Newsweek

The Greatest Adventure

Fifty years ago the race to the moon galvanized a nation in turmoil. Can we do it again?

- BY NINA BURLEIGH

Fifty years ago the race to the Moon galvanized a nation in turmoil. Can we do it again?

They traveled around 238,000 miles from home— the farthest human beings have ever traveled before or since. Their crafts contained less technology than schoolchil­dren today hold in their hands with their iPhone. The astronauts relied on a primitive computer that operated at 1.024 Megaherz and a control room in Houston filled with men (mostly) working mostly the old fashioned way—lots of human brains, pencil and paper. Today, orbital trajectori­es are calculated in seconds by supercompu­ters operating hundreds of millions of times faster than NASA’s 1969 model.

Fifty years have passed since Neil Armstrong was the first to walk on the moon on July 20, 1969. Armstrong is among only 24 men who have flown there; only 11 other joined Armstrong’s small fraternity.

As their feat recedes into history, the men of the Apollo program take their place among the pantheon of the great explorers of human history. Marco Polo. Christophe­r Columbus. Their courage and curiosity are rightly celebrated. Their children and grandchild­ren now look at the archaic flying machines that took

them to the moon and back—the same way they look at 15th Century mariners in wooden boats powered by wind, who traveled through storms to discover unmapped continents.

The trip to the moon changed the astronauts in ways they couldn’t predict. They were the first humans to see their blue planet, Earth, rising behind the lifeless orb of the moon—and to bring back with them a measured sense of its relative smallness and fragility. During the hours and days the Apollo astronauts were in lunar orbit on voyages between 1968 and 1972, the Vietnam War was raging, the U.S. and the Soviet Union were engaged in an arms race with the most powerful weapons mankind had ever invented, and American cities were tense with anti-war protests and racial unrest. The space program itself was a Cold War enterprise, a race to beat the Soviets to the moon.

The lunar endeavor, though, transcende­d jingoism and national borders. When the first moon landers returned to Earth they were greeted with ticker tape parades and global outpouring­s of admiration in 24 cities on the GIANTSTEP Apollo 11 Presidenti­al

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A space suit used for testing at the Extravehic­ular Mobility Unit in Dover, Delaware. (See page 32 for more work by photograph­er Vincent Fournier.)
LOOK SHARP A space suit used for testing at the Extravehic­ular Mobility Unit in Dover, Delaware. (See page 32 for more work by photograph­er Vincent Fournier.)
 ??  ?? MOON OR BUST The Saturn rocket lifts off July 16, 1969.
MOON OR BUST The Saturn rocket lifts off July 16, 1969.
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 ??  ?? Now → Duke is a committed born-again Christian, runs the Duke Ministry for Christ organizati­on, and lives outside of San Antonio, Texas, with his wife Dottie.
Now → Duke is a committed born-again Christian, runs the Duke Ministry for Christ organizati­on, and lives outside of San Antonio, Texas, with his wife Dottie.
 ??  ?? CHARLIE DUKE Then → Charlie Duke served twice in Mission Control, as backup crew on Apollo 13 and Apollo 17, flew to the moon on Apollo 16, and was the 10th man to step foot onto the moon.
CHARLIE DUKE Then → Charlie Duke served twice in Mission Control, as backup crew on Apollo 13 and Apollo 17, flew to the moon on Apollo 16, and was the 10th man to step foot onto the moon.

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