Easy. As Dumbledore said, Earth will be around halfway through it's orbit in half a year, so it'll be somewhere on the opposite side.
Dumbledore said:
also i know its close but the mass of the earth is not exactly the mass of mars which would make a slight difference as keplars law is not independant of mass
I can't believe you just said that.
As TranscendK said, Kepler's Law of Periods is completely independent of the mass that's doing the orbiting. Now since Mars is further away, r is greater which means t will also have to be greater to keep the value constant (r^3/T^2 = GM/4pi) which means Mars will have a greater period, which means that it won't have orbitted as much as Earth. So it'll be somewhere around the middle of half an orbit and where it is now, which is around 1/4 or 1/3 of it's orbit. Tada, there's your answer.
Oh and the satellite will obviously be launched in the direction of Earth's motion to gain relative velocity, but you have to show it exiting Earth in a sort of parabolic motion until it 'leaves' its gravitational field.
Also, I do believe they are moving anticlockwise and this is the bit where it gets tricky (if I'm right). Imagine the planets are moving clockwise. Since Earth orbits faster than Mars, Mars won't catch up to Earth (as in be aligned to the Sun), and so Earth will have to do a whole circle and finally catch up to Mars heaps later. You're only given a 6 month window where the satellite is launched. But as you SHOULD know, satellites are
always launched to gain relative velocity from Earth's relative motion to the sun. Now if it's moving clockwise, then how is it going to launch a satellite in the clockwise direction and have it land on Mars? No, it has to be launching the satellite in the opposite direction, am I right? (We aren't considering the rotational velocity of the Earth here). So if it's launching the satellite in the opposite direction, then that has to be the direction the Earth is moving so that the satellite can gain the relative velocity and hence both planets are moving anticlockwise.
I may be wrong in that last bit, 'cause it seems overly complicated and there must be a reason they give the North Pole.. I just can't spot it..
Either way, it's either got to do with Earth's relative velocity to the Sun or Earth's rotational velocity.