut Mikhail Tyurin looked pale and tired, but soon managed a smile in a video link with Mission Control. “The first thing I felt on Earth was the smell,” he told the television network.

Spanish-born U.S. astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegria, the last out of the capsule, sighed with relief, smiled and talked to the support crew as doctors monitored the men’s vital signs.

The astronaut set the U.S. record for continuous spaceflight by spending 215 days in orbit, and set another U.S. record: 10 space walks over his career.

Simonyi amassed the fortune that made his costly voyage possible through his work with computer software, including helping to develop Microsoft Word and Microsoft Excel.

Another household name, his friend Martha Stewart, watched his launch from Baikonur and was at Russian Mission Control outside Moscow when the Soyuz docked. She also spoke to him during a video linkup after he boarded the station.

Simonyi followed in the footsteps of Dennis Tito, Mark Shuttleworth, Gregory Olsen and Anousheh Ansari – all “space flight participants” who have traveled to the International Space Station aboard Russian rockets in trips brokered by U.S.-based Space Adventures Ltd.