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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,600 --> 00:00:06,160 We choose to go to the moon! 2 00:00:06,160 --> 00:00:07,320 CHEERING 3 00:00:07,320 --> 00:00:09,000 We choose to go to the moon 4 00:00:09,000 --> 00:00:11,040 in this decade and do the other 5 00:00:11,040 --> 00:00:13,480 things, not because they are easy, 6 00:00:13,480 --> 00:00:15,400 but because they are hard. 7 00:00:17,400 --> 00:00:21,040 Liftoff, we have a liftoff. Liftoff on Apollo 11. 8 00:00:23,880 --> 00:00:25,320 What a moment. 9 00:00:25,320 --> 00:00:27,120 Man on the way to the moon. 10 00:00:30,720 --> 00:00:35,880 SPEAKING IN DIFFERENT LANGUAGES 11 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:42,400 That's one small step for Man, one giant leap for mankind. 12 00:01:13,080 --> 00:01:15,080 Jesus Christ, look at that horizon. 13 00:01:17,720 --> 00:01:19,920 It has a stark beauty all its own. 14 00:01:31,440 --> 00:01:33,520 You're go to continue powered descent. 15 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:35,880 You're go to continue powered descent. 16 00:01:35,880 --> 00:01:37,400 ALARM BLARES 17 00:01:37,400 --> 00:01:38,440 Programme alarm. 18 00:01:40,200 --> 00:01:42,520 Give us a reading on the 1202 programme alarm. 19 00:01:49,920 --> 00:01:51,200 Houston. 20 00:01:53,200 --> 00:01:54,640 The Eagle has landed. 21 00:02:02,720 --> 00:02:06,720 Just for me, clean on tape, say, "I'm Neil Armstrong, 22 00:02:06,720 --> 00:02:09,560 "spacecraft commander, Apollo 11." 23 00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:13,600 I'm Neil Armstrong, Commander, Apollo 11. 24 00:02:16,200 --> 00:02:17,720 Would you prefer Buzz or Edwin? 25 00:02:19,680 --> 00:02:24,200 I'm Edwin E Aldrin Jr, lunar module pilot on the mission 26 00:02:24,200 --> 00:02:25,240 Apollo 11. 27 00:02:28,080 --> 00:02:30,800 Just look right at me and say, "I'm Michael Collins, 28 00:02:30,800 --> 00:02:31,920 "command module pilot." 29 00:02:31,920 --> 00:02:34,280 I'm Michael Collins, command module pilot, 30 00:02:34,280 --> 00:02:35,320 Apollo 11. 31 00:02:37,960 --> 00:02:41,760 The accomplishment that you expect to achieve is often compared 32 00:02:41,760 --> 00:02:42,960 to that of Columbus. 33 00:02:42,960 --> 00:02:44,920 How do you feel about such comparisons? 34 00:02:46,000 --> 00:02:49,400 Columbus wasn't sure where he was going, 35 00:02:49,400 --> 00:02:54,720 I very much hope that we won't terminate at someplace 36 00:02:54,720 --> 00:02:58,520 that we didn't expect to, some planet that we hadn't 37 00:02:58,520 --> 00:03:00,280 planned to visit. 38 00:03:00,280 --> 00:03:03,960 The crew of Apollo 11 is unique. 39 00:03:03,960 --> 00:03:05,600 Thanks very much, Buzz Aldrin. 40 00:03:05,600 --> 00:03:08,000 I wasn't finished. Oh, oh, OK, OK. 41 00:03:08,000 --> 00:03:09,400 Let's back up, whoa, whoa, whoa. 42 00:03:10,880 --> 00:03:13,440 Additionally, they are unusual. 43 00:03:13,440 --> 00:03:14,720 Do you want to start over? 44 00:03:14,720 --> 00:03:16,640 No, I don't want to start over - do you? 45 00:03:16,640 --> 00:03:18,560 LAUGHTER 46 00:03:20,120 --> 00:03:22,680 And they also have another minor distinction, 47 00:03:22,680 --> 00:03:27,240 they perhaps have been asked more questions than almost anybody 48 00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:28,440 in the world. 49 00:03:28,440 --> 00:03:31,720 Why are you going? Why are we sending men and not machines? 50 00:03:31,720 --> 00:03:33,920 Do you expect to be able to sleep? 51 00:03:33,920 --> 00:03:37,880 Do you feel that the public is putting too much hope 52 00:03:37,880 --> 00:03:39,840 on this landing? 53 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:44,000 And it's not an easy chore for them to perform. 54 00:03:44,000 --> 00:03:46,240 They are not naturally talkative men. 55 00:03:46,240 --> 00:03:48,280 I don't know about you, but I'm staggered about going 56 00:03:48,280 --> 00:03:49,640 to the moon, aren't you, fellas? 57 00:03:53,320 --> 00:03:56,520 Do you think Nasa made a mistake not planning for the capability 58 00:03:56,520 --> 00:03:57,720 of rescuing you, in case... 59 00:03:57,720 --> 00:04:01,600 Your mission has been given an 80% chance of success. 60 00:04:01,600 --> 00:04:04,360 What four events in the flight, in order if you can, 61 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:05,840 do you consider the most dangerous? 62 00:04:05,840 --> 00:04:09,120 ..do you think we are to use "if" a little more instead of saying 63 00:04:09,120 --> 00:04:10,800 "when" you land on the moon...? 64 00:04:10,800 --> 00:04:13,360 There's been speculation about what the first man on the moon 65 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:14,680 will say when he gets there. 66 00:04:14,680 --> 00:04:16,440 Will you prepare something ahead of time? 67 00:04:19,480 --> 00:04:24,520 This is CBS News, colour coverage of Man On The Moon. 68 00:04:29,960 --> 00:04:35,360 Sponsored by Kellogg's. Kellogg's puts more in your morning. 