NASA鈥檚 fallen astronauts, including University of baby直播app Boulder alumni Ellison Onizuka and Kalpana Chawla, who died in space shuttle accidents 17 years apart, will be remembered both on campus and in a special NASA online tribute this week.
CU-Boulder cadets from the Air Force ROTC and Arnold Air Society will hold the memorial for Onizuka, Chawla and the other 12 astronauts that perished in the two disasters at 9:38 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 31 -- the exact time of the Challenger disaster -- outside the Regent Administrative Center. The event will include an invocation, a speech by Squadron Commander Zach D. Bruce and a presentation of colors, followed by a procession down Regent Drive to the Space Shuttle Challenger and Space Shuttle Columbia Memorial in front of Fiske Planetarium.
After a wreathing at the memorial, the color guard will lead the procession on the footpath that follows the scale-model solar system from Fiske to the front of the Engineering Center Complex, halting at the Ellison S. Onizuka Memorial. There, short commemorations of each of the 14 astronauts will be read one by one as a rose is laid upon the memorial for each astronaut.
In addition, NASA is paying tribute to its fallen astronauts with a wreath-laying ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia at 9 a.m. EST on Jan. 28. The agency also has created a special online celebration of its fallen astronauts that is available at .
Onizuka, who received his bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees from the aerospace engineering sciences department in 1969, died when the Challenger exploded shortly after launch on Jan. 28, 1986. On Feb. 1, 2003, Chawla, who received her doctorate from CU-Boulder in aerospace engineering in 1988, was killed when Columbia was destroyed while re-entering Earth鈥檚 atmosphere.
Contact:
Zach D. Bruce, Air Force ROTC, 775-691-5561
zabr4633@colorado.edu
Jim Scott, CU-Boulder media relations, 720-381-9479
jim.scott@colorado.edu