China Daily Global Edition (USA)

50 years on, Apollo dream still inspiring

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CANBERRA — The Honeysuckl­e Creek is normally a quiet place nestling in the mountains in the south of Australian capital Canberra, but the name of a road leading to the site betrayed its importance in history: Apollo.

Fifty years ago, when Apollo 11 first landed humans on the moon, Honeysuckl­e Creek was one of three main tracking stations that made live broadcast of the event possible, receiving and transmitti­ng the image and sound of Neil Armstrong as he stepped onto the surface of the moon.

Fifty years later, the Australian­s took pride in their role for the event, which was deemed one of the most important in the 20th century.

“If not for Australia, 600 million people would not have seen the iconic image. And if not for Australia, nor would they have heard Neil Armstrong’s iconic words,” says Arthur B. Culvahouse, the US ambassador to Australia, recently.

July 20 marks the 50th anniversar­y of moon landing by humans, one day after China’s first space lab Tiangong-II ended its mission and re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere under control.

The Honeysuckl­e dish was moved to another site, but a sculpture was unveiled on July 20 by Culvahouse and Mick Gentleman, minister for the Environmen­t and Heritage of the Australian Capital Territory government. It bore the words “one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind”.

Many former employees of the station also returned to share their memories.

Trevor Gray, 77, helped with TV signal for the broadcast 50 years ago. “I remember using various equipment. Something didn’t fit and I … made it fit. I didn’t realize that later television­s around the world were going through that,” he recalls.

When the astronauts landed on moon, he was at Honeysuckl­e, watching television. “It was very exciting,” he says repeatedly.

Andy Thomas, the first Australia-born profession­al astronaut to enter space, was an 18-year-old student at the University of Adelaide in his first year of mechanical engineerin­g at that time. He was inspired by Apollo 11.

“It was just amazing to see those images come from the moon, through the tracking station here, onto our television sets. It was a defining event of the 20th century,” he told Xinhua in an interview.

The event was inspiratio­nal to him. He later joined the aerospace industry in the United States. “I dreamed of being an astronaut when I saw what the space program was doing, but I didn’t consider it a very realistic prospect,” he recalls. “It wasn’t until later in life after I had been working in the US aerospace industry for some time that I realized I could put together an applicatio­n to become an astronaut.”

The astronaut has spent 177 days in space.

Looking into the future, he says that he wishes to see humans returning to the moon and landing on Mars. “That will be a defining event for the 21st century.”

He also talked about the progress China has made in space industry. “I have to say China’s to be congratula­ted for landing the rover on the dark side or the far side of the moon,” he says. “That was a very impressive technical undertakin­g, very impressive indeed.” in the

Although a legend in China about palace and fairy on the moon could be dated back to hundreds, or perhaps thousands of years. In 1969 there were not many Chinese families that had television­s.

After the reform and opening-up China has been developing rapidly.

In 1992, China started the manned space program with a three-step strategy. The first step, to send an astronaut into space and return safely, was fulfilled by Yang Liwei in the Shenzhou-V mission in 2003. So far, the country has launched 11 manned spaceships, sending 11 astronauts into space.

It launched the first moon rover in December 2013 and plans to launch the Mars probe in 2020. The success of the Tiangong-II mission has ushered in the era of building China’s space station, which is expected to be completed around 2022.

Thomas says he hopes that in years to come there will be more collaborat­ion between China and other space agencies throughout the world, “so that when we do go to Mars, it will be truly for all humankind, not just for one country.”

He remembered that when he had training in a space station in Moscow in 1997, there were two Chinese.

“They were the first ones sent to Russia in preparatio­n for the Chinese human space flight and they were nice guys,” he recalled.

Talking about China’s space dream, Trevor Gray also hailed the country’s big progress.

“I didn’t think of flying around the world (in my childhood), which I have done,” he says. “A lot of things happened. I have seen many changes. We now have a lot of made-in-China, which I do appreciate. Anything could happen.” 1979,

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