jay: (flowers)
jay ([personal profile] jay) wrote2006-01-26 02:07 pm

a pause, today

But as we remember those who have fallen, we must also honor them by
acknowledging, humbly, that they cannot be the last. We have not made our
last mistake in learning the art and science of spaceflight. There are
places in Arlington Cemetery, and elsewhere, waiting for others who have yet
to pay the ultimate price for our human failings. We do not know who, or
why, or when, but it will come. We pray, today, that it will be a very long
time. Let us on this Day of Remembrance honor our lost companions by
resolving to make it so.

-Mike Griffin, NASA Administrator


(from a note to staff, today)

20 years since Challenger...

[identity profile] wordweaverlynn.livejournal.com 2006-01-26 11:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I thought the Challenger disaster was on the 28th. I know tomorrow is the 39th anniversary of the Apollo 1 disaster (it happened on my sister's 9th birthday). And February 1 is the Columbia.

This is not the week to go into space.

I honor the brave people who explore, who go into dangerous places, who devote their minds and hearts and bodies to exploring the universe beyond our small world.

[identity profile] brian1789.livejournal.com 2006-01-26 11:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Today is NASA's Remembrance Day, sort of a three-way memorial to all three disasters that happened around this time of year.

And... agreed.