首页
登录
职称英语
I was only 8 years old on July 20, 1969, when Neil Armstrong, 38-year-old co
I was only 8 years old on July 20, 1969, when Neil Armstrong, 38-year-old co
游客
2023-12-06
30
管理
问题
I was only 8 years old on July 20, 1969, when Neil Armstrong, 38-year-old commander of Apollo 11, descended the cramped lunar module Eagle’s ladder to become the first human on the moon. I didn’t miss a moment of the long, nerve-wracking chain of events that led to the Eagle creating the lunar base Tranquility(named in advance by Armstrong). It was stunning that this local kid who grew up on a farm with no electricity was leading America into the brave new world of lunar exploration. When Armstrong said, " That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind," we were incommensurably awed at the greatness of it all. Not Armstrong. "Pilots take no particular joy in walking," he once said in full buzzkill mode. "Pilots like flying. "
For years I longed to hear Armstrong describe what it was like to contemplate Earth from 238,900 miles away. Former Space Center director George Abbey once told me that many NASA astronauts felt that looking at Earth was akin to a religious experience. Did Armstrong agree? What did it feel like—emotionally, spiritually—to stand on the surface of the moon? Could I get him to open up about the experience?
I originally wrote Armstrong in the early 1990s to request an interview about his Korean War service. He had flown 78 combat missions—was even hit with antiaircraft fire over enemy territory—and I wanted to write a book about it, A Band of Brothers about the flyboys of "the Forgotten War" who were assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Essex. I got a polite postcard rejection: "No thanks, but I’ll keep you in mind. "
It wasn’t until several years later that NASA asked me to conduct its official oral history of the "First Man. " I was surprised and honored to get a chance to interview him—and thrilled when the date was set for Sept. 19, 2001. Then I saw the horrifying collapse of the World Trade Center towers on TV. Like everyone else, I was grief-stricken. And I was also sure my Armstrong interview would get nixed. But it didn’t play out that way. To my utter astonishment, a NASA director telephoned me that Armstrong, no matter what, never missed a scheduled rendezvous. He was going to travel from Cincinnati to Houston to do the oral history in spite of the post-terrorist-attack airport madness. Armstrong journeying to Texas days after 9. 11 certainly wasn’t the phoenix-like Chuck Yeager, emerging from the pages of Tom Wolfe’s The Right Stuf in a glorious dust cloud of triumph. But his effort was impressive. The post-9. 11 skies were largely shut to commercial aircraft, but Armstrong, whose own boyhood hero was aviator Charles Lindbergh, stubbornly refused to cancel an appointment that he dreaded. It was a matter of honor.
The interview started out well, with a question about Lindbergh. He raved about the famed pilot of the Spirit of St. Louis. He told me about his personal correspondence with Lucky Lindy(a trove that is still off-limits to scholars). It dawned on me that perhaps the fear of the Lindbergh Baby Kidnapping Syndrome had driven Armstrong underground, had turned him into a quasi-recluse. As an impermeable skeptic, he trusted neither celebrity nor crass capitalism. But the oral history was tracking. And when I turned to the Korean War, mentioning novelist James Michener’s book The Bridges at Toko-Ri, he became surprisingly effusive. "Michener was on our ship," he said. "I think he went on three tours, two or three tours, you know, at four or five weeks at a crack, and would just sit around the wardroom in the evening or in the ready room in the daytime and listen to guys tell the actual stories. "
What I was most curious about was why Armstrong, a top U. S. Navy test pilot, flying the most advanced aircraft in the world, would want to join the astronaut corps in 1962, which included chimpanzees and monkeys. "It wasn’t an easy decision," he said. "I was flying the X-15 and I had the understanding or belief that if I continued, I would be the chief pilot of that project... Then there was this other project down at Houston, the Apollo program...I can’t tell you now just why in the end I made the decision I did, but I consider it as fortuitous that I happened to pick one that was a winning horse. " [br] This text is most probably a______.
选项
A、fiction
B、biography
C、news report
D、memoir
答案
C
解析
文体题。综观全文,本篇是从一个新闻记者的角度来谈Armstrong登月如何振奋人心,并且详细记录了采访Armstrong前的波折及采访时的情形,还对Armstrong的性格和为人进行了正面和侧面的介绍,因此可以判断这篇文章是一名记者的一篇新闻稿,故[C]正确。本文记录的是真人真事,Armstrong登月事件也是众所周知的,因此不可能是小说,故排除[A];传记一般是以第三人称客观详实地叙述,本篇中谈到作者本人的篇幅较大,看起来并不像是对Armstrong生平的记述,更像是作者在记述自己多年的Armstrong情结,故排除[B];从采访部分可以看出,主角无疑是Armstrong,因此不是作者本人的回忆录,故排除[D]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3249024.html
相关试题推荐
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
Iwasonly8yearsoldonJuly20,1969,whenNeilArmstrong,38-year-oldco
随机试题
电网的相间距离保护只在相间短路才动作,在接地短路时不可能动作。
肺动脉瓣血流频谱特点以下错误的是A.肺动脉瓣上收缩期出现 B.正常时呈单峰负向
关于妊娠期循环系统的生理改变,下列选项错误的是:()A.孕妇心电图常
影响维生素B吸收的主要因素是A.浓茶 B.内因子缺乏 C.碳酸氢盐 D.四
据某知名房产中介机构统计,2010年9月份第二周全国十大城市的商品房成交量总体呈
近日,面对餐饮浪费现象,习近平总书记作出重要指示,强调在全社会营造浪费可耻、节约
根据《刑事诉讼法》,关于人民法院职能的说法,正确的是()A.为了保证诉讼顺利进
《火灾分类》(GB/T4968)按物质的燃烧特性将火灾分为:A类火灾、B类火灾
男性,66岁,2型糖尿病12年,长期口服格列苯脲15mg和二甲多胍1.5g,近两
关于地方性法规批准和备案的说法,正确的是( )。2016A、设区的市的地方性法
最新回复
(
0
)