Ok, we can verify the position of the opening on the camera. There is a foot. Mr. Cronkite there he is, there is a foot coming down the steps. Ok, neil. We can see you coming down the ladder now. [beep] ok, i just checked. Heading back up to the first step. It is adequate to get back up. Roger, we copy. It is a pretty good little jump. Mr. Cronkite so there is a foot on the moon. Stepping down on the moon. He is testing the first step, he must be stepping down on the moon at this point. Buzz, this is houston. Shadow photography on the sequence camera. [beep] ok. I am at the foot of the ladder. Under theeds are only surface only one or two inches. Veryurface appears to be finegrained as you get close to it, almost like a powder. It is very fine. Cronkite boy, look at those pictures. Wally wow. Mr. Cronkite a little shadowy, but he said expect that, on the on the shadow of the lunar module. Armstrong is on the moon, Neil Armstrong. 38yearold american standing on the surface of the moon, on this july 20, 1969. That is one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. I think that was neils quote. I didnt understand. One small step for man but i didnt get the second phrase. We would like to know what it was. Andhe surface is fine powdery. I can pick it up loosely. It appears in the fine layers like powdered charcoal to the sides of my boots. Walter that is one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. The footprint of my boots and the treads, are fine, sandy particles. Neil, this is houston, we are copying. Mr. Cronkite thank you, television for letting us watch this one. This is something. 240 thousand miles out there on the moon. There is difficulty moving around, as we suspected. It is even perhaps easier than s performed on the ground. Definitely no trouble to walk around. Mr. Cronkite that is good news. Mr. Armstrong it did not leave a crater of any size. There is about one foot clearance on the ground. I can see some evidence of rays emanating from the engine, but it is a very insignificant amount. We are mr. Cronkite we are going to have to mr. Cronkite we are fix that picture. Getting a negative picture back. Mr. Aldrin ready to bring down the camera . Mr. Armstrong i am all ready. Get it squared down and in good shape. Looks like it is coming down nice and evenly. Mr. Cronkite that is the conveyor to the tether line. A little hard for me to see, i have good footing. I will work my way over to the sunlight here without looking directly into the sun. Mr. Cronkite i dont know where in the houston converter or where the picture has gone to negative clarity. At least we can make out the figure of Neil Armstrong there. Unofficial time of first step, 1 09 20. 420. Ok, i am ready to pull it down. There is still a little bit left in the ok, dont hold it quite so tight. Mr. Cronkite he says this is like a clothesline. He is going to bring down the sequence camera now. The pictures, then a little later on looking up, i am standing directly in the shadow now and i can see everything quite clearly. The light is suspiciously bright and back lighted into the front of the lens and everything is very clearly visible. Mr. Cronkite so, mans first words, Neil Armstrongs first words on setting foot on the moon, are one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind. He found the bottom step of the ladder, slightly awry, but has no difficulty in climbing back up to the lunar module when they complete this walk. He found the surface more powdery than anticipated. He is sinking in about 1 8 of an inch you can see his prints in fine particles and lunar dust adhering to the boots. No difficulty in moving around, easier than the simulations on earth. He has about 25 minutes of activity here alone on the moons surface, testing the environment, moving around like this, taking a good look at the lunar module that he is giving us a check on. Seems to be in good shape. Very little scoring of the moons moons surface and the engine. The pads settled nicely, but not very deeply into the fine, powdery sand, fine powdery surface of the moon. Apparently it is in position for the platform for takeoff. We wouldve heard something i now from human. Installed on the bracket. Sergeant says the crew is doing well. I am still in the lec. Mr. Cronkite that would seem to indicate that they are not over exerting, i gather. Not exerting too much oxygen and there is not too much heat for the cooling system. One of our concerns were raised the fact that they are , not stressing. He has the camera with him now, i think that is the one that was lowered to him. It is not the sequence camera, which i believe stays in the lunar module. Roger, neil. We are reading you loud and clear. Get some pictures and the contingency sample. Mr. Cronkite i think the fight plan actually called for him to take the contingency sample first and then the pictures. As i recall in all my reading, the contingency sample 35 and a half minutes expended now. Mr. Pegues it is mr. Cronkite it is concerned confirmed that they are on a very level place. Which is good. It looked like they were coming down on a rough area. Maybe neil didnt get the contingency samples because he doesnt think there is any contingency. You copys houston, do about the contingency . Roger, i am going to get that as soon as i get the pictures. Mr. Cronkite you may be right, wally, as to what is in his mind. The contingency sample is really superfluous once they get the full sample, the rock and be documented sample. Which they identify rock by rock, where they got it, and that sort of thing. Although they are saying they want the contingency sample first, as they said in the fight