69 00:04:35,360 --> 00:04:38,840 Here, from CBS News, correspondent Walter Cronkite. 70 00:04:38,840 --> 00:04:40,240 Good morning. 71 00:04:41,680 --> 00:04:43,720 The astronauts are on board now. 72 00:04:44,920 --> 00:04:47,080 Next stop for them, the moon. 73 00:04:49,320 --> 00:04:53,400 The three astronauts are now in their tiny spacecraft on top 74 00:04:53,400 --> 00:04:54,720 of this enormous rocket. 75 00:04:56,960 --> 00:04:59,280 They have about 160 cubic feet in there, 76 00:04:59,280 --> 00:05:02,640 which is about the size of the interior of a small automobile. 77 00:05:05,280 --> 00:05:08,960 There is time, if only briefly in this busy morning, 78 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:12,040 to think of those three men, and the burdens and the hopes 79 00:05:12,040 --> 00:05:15,440 that they carry on behalf of all mankind. 80 00:05:19,760 --> 00:05:21,480 We are go for Apollo 11. 81 00:05:33,600 --> 00:05:35,920 LOUD, INDISTINCT CHATTER 82 00:05:40,080 --> 00:05:43,600 Our status board indicates the third stage completely pressurised. 83 00:05:46,160 --> 00:05:48,360 All the second stage tanks now pressurised. 84 00:06:04,040 --> 00:06:06,200 Power transfer is complete. 85 00:06:22,040 --> 00:06:25,160 Apollo 11, the launch team wishes you good luck and Godspeed. 86 00:06:31,840 --> 00:06:38,000 12, 11, 10, 9, ignition sequence starts, 87 00:06:38,000 --> 00:06:43,160 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. 88 00:06:53,960 --> 00:06:57,480 Liftoff, we have a liftoff. Liftoff on Apollo 11. 89 00:07:09,600 --> 00:07:10,760 Tower cleared. 90 00:07:12,640 --> 00:07:15,280 ENGINE ROARS, METALLIC RATTLING 91 00:07:29,160 --> 00:07:32,720 What a moment. I am on the way to the moon. 92 00:07:57,160 --> 00:08:01,360 You get a feeling that people think of these men as 93 00:08:01,360 --> 00:08:04,080 not just superior men, but as different creatures. 94 00:08:07,080 --> 00:08:11,800 We really don't have a language to...to describe this thing. 95 00:08:13,160 --> 00:08:15,040 What are the words you use? 96 00:08:15,040 --> 00:08:18,200 How do you say "high as the sky" any more, 97 00:08:18,200 --> 00:08:20,680 Or "the sky's the limit"? And what does it mean? 98 00:08:39,360 --> 00:08:42,520 All right, how are you? Looking good, flight. GNC? 99 00:08:45,680 --> 00:08:48,680 Looks good, flight. Looking good, flight. Roger. 100 00:08:51,800 --> 00:08:53,960 Flight, how are you? We're go, flight. 101 00:09:02,240 --> 00:09:04,800 Mark. Mark. Mode One Charlie. Go. 102 00:09:14,080 --> 00:09:15,920 Light up. Go. Guidance. Go. 103 00:09:48,400 --> 00:09:50,920 Houston, thrusters go, all engines are looking good. 104 00:09:53,040 --> 00:09:54,080 Roger, Tower. 105 00:09:56,960 --> 00:10:00,480 Neil Armstrong confirming both the engine skirt separation 106 00:10:00,480 --> 00:10:02,600 and the launch escape tower separation. 107 00:10:15,080 --> 00:10:18,760 Next critical moment will be when that second stage jettisons. 108 00:10:22,680 --> 00:10:24,560 Apollo 11 go on all sources. 109 00:10:56,760 --> 00:10:59,800 Apollo 11, this is Houston, predicted cut off at 110 00:10:59,800 --> 00:11:01,800 11 plus 42. Over. 111 00:11:29,160 --> 00:11:31,720 ENGINES ROAR 112 00:11:34,400 --> 00:11:37,000 ROARING STOPS 113 00:11:56,040 --> 00:12:00,000 Apollo 11, this is Houston. You are confirmed go for orbit. 114 00:12:02,600 --> 00:12:03,640 Roger. 115 00:12:10,240 --> 00:12:16,000 So this first, always dramatic and dangerous launch phase 116 00:12:16,000 --> 00:12:19,280 has passed, and Apollo 11 is on the way. 117 00:12:43,280 --> 00:12:48,240 This is the flight from which Man will first set foot on the moon. 118 00:12:49,200 --> 00:12:52,600 We should almost glibly toss that line away now, 119 00:12:52,600 --> 00:12:54,240 Man on the moon. 120 00:12:54,240 --> 00:12:56,560 But, by golly, just think it over. 121 00:12:56,560 --> 00:12:59,440 CBS News colour coverage of the launch day of Apollo 11 122 00:12:59,440 --> 00:13:00,800 will continue in a moment. 123 00:13:54,520 --> 00:13:56,120 HE CLEARS HIS THROAT 124 00:15:25,720 --> 00:15:27,840 SHUTTER CLICKS 125 00:15:46,080 --> 00:15:48,240 When the spacecraft has been thoroughly checked out 126 00:15:48,240 --> 00:15:50,640 by the crew, the third stage fires again, 127 00:15:50,640 --> 00:15:54,040 its speed now tearing it free from the grip of Earth's gravity. 128 00:15:56,560 --> 00:16:00,680 This is Apollo Control, we expect the translunar injection 129 00:16:00,680 --> 00:16:02,800 burn at two hours 44 minutes. 130 00:16:07,800 --> 00:16:10,160 We confirm ignition, and the thrust is go. 131 00:16:33,480 --> 00:16:37,720 We are waiting for word of the separation from the command 132 00:16:37,720 --> 00:16:39,320 module going off on its own. 133 00:16:52,400 --> 00:16:55,720 While coasting outward, the command service module separates 134 00:16:55,720 --> 00:16:58,400 and docks for access to the lunar module. 