Memento
On the third floor of Old Main, encased in glass in an exhibition hall chronicling CU 鶹ӰԺ’s distinguished history in space, there’s a football with “Colorado” pressed into the pigskin.
At 11:38 a.m. on Jan. 28, 1986, that ball rocketed away from Cape Canaveral aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger, stowed among the belongings of NASA astronaut Ellison Onizuka (Aero’69; MS’69; HonDocSci’03).
Seventy-three seconds later, a catastrophic explosion tore Challenger apart, a heart-rending event seared into memory for millions of Americans. The orbiter fell nine miles into the Atlantic Ocean. The seven-member crew perished.
Among the wreckage recovered from the sea was the CU football, a soccer ball signed by the players of the Clear Lake (Texas) High School girls soccer team, including Onizuka’s elder daughter, and a Hawaiian flag. (Onizuka was from Hawaii.) These items and some others were returned to Onizuka’s widow, Lorna, and their girls, Janelle and Darien.
The family presented the soccer ball to the high school, in Houston, and the flag to Hawaii’s governor. The football they gave to CU 鶹ӰԺ. It was an early and enduringly poignant gift to the campus Heritage Center, still new in 1986.
Not long ago, the soccer ball completed its journey to space. In 2016, 30 years after the Challenger disaster, NASA astronaut Shane Kimbrough, whose son was attending Clear Lake, ferried it to the International Space Station.
“This ball was on Challenger that fateful day,” he tweeted, with a photograph of the ball floating in the space station’s windowed cupola. “Flown by Ellison Onizuka for his daughter, a soccer player @Clear_LakeHS. #NASARemembers.”
Photo by Glenn Asakawa