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Neil Armstrong
(redirected from Neal armstrong)

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Armstrong, Neil 

Born Aug. 5, 1930, in Wapakoneta, Ohio. U. S. aviator and astronaut; naval officer. Graduated from Purdue University in Lafayette, Indiana (1955), with a specialization in aeronautical engineering.

Armstrong served in naval units and then at the Lewis research center as a test pilot. He tested jet planes, including the experimental X-15 rocket plane. From 1962 on, he was on the team of astronauts of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration of the USA. On Mar. 16, 1966, he made a space flight (along with D. Scott) as command pilot of the spacecraft Gemini 8. The flight lasted ten hours and 40 minutes (seven orbits around the earth).

Armstrong made the historic first flight to the moon with E. Aldrin and M. Collins, from July 16 to 24,1969, serving as commander of the spacecraft Apollo 11. A lunar module with Armstrong and Aldrin landed on the moon in the area of the Sea of Tranquility on July 20, 1969. Armstrong was the first man to set foot on the moon (July 21, 1969); he spent two hours, 21 minutes and 16 seconds outside the spacecraft. After successfully completing its program, the crew of Apollo II returned to earth.



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11, 2001, World Trade Center attack; first televised JFK-Nixon debate in 1960; Franklin Roosevelt's "Date that will live in infamy" speech following the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941; Neal Armstrong talking to the Oval Office from the moon in 1969; 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago; FDR's "Only thing we have to fear" Inaugural Address in 1933; Nixon's 1952 "Checkers" speech; Martin Luther King, Jr.
Acting Inspector Neal Armstrong, of Cleveland Police, said crimes involving air weapons had appeared to have fallen.
That's particularly true for baby boomers who grew up reading Ray Bradbury and Robert Heinlein and who remember watching John Glenn be slung into orbit and Neal Armstrong take that first giant lunar leap.
 
 
 
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