135 00:16:58,400 --> 00:17:00,680 And the empty third stage is left behind. 136 00:17:04,960 --> 00:17:07,320 Apollo 11, this is Houston. 137 00:17:07,320 --> 00:17:08,600 You're go for separation. 138 00:17:21,800 --> 00:17:25,800 This next major function now is the command module coasting out 139 00:17:25,800 --> 00:17:27,040 50 feet away. 140 00:17:44,000 --> 00:17:47,440 The command module will turn around 180 degrees. 141 00:18:15,600 --> 00:18:19,720 The command module will touch around and come back, 142 00:18:19,720 --> 00:18:24,080 and with the nose end, come in and dock with the lunar module. 143 00:18:45,480 --> 00:18:48,760 It's a very, very delicate and controlled task. 144 00:19:30,200 --> 00:19:32,400 With the lunar module attached to their nose, 145 00:19:32,400 --> 00:19:35,160 they'll be on the way on their three-day voyage 146 00:19:35,160 --> 00:19:38,240 to the moon, and into the pages of history. 147 00:19:49,480 --> 00:19:53,920 Apollo 11, Houston, all your systems look real good to us. 148 00:19:53,920 --> 00:19:55,640 We will keep you posted. 149 00:20:01,760 --> 00:20:04,000 We have seen something spectacular today. 150 00:20:04,000 --> 00:20:07,000 Something we'll be telling our grandchildren about. 151 00:20:07,000 --> 00:20:11,280 Something our great-grandchildren will undoubtably be undertaking 152 00:20:11,280 --> 00:20:13,840 themselves on an excursion basis. 153 00:20:13,840 --> 00:20:18,000 This is Walter Cronkite at CBS News at the Kennedy Space Center 154 00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:19,120 in Florida. 155 00:20:36,600 --> 00:20:39,560 11, this is Houston, if you are interested in the morning 156 00:20:39,560 --> 00:20:41,640 news, I've got a summary here. Over. 157 00:20:53,200 --> 00:20:58,800 Washington UPI - "Vice President Spiro T Agnew has called for 158 00:20:58,800 --> 00:21:02,840 "putting a man on Mars by the year 2000, 159 00:21:02,840 --> 00:21:05,840 "but Democratic leaders replied that priority must go 160 00:21:05,840 --> 00:21:07,160 "to needs on Earth. 161 00:21:09,000 --> 00:21:14,360 "Laredo, Texas, immigration officials in Nuevo Laredo announce 162 00:21:14,360 --> 00:21:17,360 "that hippies will be refused tourists cards to enter Mexico 163 00:21:17,360 --> 00:21:19,400 "unless they take a bath and get haircuts. 164 00:21:20,800 --> 00:21:21,840 "London. 165 00:21:23,120 --> 00:21:26,920 "The House of Lords was assured that a major American submarine 166 00:21:26,920 --> 00:21:30,240 "would not, quote, 'damage or assault', unquote, 167 00:21:30,240 --> 00:21:31,800 "the Loch Ness Monster." 168 00:21:43,080 --> 00:21:50,800 Apollo 11's distance from the Earth is now 112,386 nautical miles. 169 00:21:50,800 --> 00:21:54,600 Velocity 4,906 feet per second. 170 00:23:34,800 --> 00:23:37,880 Roger, Apollo 11. Thank you much for the show, appreciate it, 171 00:23:37,880 --> 00:23:39,080 thank you very much, out. 172 00:23:57,160 --> 00:23:59,280 Apollo 11, this is Houston. Over. 173 00:24:01,640 --> 00:24:04,360 Roger, I've got the morning news here. Over. 174 00:24:05,680 --> 00:24:10,920 "In Corby, England, an Irishman named John Coyle has won the world's 175 00:24:10,920 --> 00:24:14,120 "porridge eating championship by consuming 23 bowls 176 00:24:14,120 --> 00:24:15,400 "of instant oatmeal." 177 00:24:20,680 --> 00:24:21,920 Is he pretty good at that? 178 00:24:27,360 --> 00:24:28,440 Roger. 179 00:24:32,240 --> 00:24:35,480 It almost seems that Neil Armstrong's life was intended 180 00:24:35,480 --> 00:24:36,720 to work out this way. 181 00:24:39,160 --> 00:24:41,560 Before the moon, there was flying. 182 00:24:41,560 --> 00:24:45,040 Armstrong was, needless to say, a hot pilot in the Navy. 183 00:24:46,240 --> 00:24:48,440 He survived the only forced landing in the history 184 00:24:48,440 --> 00:24:49,800 of the space programme. 185 00:24:49,800 --> 00:24:52,160 And when a lunar training vehicle went out of control, 186 00:24:52,160 --> 00:24:55,120 forcing him to bail out for the second time in his life, 187 00:24:55,120 --> 00:24:58,640 a friend concluded he was either the best, 188 00:24:58,640 --> 00:25:00,400 or the luckiest pilot around. 189 00:25:03,160 --> 00:25:05,760 Anyone else paying attention would've concluded nothing 190 00:25:05,760 --> 00:25:08,080 could stop him from flying to the moon. 191 00:25:12,280 --> 00:25:15,400 Even more serious than Armstrong is Buzz Aldrin. 192 00:25:16,640 --> 00:25:19,080 He is, by general agreement, the most brilliant of 193 00:25:19,080 --> 00:25:21,640 the astronauts, though some of his colleagues have been known 194 00:25:21,640 --> 00:25:23,800 to comment, they wished he didn't feel it necessary 195 00:25:23,800 --> 00:25:26,480 to demonstrate his scholarship so often. 