Former American astronaut Buzz Aldrin speaks at the Planet
2010 communications and technology conference in Auckland
today. Photo by NZPA.
The second man to walk on the moon has two new missions
for 2010: convincing United States President Barack Obama to
say "yes we can" to a programme aimed at manned flights to
Mars, and out-dancing some fellow American celebrities.
Buzz Aldrin is in New Zealand to speak at Planet 2010, a
conference in Auckland highlighting new communications
technology run by the Telecommunications Industry Group.
The sprightly 80-year-old told a group of communications
industry insiders about flying fighter planes in the Korean
War, his thesis on spacecraft rendezvous in the early 1960s
and then his effort as part of the US space programme,
culminating in his trip to the moon with Neil Armstrong and
Michael Collins in 1969.
The space programme to the moon and further afield was
abandoned in the early 1970s but Aldrin is keen for it to be
resurrected.
"We are working towards a space summit with the President on
April 15 in Florida," Aldrin said.
"I hope to participate and help his people and work out
compromises between the administration and congress so that
Nasa can chart a wondrous course of flexible research in the
next 10 years towards the 50th anniversary of our landing.
"We could then fulfil the initiative that I hope the
President will choose that will help him go down in history
-- the initiative of landing permanent settlers on the planet
Mars." Before then, Aldrin has another mission: to out-dance
several celebrities in the 10th US season of Dancing With The
Stars.
The show begins on March 22 so Aldrin has brought his dancing
partner, Ashly DelGrosso-Costa, to New Zealand with him to
keep practising for his show-opening cha-cha.
Aldrin told space.com that he was entering the competition
partly to help improve public awareness of the space
programme, but that he would be competing hard.
Among his opponents will be Beverly Hills 90210 star
Shannen Doherty, Pussycat Dolls lead singer Nicole
Scherzinger and another recent visitor to New Zealand, Pamela
Anderson. Aldrin will make a 45 minute address to the public
at the conference at Sky City Convention Centre at 9am
tomorrow.
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