plan. [laughter] wally make sure they get something. I have an idea were going to get everything we want. It is just going so beautifully. Mr. Cronkite moving around, the exertion they are showing when doing that neil is showing so far, of course, it is a great and that they learned already. We are going to get the contingency sample. The man is going to get tired of that in a minute. I wonder what he is up to now. [laughter] ok, the contingency sample is down. A little difficult to dig through the very interesting, it is a very soft surface. Here and there, where i plug in the contingency sample collector, i run into a very hard surface. But it appears to be a very cohesive material of the same sort. Ill try to get a rock in here. Just a couple. Mr. Cronkite he has got that little bag on a rim that he is tagging along with an extension handle across the surface. As he reports there, it is hard to get everything in. Mr. Armstrong it has a stark beauty all its own. It is like much of the high desert of the United States. It is different but very pretty out here. Mr. Cronkite very pretty. Mr. Armstrong a lot of the hard rock samples here appear to be vesicles in the surface. A pair be what . Wally vesicles. [beep] i am looking at one now. Houston, roger that. Ok, the handle is off it pushes in about, six or eight inches into the surface. Looks like it is quite easy to [indiscernible] mr. Armstrong i am sure i could push it in farther but it is hard for me to bend down further than that. Didnt know you could throw so far. Mr. Armstrong you can really throw things along way up here. A long way up here. Is my pocket open, buzz . Buzz yes it is. It is not up against your suit, though. Put it more toward the inside. Ok, that is good. Mr. Armstrong that in the pocket . Mr. Aldrin push down. Got it . It is not all the way in. Push it. There you go. Mr. Armstrong contingency sample is in the pocket. Oxygen is 81 . I have no flags, and im in minimum flow. [beep] this is houston. Roger, neil. Mr. Aldrin ok, i have the camera on that one frame a second. Mr. Armstrong ok. Mr. Aldrin and i have got 80 oxygen. No flags. Mr. Armstrong are you getting a tv picture now, houston . [beep] neil, yes we are getting a tv picture. Neil, this is houston. We are getting a picture. Youre not in it at the present time. We can see the bag on the lec being moved by buzz. Ready for me to come out . Mr. Armstrong yeah, just stand by a second. I will move this over the handrail. Mr. Cronkite talk about being super casual. Hope he doesnt get too casual. Mr. Aldrin are you ready . Mr. Armstrong ok. I almost thought that was a simulation. You saw what difficulties i was having. I will try to watch from underneath. Mr. Cronkite aldrin about to emerge from the spacecraft. Armstrong is going to try to help guide him from below. He watches the portable lifesupport system as he climbs out. Mr. Armstrong ok, your plss looks like it is clearing ok. Your toes are about to come over the sill. Now drop down. There you go, you are clear. Laterally, you are good. About an inch clear. Mr. Aldrin you need a little bit of arching of the back to come down. How far are my feet from the edge . Mr. Armstrong you are right at the edge of the porch. Mr. Aldrin ok. Now a little foot movement. Little arching of the back. Home comes up and has cleared the bulkhead without any trouble at all. Mr. Armstrong looks good. Mr. Cronkite 45 minutes plss time expended. Neil, this is houston. Based on your camera transfer with the lec, do you foresee any difficulties in transfer . Over. Mr. Armstrong negative. Mr. Cronkite the src is the sample rock container . It is a sample return that contains the rock boxes. Backup impartially cleared. In case anybody comes by, they want the door closed. Mr. Cronkite this camera angle makes those steps look like they are vastly higher than they are. Make sure not to lock it on the way out. [laughter] a good thought. What did he say . Wally make sure not to lock it. [laughter] ok, i am on the top step and. An look down over the icu matter to hop down from one step to the next. Mr. Cronkite here he comes. Mr. Armstrong walking is very comfortable. Youve got three more steps and then a long one. Mr. Cronkite watch that last step. Wally i guess he expected the steps to compact a little more. As a result is it is a long step. Mr. Aldrin i am on the fourth rung up. Mr. Cronkite and now we have two americans on the moon. Mr. Armstrong a little more. About another inch. You got it . Mr. Aldrin that is a good step. Mr. Armstrong yeah, about a three footer. Mr. Cronkite a threefoot first step at 16 gravity. Magnificent. Mr. Cronkite but walking on a trampoline. My. Pl ss is nominal. Secondary strut has little thermal effect. Effects are all around. Had a little thermal effect on it. Mr. Armstrong i noticed that. Seems to be the worst, although similar effects are all around. Mr. Aldrin very fine powder, isnt it . Mr. Armstrong isnt it fine . Mr. Aldrin it is hard to tell whether it is a or a rock. Mr. Armstrong notice how you can kick it out. Mr. Aldrin yeah, it bounces. Mr. Cronkite look at this. [laughter] mr. Aldrin reaching down, fairly easy. Getting my suit dirty at this stage. The mass of the backpack does have some effect on inertia. In inertia. There is a slight tendency, i can see now, to backwards due to the soft, very soft texture. Mr. Armstrong you are standing on a big rock there now. Wally very shortly, armstrong is to take the camera out of that tray and move it out about 30 feet from the spacecraft so they have a view of the entire area. Mr. Aldrin i wonder if it under the engine is where the probe might have hit. Mr. Armstrong i think