196 00:25:26,480 --> 00:25:30,560 Typically, Aldrin trained for weeks underwater for his Gemini 12 197 00:25:30,560 --> 00:25:34,360 spacewalk, determined that it would be the best ever attempted. 198 00:25:34,360 --> 00:25:35,720 It was. 199 00:25:35,720 --> 00:25:38,480 But Aldrin can be as cool in appraising himself 200 00:25:38,480 --> 00:25:40,640 as he is in his relations with others. 201 00:25:42,960 --> 00:25:46,080 Mike Collins has done everything Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin 202 00:25:46,080 --> 00:25:48,680 have done, but somehow it's not the same. 203 00:25:48,680 --> 00:25:50,600 The son of a general, the nephew of another, 204 00:25:50,600 --> 00:25:52,920 he graduated from West Point, but did not like 205 00:25:52,920 --> 00:25:54,120 the military discipline. 206 00:25:55,400 --> 00:25:57,800 He bailed out of a jet that was on fire, 207 00:25:57,800 --> 00:26:00,720 but can't remember anything spectacular. 208 00:26:00,720 --> 00:26:03,320 Collins says he loves flying, but you get the feeling 209 00:26:03,320 --> 00:26:05,720 he could quit tomorrow. 210 00:26:05,720 --> 00:26:08,520 In his only other flight, Gemini X, a combination 211 00:26:08,520 --> 00:26:11,080 of circumstances forced him to cut short his spacewalk. 212 00:26:12,200 --> 00:26:15,520 While the others talk flying, he prefers to discuss books, 213 00:26:15,520 --> 00:26:17,240 wine or roses. 214 00:26:19,240 --> 00:26:22,520 A man who has known all three astronauts says if he were forced 215 00:26:22,520 --> 00:26:24,720 down on a remote island, he would want it to be with 216 00:26:24,720 --> 00:26:27,280 Mike Collins, for the quality of his personality. 217 00:26:27,280 --> 00:26:30,040 Another said he would prefer Buzz Aldrin, 218 00:26:30,040 --> 00:26:33,000 because, with his intelligence, he would soon be converting sea 219 00:26:33,000 --> 00:26:35,120 water to freshwater, and otherwise logically 220 00:26:35,120 --> 00:26:37,280 attacking the problem. 221 00:26:37,280 --> 00:26:41,240 But both agree that they would hope it would be with Neil Armstrong, 222 00:26:41,240 --> 00:26:43,840 because somehow he would get them home. 223 00:26:56,320 --> 00:26:57,720 This is Apollo Control. 224 00:26:58,800 --> 00:27:03,680 Dr Hawkins reports, all indications are that the crew 225 00:27:03,680 --> 00:27:05,200 is sleeping soundly. 226 00:27:09,760 --> 00:27:14,640 The flight director has made a decision to not put in a call 227 00:27:14,640 --> 00:27:17,040 to the crew and wake them. 228 00:27:57,720 --> 00:28:00,560 Roger 11, reading you loud and clear now. Over. 229 00:28:09,720 --> 00:28:10,800 Roger. 230 00:29:23,440 --> 00:29:26,480 I guess it's turned into night up there early, hasn't it? 231 00:29:34,880 --> 00:29:38,160 Well, there's a lot of us down here that would be willing to come along. 232 00:29:54,360 --> 00:29:58,240 This is Apollo Control at 75 hours 26 minutes. 233 00:29:59,760 --> 00:30:04,960 Apollo 11 is 966 miles from the moon. 234 00:30:04,960 --> 00:30:08,560 Velocity 6,511 feet per second. 235 00:30:08,560 --> 00:30:12,080 We are 23 minutes away from the LOI burn. 236 00:30:20,320 --> 00:30:22,880 OK, Capcom, we are go for LOI. 237 00:30:22,880 --> 00:30:25,440 I would like to remind you to enable the BD roll 238 00:30:25,440 --> 00:30:27,520 on the auto RCS switches. Over. 239 00:30:34,800 --> 00:30:36,080 That's affirmative, 11. 240 00:31:17,720 --> 00:31:18,760 OK. 241 00:32:55,440 --> 00:32:57,760 It's very quiet here in the control room. 242 00:33:49,160 --> 00:33:52,760 Apollo 11, Apollo 11, this is Houston, how do you read? 243 00:33:58,400 --> 00:34:00,080 Roger, hearing you the same now. 244 00:34:00,080 --> 00:34:02,320 Could you repeat your burn status report? 245 00:34:04,360 --> 00:34:06,800 The spacecraft is looking good to us on telemetry. 246 00:35:16,400 --> 00:35:21,280 It is possible that the divine spark in Man will consume him in flames, 247 00:35:21,280 --> 00:35:24,160 that the big brain will prove our ultimate flaw, 248 00:35:24,160 --> 00:35:25,800 like the dinosaur's big body. 249 00:35:27,560 --> 00:35:30,520 That the metal plaque that Armstrong and Aldrin expect to place 250 00:35:30,520 --> 00:35:32,920 on the moon will become Man's epitaph. 251 00:35:35,080 --> 00:35:38,840 But the future has never revealed itself, it is made it step-by-step, 252 00:35:38,840 --> 00:35:40,160 moment by moment. 253 00:35:41,720 --> 00:35:43,920 The next great moment is now at hand. 254 00:35:43,920 --> 00:35:46,680 The world waits and the astronauts sleep. 255 00:36:05,240 --> 00:36:07,280 Apollo 11, Apollo 11. 256 00:36:07,280 --> 00:36:08,760 Good morning from the Black Team. 257 00:36:11,160 --> 00:36:13,200 Apollo 11, Apollo 11. 258 00:36:13,200 --> 00:36:14,600 Good morning from the Black Team. 259 00:36:16,400 --> 00:36:18,360 Apollo 11, Apollo 11. 