"They Slipped the Surly Bonds of Earth to Touch
the Face of God"
Throughout the week, as mourning continued, Coast Guard and NASA
officials undertook the grim task of searching for the wreckage of
Challenger. Starting some 30 miles off the cape and then spreading
out to cover some 6,000 sq. mi., 13 aircraft and more than a dozen
recovery vessels joined the search of the conveniently calm Atlantic
waters for any evidence that might give clues as to why the
spacecraft had exploded.
The debris raining from the sky had kept the searchers away from
the possible impact area for nearly an hour. The sight of a slowly
drifting parachute had given viewers a fleeting hope of human
survival. News reports first indicated that a frogman had chuted into
the ocean in a quick look for any survivors. But officials soon
corrected both impressions: the falling parachute was one of the two
that normally drop the boosters into the sea for salvaging and reuse
of its parts. This one held a booster nose cap, which was retrieved
two days later.
Despite the obvious devastation of the explosion, searchers began
finding surprisingly large parts of the wreckage, the biggest being a
25-ft.- long section of the spacecraft's fuselage. Parts of the
shuttle's wings, cabin and cargo-bay door were tentatively
identified. Sonar detected a large metal object 140 ft. below the
surface, and deep-diving submersibles went down to inspect it. There
was speculation that the object might be Challenger's main cabin,
although a more likely possibility was that it was one of
Challenger's three main engines, which could have fallen in a
cluster. But Coast Guard Spokesman Lieut. Commander James Simpson
warned that "it could be a shrimp boat from 20 years ago or a
Spanish galleon from 300 years ago." By week's end the mystery had
not been solved. Recovery workers also turned their attention to a
13-ft.-diameter orange object sighted some 100 miles east of
Savannah. They were hoping that it was the cone of the main fuel
tank.
The final farewell for America's seven newest heroes came on
Friday at the Johnson Space Center near Houston, where they had lived
and trained. Among those who gathered there, under gray skies on a
grassy quadrangle amid the squat modern buildings, were some 6,000
employees of NASA and its contractors, 90 Senators and Congressmen,
and about 200 relatives of Challenger's crew. Awaiting the start of
the memorial service, while an Air Force band played funeral hymns,
some of the mourners stood quietly in clusters, dabbing their eyes,
while others stared sadly into space. A few held aloft small American
flags as tears ran down their faces.
The President and Nancy Reagan met the families in a sparsely
furnished classroom. Reagan picked up Mike Smith's daughter Erin, 8,
who was holding a brown teddy bear that wore a pink apron. After
embracing most of the relatives, one by one, he said, "We'll all go
out together in a few minutes. I wish there was something I could say
to make it easier, but there just aren't any words." Yet when the
music stopped and he stepped onto the outdoor ; rostrum, Reagan once
again found the right words, and he delivered them eloquently.
"The sacrifice of your loved ones has stirred the soul of our
nation, and, through the pain, our hearts have been opened to a
profound truth," said the President. "The future is not free; the
story of all human progress is one of a struggle against all odds. We
learned again that this America was built on heroism and noble
sacrifice. It was built by men and women like our seven star
voyagers, who answered a call beyond duty." After paying individual
tributes to each member of the crew, the President declared, "Dick,
Mike, Judy, El, Ron, Greg and Christa--your families and your country
mourn your passing. We bid you goodbye, but we will never forget
you."
The dignified 30-minute ceremony ended with a display of an aerial
equivalent of the riderless horse procession, which was impressed
indelibly on a mourning nation at the funeral of John Kennedy 22
years ago. Four T-38 jets--the trainers in which all astronauts
prepare for their dangerous duties --roared overhead. It would have
been a perfect V formation except that a fifth plane was missing, and
another symbolic void was created when one of the jets veered sharply
away from the others. As the band played God Bless America, the
President and the First Lady went down the line of family members,
shaking their hands, offering final words of solace, and hugging
little Erin and the other children as they began to cry.
Reported by Robert Ajemian/Concord, Jerry
Hannifin/Cape Canaveral and David S. Jackson/ Houston