that is a good representation of the side word velocity approach down there. Mr. Aldrin i see that probe over on the minusy strut. Mr. Cronkite mr. Aldrin is following the flight plan and testing. Mr. Aldrin cant say too much for the visibility. Very dark. Surface of a flat, rounded rock. Incidentally, these rocks are very powdery surfaced. [beep] say again, please, buzz. You are cutting out. Mr. Aldrin i said the rocks are rather slippery. Roger. Mr. Aldrin very powdery surface. Fill up all the little very fine pores. Wally that would be armstrong looking right at the camera lens detaching the camera, setting it up on a stand, then puts it back and then focus it back at the command module. They are getting ready to move the tv camera to its panorama position. Traction seems quite good. Mr. Cronkite oh, the picture is inverted again. [laughter] mr. Aldrin start to lose my balance in one direction and recovery is quite natural and very easy. Moving your arms around, jack, doesnt lift you off the surface. Not quite that lightfooted. Mr. Armstrong i have the insulation off the mesa now. It seems to be in good shape. Mr. Aldrin got to be careful that you are leaning in the direction you want to go, otherwise you slightly inebriated. You have to cross your foot over to stay underneath where your center of mass is. Walter [laughs] mr. Aldrin hey, neil, didnt i say we might see some purple rocks . Mr. Armstrong find a purple rock . Mr. Aldrin yep. Mr. Cronkite sounds so happy. Just beaming over there. Mr. Aldrin very small. Sparkly. The fragments are in places. Take a first guess, some sort of we will leave that to the further analysis. Mr. Cronkite buzz aldrins transmissions are breaking up. Mr. Aldrin quarter of an inch. Mr. Armstrong ok, houston. I am going to change lenses on you. It is a brown type of wally they have three lenses, i believe. Wideangle 90 millimeter. Consumable still looking good. Mr. Armstrong ok, houston. Tell me if you are getting a picture. Neil, this is houston, that is affirmative. All systems are go. Over. Mr. Aldrin we appreciate that, thank you. Mr. Cronkite i believe the camera is still in the mesa tray. They hadnt moved it out. Would be a much wider view from several feet away. Wally it could be, yes. Mr. Aldrin neil is now unveiling the plaque. Roger, we have got you foresighted. [beep] just leave it. Mr. Armstrong put it like that and walk around it. Good. That fieldofview is going to pick up the mesa. Good. Mr. Cronkite look at the reflection where the moon hits the surface. Houston, if the view is good we would like you to aim it more to the right. Over. Mr. Armstrong ok. Mr. Aldrin that is all the cable we have. Mr. Cronkite the director is still has control. [laughter] a little too much to the right, can you bring it back left about four or five degrees . [beep] ok, that looks good, neil. Mr. Armstrong ok. Further away or closer . Mr. Aldrin cant get too much further away. Mr. Armstrong lets try it like that for a while. I will get a couple of panoramas with it here. [beep] roger. You look ok as far as systems go. You are going to fast on the panorama sweep. You are going too fast page are going to have to stop. Mr. Armstrong i have not set it down yet. That is the first picture of the panorama. Right there. Roger. Mr. Cronkite does that look a lot like you thought it might look . Wally yes it does. They are doing such a fine job. Mr. Armstrong north, northeast. Tell me if you got a picture, houston . We got a beautiful picture, neil. Mr. Armstrong ok, i am going to move it. Mr. Aldrin ok, here is another good one. Ok, weve got that one. Mr. Armstrong this one is right downsun. I want to know if you can see the angular rock in the foreground. Roger, we have a large rock in the foreground. Looks like a much smaller rock a couple inches to the left of it. Over. Mr. Armstrong beyond it about 10 feet is another larger rock. That rock, the closest want to closest one to you is sticking out, it is about a foot and a half long, and about six inches thick. It is standing on edge. Roger. Mr. Aldrin ok, neil. Ive got the table out and i have a bag deployed. Weve got this view, neil. Mr. Armstrong this is straight south. Roger. We see the shadow of the lm. Mr. Armstrong the little hill just beyond the shadow of the lm is a pair of elongated craters, about 40 feet long and 20 feet across. Probably six feet deep. We will probably get some more work in there later. [breeze blowing] mr. Armstrong how is that for a final . For a final orientation, wed like it to go left about five degrees. Over. Now, back to the right about half as much. Mr. Armstrong ok. Mr. Aldrin ok, that looks good there, neil. Mr. Armstrong ok. One hour in seven minutes time expended. Wally looks like he is casually walking. Incidentally, you can use the shadow the staff makes to assist you getting it perpendicular. Wally buzz is erecting the solar wind experiment now. Mr. Cronkite the solar wind is not a wind we know it like it is on earth something you feel against your cheek. Mr. Aldrin it has stopped. Maybe two or three inches. Exactly what the pictures showed when they pushed away a little bit. You get force transmitted through the upper surface of the soil and about five or six moves as if it were caked on the surface, when in fact it really isnt. Mr. Armstrong i noticed in the soft spots, where we have footprints nearly an inch deep that the soil is very cohesive. It will retain a slope of probably 70 degrees along the side of the footprints. I sure hope there is no area that is blacked out from the television right now. Mr. Cronkite while there is, russia, the soviet, and china. It is a shame, more than a fourth