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SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON — Mission Control Center personnel sit back
at their consoles and watch via television the first men ever to walk on the
moon, Astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin landed on the moon,
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Americans Await
Astronauts' Return
By DAVID SMOTHKK*
UPI Senior Editor
Americans rubbed moon dust
out of their eyes today and
braced for one more cliff
hanger — their astronauts’
takeoff for home.
Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin
E. Aldrin on the moon, with
Michael Collins waiting for the
Eagle module in lunar orbit,
gave their countrymen some of
the proudest hours of their
history Sunday and Sunday
night.
America’s prayers went with
them to the alien world. They
continued today, waiting for
assurance that the moon men
were coming back.
Rarely had Americans felt so
much together, with each other
and with mankind. Never had
they seen—seen in the darkened
quiet of their living rooms—
such sights as came to them
from the moon by television
from almost a quarter million
miles away.
The sense of togetherness
was so strong that more than
10,000 people gathered in the
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egressed their lunar lander, and completed a series of experiments in the
over two hour stay outside their spacecraft.
rain and the mud in New
York’s Central Park Sunday
night to watch on three color
television sets as Armstrong
climbed down to the floor of the
moon.
Throng Grows Silent
The throng grew silent as it
realized it was actually watch
ing an American doing what no
man had ever done. There was
cheering and whistling when
Armstrong was down safely,
but many of the watchers
remained transfixed, as if
unbelieving.
A policeman said, to no one
in particular, “It's a great day
for mankind.”
Nixon, sitting in the Oval
Room of the White House,
picked up the telephone and
called the moon—as any
American might have wished
he could. "I just can’t tell you
how proud we all are,” he said.
In the almost deserted Logan
International Airport at Boston,
a young soldier watched
Armstrong set his foot on the
moon and yelled, ‘'Unbelieva
ble'”
At Disneyland outside Los
Angeles, members of the
Russian track and field team
participating in the U.S.-
U.S.S.R.-British Commonwealth
International track meet
wa'obed the landing of the
Eagle on Tranquillity Base on a
giant screen. They slapped each
other on the back and shook
hands with Americans around
them.
Subject For Wonder
Across the nation Sunday
night, the great majority of
Americans appeared disposed
to treat the moon with awe; not
a matter for celebration but a
subject for wonder.
It was in homes that most
Americans gathered with their
families and friends to share
the moon adventure. They bent
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towards their television sets first step. Anvone who wanted
waiting for the thrilling words t 0 make a random comment
"the Eagle has landed” and was likely to be shushed,
that Armstrong had made that
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Moon Mon
At Work
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPD—Experiments conducted
by Apollo 11 astronauts Nell A.
Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin
Jr., during their moon walk:
Soil: The most important
experiment, in which samples
of the moon are brought back
to earth for testing by the
world’s top scientists. More
than 50 pounds of soil, pus
selected rocks, were collected.
The astronauts collected only
one box of two scheduled.
Moonquakes: A large sensor
shielded by a thermal shroud
was left on the moon to record
moon quakes. The experiment
not only can record inner lunar
movement, but can record the
impact of meteors on the lunar
'surface.
Laser: A fancy-looking box
tilted at an angle was left
behind by Aldrin and Arm
strong. It contains 103 reflec
tors designed to receive a laser
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Griffin Daily News
Monday, July 21, 1969
beam shot from earth and
shoot it back along the exact
same path. Such beams can be
used to determine the exact
distance from the earth to the
moon. The first beam was shot
to the moon and returned to
earth perfectly just as the
astronauts were climbing back
into the lunar module.
So'ar wind: A thick piece of
aluminum foil was unfurled on
the moon after' the astronauts
stepped from “Eagle." The foil
was taken back into the
spacecraft and scientists will
try to determine the amount of
gaseous eements contained in
the solar wind that hit and
stuck to the foil.
Kentudkn fried /Jkkkew
“READY WHEN YOU ARE"
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