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So you were thinking ashes to moon dust?

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The recent flight of SpaceShipOne, the first privately funded craft to reach space, has renewed interest in TransOrbital Inc., a San Diego County company planning to launch its Trailblazer lunar orbiter in March.

“TransOrbital wants to be the FedEx or UPS of long-haul truckers for deep space, but right now our focus is the moon -- we’d like to be known as the delivery service to the moon,” says TransOrbital President Dennis Laurie, whose everyday conversation has a futuristic spin.

“We’ll launch Trailblazer off a Russian rocket that used to be an ICBM that was pointed at the U.S. You’ll be able to communicate with the satellite while it’s in orbit. You’ll get a confirmation by sending an e-mail and receive an automatic response from the orbiter. That’s never been done from the moon.”

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For its second and third missions, TransOrbital has sold space in time capsules that will preserve business cards, messages, photos, jewelry -- even cremated remains -- on the moon, Laurie says.

“If you want a safe place to keep information, free from man-made or natural disasters, the moon makes an excellent location for storage of information, a library or archive, sales or technical data or lineage records. Some people in Europe designed a cosmetics container that’s shaped like a rocket ship. They’ll actually be able to say their product is on the moon.”

The time capsule containing personal artifacts also will launch a variety of artistic visions -- seven painters are sending compositions each slightly larger than a business card.

Not to be outdone, several musicians have secured room for their recordings. “Musicians want their CDs on the moon,” Laurie says -- but listeners will have to visit the orb to hear them.

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