of the world are being denied this picture by their rulers. Most of the rest of the world, though, including in other communist nations, it is being displayed, including eastern europe. We can kind of see the footprints. Wally i agree. Mr. Cronkite man leaving his footprints on the moon. Without any atmosphere, no wind or rain to wear them away. They might stay there for quite a long time. This is armstrong. Wally he cant believe it. Did anything come out did anything come out . Get that part . That is the rock. Wally they are collecting now the rock samples. These are the ones they will it in a bag and then into the box, the vacuum box. You will have to extend that one. Wally looks like the core they are driving down. Cant really tell. Columbia, columbia. This is houston. Over. Houston, als. Over. Wally they have got a core, a piece of pipe, in effect, that they attached onto this handle. Neil armstrong has been on the surface now about 45 minutes. Wally they hammer that into the surface and get a sample down below the actual surface, which they already have contaminated with the engine and with their presence. They have to go below, under the contamination, down to almost a foot or so, i think. 16 inches. Wally 16 inches. A little more than they can get by scraping on the surface themselves. Houston, columbia on the high again. Over. Columbia, this is houston, reading you loud and clear. Over. Reading you loud and clear. How is it going . Roger. The eva is progressing beautifully. I believe they are setting up the flag now. Great. They started out behind time on this. I guess youre about the only person around that doesnt have tv coverage of the scene. Wally this is the flag, not the core sample. [laughter] thats all right, i dont mind a bit. Mr. Cronkite he doesnt mind a bit not having the television right now. How is the quality of the tv . It is beautiful, mike. It really is. Wally there it is pure the u. S. Flag. They have the flag up now. You can see the stars and stripes on the lunar surface. Beautiful. Just beautiful wally the flag is on a frame, there is no wind, though. It is a three foot by five foot flag and it has a frame of its own to hold it on. Do you need to pull that in . Over. Mr. Cronkite seems like they ought to be some views it. [chuckles] it wont go in. Ok. Mr. Cronkite looks like they are having a little trouble getting that into the surface. Wally lightly, he moves back. I think they are taking pictures of each other with the camera. Yep, exactly what they are doing. The first tourists on the moon. Mr. Cronkite from their description, sounds like a place we would like to go to after all. Aldrin called it a magnificent desolation. Aldrin said stark beauty on its own. Different from the United States desert. It does look pretty out there. Kind wordsthe first of the moon. Those on the surface think there is something about it. Neil, this is houston. Radio check. Over. Wally maybe they think of it as not so pretty but their own. Mr. Armstrong houston, loud and clear. Mr. Aldrin loud and clear, houston. Roger, buzz. Wally they can claim it for now, at least. Mr. Cronkite they cannot claim it the declaration of the united nations. They all agreed that they would not claim the moon but use it for military purposes. So this planting of the flag is not the old 15th, 16th, 17th century planting a flag and claim territory. It is to put the United States flag there to let the world know that we are there. The sense of pride the American People feel in this tremendous accomplishment. Mr. Aldrin i believe i am out of your field of view, is that right, houston . Affirmative, buzz. You are in our field of view now. Mr. Aldrin you do have to be careful to keep track of where your center of mass is. It takes a good two or three paces to make sure youve got your feet underneath you. [laughter] mr. Cronkite that powder. Canhree or four easy paces bring a fairly smooth stop. Mr. Cronkite looks like it is getting pretty frisky up there. Use have to go out to the side and cut a little bit. A socalled kangaroo hop. Seems like you forward ability is not quite as good. As good as it is in the conventional sense. This when im using now this one im using now could get rather tiring. Aldrin this may be a function of this suit as well as the lack of Gravity Force here. Can we get both of you in the frame, please . Wally i think we are going to have an announcement here. Mr. Armstrong roger, we are about to get in the frame of the camera. Mr. Cronkite yeah, i think something important is coming up. Neil and buzz, the president of the United States is in the office now and what like to Say Something to you. Over. Mr. Armstrong that would be an honor. Go ahead, mr. President. This is houston come out. Hello, neil and buzz. I am talking to you on telephone from the oval room in the white house. This has to be the most historic telephone call ever made from the white house. I cant tell you how proud we all are of what you have done. For every american, this has to be the proudest day of our lives. And for people all over the world, i am sure that they, too, joined with americans in recognizing what an immense feat this is. Because of what you have done, the heavens have become a part of mans world. And as you talk to us from the sea of tranquility, it inspires us to redouble our efforts to bring peace and tranquility to earth. For one priceless moment in the whole history of man, all the people on this earth are truly one. One in their pride in what you have done and one in our prayers that you will return safely to earth. Mr. Armstrong thank you, mr. President. It is a great honor and privilege for us to be here representing not only the United States, but men of peace of all nations, and with interest and curiosity, and men with a vision for the future. Its an honor for us to be able to participate here today. President nixon thank you, very much. All of us look forward to seeing you splash down on thursday. Mr. Armstrong thank you. Mr. Aldrin look forward to that very much, sir. Mr. Cronkite splashdown should be on thursday in honolulu, hawaii. Roger, i have the b22 for you. Mr. Armstrong roger, go ahead. P22, landmark i. D. , t11102656. T211032 mr. Cronkite they are reading off the Engineering Data again. 