
Ron Woods, an equipment specialist, who has been a space suit designer from Mercury to now speaks to participants at the two-day STS-132 Launch Tweetup at Kennedy Space Center, Thursday, May 13, 2010, in Cape Canaveral, Fla. NASA Twitter followers in attendance will have the opportunity to take a tour of NASA's Kennedy Space Center, view the space shuttle launch and speak with shuttle technicians, engineers, astronauts and managers. Photo Credit: (NASA/Paul E. Alers)

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- During a tour of KSC, former President Jimmy Carter is shown packages of food that are used on the International Space Station. Astronaut Scott Kelly (far left) relates how the food is prepared and how it tastes. Behind and to the left of Carter is Tip Talone, director of Payload Processing, International Space Station. At the far right is Ron Woods, a technician in the Flight Crew Equipment Facility

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- During a tour of KSC, former President Jimmy Carter is presented with a print displaying the space suits used in the early days of the Space Program. is Tip Talone (right), director of Payload Processing, International Space Station, made the presentation. At left is Ron Woods, a technician in the Flight Crew Equipment Facility, who is also the artist of the original drawing

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - During a tour of KSC, former President Jimmy Carter is shown the current version of a lightweight mission specialist seat. From left to right are Ron Woods, a technician in the Flight Crew Equipment Facility; Carter; astronaut Joseph Tanner; another KSC employee; and Tip Talone, director of Payload Processing, International Space Station

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. -- In the Space Station Processing Facility, Ron Woods (left) shows members of the 1998 astronaut candidate class (group 17) an Apollo-style space suit and how it differs from the current suits. The class is taking part in training activities, including fire training and a flight awareness program, plus touring the OPF, VAB, SSPF, launch pads, SLF, Apollo/Saturn V Center, the crew headquarters, as well as the SSME Processing Facility. The U.S. candidates in the '98 class are Clayton C. Anderson, Lee J. Archambault, Tracy E. Caldwell (Ph.D.), Gregory E. Chamitoff (Ph.D.), Timothy J. Creamer, Christopher J. Ferguson, Michael J. Foreman, Michael E. Fossum, Kenneth T. Ham, Patricia C. Hilliard (M.D.), Gregory C. Johnson, Gregory H. Johnson, Stanley G. Love (Ph.D.), Leland D. Melvin, Barbara R. Morgan, William A. Oefelein, John D. Olivas (Ph.D.), Nicholas J.M. Patrick (Ph.D.), Alan G. Poindexter, Garrett E. Reisman (Ph.D.), Steven R. Swanson, Douglas H. Wheelock, Sunita L. Williams, Neil W. Woodward III, George D. Zamka; and the international candidates are Leopold Eyharts, Paolo Nespoli, Hans Schlegel, Roberto Vittori, Bjarni V. Tryggvason, and Marcos Pontes

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - At NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, NASA's Ron Woods, a flight crew equipment specialist, presents one of his space-themed paintings to the participants in NASA's STS-132 Tweetup. NASA is hosting 150 people from around the world and providing them with a behind-the-scenes perspective to share with their followers via the social networking service Twitter. Attendees were randomly selected from more than 1,000 online registrations and include people from more than 30 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the Netherlands, New Zealand and England. The Tweeters are being given the chance to meet with shuttle technicians, managers, engineers and astronauts, to take a tour of Kennedy, and to experience the exhilaration of the launch of space shuttle Atlantis' STS-132 mission. A tent was set up especially for the occasion near the countdown clock at Kennedy's Press Site. Atlantis' liftoff is set for 2:20 p.m. EDT on May 14. STS-132 is the 34th mission to the station and the last scheduled flight for Atlantis. For more information on the STS-132 mission objectives, payload and crew, visit http:__www.nasa.gov_mission_pages_shuttle_shuttlemissions_sts132_index.html. Photo Credit: NASA_Amanda Diller