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发信人: leonado (我爱飞雪), 信区: Green
标 题: Indian Astronaut's Village Hits Streets in Grief
发信站: 哈工大紫丁香 (2003年02月02日11:39:42 星期天), 站内信件
Feb. 1
— NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Thousands of people in northern India braved a cold
winter's night on Saturday to ring temple bells and pray for a miracle after
the space shuttle Columbia exploded on re-entry with an Indian-born astronaut
on board.
Aerospace engineer Kalpana Chawla, a symbol of pride for Indians, was one of
the seven-member crew aboard the shuttle that broke up as it prepared to
return to Earth after completing a 16-day mission. NASA said there appeared
to be no survivors.
As news of the tragedy reached Chawla's home town of Karnal, a wheat and
rice-growing center just outside the capital New Delhi, people streamed out
of their homes to pray for Chawla and her six crewmates.
Chawla's elder brother Sanjay told reporters outside his home in New Delhi
that he first learned of the disaster in a mobile text message from his wife,
who was with family members in the United States to watch the shuttle landing.
"I knew within my heart that something big had gone wrong," he said. "When
you are in such a job, then the family has to be ready for such news."
However, he had not given up hope: "Miracles do happen, but it is hoping
against a lot of odds."
A student at Tagore School, where Chawla studied as a child, told Reuters
other students, parents and well-wishers had gathered at the school and Hindu
temples across Karnal chanting prayers for the first Indian-born astronaut to
fly on a U.S. space mission.
Chawla moved to the United States after graduating from Punjab Engineering
College in the northern city of Chandigarh in 1982. She received her
doctorate from the University of Colorado.
A keen stunt pilot, she started working for NASA in 1988. She had already
logged 376 hours in space after serving as a mission specialist on a previous
shuttle flight.
"Something of this magnitude happening is shocking. All who venture out to
space do so with a spirit of adventure and exploration," Space Research
Organization chairman K. Kasturirangan told Reuters.
"They are great women and men. When something like this happens to them it is
terrible."
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已得意中人 从此不二色
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