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| Unveiling of
Bronze Bust Marks Dedication of Anderson Memorial Plaza |
OMAHA, Neb., June 14 /PRNewswire/
Creighton University dedicates Anderson Memorial Plaza
Creighton University honored the memory and life of
Creighton alumnus and space shuttle Columbia astronaut Lt. Col.
Michael P. Anderson with the unveiling of a bronze bust of
him during a dedication ceremony Saturday, June 12.
The plaza in front of Creighton's new Hixson-Lied Science Building
was named in Anderson's honor. Anderson earned a master's degree in
physics from Creighton in 1990 and was presented with Creighton's
prestigious Alumni Merit Award in 1998.
Lt. Col. Anderson's wife, Mrs. Sandra Hawkins Anderson of Houston,
her two daughters, Sydney (12) and Kaycee (10), his parents, Bobbie and
Barbara Anderson of Spokane, Wash., his sister Joann Sykes and her husband
Fred of Oklahoma City, and his cousins were among those attending.
Anderson, along with his fellow astronauts, lost his life in the tragic
events of the space shuttle Columbia. Creighton President the Rev. John P.
Schlegel, S.J., described Anderson as "not only one of Creighton's
best" but "one of our nation's best."
The bust was created by Creighton Fine and Performing Arts Professor
Littleton Alston.
Also in Anderson's memory, Creighton established the Michael P.
Anderson Endowed Scholarship for physics students shortly after the Feb. 2003
shuttle tragedy.
Lt. Col. Anderson, was the payload commander and a mission
specialist responsible for the management of the science portion of Columbia's
16-day mission.
Selected for NASA's astronaut program in December 1994, Lt. Col.
Anderson was the first African-American to visit the space station when the
Space Shuttle Endeavour docked with the Russian Mir in 1998.
Creighton is an independent, comprehensive university operated by
Jesuits. Creighton has been ranked at or near the top of Midwestern
universities in the U.S. News and World Report magazine's "America's Best Colleges"
edition for more than a decade.
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