110340. Mr. Cronkite electrical storm in flagstaff, arizona has denied the picture of this landing to the people at the geological laboratory. They have worked and lived on this thing for years and now they are not getting the picture because of the electrical storm. Similarly, an electrical storm in falls church, virginia and college park, maryland. Mr. Aldrin it is very interesting to note that when i kick my foot, there is no atmosphere here. They seem to leave and most of them have the same angle of departure and velocity. From where i stand, a large portion of them will impact at a distant to the south. [indiscernible] highly dependent upon the traditional trajectory upwards from where already the particles are. Roger, buzz. Columbia, this is houston. Request omni delta. Omni delta. Over. Just as i go in, there is a reflection off my face onto the visor, makes visibility very poor just the transition. Sunlight into the shadow. I have so much glare coming onto my visor. The helmet actually get the shadow and then it takes a short while for my eyes to adapt to the conditions. Visibility, as weve said before, is not too great. But both visors up, we can certainly [indiscernible] mr. Aldrin after being out in the sun we can see you on the cable. Ok. Mr. Aldrin your toe is still hooked in it. Mr. Armstrong that one . Mr. Aldrin yes. Ok, you are clear now. Mr. Armstrong thank you. Wally Neil Armstrong has the scoop for the bulk sample collection. They have about another hour and 25 minutes of activity before it will be closed. They have an hour more on the scope. It has completely disappeared now. I dont know what color to describe this other than a grayishpurple color. We are recovering most of the lighter part of the boot. Very fine particles. Buzz, this is houston. You are cutting out at the end of your transmissions. Can you move your microphone over . Mr. Aldrin roger. I will try that. Beautiful. Mr. Aldrin that went inside my mouth that time. It got a little wet. Neil has been on the surface for an hour now. Buzz, not quite 20 minutes less than that. In general, time spent in the shadow [indiscernible] inside the suit. There is a difference but a tendency to be cooler than out in the sun. This is houston. One hour and a half extended on the poss. This is houston. Over. They are working on this rock sample. Scoop up some of the rocks and put them in a bag that can be transferred. Columbia, this is houston. Over. You should have aos right about now. It will be 40 minutes and 15 seconds. It will be 40 minutes and 15 seconds. You have to realize on the moon, if they wore that pack on the ground he would be 360 pounds. On the moon he is 60 pounds. There is a scoop or you got a good picture of it there. You have a square bucket light scoop on the end of the extension arm and it drags it across the surface. Averaging between 90 and 100. Flight surgeon reports right on the predicted number of the btu units expended in energy. He thinks they are in great shape. Looking around, the contrast in general differs greatly by virtue of the [indiscernible] very light colored gray, light gray color halo around my own shadow in the shadow of my helmet. Then as i look across, the contrast becomes longer. The color is still fairly light. Sun, alook down into the larger amount of shadowed area is looking toward us. Is darker. Color the contrast is not as big. Surveying the area that we have picked up, considerably darker. I imagine this is the [indiscernible] the same is true five survey around the area. It is generally a darker contrast. For those of you trying to take chairs off of your television tube of these men on the moon, hints from cbs news Photography Department regarding this matter first of all, for those with simple cameras Neil Armstrong bringing the Neil Armstrong bringing the scoop up. We have about an hour or more. Roger. Right in this area there are two craters. The one that is in front of me now as i look at the Eleven Oclock position is 30 to 35 feet across. It is 68 inches across. The photographer suggest you try to take a picture with a simple camera, one that you cannot focus or change the lens opening. Stand back at least five feet, turn up the brightness and stand at least five feet away. Buzz is behind at the minus z strut. If you have an adjustable camera, try a film with a 56 lens and a shutter speed at 130 seconds. You are directly opposite the ladder. That is for black and white. 56 opening, speed of 130, daylight color film they suggest the set at 28 and shutter speed of 115 for the setting. To minimize the bluish cast using 81 a or skylight. If you havent got them, you can rush out and get them now but if you have them, that is the suggestion of the cbs photographic team. They have been on the surface an hour and 10 minutes. Mr. Cronkite between the lens it might eliminate the bar that we are getting across the screen. We dont see it with the eye but the camera operating at a speed will see it. We are now in the area of the minus y strut. Taking photographs. Mr. Cronkite one of the important things we are finding out with more than hour of walking in the moon behind us buzz is making his way around and photographing and looking at the condition on both sides. Mr. Cronkite is that the energy extended, heat rate, body temperature, cooling of the suit, all of these things are working as they planned them. Still occupied with the rock sample. Mr. Cronkite things indicate, wally, we will have more exploration in the future without the pain we have had and with the old eva. I believe we are doing better. 