Remembering the Fallen Astronauts
I have been away from my computer for the past three days, but I don’t want to fail to mention that this past week was the anniversary of all three of the most calamitous events to befall the American space program, with fatal accidents occurring in connection with the following spacecraft: Apollo 1 (January 27, 1967); the shuttle orbiter Challenger (January 28, 1986); and the shuttle orbiter Columbia (February 1, 2003). I remember where I was when I heard about or saw each of these incidents, which resulted in the loss of a total of seventeen good men and women. The best that can be said about these sad days is that they may have helped us understand how to avoid similar accidents in the future. Space is hard, and the people who visit it are more or less always in peril. Let’s not forget that—or them.
Published on February 04, 2020 19:28
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From Here to Infirmity
Thoughts, drafts, reviews, and opinions from Bruce McCandless, poet, amateur historian, bicyclist and attorney. I'm partial to Beowulf, Dylan, Cormac McCarthy, Leonard Cohen, Walt Whitman, Hillary Man
Thoughts, drafts, reviews, and opinions from Bruce McCandless, poet, amateur historian, bicyclist and attorney. I'm partial to Beowulf, Dylan, Cormac McCarthy, Leonard Cohen, Walt Whitman, Hillary Mantel, Wilco, and Steve Earle, chocolate, coffee, Colorado rivers and college football. I'd like it if you'd read a couple of my posts, and I'd love it if you'd comment. We all care about the written word. Let me read a few of yours.
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