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[b]Space Autograph of the Week Topic 3: Neil Armstrong[/b] Sadly, Neil Armstrong passed away on August 26, 2012 from complications related to his heart bypass surgery earlier in the month. This is truly, one giant loss for all mankind... It is fitting that we thus honor Neil Armstrong as the Space Autograph Topic of the Week. [IMG]http://i759.photobucket.com/albums/xx232/yeknom-ecaps/Armstrongall.jpg[/IMG] From the small town of Wapakoneta, Ohio rose a humble engineer to the pinnacle of the space program. The route took Armstrong first to the Navy where Armstrong flew Navy fighter jets during the Korean War, flying nearly 80 missions. During one flight over North Korea in 1951, the right wing of his jet clipped a cable wire. He managed to fly to friendly territory before ejecting. Next, on to Edwards Air Force Base in California as a research test pilot of the X-1B and later the X-15 which he flew 7 times. Then came his move to NASA as an astronaut with the second group of astronauts selected. On Armstrong's first flight he would be the command pilot of Gemini 8 and was able to handle the emergency in space that threatened the lives of the crew and required an immediate abort with the secondary recovery ship, the USS Leonard F. Mason. With the upcoming Apollo program NASA built LM trainers. Armstrong would perform training flights at Ellington AFB near Houston, Texas in an early version called the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle or LLRV. Armstrong was flying LLRV-1 on May 6, 1968 when it went out of control. He ejected safely and the vehicle crashed. Nothing would be easy for the first landing on the moon during Apollo 11, which Armstrong commanded. Armstrong took over from the computer, steering Eagle over a giant crater and the boulder field, and flew onward with his fuel supply dwindling. Finally, Armstrong had found a relatively smooth spot, and with just 100 feet until landing on the moon he brought Eagle into a final, vertical descent but the descent engine was kicking up moon dust, sending it outward in all directions. Armstrong used rocks sticking up through the blowing dust as a reference. From Houston comes the announcement that there is just 30 seconds of fuel left before a mandatory abort. And then, from Buzz Aldrin: "contact light" where a light on the instrument panel signaled that the probes at the end of Eagle's legs had touched the surface. Armstrong shut down the engine--with about 20 seconds' worth of fuel remaining. Seven hours later he and Aldrin would emerge from Eagle, climb down its ladder, and take the momentous step the world that many of us watched on black and white TV screens. When Armstrong was still doing limited signings through the mail I called his secretary and she said he would only sign one item for me. I thought long and hard about what item to send... a NASA portrait? No, I could buy or trade for one of those later (still need to do that)... a Gemini 8 photo, again there are some of those out there (though I still don't have one!)... Apollo 11, didn't know how to ask for the photo of Armstrong on the moon. What to do? Then it came to me, I had a X-1A/X-1B photo signed by Chuck Yeager, the first person to break the sound barrier and Armstrong flew the X-1B... so off it went. So here is a photo signed by both the first person to break the sound barrier and the first person to walk on the moon. It is still one of my favorite photos in my collection. [IMG]http://i759.photobucket.com/albums/xx232/yeknom-ecaps/ArmstrongYeager.jpg[/IMG] As the Armstrong family stated... For those who may ask what they can do to honor Neil, we have a simple request. Honor his example of service, accomplishment and modesty, and the next time you walk outside on a clear night and see the moon smiling down at you, think of Neil Armstrong and give him a wink. -- I know I will.
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