40 minutes time expended on the poss now. They are doing better than anticipated and having more emotion than anticipated. Rock sample is in the field. Mr. Cronkite they have 15 rocks sealed for samples and these are the documented rocks, presumably, once they take up individually and photographed where they got them and they put them in a box with the proper number to identify. These are not just the raw rock samples. Presumably, they have completed that and have a couple boxes of those. Now they are getting the specific documented samples. Columbia, this is houston. Go ahead. Over. [indiscernible] i did see a suspiciously small white object. Go ahead with the coordinates of the small white object. 3736, it is on the southwest ramp of the crater. It looks like they were able to pick it up at quite a degree. It is on the southwest wall of the crater. Roger. Copy. Echo decimal three and seven decimal six. Columbia, this is houston. While i am talking to you. We will be at 111 and one niner, 1120523. Over. Mr. Cronkite he said he saw white object down below it was on the rim of the crater and was sure if it was the module they were on the rim of the crater. I suppose it could be, couldnt it, that the definition of a crater 69 miles up might be such that they wouldnt recognize it . That is possible. It seems to be that it could be the crater. If there was that much light on the rim itself which may make it difficult to see what we see. What we see is a very dim object. Just imagine what they see. Mr. Cronkite it is a reflective surface from this angle, anyway. [indiscernible] you are breaking up again, buzz. I say the jet deflector on quad four seems to be more wrinkled than the one on quad one. It seems to have set up quite well to the pictures in the part of the lens that illuminate the thermal effect much better than we can get them up here in the front. Roger that. We want to get some particular photographs of the. Ok. Mr. Cronkite the Associated Press writer in the space station in houston has a wonderful lead on his story. I am showing 3. 78 at a time. Mr. Cronkite he said they kept the whole world waiting while they dressed to go out. Once the whole world saw Neil Armstrongs one small step for man, one giant step for mankind. It could take them as long to prepare for the walk on the moon as they had planned for. Roger. Neil is 66 02. Minimum cooling. Pressure is 382. Houston, roger that. Mr. Cronkite they all sound like good figures. Very good. Particularly the minimum cooling. That is great to see that perform so well. Neil has finished collecting and packing the rock sample. Buzz, this is houston. Have you removed the closeup camera . [indiscernible] negative, thank you. Look at the first step they have been there a little over an hour. Mr. Cronkite that is what you are talking about earlier and they adapted to the weightlessness of the spaceflight and now the weightlessness of the moon. Unbelievable. They are all members of the club now. It was a hard fight years ago. Mr. Cronkite one of the arguments about not sending man up there thinking he couldnt survive in space and on the moon. [indiscernible] roger, it looks like we are half an hour slow and we are working on it. All right. Arent you glad there are no chimpanzees standing there right now . Mr. Cronkite they were the first experimenters on the moon and explorers. They are running about a half hour behind the plan, as you heard from Mission Control for what they will do on the moons surface. However, we heard a moment ago that they have finished packing the rock samples. We havent heard of the deployment of the socalled early apollo experiment. Buzz, this is houston. To clarify, you are in good shape at this time. A phenomenal timeline. Over. Roger, i understand that. Mr. Cronkite there is a seismometer experiment that they leave on the moon surface and will send back for a period of time reports on the impact of the moons surface are any earthquakes. There is a prismlike mirror that puts lasers. If you have a powerful enough laser and a lot of people do, you can try to focus on the reflector with a laser beam. That is a controlled beam of light to the moon. There is a known time and the return of the light signal and we will get measurements of the moons wobble and the earths wobble with those measurements. Slightly over an hour and 20 minutes. No abnormalities in the rim. That seems to be in good shape. The antennas are in place. There is no evidence of problem underneath or any drainage of any kind. Roger that. Is very surprisingly lack of penetration of all four of the foot beds. You can see that clearly in the picture. Thats clearly visible. Theres a picture, thats all. The size of the discs at the bottom of the struts at which they are landing. There is a defense stage. I think we will be able to see. Mr. Cronkite i am a little confused. There were 15 rocks, individual rocks that were documented. And yet the documented rock samples are at the tale end of their series of experiments on the moon. We talking about 15 samples of rock. Looking at the skirt of the defense stage. Mr. Cronkite actually, the word that was passed to me was 15 