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To: Carolinamom; Jim Robinson
Yes, Carolina - I do so agree ...

Also ... Jim - having met you at FRIVA, thank you so much for this wonderful place to share our grief and our joys.
550 posted on 02/01/2003 10:18:52 AM PST by CyberAnt ( Syracuse where are you?)
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To: All
Columbia's history
NASA
 
Published Feb. 1, 2003

Columbia (OV-102)

Background

Columbia, the oldest orbiter in the Shuttle fleet, is named after the Boston, Massachusetts based sloop captained by American Robert Gray. On May 11, 1792, Gray and his crew maneuvered the Columbia past the dangerous sandbar at the mouth of a river extending more than 1,000 miles through what is today south-eastern British Columbia, Canada, and the Washington-Oregon border. The river was later named after the ship. Gray also led Columbia and its crew on the first American circumnavigation of the globe, carrying a cargo of otter skins to Canton, China, and then returning to Boston.

Other sailing ships have further enhanced the luster of the name Columbia. The first U.S. Navy ship to circle the globe bore that title, as did the command module for Apollo 11, the first lunar landing mission.

On a more directly patriotic note, "Columbia" is considered to be the feminine personification of the United States. The name is derived from that of another famous explorer, Christopher Columbus.

The spaceship Columbia has continued the pioneering legacy of its forebears, becoming the first Space Shuttle to fly into Earth orbit in 1981. Four sister ships joined the fleet over the next 10 years: Challenger, arriving in 1982 but destroyed four years later; Discovery, 1983; Atlantis, 1985; and Endeavour, built as a replacement for Challenger, 1991. A test vehicle, the Enterprise, was used for suborbital approach and landing tests and did not fly in space. The names of Columbia's sister ships each boast their own illustrious pedigree.

In the day-to-day world of Shuttle operations and processing, Space Shuttle orbiters go by a more prosaic designation. Columbia is commonly refered to as OV-102, for Orbiter Vehicle-102. Empty

553 posted on 02/01/2003 10:19:49 AM PST by McGruff (It's a sad day.)
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http://artists.mp3s.com/artist_song/2475/2475506.html

I posted this earlier on another thread. There's a version somewhere out there that is not as "hard"-rock as this one, more folksong, that was performed publically at a science fiction convention days after Challenger exploded. A lovely tribute to Challenger, and it still makes me cry.

I am so so sad today. My kids are so happy because their grandma is coming. It's a schizoid household today...they are too young to stay melancholic for long.
645 posted on 02/01/2003 10:48:15 AM PST by ChemistCat (We should have had newer, safer, better, more efficient ships by now, damn it.)
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