260 00:36:18,360 --> 00:36:19,840 Good morning from the Black Team. 261 00:36:24,320 --> 00:36:28,080 After having breakfast, the crew will have a rather busy day 262 00:36:28,080 --> 00:36:32,040 today, including the first men landing on the moon. 263 00:36:35,240 --> 00:36:37,320 Looks like it's going to be impossible to get away 264 00:36:37,320 --> 00:36:39,640 from the fact that you guys are dominating all of 265 00:36:39,640 --> 00:36:41,000 the news back here on Earth. 266 00:36:43,320 --> 00:36:47,040 Among the large headlines concerning Apollo this morning 267 00:36:47,040 --> 00:36:52,040 is one asking that you watch for a lovely girl with a big rabbit. 268 00:36:53,120 --> 00:36:56,800 An ancient legend says a beautiful Chinese girl, 269 00:36:56,800 --> 00:37:01,040 called Chang-o, has been living there for 4,000 years. 270 00:37:02,680 --> 00:37:06,760 It seems she was banished to the moon because she stole 271 00:37:06,760 --> 00:37:10,480 the pill of immortality from her husband. 272 00:37:12,240 --> 00:37:14,560 You might also look for her companion, 273 00:37:14,560 --> 00:37:17,080 a large Chinese rabbit, 274 00:37:17,080 --> 00:37:20,200 who is easy to spot, as he is always standing 275 00:37:20,200 --> 00:37:23,640 on his hind feet in the shade of a cinnamon tree. 276 00:37:40,600 --> 00:37:42,200 Roger, we copy. 277 00:37:44,080 --> 00:37:47,520 You heard that report from Neil Armstrong, 278 00:37:47,520 --> 00:37:48,880 they are now in the lunar module. 279 00:38:00,960 --> 00:38:04,080 Flight director Gene Kranz is going around the control centre 280 00:38:04,080 --> 00:38:07,360 now, talking to his flight controllers, reviewing status, 281 00:38:07,360 --> 00:38:12,000 in preparation for making the go/no go decision for undocking. 282 00:38:19,160 --> 00:38:22,280 Apollo 11, Houston, we are go for undocking. Over. 283 00:38:38,080 --> 00:38:40,000 Houston, you're looking good for separation, 284 00:38:40,000 --> 00:38:42,040 you are go for separation, Columbia. Over. 285 00:40:30,760 --> 00:40:32,160 Say again the angles, though. 286 00:40:32,160 --> 00:40:36,240 Roger. Pitch 212, yaw plus 37. 287 00:40:49,600 --> 00:40:54,640 In about 25 seconds from now, the important burn of the descent 288 00:40:54,640 --> 00:40:58,560 propulsion system engine of the lunar module will begin 289 00:40:58,560 --> 00:41:01,040 slowing it down for the landing on the moon. 290 00:41:24,080 --> 00:41:25,440 10% TCP. 291 00:41:25,440 --> 00:41:26,840 Rog, 10%. 292 00:41:26,840 --> 00:41:29,240 CRACKLING AND HISSING 293 00:41:36,000 --> 00:41:39,120 This is Apollo Control, we've had loss of signal now. 294 00:41:48,880 --> 00:41:51,600 SLOW BEEPING 295 00:43:34,680 --> 00:43:36,080 That's affirmative. 296 00:43:36,080 --> 00:43:38,200 ALARM BLARES 297 00:43:46,960 --> 00:43:48,280 1202. 298 00:44:49,920 --> 00:44:54,040 This landing is not just as simple as it sounds. 299 00:44:54,040 --> 00:44:56,840 They've got to come in over some rather high features 300 00:44:56,840 --> 00:45:01,000 before they make that set-down on a fairly flat point on the moon. 301 00:45:01,000 --> 00:45:03,640 The most difficult part of the mission is the landing. 302 00:45:03,640 --> 00:45:07,080 You have the manoeuvrability of a helicopter, so you can descend 303 00:45:07,080 --> 00:45:11,120 vertically, look at the area, and finally, pick out that one spot 304 00:45:11,120 --> 00:45:13,160 that is acceptable. 305 00:45:13,160 --> 00:45:15,600 The hard part, of course, is to get that close, 306 00:45:15,600 --> 00:45:18,280 and you have to commit to leaving, after all of this work, 307 00:45:18,280 --> 00:45:20,720 and I think that pressure is probably the greatest amount 308 00:45:20,720 --> 00:45:22,200 of pressure any crew will ever have. 309 00:45:25,000 --> 00:45:27,440 We are now in the approach phase, everything looking good. 310 00:45:31,920 --> 00:45:32,960 Roger, copy. 311 00:45:34,360 --> 00:45:39,600 And just 14 miles to go, 4ยฝ minutes is left in this era. 312 00:45:42,320 --> 00:45:45,600 ALARM BLARES 313 00:45:51,640 --> 00:45:54,120 1201 alarm. Same type, we're go, flight. OK, we're go. 314 00:46:09,560 --> 00:46:11,560 Roger, we copy you. 315 00:46:11,560 --> 00:46:12,600 35 degrees. 316 00:46:13,560 --> 00:46:17,000 35 degrees. 750. Coming down to 23. 317 00:46:18,000 --> 00:46:19,480 600 feet, down at 19. 318 00:48:20,640 --> 00:48:23,880 Roger, Tranquility, we copy you on the ground. 319 00:48:24,840 --> 00:48:26,840 You've got a bunch of guys about to turn blue, 320 00:48:26,840 --> 00:48:29,120 we're breathing again, thanks a lot. 321 00:48:30,400 --> 00:48:33,760 Oh, boy, Man on the moon. 322 00:48:36,200 --> 00:48:37,480 Boy... 323 00:48:40,160 --> 00:48:42,600 Wally, say something, I'm speechless. 324 00:48:42,600 --> 00:48:44,200 I'm just trying to hold on to my breath. 325 00:48:45,480 --> 00:48:46,800 That is really something. 326 00:48:48,760 --> 00:48:52,920 Roger. Tranquility. Be advised there's lots of smiling faces 327 00:48:52,920 --> 00:48:55,160 in this room and all over the world. Over. 328 00:49:00,120 --> 00:49:02,120 Roger. It was a beautiful job, you guys. 329 00:49:07,360 --> 00:49:09,200 Roger. We read you, Columbia. 