Her life-size statue stands on the walkway of the Peace Through Strength pavilion on the west side of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library — not far from an F-117 stealth fighter jet, F-14 fighter jet and an Abrams MI tank.
The strength when peace fails.
It arrived by truck two weeks ago and was taken by forklift to a storage unit by facilities manager John Lehne and his assistant manager Derek Lyneis who covered it in a sheet while the foundation was being readied for the big day this Tuesday, the Fourth of July, when it will be unveiled to the public.
Who better to honor the nation’s 247th birthday than the first American woman in space, Sally Ride?
When the pride of Encino stepped off the Space Shuttle Challenger on June 24, 1983 at Edwards Air Force Base in Palmdale after a six-day mission, little girls across the country watching with their parents on black and white TVs looked up at the stars that night and thought, “Why not me?”
Sally gave them confidence and inspiration. An answer to their dreams. America had its first woman in space. Sally Ride had opened the door they would walk through as women. Move over and make some room for the ladies, gentlemen.
Hers was the second Space Shuttle Challenger mission — STS-7.
Three years later, on the Challenger’s 10th mission, it disintegrated on takeoff killing all seven members on board, including teacher Christa McAuliffe.
Sally’s last mission at NASA was to serve on the presidential commission investigating the disaster. She had a lot of questions that never got answered. It was time to move on. She left NASA for academia.
Since then, more than 50 women have flown on NASA space missions, all of them standing on Sally Ride’s shoulders.
“We went to Kennedy Space Center a few weeks ago for a celebration of her launch 40 years ago,” said Bear Ride, Sally’s younger sister. Her parents named her Karen, but Sally had a hard time pronouncing the name as a little girl.
“It came out…
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