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- In Memory
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- We here at LOADSTAR mourn the deaths
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- of the crew members of the space
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- shuttle CHALLENGER. Like other
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- Americans, we have watched the
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- CHALLENGER's final launch a hundred
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- times, only to be shocked once more by
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- the sudden ball of flame, the SRB's
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- careening in their mindless paths back
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- to earth.
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- Chances are that these images will
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- never fade in the course of our
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- lifetimes, that each of us will recall
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- exactly where we were when we heard
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- that the shuttle had exploded.
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- CHALLENGER will become this
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- generation's Kennedy assasination,
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- always a part of our inner lives.
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- This is as it should be, for each
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- member of the CHALLENGER's crew
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- exemplified all that can be good and
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- right in men when dreams are coupled
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- with courage. We mourn the loss of
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- Gregory B. Jarvis; Christa McAuliffe;
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- Ronald E. McNair; Ellison S. Onizuka;
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- Judith A. Resnick; Francis R. Scobee;
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- and Michael J. Smith.
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- Our grief is, in a sense, the final
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- legacy of the CHALLENGER crew, for
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- their deaths shock us into an
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- awareness of the ideals they lived
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- for, ideals that we so often forget
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- in our day to day lives. Their
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- deaths give new life to ancient
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- dreams of discovery, ancient ideals
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- of courage.
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- In a complacent and cynical world,
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- words like courage may now regain
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- their meaning. And we may no longer
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- think of heroes as figures of myth
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- now that we've glimpsed what it takes
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- to ride a pillar of fire into the
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- sky.
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- Now we know. Something died in each
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- of us that January morning, nine miles
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- above the Cape. But something else
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- essential, something long forgotten,
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- was reborn.
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