[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 114 (Monday, July 21, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4639-S4640]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
45-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF THE LUNAR LANDING
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, 45 years ago yesterday the entire world
was riveted to their television sets--often a television image that was
grainy, black and white, and flickering--as we heard the report, ``The
eagle has landed.'' Then we saw Neil Armstrong come down the ladder of
the lunar lander, and that is when he made the famous statement,
``That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.''
In the context of that day 45 years ago, unless one was of sufficient
youth to not have a memory, anyone will remember exactly where they
were and what they were doing, because that was an extraordinary time
for the entire planet. This Senator at the time was an Army lieutenant.
At the lift-off 4 days earlier, I had been in Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and
had gone to the embassy asking if they had a television so I could
watch the lift-off in my hometown area of Brevard County where, from
this launch pad, my family had homesteaded under the old Homestead Act
in 1913, working the land for years, eking out a living which, under
the Homestead Act, was a way of populating the country--particularly
the westward expansion but that was also the southward expansion, into
unsettled lands like Florida. I have a
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copy of that deed of 160 acres of land, signed by Woodrow Wilson to my
grandparents in 1917. That land sits today at the north end of the
space shuttle runway at the Kennedy Space Center. It is only a few
miles from the launch pad where Apollo 11 launched, and years later in
the early part of the Space Shuttle Program I had the privilege of
launching with the crew of STS-61C.
But at that moment 45 years ago, I had gone into the embassy in
Belgrade, and they did not have a television set that would show the
lift-off. I asked if there was any way of getting a communication. They
said: Go outside of the city on those high hills and stick up your
shortwave radio antenna and get the BBC from London. My friends and I
did exactly that. When that rocket, the Saturn V, lifted off, there
were three young Americans screaming at the top of our lungs: ``Go,
baby, go.''
Four days later, I was on my way back to the United States and was
staying overnight in a London hotel. I got the desk to call me in the
middle of the night, somewhere around 3:00, and turned on that
flickering black-and-white television set to see Neil Armstrong come
down the ladder and issue that famous statement.
Today at the Kennedy Space Center is a ceremony commemorating that
event 45 years ago yesterday. I happened to bump into Buzz Aldrin
yesterday at the Orlando airport as he was on his way to join with Mike
Collins, who was the third of the three Apollo astronauts. They are
there today to dedicate the operations and checkout building at the
Kennedy Space Center to be named for the commander of that mission and
the first one to set foot on the Moon--Neil Armstrong. It is that very
same building where those astronauts were in quarantine before they
went to the launch pad, it is that very same building where so many of
the space missions have been prepared, and it is that very same
building, now named for Neil Armstrong, which is preparing the
spacecraft that will be the forerunner of taking us in our next journey
to another celestial body--this time the planet Mars.
That spacecraft, Orion, will be tested at the end of this year in a
ballistic reentry, going out some 30,000 miles, to come back in at a
very steep descent to test the new protective materials on the heat
shield. In the old days we had an ablative material on the blunt end of
the capsule that would burn up on reentry coming through the fiery heat
of reentry, 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit. Part of the heat shield would
burn up. Today, they have much more high-technology techniques that
will repel the heat in order to save the crew, and that test will come
at the end of the year.
When we shut down the Space Shuttle Program, most Americans felt as
though the human space program was shut down. That is not the case. We
have an orbiting national laboratory that is part of the International
Space Station, with two American astronauts and an international crew--
a total of six astronauts onboard, doing research right now, as they
have been.
As a matter of fact, to give a visual mind's-eye idea of how big this
International Space Station is, it is 120 yards long. Visualize from
one goalpost and one end zone to the other goalpost, and that is how
big the International Space Station is, and six humans are on board
right now.
We are already developing the rockets that are delivering cargo--
American rockets--and those rockets are now in a competition in NASA as
to which ones will be selected to carry humans, and then all of the
redesign, the redundancies of systems, the escape mechanisms, will be
incorporated in order to make it safe for humans. We are expecting that
first American launch of Americans onboard American rockets to be in
2017. Then the American people will realize that we have been in space
all along.
We can speak of the wonders of our space program--the Hubble space
telescope that has been on orbit carried by a human crew that has now
unlocked the secrets of the universe. The follow-on telescope named
after the first NASA Administrator James Webb will peer back in time to
the very beginning of the universe and will bring us additional
knowledge about how we got here and how it all started in this
incredibly infinite thing called the universe, of which the cosmos as
we look out is so large we can't comprehend it.
Our space program is vigorous, and now we will move into a new era
starting right there in the building that is being dedicated today in
memory of Neil Armstrong, a building that will assemble the spacecraft
called Orion which will launch with Americans in 2021 for the beginning
of a mission that will capture a distant object--an asteroid--fly to
it, rendezvous, explore it, as we start the systems, the methods,
building and creating the new technologies that will then allow us to
take a human crew all the way to the planet Mars, land them, and bring
them back safely to planet Earth.
So this is a day that we remember, and we remember an astronaut who
was taken way too early from us, because Neil was only 82 years old.
Although of the original seven, which Neil was not a part of, we only
have one left; that is, John Glenn, the first American to orbit the
Earth, a former Senator of this body in his nineties. He looks
terrific.
After the Mercury Program came the Gemini Program and then came the
Apollo Program, and that is the celebration that has just occurred,
celebrating 45 years. It is hard to believe it has been that long. Yet
that was a day the world stopped as they gazed, fixed on their
television sets, as a human from planet Earth set foot on another
celestial body. That was quite an accomplishment, but there is a lot
more to come.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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