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- Newsgroups: alt.callahans
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!sgiblab!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!linac!uchinews!ellis!mss2
- From: mss2@ellis.uchicago.edu (Michael S. Schiffer)
- Subject: Re: An early toast
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.062620.24369@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: mss2@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: University of Chicago
- References: <1jvdioINNr25@digex.digex.com> <1993Jan27.043515.14771@wam.umd.edu> <1k56dkINNloq@menudo.uh.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 06:26:20 GMT
- Lines: 54
-
- In article <1k56dkINNloq@menudo.uh.edu> narxtc@casc.math.uh.edu (Noah Ramon) writes:
-
- >I first heard it during school, as well. Evidently, there were some TVs
- >tuned to the launch, but no one I know saw the actual liftoff. In the middle
- >of class, a voice came over the loudspeaker and announced the tragedy. I
- >honestly had no idea how to react. We had been going so long, with a success
- >rate so high, that I shudder to think what Mr. Probability had to say when
- >he glanced in its direction. We had no idea that something like this could
- >happen again, not since the Grissom-White-Chaffee mission.
-
- "I was in high school at the time, but while I was extremely
- saddened (after school I basically lay curled up watching the explosion
- repeat over and over on CNN till I fell asleep) I wasn't surprised as
- such. At the time I was a regular reader of _Analog_, and a year or
- two earlier G. Harry Stine had written an article entitled "The Sky is
- Going to Fall" considering the probability and effects of a shuttle
- disaster. The thing to remember is that the Space Shuttle is an
- experimental craft in a field which wasn't thirty years old in 1986
- (measuring from Sputnik). Experimental craft are prone to failure--
- the fact that we _didn't_ have a fatal space disaster before 1986
- (Apollo 1 happened on the ground) reflects luck and caution. (Perhaps
- too much caution-- if we'd had a real space program, with a space
- station in the early seventies and a moon base before 1980, we'd
- certainly have had more casualties, but we'd have more to show for it
- as well.)
-
- "People die opening frontiers. This isn't to minimize the
- tragedy, but no enterprise will ever be risk free. At least they died
- attempting something worthwhile, and for that we will remember them
- and honor while we live. (Beyond that, the memories will no doubt
- fade. Sic transit gloria mundi.) More people will die going into
- space, and it will not be easy, any more than it's easy to face plane
- crashes, auto accidents, or the thousands of other ways in which
- humans end their lives. But as long as we keep trying to follow them,
- then they will not have died in vain even after they've faded to
- half-remembered footnotes in the history of the early age of space.
-
- Now the rest is up to us,
- There's a future to be won.
- We must turn our faces outward.
- We will do what must be done.
- For no cradle lasts forever,
- Every bird must learn to fly,
- And we are going to the stars--
- See our fire in the sky.
-
- -- from "Fire in the Sky" by J. Kare, _Minus Ten and Counting_
-
- Michael
- --
- Michael S. Schiffer, LHN, FCS "I decline utterly to be impartial
- mss2@midway.uchicago.edu as between the fire brigade and the fire."
- mike.schiffer@um.cc.umich.edu -- Winston Churchill, July 7, 1926
- mschiffer@aal.itd.umich.edu
-