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Space shuttle Endeavour exhibits opening in Los Angeles

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Amy Davis is a fifth-grade teacher at Inglewood’s Century Park Elementary School. Her class watched last month as Endeavour, riding a jumbo jet, flew low over the school on its way to the Los Angeles International Airport. The children shrieked with glee as it passed over their heads.

Two students ran up to Davis. Ten-year-old Richard Hercules had tears streaming down his face.

“They’re happy tears,” Richard’s friend told their teacher.

Richard has wanted to be an astronaut as long as he can remember. He “felt lucky” he got to see Endeavour, he said.

“That’s the only space shuttle I’ve ever seen,” he said. “It gave me a boost of wanting to be an astronaut more.”

Davis wrote to the Science Center, explaining how moved Richard was by the experience. A NASA official heard the story and sent Richard an application to Space Camp in Alabama.

Richard is now working on the application, collecting letters of recommendation and writing an essay on astronaut John Glenn, trying to earn a scholarship so he can go.

“Dreams are possible,” Davis said. “It was meant to be.”

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