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Show 2A DESERET Man Turns Face Out To The Stars Monday, July 21, 1969 NEWS, i, Americans Take On The AAoon IA7alk 'Ctfniinued from Mrs I page T the southwest edge of the Sea of Armstrong Tranquility, and Addrin began their final appicach. In the final minutes befoie Armstrong landing, took control of Eagle from the automatic guidance system and steei ed it over a big boulder field. Because of this, they landed four miles west of their target. WORLD TINES IX The entire world was tuned in as they marie their final descent. The voices went like this: At 220 feet: Coming down i I countries in the entire that we think you have (tine a magnificent job up rjjl- - VirM Jjimr. von (Jliank much, very Armstrong .aid, Lts been a long day, t(tlii?d Aldrln. scmp rest and got at Jv.mnorrow, Slayton said, ;vhe time was 4 a.nt. EDT. A vJ.yKr.ip call from ground was Expected about 9 a.m. EOT, 3be events that made the iPudav of July In the year j6fit.A.L. so historic came at nicely." At 75 feet: Looking good. dizzying pace. ltwas 1 :47 p.m. EDT when ' At 30 fept : Ticking up some dust. AlYRstrong and AWrin riding . lunar lander cut them P'inally, at .4:17:45 p.m., selves loose from the Armstrong radioed the first ship Columbia with only woids from the moon. "Contact light. Okay. Engine stop. (JnjHns left aboard, '''fiagle has wings, radioed ACA (altitude control assemAtnistrong bly) out of dptent. Modp conWhile Columbia remained in trols both auto. Descent ena high orbit, Eagle gine command override, off. Engine arm off. 413 is in. began the deliheiate diop toward the lunar surface. . TERSE, CALM JJe 46,000 ,fe?t, Armstrong Ground controller Charles fired Eagle's big descent enM. Duke: "Houston, We copy gine Three hundred miles you down. Eagle. from the landing site on Armstrong: Houston, tran' "s' quillity base here. The Eage has landed. " The astronauts were anxious to start exploring. Dr. 'SALT LAKi CITY. UTAH Charles A. Berry, the astrojfatorial OW, U I. Flrtl South 'wAdvortUln on circulation nauts doctor and other flight 14) I. Main St. physicians, four-hou- the moon walk. ITT OX SL ITS After a snack (their pantry contained a ham salad spread and bacon squares, among several choices, the two men put on their stiff, bulky but Jifegiving spacesuits. Armstrong looked out the Eagles window and said, "We cannot see any stars out the window but the earth is bright and beautiful. The blue, white and brown marbled earth ball hung 67 degrees above the lunar horizon. a scant three miles away. It was 238,000 miles from their landing site back to d DESERET NEWS decided they were rested enough and gave them r emission to delay a test ppriod until after . com-isij- Utah Mil 1150. Published et the Silt Laho Enteiod ecievenlng. second class CJtyost Office to Act et Conerass, Mfteh 3, W9. Deserot Nows Publishing Com-pessumos ne responsibility for contribnienjscripls end photographs uted. Photoeraphs and artldts may wrltton with permis beyfprinted only atooVvon in advance. DELIVERY RATES S 2.00 One month (daily only) $12.00 Six months (daily only) $24 00 Ona year (daily only) One month (daily and Sunday) , $300 srmtflonths (daily and Sunday) . $1100 $34 90 Ont tear (daily a.d Sunday) larities, Just granularities. about every variety of rocks you can find. Armstrong reported, "This G (gravity) is just like in an airplane, and when ground controllers told them there were lots of smiling the around faces world, "There replied, Armstrong are two of them up here. one-sixt- h tub (Sunday by carriar) patitf only Daily and Sunday &alurday only Cftgrth l $3.00 $2.25 $3.50 i mo. yr. mo. mo, mo. t 3.50 4 00 .Dr... Thomas mo. 2 00 yr, 3 50 payable m News only 4 administrator 4ilmaii subscriptions art vidtnber Audit bureau of Circulations. Hafbrday only ana ntatfeutsito earner onto. t your wagon -- . . . v TIME FOR A ,24 th ' f JULY is my honor to report to you that the Eagle has landed on the Sea ol Tranquility and our astronauts are safe and looking forward to starting the exploraton of the moon. Explore the frontiers of the West with a 24th of July car buy. SEE TODAY'S To newsmen he was equally CLASSIFIED ecstatic. "This ADS l is on strictly a As we look at the things that W'e have on the drawing boards as we look at the dreams of the engineers for the future, it seems very clear