SPACE WIRE
US remembers fallen astronauts of Columbia shuttle disaster
WASHINGTON (AFP) Feb 01, 2004
The United States planned memorials Sunday and Monday for the seven Columbia shuttle astronauts who died last year when their ship disintegrated over Texas and Louisiana.

On February 1, 2003, startling pictures of the shuttle falling like a shooting star dominated news broadcasts, shocking the country.

The country was to remember the tragedy in somber ceremonies and during the United States' annual sports extravaganza, the 38th American football Super Bowl.

The crew included Rick Husband, Willie McCool, Michael Anderson, David Brown, Laurel Clark, Kalpana Chawla and Ilan Ramon, Israel's first astronaut.

On Monday, NASA will dedicate a memorial to the astronauts at Arlington Memorial Cemetery in Virginia. NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe will preside over a private ceremony for the victims' families and other guests.

Later in the evening, the Columbia Shuttle Memorial Trust and NASA will host a private gathering at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington to celebrate the seven astronauts' lives.

Before Sunday's Super Bowl, CBS television planned to show the rock group Aerosmith visiting NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, earlier this week. The group was scheduled to perform a tribute song for the Columbia crew.

The Astronauts of the next NASA space shuttle mission were scheduled to be recognized on the football field after another tribute song from pop star Josh Groban.

But one year after the tragedy, which demoralized the space program, there is renewed optimism at NASA.

The two Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, have recently sent images from the planet that have flabbergasted NASA scientists.

Earlier in January, President George W. Bush unveiled a bold new space initiative that included replacing the shuttle fleet by 2010 with ships that can travel by 2015 to the moon and eventually to Mars.

NASA, which lost the Challenger in a take-off explosion in 1986, is already planning new shuttle flights. The fleet is down to three ships, Atlantis, Discovery and Endeavor.

A scathing report from an independent investigation found flaws in NASA's command and decision-making.

A task force formed later, the Return-to-Flight Task Group, said on January 20 that NASA had not implemented all of the recommendations from the investigation and that it was unclear when new space flights could resume.

But NASA hopes to be ready for a new mission in September.

Air Force pilot Eileen Collins is the crew leader for the space program's next manned flight.

The crew would leave on a 13-day mission aboard Atlantis to the international space station.

Collins said she is confident NASA will overcome the Columbia tragedy.

"If I didn't think something was safe and I wasn't satisfied, then I have ways of dealing with that," the mother of two said.

"Frankly, what I tell my family is: If I didn't feel it was safe, I wouldn't go."

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