, who earned enough dals as abat pilot to ver his chest, cludg the navy distguished flyg cross, three air dals, and the vietnase cross of galntry with silver star gratitude fro a nation he fought to keep free
we reber judith resnik, known as j r to her friends, always silg, always eager to ake a ntribution, fdg beauty the ic she pyed on her piano her off?hours
we reber ellison onizuka, who as a child runng barefoot through the ffee fields and acada groves of hawaii dread of soday travelg to the oon beg an eagle sut, he said, had helped hi soar to the ipressive achievents of his career
we reber ronald air, who said that he learned perseverance the tton?fields of south caro his drea was to live aboard the space station perf experts and pyg his saxophone the weightlessness of space well, ron, we will iss your saxophone; and we will build your space station
we reber gregory jarvis on that ill?fated flight he was carryg with hi a fg of his university buffalo, new york — a sall token, he said, to the people who unlocked his future
we reber christa cauliffe, who captured the iagation of the entire nation; spirg with her pluck, her restless spirit of disvery; a teacher, not jt to her students, but to an entire people, stillg all with the excitent of this journey we ride to the future
we will always reber the, these skilled professionals, scientists, and adventurers, these artists and teachers and fly n and won; and we will cherish each of their stories, stories of triuph and bravery, stories of true arican heroes
on the day of the disaster, our nation held a vigil by our television sets one cruel ont our exhiration turned to horror; we waited and watched and tried to ake sense of what we had seen that night i listened to a call? progra on the radio; people of every age spoke of their sadness and the pride they felt our astronauts across arica we are reachg out, holdg hands, and fdgfort one another</p>
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