to me that there are two basic factors that have to be answered : "First is. whether or hot we can attain the kind of costs and the kind of reliability in space flight that we now have in air travel. "The second question is if we can indeed travel in a practical way to the moon and eventually beyond, will men will indeed wish to do so they wish to found small first research stations and perhaps colopermanent eventually nies? "And it seems to me that the history of mankind is that they certainly will. "I think that the significance of the trip that is just started today (Sunday), is indeed that mankind is going to establish places of abode outside of his home planet the earth. 1 Ginza in Tokyo to watch historic step. Minister Hilmar Baunsgard of Denmark said it for millions all over the world today: Its almost too niuch in one night!" In London and Tokyo and Moscow, men ard women reacted to mans landing on the moon with astonishment and praise. Many said they could hardly believe their eyes. . Even though hundreds of millions heard the Apollo 11 landing on radio or saw it on television nearly a quarter of the earth's people did not. Communist China told its 700 million people nothing about it. Soviet celebrate the loudannouncement over speakers, "the Eagle has landed,' signifying that the Apollo astronauts had reached lo Square Soviet cosmo"The courageous nauts have landed on the moon. the Pravda story said. Baunsgaard joined an estimated 3 million Danes who watched the moon landing. "I have hardly recovered my breath, Baunsgaard said. "Its almost too much in one night. The pictures beat everything I have seen hefore. Dr. Andrzej Marks, a prominent Polish scientist, said, I am so excited that my pulse is cosmic! In Iamdon, youths leaped into fountains in Trafalgar Moscow. Joanne Goldstein, a Brooklyn, N.Y:, tourist in Vienna, said, its like a dream. You can't believe it even if you have seen it. iVtu 1M utu they mn , fur rtwr," thruh it lovak office girl said, recalled the Aug. 21. 1968 Soviet inva- sion of her homeland. Mans landing on the moon has opened a window on a heretofore mysterious and forbidden planet that has been an object of human awe, wonder and dread lor centuries. "Every accomplishment that lessens mans fear of the unknown is important to manDr. kind psychologically, Jack Tedrow, Salt Lake psy J A K ARTA, basic psychological problem, he added. The successful landing and moon exploration walk also "demonstrates to America that occasionally we can solve a successfully, said. Tedrow problem , j y t THI WORLD'S FINEST BAND INSTRUMENTS and I W SPINET PIANOS FOR RENT In many countries, parents named their newborn Apollo. Patrol Ambushed chiatrist said today in answer to a Deseret News inquiry. "Fear of the unknown is a I with pvrchait option j m S E! Pr month and INDONESIA jjgS V, up Primitive tribesmen (AP) in West Irian's central highland ambushed an Indonesian government patrol last week and killed 11 men, informants ! here said Sundav. SUMMERHAYS MUSIC 262-338- h 7 152 South Main . N T DF.RMA-SOF'- proud Czechos- - sians." a Tortured 9 Years by 2C0RNSandaYART rti how Im glad the Americans did it first and not the Rus- - of Charles Block Angeles, in Vienna on vacation, "its almost to the point of being impossible. "We burst with pride and tremble with emotion because we have just landed on the moon!" laid French science fiction writer Rene Barjavel. "Like the child letting go of its mothers hand, who crosses the distance between the chairs for the first time. Hillbrow J o hannesburgs District normally pulses with night life but it was almost deserted Sunday night. Most South Africans were at their radios. South Africa has no television. If Moscow television was terse in its report of Apollo, oV And ier to move around than expected, and that they could be active and stay comfortaIn fact, ble. everything worked beautifully. It was demonstrated that man can function well far from earth. This means there will be no turning back. More Apollo flights to the moon are coming. Critics of the manned program have questioned manned flights to the moon. Some have answered that we can learn more about the earth by learning about the moon, and that we can perform scientific experiments which cannot be duplicated in the environment of the earth. This is true, but in the longer view, man has