Cornell Student in Lockerbie Air Disaster Honored at Syracuse University
November 6, 2006 - 12:50amLast Friday, Syracuse University honored the 35 students studying abroad, including junior Kenneth Bissett ’90, who perished in the crash of Pan Am Flight 103 in Lockerbie, Scotland on Dec. 21, 1988, with a Rose-Laying Ceremony.
Bissett, 21, a junior at the time was returning from studying abroad in London when the plane crashed killing 270 people.
“This is the first year they invited Cornell to the ceremony,” said Sarah Boxer ’07, vice president for finance of the Student Assembly, who attended the Rose-Laying Ceremony with CJ Slicklen ’09, S.A. vice president for public relations.
“Hopefully it’s something we’ll continue,” Boxer said. At the ceremony at 2:03 p.m. — when the tragedy occurred — she and Slicklen placed a bouquet of white and red roses at the Wall of Remembrance.
Syracuse University awards 35 remembrance scholarships of $5,000 each, in honor of the students in Pan Am Flight 103. The university holds a remembrance week each year culminating with a ceremony led by the scholars each year in honor of the 35 students in the crash.
“Now we have connections with Cornell … so Cornell can also remember Kenneth,” said Erin McLaughlin, a senior at Syracuse, who was in charge of the ceremony. “[Cornell] is welcome to come to our event.”
— Written by Vanessa Hoffman

Lockerbie
I was staying with friends in a small town in Creetown which is about 10 miles from Lockerbie in Scotland. We stopped to visit the memorial garden for all those that perished on PanAm 103.It is beautifully kept and very moving to read all the names of those listed.I took several photos as I felt that those that were lost should be remembered.I was lucky enough to have friends to visit who took me to see it and I know there are loved ones that may not have had the chance to.I was there this past April 06 18 years later.
Barbara Bergman