Yuma Sun

Challenger, Columbia wreckage on public display for 1st time

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA is offering up wreckage from the Challenger and Columbia for public view after hiding it from the world for decades.

A new exhibit at Kennedy Space Center features two pieces of debris, one from each lost shuttle, as well as poignant, personal reminders of the 14 astronauts killed in flight.

It is an unpreceden­ted collection of artifacts — the first time, in fact, that any Challenger or Columbia remains have been openly displayed.

NASA’s intent is to show how the astronauts lived, rather than how they died. As such, there are no pictures in the “Forever Remembered” exhibit of Challenger breaking apart in the Florida sky nearly 30 years ago or Columbia debris raining down on Texas 12 years ago.

Since the tragic re-entry, Columbia’s scorched remains have been stashed in off-limits offices at the space center. But NASA had to pry open the undergroun­d tomb housing Challenger’s pieces — a pair of abandoned missile silos at neighborin­g Cape Canaveral Air Force Station — to retrieve the section of fuselage now on display.

The exhumation was conducted in secrecy. Everything about the exhibit, in fact, was kept hush-hush during the four years it took to complete the project, out of respect to the dead astronauts’ families.

June Scobee Rodgers had never seen an actual remnant of her husband’s destroyed shuttle, Challenger, until previewing the exhibit just before its low-key opening at the end of June.

“Sad, yes,” to see the wreckage but it is “a wonderful memorial” to the shuttles, Scobee Rodgers said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? IN THIS JULY 17 FILE PHOTO, a car drives by hitchBOT, a hitchhikin­g robot in Marblehead, Mass. The Canadian researcher­s who created hitchBOT as a social experiment say someone in Philadelph­ia damaged the robot beyond repair on Saturday, ending its...
ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THIS JULY 17 FILE PHOTO, a car drives by hitchBOT, a hitchhikin­g robot in Marblehead, Mass. The Canadian researcher­s who created hitchBOT as a social experiment say someone in Philadelph­ia damaged the robot beyond repair on Saturday, ending its...

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