http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/space/1760649

Front pages of Indian newspapers today carried pictures of Kalpana Chawla,
the first Indian-born woman in space, to celebrate her expected return to
earth on the space shuttle Columbia.
The return never happened after the space shuttle Columbia broke apart about
203,000 feet over Texas minutes before it was to land in Florida.

"What can anyone say except that we are aghast at the terrible tragedy,"
said V. Sundararamaiah, scientific secretary of the Indian Space Research
Organization.

In India, which has launched satellites for years and is preparing for a
moon orbit this decade, Chawla was a new kind of heroine.

Just before she lifted off on the Columbia space shuttle for her second trip
to space, she told reporters that her inspiration to take up flying was
J.R.D. Tata, who flew the first mail flights in India.

"What J.R.D. Tata had done during those years was very intriguing and
definitely captivated my imagination," Press Trust of India quoted her as
saying on Jan. 16.

After her first flight in 1997, she had told News India-Times of seeing
India's Himalayan Mountains and mighty rivers from space.

"The Ganges Valley looked majestic, mind boggling," she said. "Africa looked
like a desert and the Nile a vein in it."

Chawla was born 41 years ago in Karnal, about 80 miles north of New Delhi,
in northern Haryana state. She emigrated to the United States from India in
the 1980s and became a U.S. citizen.

Chawla's parents, two sisters and sister-in-law had gone to the United
States to watch her flight, a family friend, Arun Sharma, said outside the
home of her brother, Sanjay, in New Delhi.

Sanjay Chawla was watching TV news when he heard about the disaster, and was
unable to make any comment, Sharma said.

The town's residents had planned a celebration, but were in shock and
mourning today.

Some 300 children at the Tagore Bal Niketan school that Chawla attended had
gathered for an evening of song and dance to celebrate the expected landing
of Columbia, said Principal Rajan Lamba in a phone interview with The
Associated Press.

"A happy occasion turned into an atmosphere of disbelief shock and
condolence," Lamba said.

Press Trust of India had calculated exactly when Indians could look to the
skies and wave as the space shuttle carrying mission specialist Chawla flew
past in the heavens. PTI told readers in southern Bombay and Madras which
minute of the day they could hail their countrywoman.

The Times of India put her picture at the top of the front page in Saturday
morning's editions, saying she and her crew mates were preparing for their
homecoming.

Chawla graduated from the Tagore School in the mid-1970s and later received
a degree in aeronautical engineering from Punjab Engineering College.

After moving to the United States, she earned an advanced degree in the same
field from the University of Texas and a doctorate in her specialty from the
University of Colorado at Boulder in the late 1980s.

She became an astronaut in 1994. On her first space flight, she was blamed
for making mistakes that sent a science satellite tumbling out of control.
Other astronauts went on a space walk to capture it.

India Today magazine reported that NASA had absolved Chawla, rating her a
"terrific astronaut," and saying the accident had resulted from a series of
small errors.

On her 1997 flight, Chawla said that as the shuttle repeatedly passed over
India, especially New Delhi, she pointed it out to the other crew members
and said, "I lived near there."









rob




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