Years ago, Karrie Hinkle of Costa Mesa watched Endeavour’s
fiery trajectory from a Cape Canaveral launch pad not once, but twice.A snail’s-pace crawl through the streets of Los Angeles
hardly compares to the drama of a shuttle launch. But Hinkle still set up her lawn chair in a
parking lot along Crenshaw Boulevard to watch Endeavour’s final journey.
“It’s happy and sad,” Hinkle said. “Sad the program is gone.
But proud we have a shuttle here in L.A. It’s not something you ever get tired
of seeing.”
Hinkle has worked for 20 years at Boeing, where she helps
design insulation for space shuttles. That includes Endeavour. She’s currently
designing “the next generation of space travel.”
Her parents, both of whom celebrated birthdays last week,
flew in from Morton, Ill., to watch the shuttle.
“This is my birthday present,” her mother, Connie Young, said.
The crowd along Crenshaw had grown since early Saturday
morning. Endeavour's move was slowed for
much of the day by extremely close trees, utility poles and buildings, and
crews have been forced to complete tedious maneuvers to prevent the shuttle
from being damaged.
PHOTOS: Endeavour rolls through the streets of L.A.
A dance party with choreographer Debbie Allen planned for
the shuttle’s arrival began without the show’s honoree. Dancers began to leave.
The marching band went home.
But Hinkle, her parents, her daughter and her daughter’s
friend waited more than eight hours to see the shuttle inch into view over the
heads of thousands of other spectators.
“I see it! I see it!” one man shouted, as the shuttle rounded
a bend on Crenshaw. “It’s here! It’s here!”
Young rose from her lawn chair and pressed her hands against
the stone wall, craning her neck to see it. As it swept into view, the family said
little, instead lining up against the wall for a series of photos with the
shuttle in the background.
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