330 00:49:09,200 --> 00:49:11,560 He has landed, Tranquility Base, 331 00:49:11,560 --> 00:49:13,480 Eagle is at Tranquility. Over. 332 00:49:16,440 --> 00:49:17,480 Good show. 333 00:49:54,920 --> 00:49:58,480 Well, this day has given us, Eric Sevareid, 334 00:49:58,480 --> 00:50:00,680 I guess our biggest story, 335 00:50:00,680 --> 00:50:03,160 nothing compares with this, I don't think. 336 00:50:03,160 --> 00:50:06,480 I think, Walter, sometimes it's easier to be an active 337 00:50:06,480 --> 00:50:10,120 participant in world-shaking things like this than an observer 338 00:50:10,120 --> 00:50:12,840 who can only sit. At least it's easier on the nerve ends, 339 00:50:12,840 --> 00:50:18,520 the thing that got us all downstairs in another office watching this, 340 00:50:18,520 --> 00:50:22,520 in those last few minutes and seconds, was the steadiness 341 00:50:22,520 --> 00:50:25,360 of those voices, of those two men. 342 00:50:26,760 --> 00:50:29,880 And as an old-fashioned humanist, that seemed, to me, a little 343 00:50:29,880 --> 00:50:32,440 reassuring that in those last second, the human hand 344 00:50:32,440 --> 00:50:36,080 and eye had to take over from the computer, if I understood exactly 345 00:50:36,080 --> 00:50:39,800 what was going on in that lunar module. 346 00:50:39,800 --> 00:50:42,640 Sitting here, I really was quite speechless, 347 00:50:42,640 --> 00:50:46,120 I don't think that's happened in my life. 348 00:50:46,120 --> 00:50:50,280 As a matter of fact, Armstrong's words were as eloquent 349 00:50:50,280 --> 00:50:52,360 as you could ask. 350 00:50:52,360 --> 00:50:55,000 "The Eagle has landed." The Eagle has landed. 351 00:50:55,000 --> 00:50:57,080 What more could you say? No more, no more. 352 00:51:02,280 --> 00:51:04,800 What do you think of Man's landing on the moon? 353 00:51:04,800 --> 00:51:06,760 It was just profound. 354 00:51:06,760 --> 00:51:09,680 Man has stepped off this planet, and I'm proud to be an American 355 00:51:09,680 --> 00:51:11,520 and an earthling. 356 00:51:11,520 --> 00:51:13,080 What was the reaction where you were? 357 00:51:13,080 --> 00:51:14,960 What does it mean to you? 358 00:51:14,960 --> 00:51:17,960 This is one moment I want to share with the American people. 359 00:51:17,960 --> 00:51:20,720 Yugoslavia, in fact, has adopted the three American 360 00:51:20,720 --> 00:51:22,520 astronauts as its own heroes. 361 00:51:22,520 --> 00:51:25,160 What's your reaction? What are your thoughts? How about you, sir? 362 00:51:25,160 --> 00:51:28,960 I am very proud to be a member of generation 363 00:51:28,960 --> 00:51:32,040 of this historical moment. 364 00:51:32,040 --> 00:51:34,800 I think this is a great day for Americans. 365 00:51:34,800 --> 00:51:37,120 I think maybe Mars might be next. 366 00:51:37,120 --> 00:51:38,320 Who knows? 367 00:51:46,760 --> 00:51:51,240 Buzz Aldrin and his co-pilot, Neil Armstrong, they've been on 368 00:51:51,240 --> 00:51:56,200 the moon for over two hours now, and Buzz Aldrin did take something 369 00:51:56,200 --> 00:52:00,040 with him today, most unusual, he took a part 370 00:52:00,040 --> 00:52:04,280 of the communal bread loaf from his church along with him 371 00:52:04,280 --> 00:52:07,640 so that, at his evening meal tonight, Sunday, 372 00:52:07,640 --> 00:52:11,240 he will, in a sense, share Communion with the people 373 00:52:11,240 --> 00:52:12,560 of his church. 374 00:52:17,280 --> 00:52:18,880 Tranquility, you can go ahead. 375 00:52:49,480 --> 00:52:50,840 Roger, Tranquility Base. 376 00:53:01,000 --> 00:53:06,600 And the least we can do is to accede to the request from the hero 377 00:53:06,600 --> 00:53:09,760 conquerors of space, Armstrong and Aldrin, 378 00:53:09,760 --> 00:53:13,400 to pause for a moment, and contemplate the last few hours, 379 00:53:13,400 --> 00:53:15,400 and give thanks in our own way. 380 00:53:32,000 --> 00:53:35,760 CBS News colour coverage of the epic journey of Apollo 11 will continue 381 00:53:35,760 --> 00:53:37,240 in a moment. 382 00:53:41,720 --> 00:53:44,040 We will get word from the spacecraft, 383 00:53:44,040 --> 00:53:48,680 that they intend to depressurise the cabin, and open the hatch 384 00:53:48,680 --> 00:53:51,600 in about 15 minutes from now. 385 00:54:08,400 --> 00:54:10,960 We are approaching one of the critical moments, 386 00:54:10,960 --> 00:54:15,120 and Neil Armstrong's father did say that he hoped that his son 387 00:54:15,120 --> 00:54:18,200 would have something to say on the surface of the moon. 388 00:54:18,200 --> 00:54:21,840 He said, "I hope he'll say something that unites the world." 