rocks. Radiating or edging away of the surface. Both of us were marked there was a large amounts. Is reported beforehand was enabled to verify that. Mr. Cronkite they said the ceiling hatched just from an hour from now, from hatch opening to hatched ceiling. Guess, i taking a wild would say that would be then a half hour. Its just too big and angle, neil. Neil. An angle, yeah, i think you are right. Far, theite so contingency and the bulk right all rock sample. They have deployed the television set. They had the ceremony with president next and. As the president greeted them on. He moon and then the two men standing on either side have deployed to the right of the lunar module. They passed to the seismology experiments and got the documented sample of rocks. Force of impact that we actually had. Mr. Cronkite they are still inspecting the lunar module. This inspection has scientific value as well. Ok. Columbia, columbia, this is houston. Go ahead, bud. Take a photograph or something and then want to start moving sideways. But if they do that with gradual sideways hops roger. Dcs do you see us . Buzz, we can see your feet sticking out underneath the. Tructure just on the other side. Now we can see the secondary struts. Bay contains the scientific experiments to be left on the surface of the moon the laser reflector. It looks like they are going to stay up without any problems. Thisumbia, columbia, is houston. We are about to lose you. Over. Pick an area, neil. Yaw 175, columbia. [indiscernible] roger that. The surgeon says everything looks fine. An hour and a half of lunar surface time for Neil Armstrong. About the same timeline as the earlier plan. Now. S 21 minutes from armstrong bought is about 10 minutes later. They have been deployed manually. We have been on the portable lifesupport systems for two hours now. This success of the landing and the first walked on the moon dan rather the president can be expected to make of policy decision today. That will be deployed manually also. It seems to be recommended that it be going to mars. This is the 730 position. Neil armstrong to the left of the screen. Got us a good area picked out. I think this area is as good as any. Stay on the high ground. It. Atch, they are in quite rounded, large boulders. Buzz aldrin on the right. s going to be difficult to find a good level. Would that be a pretty good place . Theyre going to have to get on the other side of this rock here. Left. Right around to the they will be out of the camera field of view well setting up these experiment. Can you make out probably 2 and the thing , i do not before believe i believe that before. Creator, it looks like impact craters. I dont see either. The advisors think that is a solar wind experiment. Flatat deployed to a surface. Flat surface . Were looking at that side on. It may very well blow that flag over. Write about there. Fume picture missions may have that. Future missions may have that. They are using the lunar module. As it is, this picture is being transmitted through an antenna. This is the seismic experiments. Difficultybit of getting it to the center. You are coming out again, buzz. You are cutting out again, buzz. Mr. Cronkite we see the men go back to that spot. Ill think we have any complaints about the television on this one. Mr. Cronkite suggested to staff, the test pattern for the tv camera, very well may be. Youre looking at that bright, shiny surface on the lions the lens. Its level. The alignment appears to be good. Looking at these documented rock samples. Silent. Perfectly level, too. Mr. Cronkite it looks like that is than suspended so it vertical, so you can get the proper resolution of the camera. A leveling device to come up with an accurate level. It looks to me as though the rather thanex concave, over. It looks level by eyeball. The carpenters level. The curve is going up and it is downhill. How can that be . What we are discussing is on a leveling device on the seismometer. You know what is really lacking is the huffing and puffing of the gemini days. Mr. Cronkite i think i can, i think i can. It wont work. Backup. Backup. Houston the right hands solar delay deployed automatically. The lefthand is at the far end. We are at the grand now ground now. Bad jet, affirmative. Theres no way of telling if that is lined up without getting in the way. Mr. Cronkite pictures look like some of those early movies of science fiction, a man on the moon, dont they . It looks like those movies. Incredible. Just before they started the he said i sure wish id shaved last night. [laughter] in good shape. We would like to extend the duration of the eva we will and acts uzz over. An extra 15 minutes on the moons surface, they are doing so well. Aldrinsd make entrance into the lunar module about five minutes after the hour. 2 12 is the time expended on the plss. Ofcould you get a photograph the level, over . I will do that, buzz. We will get a photograph of that. Houston, at what time do we need to have the documented sample, over . s right in the middle now. Mr. Cronkite talking about that little ball the bubble. We are estimating two minutes, over. Mr. Cronkite the laser leaves onlyads the documented rock sample. That got another 15 minutes. Go ahead, houston. Columbia. Commenced like to charging the battery at 1 11. Cronkite Michael Collins they are constantly monitoring the systems on columbia. They are alert. Ot worried things are going well there, too. This is houston. Youve got about 10 minutes left prior to commencing your eva termination activities, over. Roger, i understand. I know how he feels when he sees Something Like this coming to a close. Its a real letdown. Mr. Cronkite i