NASA Coverage of Neil Armstrong Service at National Cathedral

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Sept. 12, 2012

Allard Beutel 
Headquarters, Washington    
202-358-2191 
allard.beutel@xxxxxxxx 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M12-178

NASA COVERAGE OF NEIL ARMSTRONG SERVICE AT NATIONAL CATHEDRAL

WASHINGTON -- NASA will provide special live programming of the public 
memorial service at the Washington National Cathedral to honor the 
life and career of astronaut Neil Armstrong at 10 a.m. EDT, Thursday, 
Sept. 13. The memorial will be broadcast live on NASA Television and 
streamed online by the agency's and National Cathedral's websites. 

NASA Television will air two high-definition feeds of memorial 
starting at 9:45 a.m. NASA TV's Public Channel (channel 101) will 
carry the service, complete with on-screen identification fonts of 
the participants. The agency's Media Channel (channel 103) will 
broadcast a clean feed. NASA TV's Education channel will carry the 
complete service in standard definition. 

Also during the live broadcast of the service, NASA's Chief Historian, 
Bill Barry, will conduct an online chat on UStream that will provide 
additional information about the speakers at the memorial and their 
connection to Armstrong and NASA. To view the chat, visit the NASA 
Public Channel page on UStream at: 

http://www.ustream.tv/nasahdtv   

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, NASA Deputy Administrator Lori 
Garver, dignitaries, community and political leaders, members of the 
Armstrong family and members of the NASA family, including current 
and former astronauts, will pay respects to Armstrong. 

Bolden, former Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snow, and Eugene 
Cernan, the Apollo 17 mission commander and last man to walk on the 
moon, will offer tributes. Armstrong's Apollo 11 crewmate and command 
module pilot, Michael Collins, will lead prayers. Popular jazz 
singer-songwriter Diana Krall is scheduled to sing at the service. 
Other musicians include the U.S. Navy Band "Sea Chanters," the 
Cathedral Choir, and the Metropolitan Opera Brass. The Right Rev. 
Mariann Edgar Budde will offer a homily in honoring the life of the 
first man to walk on the moon, who died Aug. 25. 

Washington National Cathedral is a historic landmark symbolizing the 
role of faith in America and its iconography tells the stories that 
have shaped the nation's identity. Armstrong, along with fellow 
astronauts Collins and Buzz Aldrin, presented the National Cathedral 
with a moon rock brought back during their Apollo 11 mission. The 
presentation took place in a July 21, 1974 service commemorating the 
fifth anniversary of the first lunar landing. The iconic Space Window 
that later would display the sliver of lunar rock also was dedicated 
at that service. To learn more about the Washington National 
Cathedral, visit: 

http://www.nationalcathedral.org 

For NASA TV downlink information, schedules and links to streaming 
video, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv 

For additional information about Armstrong and his career, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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