389 00:54:21,840 --> 00:54:24,040 Neil Armstrong's mother said that, however, 390 00:54:24,040 --> 00:54:26,760 "Maybe he will be so thrilled, he won't have any words at all." 391 00:55:03,320 --> 00:55:04,480 Move. 392 00:55:53,960 --> 00:55:58,200 Buzz, this is Houston, radio check, and to verify TV circuit breaker in. 393 00:56:02,840 --> 00:56:05,040 Man, we're getting a picture on the TV. 394 00:56:08,120 --> 00:56:09,280 There's a foot going down. 395 00:56:09,280 --> 00:56:12,000 There he is, there's a foot coming the steps. 396 00:56:16,360 --> 00:56:19,080 OK, Neil, we can see you coming down the ladder now. 397 00:57:35,720 --> 00:57:38,040 That's one small step for Man... 398 00:57:40,600 --> 00:57:43,720 ..one giant leap for mankind. 399 00:57:46,400 --> 00:57:48,240 Armstrong is on the moon. 400 00:57:50,480 --> 00:57:54,720 38-year-old American, standing on the surface of the moon. 401 00:57:56,640 --> 00:57:57,680 Wow. 402 00:58:18,640 --> 00:58:20,720 Neil, this is Houston, we're copying. 403 00:58:22,800 --> 00:58:24,840 Boy, look at those pictures. 404 00:58:24,840 --> 00:58:28,400 Oh, thank you, television, for letting us watch this one. 405 00:58:28,400 --> 00:58:29,880 Isn't this something? 406 00:58:52,960 --> 00:58:55,480 Roger, Neil, we are reading you loud and clear. 407 00:59:50,840 --> 00:59:52,240 CHATTER 408 01:00:14,720 --> 01:00:17,080 I'm going to leave that one foot up there and... 409 01:00:58,000 --> 01:00:59,200 Ready for the camera? 410 01:01:02,840 --> 01:01:05,760 Why don't you turn around and let them get a view from there 411 01:01:05,760 --> 01:01:07,800 and see what the field of view looks like. 412 01:01:10,200 --> 01:01:13,480 Neil, this is Houston, we would like you to aim 413 01:01:13,480 --> 01:01:16,080 it a little bit more to the right. Over. 414 01:01:16,080 --> 01:01:17,120 OK. 415 01:01:19,000 --> 01:01:20,520 OK, that looks good, Neil. 416 01:01:27,400 --> 01:01:29,840 Now they are collecting now, the samples. 417 01:01:31,800 --> 01:01:35,280 We've got about another hour and five minutes of extra vehicular 418 01:01:35,280 --> 01:01:37,440 activity before the hatch is closed. 419 01:01:38,840 --> 01:01:42,600 I think all of us on Earth probably feel the same way. 420 01:01:42,600 --> 01:01:45,560 There will never be a day like this again, in any of our histories. 421 01:02:06,360 --> 01:02:07,400 Roger. 422 01:02:40,200 --> 01:02:42,280 Columbia, this is Houston. Over. 423 01:03:31,880 --> 01:03:35,520 Neil and Buzz, the President of the United States 424 01:03:35,520 --> 01:03:37,800 would like to say a few words to you. Over. 425 01:03:40,600 --> 01:03:42,200 All right, go ahead, Mr President. 426 01:03:45,000 --> 01:03:46,360 Hello, Neil and Buzz. 427 01:03:47,560 --> 01:03:51,440 I'm talking to you by telephone from the Oval Room at the White House. 428 01:03:53,680 --> 01:03:57,360 And this certainly has to be the most historic telephone call 429 01:03:57,360 --> 01:03:58,720 I've ever made. 430 01:04:00,920 --> 01:04:04,120 And as you talk to us from the Sea of Tranquility... 431 01:04:05,720 --> 01:04:09,800 ..it inspires us to redouble our efforts to bring peace 432 01:04:09,800 --> 01:04:11,760 and tranquillity to Earth. 433 01:04:50,560 --> 01:04:53,160 And thank you very much, and I look forward to seeing 434 01:04:53,160 --> 01:04:54,680 you on the Hornet on Thursday. 435 01:05:27,080 --> 01:05:28,240 Roger. 436 01:05:35,040 --> 01:05:37,760 In the foreground, Buzz Aldrin is collecting 437 01:05:37,760 --> 01:05:39,120 a core tube sample. 438 01:07:42,440 --> 01:07:44,880 Tranquility Base, this is Houston. 439 01:08:53,680 --> 01:08:56,240 Tranquily Base, this is Houston. Over. 440 01:09:19,640 --> 01:09:22,040 We want to make sure we check the breakers. 441 01:09:57,160 --> 01:09:58,800 Just one quickie. 442 01:09:58,800 --> 01:10:03,160 Mike, this is serious, really, if I can ask. 443 01:10:03,160 --> 01:10:05,960 How would you feel if you had to come home alone? 444 01:10:05,960 --> 01:10:07,640 Terrible. 445 01:10:07,640 --> 01:10:08,720 Really. 446 01:10:28,640 --> 01:10:31,440 We are keeping tuned now to Mission Control, 447 01:10:31,440 --> 01:10:33,720 and Houston has a go-through of checking out 448 01:10:33,720 --> 01:10:38,640 the spacecraft systems before men LEAVE the moon for the first time. 449 01:10:42,760 --> 01:10:44,280 Roger, go ahead. 450 01:10:44,280 --> 01:10:48,960 OK, on surface 57 there on your verb 21 noun 73, 451 01:10:48,960 --> 01:10:52,280 trunnion leave it at 180. 452 01:10:52,280 --> 01:10:54,280 The shaft, we'd like... 453 01:11:36,840 --> 01:11:38,200 Roger. 454 01:12:14,640 --> 01:12:16,800 700, 150 up, beautiful. 455 01:12:18,440 --> 01:12:21,360 The upper stage of the Eagle lifts off, 456 01:12:21,360 --> 01:12:24,360 leaving behind the now-useless landing stage, 457 01:12:24,360 --> 01:12:27,440 and swings into orbit to dock with Columbia once again. 458 01:12:31,200 --> 01:12:35,120 1,000 feet high, 80 feet per second vertical rise. 459 01:12:35,120 --> 01:12:37,200 Oh, boy, hot diggity dog. 460 01:12:37,200 --> 01:12:38,880 They are off and running now. Yes, sir. 461 01:12:41,000 --> 01:12:42,520 Armstrong and Aldrin. 