REX - Regional Express

March 2013

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historyfocus Background image: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (NASA/JPL) Opposite page, above and below: Neil Mason and Dave Cooke (Parkes Observatory) with Stan Lebar (Apollo Television Cameras); Honeysuckle Creek receivers; subsequent moon landing of Apollo 15. Parkes: the Dish For the CSIRO Parkes Observatory, however, relaying the event proved to be problematic when nature intervened. Immortalised in the titular film, The Dish, the observatory played a key role when Houston switched over to the images received from Parkes' 64-metre radio telescope for the remainder of the two-and-a-half-hour broadcast. Dave Cooke was a radio receiver engineer at Parkes during the Apollo 11 mission. "We were all pretty keyed up and a lot of work had gone into anticipating various contingencies that could occur," he explains. "One thing we couldn't plan for, however, was the weather!" "We nearly got blown off the air!" adds Neil Mason, who, as the telescope operator, had the critical job of keeping track of the moon as the telescope creaked against the tyrannical winds. Despite the dangers to the Dish, the order was given to keep going. "Our director, John Bolton, was usually one for going by the book, but I think he realised the momentousness of the occasion, so we pressed on," Mason says. 79

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