not traveled to the moon to get a better look at the earth. The ultimate direction is outwards. Despite social and economic issues and questions of national priority, Apollo 11 has opened a door to the universe. It is simply not in the nature of man not to walk through that door. Feat Lessens Man's Fear Of Unknown, Medic Says full of their mothers must be. "This is the No. 1 event of the year, said a young Moscow architect. The U.S. embassy in Mos-- . cow reported receiving scores of telephone calls daily since the launching of Apollo from Russians inquiring on the flights progress and wishing the astronauts well. mid-da- A were "Such brave boys said a retired woman bookkeeper in I.os Moscow television let the 1947 movie "Song of Love with Katherine Hepburn and Robert Walker run to its conclusion then reported Apollo as the last item on its late newscast. Communist The party newspaper gave bigger headlines to its own Luna 15 moon orbiting spaceship but held up its press run until it could earn- - the story of the moon landing, a newspaper practice extremely unusual in Russia. citizens wrung out. Then li.e whole building exploded mm a frenzy of activity as reporters rushed for telephones, microphones and typewriters to give out one of the biggest stories in history. things were By contrast, it came time when calm fairly for Armstrong and Aldrin to leave their spacecraft and set foot on the moon for the first time. But a new dimension of drama unfolded as the television camera clicked on at the base of the spacecraft and relayed live pictures to earth of Armstrong coming down the ladder. Suddenly the whole thing had an air of unfamiliar reality, as if all the old science fiction stories and movies had suddenly come to life. It was seeing, but believing was still hard. As the mission progressed, none of the potential problems astronauts The appeared. found that their space suits worked well, that it was eas praise. the moon. In Tokyo, it was high noon when Neil A. Armstrong set foot on the lunar surface and so many millions of Japanese were engrossed with their television sets that Tokyos subways were almost empty. They are usually jammed at GIFT SHOP TRAVELWARE I lentil a ktppt mtr, goodbye lo laming calluses, Sy common Stalls wild coins, wonder-workin- g' This unique cienie softens. dissolves those lui d to lemovegtoisths so they rub oft painlessly and safelv Don't' ieaving akin wlky smooth auffei .GetOERMA SOFT at your druggist. OERMASCFT. A SPORTY WAY TO GO I CbdkuA fkaAitk, -- REDUCED razor g Prime personal my part, but it seems clear to me that what we have demonstrated is a very etude and preliminary opinion IN THIS NEWSPAPER best-sellin- U.S. "It CAR BUY! The .the "Mankind is going to estab-- I lish places of abode outside the earth, his home planet Paine told a news conference Sunday. Paine said he called the House White immediately after the touchdown on the moons surface and told President Nixon: ah - of the Space Agency thinks the successful lunar landing of Apollo 11 astronauts is a. "giant toward, the goal. First .step must come additional explorations including small research stations manned by scientists. Church News delivery areas t li catling to onri of the trail O. Paine, United Press International . form of travel between the earth and other bodies, Paine said. TV on the Excitement Was Universal As The World Watched rock-strew- n 'Giant Step Toward Moon Colonization' o Japanese crowd around ROCKHOIXDS PARADISE Looking aj tell moonscape they soon would tied, Aldrin said, "It looks like a collection of just about every variety of shapes, angu- 15, SPACE CENTER, HOUSA permanent TON (UPI) men on the for earth colony moon? r UPI Telephoto earth. . .Solt LaktJunoCity, .?rtabltshed Continued from First Page in America is now selling for FL0RSHEIM SHOES SELECTED STYLES REGULARLY $19.95 TO $26.95 itwith the purchase of li l?Uhe new 10 edge r (Adjustable Razor Band j.;i OUR PRICE Carry-O- n GOOD SELECTION, byOHMH neW W 179 THOUGH NOT ALL i in id ni:i: pvkkim. Store ()en Monday Till 9 Other Meek Nights Till 3:4(1 l)i null own f) SIZES IN EVERY STYLE. Gdlvut DOW MOWN Tho AdjustableTachmatlcT by Gillatta better Carry-Oby Atlantic, ideal for the quick traveling businessman. No waiting for luggage delivery . . . saves time end nerves. 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