462 01:12:42,520 --> 01:12:43,640 You're looking good. 463 01:12:45,000 --> 01:12:47,840 They are just short of 24 hours on the moon's surface, 464 01:12:47,840 --> 01:12:51,920 on the way back now to rendezvous with Mike Collins orbiting. 465 01:15:04,080 --> 01:15:05,760 This is Apollo Control. 466 01:15:06,760 --> 01:15:10,480 Communications are somewhat scratchy with Apollo 11. 467 01:15:14,360 --> 01:15:20,440 Columbia and Eagle now reunited to become Apollo 11, 468 01:15:20,440 --> 01:15:21,920 again. 469 01:15:48,280 --> 01:15:51,360 When the crew and moon samples are transferred to the command 470 01:15:51,360 --> 01:15:54,680 service module, the lunar module is discarded. 471 01:16:47,840 --> 01:16:51,080 30 seconds now until loss of signal, we've had a last status check 472 01:16:51,080 --> 01:16:53,160 from the flight director, and all around the room, 473 01:16:53,160 --> 01:16:54,200 the word is go. 474 01:17:08,640 --> 01:17:11,520 Apollo 11, Houston, you are a go for TEI. Over. 475 01:17:24,000 --> 01:17:27,200 Now, at this point, we are waiting as Mission Control 476 01:17:27,200 --> 01:17:31,800 and as the whole world, for this word, that behind the moon, 477 01:17:31,800 --> 01:17:36,840 out of touch with the Earth, the astronauts of Apollo 11 478 01:17:36,840 --> 01:17:42,680 have successfully fired the engine for the trans-Earth injection. 479 01:18:09,720 --> 01:18:11,960 They are on the edge of their seats, just as you and I are. 480 01:18:21,200 --> 01:18:23,120 Roger, we've got you coming home. 481 01:18:25,040 --> 01:18:26,600 They are on the way home. 482 01:18:26,600 --> 01:18:27,680 Hallelujah! 483 01:18:40,880 --> 01:18:45,560 PIANO PLAYS SOFTLY 484 01:18:54,240 --> 01:18:58,320 We're always going to feel somehow strangers to these men. 485 01:18:58,320 --> 01:19:01,080 They've peered into another life we can't follow. 486 01:19:04,000 --> 01:19:06,040 SINGING 487 01:19:06,040 --> 01:19:10,320 He said it was "pretty", the scene he saw on the moon. 488 01:19:15,040 --> 01:19:18,800 Somehow they found a strange beauty there that I suppose they can never 489 01:19:18,800 --> 01:19:20,720 really describe to us. 490 01:20:52,040 --> 01:20:56,720 MUSIC 491 01:21:00,200 --> 01:21:02,040 CLICK, MUSIC STOPS 492 01:21:40,360 --> 01:21:43,560 Apollo 11, lined up right down the middle of the entry corridor. 493 01:21:47,680 --> 01:21:51,840 As it approaches the re-entry speed of nearly 25,000 mph, 494 01:21:51,840 --> 01:21:53,760 the service module drops away. 495 01:22:06,200 --> 01:22:09,560 The command module, Columbia, is all that remains of the original 496 01:22:09,560 --> 01:22:12,720 3,000 tonnes of rocket, fuel, and cargo. 497 01:22:13,960 --> 01:22:16,760 The command module now plunges into the atmosphere, 498 01:22:16,760 --> 01:22:19,240 protected by its heat shield. 499 01:22:19,240 --> 01:22:21,520 Apollo 11, Houston, you are still looking mighty fine 500 01:22:21,520 --> 01:22:23,240 here, you are cleared for landing. 501 01:22:31,160 --> 01:22:32,200 Roger. Copy. 502 01:22:41,440 --> 01:22:44,960 Velocity 34,630 feet per second. 503 01:22:46,800 --> 01:22:50,800 Range to go to splash, 1533 nautical miles. 504 01:23:58,880 --> 01:24:00,840 Apollo 11, Houston through ARIA 4. 505 01:24:03,200 --> 01:24:06,360 Hornet reports a sonic boom a short time ago. 506 01:24:09,320 --> 01:24:13,040 Apollo 11, Houston, in the blind, Air-Boss has a visual contact. 507 01:24:16,480 --> 01:24:21,480 Apollo 11, Houston, through ARIA, standing by. Over. 508 01:24:21,480 --> 01:24:25,120 Maximum G-force should be just about now. 509 01:24:25,120 --> 01:24:29,640 We are seeing this glowing re-entry, like a comet coming back 510 01:24:29,640 --> 01:24:31,520 to the Earth's atmosphere. 511 01:24:34,760 --> 01:24:36,840 We are getting nothing from Mission Control, 512 01:24:36,840 --> 01:24:38,520 or from the spaceship. 513 01:24:40,440 --> 01:24:42,040 Come on, Houston, give us the word. 514 01:25:17,640 --> 01:25:19,600 Hot dog, Apollo 11 has made it. 515 01:25:54,720 --> 01:25:55,920 They're back from the moon. 516 01:25:57,080 --> 01:25:59,920 Astronauts Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins 517 01:25:59,920 --> 01:26:03,520 landing in the Pacific Ocean, southwest of Hawaii. 518 01:26:03,520 --> 01:26:06,720 APPLAUSE 519 01:27:18,120 --> 01:27:20,880 Houston, Tranquility. Over. 520 01:27:20,880 --> 01:27:22,760 Neil is now unveiling the plaque. 521 01:27:25,600 --> 01:27:30,560 Here, men from the planet Earth, first set foot upon the moon. 522 01:27:32,640 --> 01:27:34,720 We came in peace for all mankind. 523 01:27:35,880 --> 01:27:39,160 July 1969, AD. 524 01:27:46,720 --> 01:27:50,760 To find out more about Apollo 11, and examine moon rocks collected 525 01:27:50,760 --> 01:27:54,640 by the astronauts using a virtual microscope, go to... 526 01:27:57,800 --> 01:28:00,040 ..and follow the links to the Open University. 67161

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