[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 39, Number 6 (Monday, February 10, 2003)]
[Pages 156-157]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

<R04>
Remarks at a Memorial Service for the STS-107 Crew of the Space Shuttle 
Columbia in Houston, Texas

February 4, 2003

    Their mission was almost complete, and we lost them so close to 
home. The men and women of the Columbia had journeyed more than 6 
million miles and were minutes away from arrival and reunion.
    The loss was sudden and terrible, and for their families, the grief 
is heavy. Our Nation shares in your sorrow and in your pride, and today 
we remember not only one moment of tragedy, but seven lives of great 
purpose and achievement.
    To leave behind Earth and air and gravity is an ancient dream of 
humanity. For these seven, it was a dream fulfilled. Each of these 
astronauts had the daring and discipline required of their calling. Each 
of them knew that great endeavors are inseparable from great risks, and 
each of them accepted those risks willingly, even joyfully, in the cause 
of discovery.
    Rick Husband was a boy of 4 when he first thought of being an 
astronaut. As a man, and having become an astronaut, he found it was 
even more important to love his family and serve his Lord. One of Rick's 
favorite hymns was ``How Great Thou Art,'' which offers these words of 
praise: ``I see the stars. I hear the mighty thunder. Thy power 
throughout the universe displayed.''
    David Brown was first drawn to the stars as a little boy with a 
telescope in his backyard. He admired astronauts, but, as he said, ``I 
thought they were movie stars. I thought I was kind of a normal kid.'' 
David grew up to be a physician, an aviator who could land on the deck 
of a carrier in the middle of the night, and a shuttle astronaut. His 
brother asked him several weeks ago what would happen if something went 
wrong on their mission. David replied, ``This program will go on.''
    Michael Anderson always wanted to fly planes and rose to the rank of 
lieutenant

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colonel in the Air Force. Along the way, he became a role model, 
especially for his two daughters and for the many children he spoke to 
in schools. He said to them, ``Whatever you want to be in life, you're 
training for it now.'' He also told his minister, ``If this thing 
doesn't come out right, don't worry about me. I'm just going on 
higher.''
    Laurel Salton Clark was a physician and a flight surgeon who loved 
adventure, loved her work, loved her husband and her son. A friend who 
heard Laurel speaking to Mission Control said, ``There was a smile in 
her voice.'' Laurel conducted some of the experiments as Columbia 
orbited the Earth and described seeing new life emerge from a tiny 
cocoon. ``Life,'' she said, ``continues in a lot of places, and life is 
a magical thing.''
    None of our astronauts traveled a longer path to space than Kalpana 
Chawla. She left India as a student, but she would see the nation of her 
birth, all of it, from hundreds of miles above. When the sad news 
reached her hometown, an administrator at her high school recalled, 
``She always said she wanted to reach the stars. She went there, and 
beyond.'' Kalpana's native country mourns her today, and so does her 
adopted land.
    Ilan Ramon also flew above his home, the land of Israel. He said, 
``The quiet that envelops space makes the beauty even more powerful, and 
I only hope that the quiet can one day spread to my country.'' Ilan was 
a patriot. The devoted son of a holocaust survivor served his country in 
two wars. ``Ilan,'' said his wife, Rona, ``left us at his peak moment, 
in his favorite place, with people he loved.''
    The Columbia's pilot was Commander Willie McCool, whom friends knew 
as the most steady and dependable of men. In Lubbock today they're 
thinking back to the Eagle Scout who became a distinguished naval 
officer and a fearless test pilot. One friend remembers Willie this way: 
``He was blessed, and we were blessed to know him.''
    Our whole Nation was blessed to have such men and women serving in 
our space program. Their loss is deeply felt, especially in this place, 
where so many of you called them friends. The people of NASA are being 
tested once again. In your grief, you are responding as your friends 
would have wished, with focus, professionalism, and unbroken faith in 
the mission of this agency.
    Captain Brown was correct: America's space program will go on.
    This cause of exploration and discovery is not an option we choose. 
It is a desire written in the human heart. We are that part of creation 
which seeks to understand all creation. We find the best among us, send 
them forth into unmapped darkness, and pray they will return. They go in 
peace for all mankind, and all mankind is in their debt.
    Yet, some explorers do not return, and the loss settles unfairly on 
a few. The families here today shared in the courage of those they 
loved, but now they must face life and grief without them. The sorrow is 
lonely, but you are not alone. In time, you will find comfort and the 
grace to see you through. And in God's own time, we can pray that the 
day of your reunion will come.
    And to the children who miss your mom or dad so much today, you need 
to know they love you and that love will always be with you. They were 
proud of you, and you can be proud of them for the rest of your life.
    The final days of their own lives were spent looking down upon this 
Earth. And now, on every continent, in every land they could see, the 
names of these astronauts are known and remembered. They will always 
have an honored place in the memory of this country. And today I offer 
the respect and gratitude of the people of the United States.
    May God bless you all.

Note: The President spoke at 12:35 p.m. in a courtyard at NASA's Lyndon 
B. Johnson Space Center. The Office of the Press Secretary also released 
a Spanish language transcript of these remarks.