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Here's an interesting one...
When people found out that Neil Armstrong would be the first human to walk on the moon, they kept asking him what he would say when he stepped off the Eagle lander. His mail was full of suggestions. Many people suggested verses from the Bible or words from Shakespeare.
It wasn't until the Eagle had landed on the moon that Armstrong finally decided what he was going to say.
What would you say if you got to walk on the moon?
Submitted by Karin (undergraduate business student)
(August 4,1997)
Here's an interesting one...
Soon after it was announced that Neil Armstrong would be the first human to walk on the moon, people began to ask him what he would say when he stepped on the moon. His mail had been full of suggestions, including verses from the Bible and passages from Shakespeare. Everyone from the press to his simulator instructor had brought it up. Even Collins and Aldrin are on record of having asked him on the way to the moon.
If it hadn't been for the fact that everyone made such a big deal of it, Armstrong probably wouldn't have thought of it at all. But the world was asking for historic words for a historic occasion. After the Eagle had landed on the moon, Armstrong could delay no longer. He had to decide what he would say when he stepped off the lander. He began to think of the first step he would take from Eagle's ladder. He pondered the irony of such a small step being of such importance. It was here that Armstrong's famous words became final.
Submitted by Karin (undergraduate business student)
(August 4, 1997)
Here's an interesting one...
Very soon after it was announced that Neil Armstrong would be the first human to walk on the moon, people began to ask him what words he would utter on this monumental occasion. His mail had been full of suggestions, including verses from the Bible, passages from Shakespeare, and countless others. Everyone from the press to his simulator instructor had brought it up. Even Collins and Aldrin are on record of having asked him on the way to the moon.
If it hadn't been for the fact that everyone made such a big deal of it, Armstrong probably wouldn't have thought of it at all. But the world was asking for historic words for a historic occasion. Inside the Eagle, already landed on the moon, Armstrong could delay no longer. He began to think of the first step he would take from Eagle's ladder. He pondered the paradox of such a small step being of such importance. And it was here that Armstrong's famous words became finalized.
Another interesting tidbit of lunar landing trivia is that Armstrong later reported that he intended to say,"...one small step for a man," but the indefinite article is missing from the recorded transmissions. In 1971, a writer asked him whether
the "a" had been lost in transmission or simply forgotten. Armstrong, savoring the ambiguity, replied, "We'll never know."
Submitted by Karin (undergraduate business student)
(August 4, 1997)
Last modified prior to September, 2000 by the Windows Team
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