mandyb wrote:Chariot of Fire wrote:daddy1gringo wrote:Although I'm not sure about treating her death as any more tragic than anyone else's just because she was famous, still I don't think blowing razzberries as her now that she's gone is appropriate.  
" I've seen the needle and the damage done 
A little part of it in everyone
but every junkie's like a setting sun..."
-- Neil Young
AAFitz wrote:That wasn't the actual quote from the Apollo 11 mission.
No, the quote from the Apollo 
11 mission was "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind."  But what was the actual quote from the Apollo 13 mission?
 
Also wrong.  ".....one small step for man....." not "a man"
"
 
With improved sound technology they have been able to prove that he did, in fact, say 'a man', though in the original recording this wasn't decipherable.
As for Whitney....didn't she almost have it all...?
 
Chariot of Fire wrote:From the NASA web site:
"At the time of the mission, the world heard Neil say "That's one small step for man; one giant leap for mankind". As Andrew Chaikin details in A Man on the Moon, after the mission, Neil said that he had intended to say 'one small step for a man' and believed that he had done so. However, he also agreed that the 'a' didn't seem to be audible in the recordings. The important point is that the world had no problem understanding his meaning. However, over the decades, people interested in details of the mission - including your editor - have listened repeatedly to the recordings, without hearing any convincing evidence of the 'a'. In 2006, with a great deal of attendant media attention, journalist/ entrepreneur Peter Shann Ford claimed to have located the 'a' in the waveform of Neil's transmission. Subsequently, more rigorous analyses of the transmission were undertaken by people with professional experience with audio waveforms and, most importantly, audio spectrograms. None of these analyses support Ford's conclusion. The transcription used above honors Neil's intent"
I was coming from an interview where Armstrong insisted that he had said "
a man".  I was 10 years old and watching and listening intently in July of 1969 when he said it, and it sounded like there was no "a", but I figured it made sense that he was telling the truth since he had a lot of time to decide what would be his first words from the moon, and without the "a" it doesn't make sense.
But back on subject, again, Whitney had a voice and knew how to use it.  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jeUINzHK9o 
			The right answer to the wrong question is still the wrong answer to the real question.