think all of us on earth, including those of us might be a little bit sleepy, coming on 6 00 in europe would watch this for a long time. This is houston. [indiscernible] uncaged. En we are observing short period oscillations, over. The footprints are working Neil Armstrong has been on the surface about an hour and 15 minutes. While were talking about standing on the moon mr. Cronkite [indiscernible] anytime. [indiscernible] guess. Time, i mr. Cronkite the words of an old song come to me. There ought to be a moonlight savings time. Overtime. Moonwalk on both coming back home there. You see them driving that cord town now. There they are. Hammering on the crossbar. Thats the moons surface. Is collecting accord to sample. I hope you are watching how hard i have to hit this into the ground to the tune of about five inches, houston. They thought maybe they could put it in the hands. In the wahhaj the desert, it a sledgehammer to get a spike into that. It almost looks wet. Got a sample. I gather, we have had some inquiries. , thentioned that glare glare on the screen on the lefthand side. It, thatsho missed the sun reflecting on one of the struts. Two core tubes and the solar wind, over. Mr. Cronkite on the right the american flag. They dont have much definition of the stars there. They missed the report. Mr. Cronkite we did get some inquiries. A purely some people did. Yall take care. Buzz, this is houston, you have approximately three minutes must commence your eva activities. Roger, i understand. Columbia, this is houston, minute to los. Ne over. Do you plan on commencing on the backside . So, well disable the up link. O you chlt you able to ere record in a documentary way tube samples were tan . I didnt get they are mainly in the vicinity of the solar rim. This is houston, youve got tube. You can throwthat into the box. A litterbug . Going to be litter bugs, leaving a lot of equipment need to they dont bring it back with them. They dont want to weigh down module. Getting rocks. [inaudible] looking at busy them, its unbelievable. That will be determinative. With all the stuff to be left to he moon, the cost we had ay for it in development and engineering and manufacturing about 1. 25 million. Portable life support systems. Houston, its about time for start your close out activities. About a thousand dollars a piece just in those two life support systems. They have been on their life support system 2 25. The important thing is you to leave some of that would call here mass behind. O be balanced out by the rocks that they are taking back. Pad about a pound represents about 500 pounds. If you take it to the moon and bring it back. And u take it to the moon leave it there its a little pounds on the launch pad. By no means a pure fact but of a ratio. Rocks to the right of the screen. They are going to be getting ready very shortly to climb up module again, his on the moon terminated. This is houston, i would like remind you of the closeup leader. Start up the cameras underneath, have to im picking up everal pieces of this particular rock out here now. Camera. Film going to rest on the moon. Be left there. Thats worth 50,000 itself, and the television camera, the estimate there is a quarter of a illion to half a million dollars. Camera magazine, im closing out the sample. Running low on time. Whats your Weight Reduction program . This is one of the things we about. Leaving these items behind. When they talked about they 130 to bring back 100 to pounds of rock instead of bringing back this equipment one of the firms in houston said, we an 11,000 camera looks like. We dont know what moon lock looks like. Moon rock. I can quickly take this and head up the ladder. Houston is being very lenient on buzz r timeline going back up. I thought at the moment that hey got out a little early according to the timeline. Else before i head up . The leader, buzz. Head on up. Close to an order as i have heard. Step. T leaped up on the hes left the moons surface. The ladder. Limbing o trouble getting that first step. There you see him. The flag over on the right. Above white dot right the horizon on the right is a from the tv ot in the park station in australia doesnt mean anything to me. Buzz aldrin and Neil Armstrong. Years old, montclair, new jersey. Walk on the his moon. Climbing back into the lunar commander, Neil Armstrong, will finish his walk aldrin is up z there. Of this historic walk right there on television, rom a quarter of a million miles out from space. Buzz does have a first. One to leave the moon. [laughter] i hope history records that three men made this trip. Drin andmstrong, buzz alleged mike collins. Neil armstrong would agree certainly that history simply record that the first man on the moon was Neil Armstrong. Period. Okay. On in. Ding okay. Neil has been on the surface a few minutes longer than two hours. 20 uzz, approximately minutes less than that. This is houston. Did the magazine go off on that container also . Brand got half a azine hooked roger. Of losing t a record those film and camera magazines in space. Leave the cameras but not the pictures they took. Nothing worse coming home a vacation and finding that pictures of the kids. All weekend American History tv is looking back 50 years to landing. Lo 11 moon we continue now with cbs live coverage of the return and ecovery of the apollo 11 astronauts on july 24, 1969. The broadcast includes president interviews of the three astronauts, buzz aldrin, neil rmstrong and Michael Collins aboard the uss hornet. The ship that retrieved the module from a d rearea of the pacific ocean. This is American History tv on 3 where every weekend we explore our nations past